*947 Opinion
Daniel Wagner brought a personal injury action against Irene Doulton and Nemos Secret Harbor Development for personal injuries sustained in a collision between his motorcycle and defendants’ automobile on Pacific Coast Highway. After a trial which lasted over a month the jury returned a verdict in favor of defendants.
Appellаnt Wagner moved for a new trial on the grounds, inter alia, of jury misconduct. His motion was denied. Although numerous grounds were raised below, appellant has limited this appeal tо the alleged misconduct of one juror.
In support of the motion for a new trial, two jurors presented affidavits to the trial court alleging that another juror, Edwin Johnston, an engineer, had prepared a scale map of the location of the accident and the vehicles involved and brought it into the jury room. The map was drawn on either plain or graph paper and was shown to the other jurors.
Edwin Johnston also submitted his affidavit, dated December 19, 1979, which declared in part: “That while deliberating on the Wagner vs Doulton case, I prepared a diagram of the Malibu accident location from and only from information that was presented in court. No independent investigation was made by me, and I had never visited the actual accident scene or received any information other than that which was presented in court. [1i] That all of the informatiоn that was used for the diagram that I prepared during the deliberations was taken from my notes made from the testimony in court or from my memory of the evidence that was prеsented in court.”
At the hearing for the motion for a new trial, the court noted that Mr. Johnston’s affidavit did not clearly deny that the map he prepared was drawn outside the jury rоom.
“The Court: I do see a problem in bringing a map into that jury room. [H] As I analyze it, it would have to be something prepared at home, not in the jury room. [11] Now, I know your position is hе did it in the jury room. This is not the way I read the affidavit. It is on drafted paper, drawn to scale and brought in.”
*948 After oral argument the court granted a continuance until the next day to allow the defendants’ attorney to get another affidavit from Mr. Johnston and from any of the other jurors to clarify the issue of where the map or diagram had been preрared.
The following day defendants’ attorney filed with the court a second affidavit from Mr. Johnston, dated December 27, 1979, which, although similar to his first affidavit, also stated: “I prepared a diagram in the jury deliberation room of the Malibu accident location from and only from information that was presented in court. .. . ”
Defendants’ attorney also рresented three additional affidavits of other jurors supporting Mr. Johnston’s statements that he prepared the diagram in the jury room.
After arguments were heard on the conflicts between the affidavits, the trial court denied appellant’s motion for a new trial.
Appellant has summarized his principal position on appeal by the fоllowing question: “Was the plaintiff deprived of a fair and impartial trial by reason of the conduct of a juror who prepared a scale diagram outside the courtroom and presented his own extrajudicial ‘evidence’ during jury deliberations?”
It is well settled that the granting of a motion for a new trial rests completely within the discretion of the trial judge and will not be overturned unless there is a clear abuse of discretion.
(Jiminez
v.
Sears, Roebuck & Co.
(1971)
The trial court had before it two conflicting sets of affidavits on the question of whether the diagram was prepared in the jury room, or was prepared outside and then brought into the jury room. “‘When an issue is tried on аffidavits. . . and where there is a substantial conflict in the facts stated, a determination of the controverted facts by the trial court will not be disturbed.1 [Citations.]”
(Weathers
v.
Kaiser Foundation Hospitals
(1971)
Appellant also argues that Mr. Johnston’s training as an engineer, allowed him to “unfаirly sway” the other jury members by his diagram of the accident scene. We find this argument to be without merit.
Interestingly, there is little decisional law on the question of what is prosper discussion among jurors during deliberations, and the few cases are quite ancient. In
Baker
v.
Borello
(1902)
In an American Law Reports annotation,
We believe the appropriate rule has been well articulated by an opinion of a sister state: “In determining what is proper and what is improper discussion among jurors, regard must be had for the fact that the jury are supposedly men [and women] of different walks of life, avocations, and necessarily views that would be affected by their past experiences and situations. They could hardly arrive at a solution of their differences without discussion of the fаcts before them, and each man’s discussion would necessarily be tinged or affected by his own viewpoint and experience.”
(Frazer
v.
State
(1924)
While it is a fundamental rule that jurors may not rеceive evidence out of court and may not conduct experiments which put them in possession of evidence not offered at trial
(People
v.
Pierce
(1979)
The judgment is affirmed.
Kaus, P. J., and Ashby, J., concurred.
