In a civil case, a verdict rendered by a jury consisting of fewer than six jurors is a nullity in the absence of consent by all parties.
I
This medical malpractice suit arises from the defendants’ alleged negligent treatment of the 27-year-old, childless plaintiff for a cancerous cyst on her ovary resulting in a total hysterectomy. The trial lasted in excess of three weeks. Unfortunately, the six-person jury had only two alternate jurors who were both excused during the course of the trial.
The summations and charge followed. The jury then began its deliberations which continued until the following day. Late that afternoon, counsel were advised that the jury had reached a verdict. Just before the verdict was taken in open court, the plaintiff’s attorney made the following statement on the record:
"mr. Phillips [plaintiff’s attorney]: Before the jury comes in, I would like to put one thing on the record.
"the court: Before the verdict?
"mr. Phillips: Yes, before the verdict. Your Honor, in making the application which I did at the time that we lost the sixth juror, I made that application because I believe that a complete record should be made including the verdict.
"In light of the defendant’s [sic] unwillingness to go along with my application, I want to state on the record that I am
"the court: You are saying because defendant [sic] did not go along with the limited jury that you did not consent to the limited jury.
"mr. Phillips: I am not waiving her rights. I have asked for the limited jury but I am not waiving whatever rights my client may have, whatever they may be”.
The five-person jury returned a unanimous verdict in favor of the defendants. The plaintiff moved to set aside the verdict on the ground that the jury was improperly constituted and that "without the opportunity to perform any type of research * * * as to what the state of the law was I made an application” and that he had placed his client in a "heads-I-lose, tails-you-win” situation. The Trial Judge denied the plaintiff’s motion to set aside the verdict holding, in effect, that the plaintiff consented to the five-person unanimous jury and "cannot now contend that the procedure she herself advocated was improper”. In addition, the court ruled that counsel’s statement on the record prior to the verdict was ineffectual since the "plaintiff cannot have it both ways”.
We reverse and grant a new trial.
II
In a civil case, "[a] jury shall be composed of six persons” (CPLR 4104). A verdict may be rendered by not less than five sixths of the jurors constituting a jury (NY Const, art I, § 2; CPLR 4113 [a]). The issue before us is the effect of the five-person unanimous verdict in the absence of consent by both parties. Stated otherwise, could the plaintiff’s attorney effectively unilaterally consent to the five-person unanimous jury?
In the seminal appellate decision to date, it was earlier determined by the Appellate Division, Third Department, in Measeck v Noble (
The statutorily mandated minimum number of six jurors, with a requirement of at least a five-sixths vote is based, in part, on the traditional freedom to disagree accorded to a minority juror. In Schabe v Hampton Bays Union Free School Dist. (
From our examination of the New York State Constitution and the statutes and cases interpreting these provisions, it is clear that absent the consent of all parties, unanimity of five jurors is not interchangeable with a five-sixths verdict of six jurors.
The rule that the statutory minimum number of jurors must decide the case is accepted in most jurisdictions in this country. Illustrative of this well-settled precept is the following statement in Brame v Garwood (339 So 2d 978, 979 [Miss]): "The action of the trial court in ordering the trial to continue (over the Brames’ objection) with eleven jurors exceeded his constitutional authority even though he may have felt compelled to take such action in order to salvage the trial that had already consumed several days at great expense. The exigencies of the situation, though unusual and weighty, do
Also, in Hartgraves v Don Cartage Co. (21 111 App 3d 298, 301-302,
Ill
Although the constitutional and statutory provisions guaranteeing a jury trial require a minimum jury of six persons, it is well settled that, in a civil case, the parties may stipulate to proceed with less than the minimum number (see, Maiello v Johnson,
IV
While the above rules are clear and well established, we now turn to the crucial issue in this case, namely, whether
Initially, the plaintiff’s contention that her counsel did not consent to a unanimous five-person verdict is unsupported by the record. On the morning of the summations and charge, after both attorneys were advised that the sixth juror was ill, the plaintiff’s attorney clearly and unequivocally made an application to proceed with five jurors, and maintained this position even after the defendants’ counsel refused to consent and moved for a mistrial. After he had an opportunity to research the subject, and after counsel were notified that the jury had reached a verdict, which was still unannounced, the plaintiff’s counsel stated, in a vague manner, that he was not waiving his client’s rights. Nevertheless, he did not object to the rendering of the verdict, nor did he ask for a mistrial. This attempted reservation of rights was ineffectual and inadequate. A withdrawal of a prior consent that is merely strategic — made solely to secure some procedural advantage — need not be honored (see, People ex rel. Rohrlich v Follette,
The right to trial by jury is a fundamental one, and the courts indulge every reasonable presumption against waiver (Aetna Ins. Co. v Kennedy,
A waiver is the " 'voluntary and intentional relinquishment or abandonment of a known existing legal right * * * which except for such waiver the party would have enjoyed’ ” (see, Davison v Klaess,
Further, the plaintiff’s alleged waiver or consent involved more serious consequences than a waiver of her right to trial by a jury of six. The purported "waiver” really constituted a consent to be bound only by an unfavorable verdict. As to the defendants, since they themselves moved for a mistrial and sought a new trial, it cannot be said that they were prejudiced by the erroneous rendering of a void verdict.
As stated above, a waiver can only occur when a party relinquishes a right which, except for such waiver, the party would have enjoyed. The plaintiff’s consent to proceed with five jurors was an abandonment of nothing and a relinquishment of no right. By doing so, the plaintiff placed herself in a "no-win” situation and agreed to a procedure which, absent the consent by the defendants, was barred by statute and was in violation of a fundamental right. Thus, the plaintiff had no legally cognizable right to agree to a verdict rendered by an impermissibly constituted jury unless the defendants also consented. The plaintiff’s "waiver” was, in effect, a concession
The defendants contend that the decision of the Appellate Division, Fourth Department, in Ashdown v Kluckhohn (
In Ashdown (supra), the plaintiffs hoped to obtain an advantage by excluding from deliberations on damages a juror who had already found no liability, and the plaintiffs were responsible for the fact that only five jurors ruled on damages. Therefore, it can be argued that they waived a right from which they could have benefited. In the case at bar, the
V
While the temptation to a Trial Judge to salvage a nearly four-week trial one day from the end with the ancillary saving in judicial time and expense is understandable, in the absence of a consent by all parties, a jury made up of less than six persons cannot render a valid verdict. At the precise point in time when the defendants’ counsel refused to consent to a five-person panel, the trial, for all intents and purposes, had come to an end. Under those circumstances, the court should have declared a mistrial and discharged the jury. Whatever occurred after the erroneous and meaningless continuation and verdict by the five-person jury was ineffectual and a nullity, and either side can move to set aside such a void verdict. In effect, with the defendants’ objection to the composition of the jury, it ceased to exist as a functioning unit. This rule, which has, generally, been the accepted practice in the trial courts, not only conforms to the constitutional and statutory mandates but is a simple and workable uniform trial procedure which is fair to all parties.
Accordingly, the judgment based on the verdict in favor of the defendants should be reversed, and a new trial granted, with costs to abide the event.
Weinstein, J. P., Rubin and Eiber, JJ., concur.
Ordered that the judgment is reversed, on the law and in the exercise of discretion, and a new trial is granted, with costs to abide the event.
Notes
We note that in cases where there is a possibility of a long trial, it is the responsibility of the Trial Judge to insure that a sufficient number of alternates are impaneled. In a case such as this, four or even six alternate jurors should have been selected (see, CPLR 4106).
