129 S.W.2d 821 | Tex. App. | 1938
Lead Opinion
This suit was brought by appellant against appellee, seeking recovery for total permanent disability under a group insurance policy issued by appellee to Sinclair Consolidated Corporation, of which appellant was an employee. The case was submitted to the jury on special issues, the first of which was answered in appellee's favor, the others not being answered: and on such verdict judgment was rendered for appellee. Appellant seeks reversal of the judgment on the claim of misconduct of the jury, and on the claim of misconduct of the judge. Appellant has brought up a transcript of the evidence which was adduced on the hearing of the motion for a new trial, but has filed no statement of facts proved on the trial.
The alleged misconduct of the jury (and of the bailiff in whose charge they were) was this: That after the jury had retired to consider their verdict, they asked the bailiff to get them a dictionary (they wanted to read the definition of the word "disability" to one of the jurors, who said he didn't know what it meant as used in the court's charge). The bailiff refused to get it for them. This occurred after court and counsel had gone home, who never learned of such communications between the jury and bailiff until after the verdict. And recourse, thereupon, seems to have been had to the policy to determine what "disability" meant. Further misconduct claimed by appellant is this: That around 8:45 o'clock at night, the bailiff asked the jury if they had reached a verdict, and when informed that they had not, told them they should have done so by this time in a little case like the one they were considering. (As to whether this was said there was a conflict of evidence.) Further misconduct claimed by appellant is this: That around 9 o'clock at night the bailiff asked the jury if they wanted to continue their discussion or to retire to the dormitory; and when the jury told him they could get no further that night with the case, the bailiff then told the jury, "I have a surprise for you, the Judge has told me to excuse you until 9 o'clock in the morning. Don't talk to anybody about this case and be back in the morning at 9 o'clock." The jury then went home; the judge was not in the court room at the time, and the bailiff had communicated with him at his home, and received instructions what to do. That the next morning the bailiff sent the jury into the jury room — i. e., the jury was not first placed in the box, and then directed by the court to retire to the jury room.
There is a marked distinction between misconduct on the part of the trial judge, and on the part of the jury. Elliott-Greer Office Supply Co. v. Martin, Tex.Civ.App.
As stated above, misconduct on the part of the judge stands in a different category from misconduct on the part of the jury, or on the part of others. "The sacredness of the right to a jury trial and the delicacy of any fact inquiry as to the probable effect of the trial court's misconduct, before the very judge against whom the complaint is made, renders the matter of such public concern as to be well within the legislative right to speak arbitrarily. * * *" And, "the courts will not permit an inquiry into the probable effect of a violation of the statute." Parker v. Bailey, Tex.Com.App.,
Since, had the jury dispersed over the night without the court's permission, that fact alone would not constitute misconduct authorizing the court to declare a mistrial, we are unable to see how their dispersion over the night with his permission would, of itself, constitute such misconduct. Had the bailiff not instructed the jury not to discuss the case, and had the judge failed to do so, that fact alone would not have vitiated the verdict. It is to be presumed that during the trial the judge instructed the jury each time they dispersed not to discuss the case. The fact that the judge instructed the bailiff to do so on the occasion in question could not, of itself, have prejudiced appellant. The incident could in no sense be said to have denied appellant a jury trial.
Appellee has presented various grounds not discussed by us, including objections to the consideration of appellant's assignments of error, as to why this cause should not be reversed. Such grounds we consider it unnecessary to pass on. The judgment will be affirmed.
Affirmed.
MONTEITH, C. J., participating as Special Commissioner.
Addendum
Appellant's motion for rehearing is refused.
*825Refused.