87 Ind. 205 | Ind. | 1882
The appellant asked the court to submit interrogatories to the jury called to try the cause} the request was granted, and twenty-five interrogatories were submitted. After the jury had been deliberating for some time the court withdrew the interrogatories and directed the jury to return .a general verdict.
The statute, in express terms, confers upon parties the right to submit special interrogatories, and this court has again and again decided that it is error to refuse to compel answers to relevant and proper questions. It is certainly error to withdraw proper interrogatories after they have once been duly submitted, in ordinary cases, and, unless there is something in the particular case before us taking it out of the general rule, the action of the trial court must be deemed erroneous.
It is contended that this case is not within the general rule, because it is one of exclusive equitable jurisdiction and triable by the court, and that the court had authority, under the code of 1881, to submit the cause to a jury, with directions to find upon particular questions of fact for the information of the court. R. 8. 1881, sec. 409. The trial court did not, however, proceed under this provision of the code, but treated the
It must be held that, where the court undertakes to try a cause'by jury, as au ordinary action at law, it must proceed according to the law governing jury trials, or confusion, perplexity and uncertainty will result. Unless these rules be held to govern, we shall have cases tried without rules or method, or else tried by arbitrary rules devised by the judge who presides in the particular case. We do not mean to say that under the provisions of the code referred to courts may not either try questions of fact for themselves or send the cause to a jury for the decision of particular questions, but we do say that where the court and parties treat the case as an ordinary action at law, and enter upon the trial of it as such, and all the proceedings until the jury have retired for consultation are conducted as in ordinary actions, the rules applicable to such actions must be substantially followed.
It is also contended by the appellee that, as it appears from the report of the jury that they were unable to answer the interrogatories, the court was justified in withdrawing them. The record history of the action of the court is as follows: “After.
If the appellant’s counsel were wrong in objecting to the proposition of the court to send the papers to the jury, the proper course was, not to withdraw the interrogatories, but to overrule the objection and place the jury in possession of the papers. The fact that the counsel interposed a groundless objection supplies no reason for a wrong ruling by the court. If, however, the papers were such as the party had a right to have kept from the jury the ease is still plainer; for one is not to be denied a right because he refuses to yield some other right. We can not say what “ papers ” the court desired the parties to agree to send to the jury. If they were documents of evidence, it would have been error to grant the request. Nichols v. State, ex rel., 65 Ind. 512; Lotz v. Briggs,
Judgment reversed.