65 Me. 354 | Me. | 1876
Two grounds were taken in defense at the trial: I. That if the plaintiff had any interest in the money loaned to Kidder, it was only that of a partner in the firm of E. H. Walker & Co., and so the suit in his individual name was not maintainable: II. That, at all events, the matter had entered into the adjustment between E. H. Walker & Co. and the defendants’ intestate, made January 13, 1869.
The jury were duly instructed that if there was a partnership, and the funds were advanced by the firm, the action was not maintainable. Their attention was carefully called to the evidence, tending to show that the money was advanced by the plaintiff alone; and they were further directed, if they found that it was so advanced, to inquire whether it had ever been accounted for. The report states that “after the jury had returned into court with their verdict, and before it was affirmed by the clerk, the court inquired of the foreman, the grounds upon which they found for the defendant. The foreman replied, we find for the’ defendant upon the ground that there was a firm existing at that time.” The foreman’s answer makes the basis of the plaintiff’s motion to set aside the verdict.
The defendant objected to having the foregoing answer of the foreman made part of the report.
We think the objection might well have been sustained. The foreman’s answer makes no part of the record. It was not affirmed as a special finding. The attention of the jury generally does
Considerations of this nature doubtless led Gurney, B., at the trial of Horner v. Watson, 25 E. C. L. R., 595, to decline to hear the reasons upon which the jury based their verdict for the defendant, though some of the jury expressed the wish to state them. But in several courts of high respectability in this country, the practice has been different; and the cases cited by the plaintiff' and those therein referred to may be regarded as establishing the power of the court, in its discretion, for the purpose of promoting justice or restraining useless litigation to inquire of the jury when they return a verdict upon which of several grounds taken by the parties the verdict is based, or the rule upon which they assessed the damages; though it is often said that this power is to be exercised very sparingly and with great caution.
There is a clear distinction between receiving the testimony of jurors touching these matters after they have been discharged from the consideration of the case, and exposed to the complaints, solicitation, and arguments of the defeated party, and receiving the answers of the same jurors under their official oaths before they have separated. But we think, in order to make these answers available for the furtherance of justice, and the prevention of useless litigation, that they should be made with due deliberation and a knowledge on the part of the jury, that the foreman speaks for all
' It is however unnecessary now to determine whether any, (and, if any, what) weight should be given to an answer of the description here reported; for an examination of the testimony satisfies us that the plaintiff’s motion cannot be sustained even upon the assumption that the grounds of the verdict were fully, as well as truly stated.
The plaintiff’s counsel contends that the jury found nothing which was decisive of the case.
The foreman’s answer must be construed in the light of the instruction given by the presiding judge. It cannot be expected, as the plaintiff seems to claim, that it should have the precision of a special plea.
The finding that “there was a firm existing at that time” includes a finding that such firm advanced the money, if it was advanced. The plaintiff’s clerk produced as a witness by him testifies pointedly . and positively to the existence of a firm composed of the plaintiff and his brother, at the time of the transaction out of which this suit grew — that the plaintiff’s business with the defendant’s intestate was conducted not in his own name, but in that of the firm, and that the money here claimed is included on the books of the firm with other moneys advanced or paid to Charles E. Bailey, the defendant’s intestate; and the plaintiff, himself, in all his transactions with said Bailey, and in his letter to the defendant in which he first asserts this claim, uses the name of the firm. Though the plaintiff’s brother and alleged partner now swears that he had retired previous to this transaction and had no interest in it, still it was for the jury to settle the conflict in the testimony offered by the plaintiff, and it is by no means certain that they erred.
Had the verdict been based on the other branch of the defense, in view of the testimony of Kidder, that the plaintiff, though specially and repeatedly requested by him to call Bailey’s attention
We think the conflict of testimony upon both the grounds taken in defense was such that a verdict of the jury, based upon either, should be regarded as final. Motion overruled.