334 A.2d 242 | Conn. Super. Ct. | 1974
The plaintiff, on February 4, 1970, was found guilty after a jury trial of receiving a stolen color television set in violation of General Statutes § 53-65. He was sentenced to the Connecticut Correctional Institution at Somers for a term of not less than a year and a day nor more than two years, and a fine of $500 was also imposed. The judgment was affirmed on appeal. State v. Moynahan,
The occasion for this postconviction suit arose in January of this year when Mrs. Mary Niekerk, who had served on the jury which convicted the plaintiff, contacted Attorney William Secor, who had represented the state in the trial of the case, for an appointment about wills for herself and her husband. She and her husband, John Niekerk, went to the office of Attorney Secor on January 28, 1974. In the course of their meeting, Attorney Secor recognized Mrs. Niekerk as one of the jurors who had served in the trial of the case against the plaintiff. He also came to realize that her husband, whose name he had previously thought was Leo rather than John, was well known to him from various political activities in which both had participated in the town of Middlebury. He also discovered that in 1960 he had acted as attorney for Mr. and Mrs. Niekerk in the preparation of their earlier wills and, at about the same time, as attorney for the estate of Leo Niekerk, father of John Niekerk. These facts were reported promptly by Secor to the state's attorney, Francis M. McDonald, Jr.; to the chief state's attorney, Joseph T. Gormley, Jr.; and to the trial judge. The trial judge then brought the situation to the attention of the attorney for the plaintiff, who then proceeded to institute this suit.
It appears that at the start of the trial on January 13, 1970, Mrs. Niekerk, apparently in response to the customary opening statements of counsel, disclosed that she lived in the same town as Secor — Middlebury. In answer to questions asked by the trial judge, she said that she did "not really" know Secor personally and had never had any business or social engagements with him or any professional relationship. She said that her acquaintance with him would not affect her judgment and that she had never said more than "hello" to him. *436
On January 14, 1970, Mrs. Niekerk was drawn at a point when five jurors had been selected and the plaintiff had used four of his ten challenges. Secor began her interrogation. In response to his questions, she said that she had previously informed the court that she knew Secor. She said that her husband's first name was John and that he had a brother in Middlebury named Leo but that she had never discussed Secor with Leo. At this point Secor said that he knew Leo and that once he used to see Leo in Middlebury fairly often.
Upon examination by counsel for the plaintiff, Mrs. Niekerk said that she would not be influenced by the fact that Secor was apparently acquainted with her brother-in-law. No other questions were asked of her bearing upon this matter.
At the trial of the instant case, Mrs. Niekerk testified that at the time that she was serving on the jury she completely forgot that Secor had drawn her will and had been her lawyer ten years before. She knew that her husband was friendly with Secor. Although they belonged to the same church, she had never visited Secor's home, nor had he visited hers. She did not regard him as one of her friends.
The plaintiff claims that the effect of the non-disclosure of the lawyer-client relationship between Secor and Mrs. Niekerk as well as the political and social relationship between Secor and the juror's husband effectually deprived him of a reasonable opportunity to challenge this juror for cause or to exercise a peremptory challenge. The prayer for relief seeks to set aside the verdict of guilty, to have a mistrial declared, and to have the criminal charges against the plaintiff dismissed.
"It is generally recognized that a false answer on voir dire which has the effect of depriving counsel of the opportunity to make a proper determination of whether to exercise the right to challenge a juror will not in itself require the granting of a new trial. The courts are almost all agreed that to justify a new trial it must appear that the party seeking it has been prejudiced in his case by the false answers." Note, 38 A.L.R. 2d 624, 627.
In Connecticut, technical grounds for disqualification of a juror, bias or partiality not being indicated, have never been deemed sufficient to warrant a new trial. State v. Brockhaus,
Unlike a direct relationship to a party or an interest in the outcome of a suit, which import absolute bias and require disqualification of a juror as a matter of law, the attorney-client relationship of ten years before which Mrs. Niekerk failed to reveal does not in itself indicate partiality. McCarten v. Connecticut Co., supra, 544. The fact that she forgot about the earlier relationship is sufficient indication that she was unaware of it during the trial and was not influenced by it. Id., 545.
It is plain that the only remedy available to the plaintiff is a petition for a new trial, which the general prayer for relief in the complaint — "such other relief as the court deems appropriate in law" — would encompass. A petition for a new trial must allege facts which show that substantial justice was not or may not have been done. "It cannot rely on error merely technical; on the contrary, its very foundation is that a judgment technically valid is *439
substantially unjust." State v. Brockhaus, supra, 111. Even if the statute, §
It is ordered that judgment enter for the defendant.