As is shown-by the bill of exceptions, “the mo
Gowan swears, in the affidavit referred to, that he had a conversation with the juror, while the trial of the cause was in progress, in which the juror stated, in effect, that the attorney who was trying the cause for defendants had mismanaged the case, and that he was not fit to attend to such a case against the attorney who represented the plaintiff in the trial, and that plaintiff ought to recover the full amount claimed by him as damages.
The affidavit of the juror was also filed in the case, in which he denied positively that he ever made the statements detailed by the witness Gowan in his affidavit.
Plaintiff contends, First, that the circuit court was not warranted by the evidence in finding that the alleged misconduct of the juror was established, and, Second, that, if the juror was guilty of the misconduct charged, the same is not sufficiently prejudicial to impeach the verdict.
The question whether the verdict ought to be set aside in any case on this or similar grounds is left very largely to the sound discretion of the trial court. The judge who tries the case is necessarily in a much better position to determine whether the substantial rights of the parties have been affected by the misconduct complained of than we can be; and when he has determined that justice and the proper administration of the law demand that there should be another trial of the cause, it should be made to appear very clearly that there has been an abuse of discretion, before we would be warranted in setting aside his order.
If the judge who tried this case was satisfied (as he probably was) that the juror, during the progress of the trial, entered into a discussion of the merits of the case with another party, and that he made up his mind, upon hearing the evidence introduced in support of the claim of one of the parties, that that party was in the right and that, from that time on during the trial, his mind was in no condition to fairly hear or consider what might be offered in evidence, or by way of
Affirmed.