Stephen WATKINS and Michael Watkins v. TAYLOR SEED FARMS, INC.
87-337
Supreme Court of Arkansas
April 25, 1988
748 S.W.2d 143 | 294 Ark. 291
TOM GLAZE, Justice. This case arises from a jury verdict against the appellants in their suit against the appellee for causing appellants’ crop failure. Appellants had alleged that the appellee negligently commingled and mislabeled appellants’ seed with a late maturing variety of seed. Appellants’ appeal is limited to the trial court‘s denial of their motion for a new trial, wherein they argue the trial judge erred in refusing to hear and consider testimony concerning certain disparaging remarks about appellants’ attorney made by two jurors during deliberations. Although appellants set out three points on appeal, all three center on whether the trial court was required to consider such testimony pursuant to
In support of their offer of proof, appellants included an affidavit and testimony of a juror, John Seymour, who stated that two female jurors made the following comments in the presence of the entire jury: (1) The first woman said, “W.B. ‘Tuffy’ Howard, (appellants’ attorney), got custody of some children for a man and after the man got custody of the children, he murdered them.” (2) A second woman replied, “Yes, that‘s the kind of man he is.” These two jurors, whom Seymour claimed had made the remarks, also testified as a part of appellants’ offer of proof. The first one, Mary Seale, denied having made any statements about Howard, but did remember hearing someone make them. The second juror, Donna Cornelison, testified that the jurors had discussed the attorneys but that she did not make nor recall any remarks, as those described by Seymour, having been made in the presence of the jury.
Appellants contend that the remarks attributed to the two jurors constituted extraneous prejudicial information and required the trial judge to receive and consider the proffered testimony. We disagree. Our provision is identical to
Appellants cite Lewis v. Pearson, 262 Ark. 350, 556 S.W.2d 661 (1977), which clearly involved a situation different from those posed in Borden and Robinson, as well as the one at hand. While Lewis involved an accident and a suit for personal injuries,
In Lewis, the trial court‘s bailiff, an officer of the court, was the source of the outside or extraneous prejudicial information and that information was directed at one of the parties to the pending action. In the present case, the statements attributed to the two jurors were not directed at the appellants or the cause they championed. In fact, Seymour testified that the juror, who made the comment about Mr. Howard, “did not advance that as a reason not to find for plaintiffs [appellants].”
In conclusion, we note that, in their motion for a new trial, the appellants alleged not only that extraneous information prejudiced the jury but also that the jurors, making the remarks, were untruthful when failing on voir dire to respond to questions as to whether they knew the appellants’ attorney or knew of any reason they could not give the appellants a fair and impartial trial. The fact that a juror may have heard of appellants’ attorney and some case in which he may have been involved does not equate with the juror knowing the attorney. In this respect, it would be somewhat speculative to say that the jurors’ silence on voir dire was due to untruthfulness on their part.
We can appreciate the appellants’ and their attorney‘s concern when confronted with charges that suggest a juror or jurors could have harbored some hidden, personal bias or prejudice which had nothing to do with the actual merits of the cause to be decided. Nonetheless,
Because we find no merit in appellants’ argument, we affirm.
PURTLE, J., dissents.
JOHN I. PURTLE, Justice, dissenting. Although the facts of the case are not important to this dissent, I‘m compelled to say that as I view the facts the case was almost open and shut against the appellee. The jury must have decided the case upon extraneous matters because there is no logical justification for the fact that the appellee sold the appellants LaBelle rice but the seed produced Star Bonnet plants. The latter brand matures much later than LaBelle. The jury‘s finding, which I consider to be completely contrary to the facts, lends credence to the argument that the verdict should be set aside because the jury considered extraneous prejudicial information.
The basis for this dissent is that there is clear evidence before this court that the verdict was not decided on the issues and evidence presented, but rather on the opinion of at least two jurors that W.B. “Tuffy” Howard was an unscrupulous and mean attorney.
Even if “Tuffy” Howard had earned the reputation of being a rough and tough attorney, it was not evidence which should have been considered by the jury in deciding his client‘s case.
The analysis set forth in the majority opinion would probably go so far as to prohibit an inquiry into whether a juror had been bribed. I think the entire court would agree that there would not be a fair jury trial under such circumstances.
