Vowell v. Issaquah Coal Co.
Vowell v. Issaquah Coal Co.
Opinion of the Court
The opinion of the court was delivered by
— This is an appeal from a judgment of the superior court of King county in favor of plaintiffs for
The first assignment of error is that the court erred in allowing the witness Brooke to be interrogated on cross-examination as to whether, if a system of bells had
The second assignment embraces the alleged misconduct of counsel for respondents in making remarks which had a tendency to inflame the minds of the jurors against the appellant. We have examined the record with reference to this assignment, but are unable to conclude therefrom that any prejudicial error was committed. It was a heated controversy and many collateral remarks were made by the attorneys on both sides, which were probably not entirely pertinent to the issues, and it may be the case could have been tried more properly with less acrimonious discussion and fewer interjected remarks. But it is not given to all attorneys to try a law suit with equal grace and courtesy and consideration. Differences in temperament, education, and even disposition must be considered, and allowance made therefor. On the whole, we think the jury was not unduly influenced, if influenced at all, by the conduct complained of.
It is strenuously insisted that the court erred in not granting the motion of appellant for the discharge of the jury at a certain stage of the proceedings, because of alleged misconduct of one of the plaintiffs and one of the jurors in engaging in conversation during the recess of the court. The following statement was made during the trial by counsel for appellant:
“I want to move the court to discharge this jury from*107 further consideration of this cause for improper conduct on the part of one of the parties plaintiff and improper conduct on the part of one of the jurors, and I would like to call witnesses on that point.”
The counsel proceeded to state, in substance, that he had seen Charles Johnson, one of the jurors, talk for a minute or a minute and a half with George Vowell, one of the respondents; that, after a seeming observation by him of the juror and said respondent, they separated, and that they were afterwards seen talking together again. It was upon this state of facts that the controversy arose. There did not seem to be any objection on the part of counsel for respondents to the investigation of the question. In fact, he demanded that the juror and the said respondent should be called upon the stand and questioned, and what was said ascertained. After a good deal of discussion between the court and the respective counsel, the court concluded that he was without authority to discharge the jury, and the motion was denied, and the cause proceeded. A large number of cases have been cited by the appellant in support of the contention that the court erred in denying the motion to discharge the jury, many of which are from this court. But without especially reviewing them, we think none of them are in point, or go so far as to hold that a casual remark or conversation between a juror and a litigant, before the jury has retired to consider of its verdict, would warrant a discharge of the jury. This conversation occurred in the public corridor at the court house where jurors, witnesses, litigants, and spectators were mingling indiscriminately, and, while it is absolutely necessary that juries should be kept beyond the influence of interested parties, or even above the reasonable suspicion of undue influence, it does not seem to ns that, considering the circumstances of the case, the
We do not think that it is necessary to go into a discussion of the other errors alleged in appellant’s brief. The questions presented have all been discussed by this court so often that a reannouncement of the law governing them would be the purest repetition. The court certifies that plaintiffs produced evidence tending to prove that the air
This being true, and the testimony on the subject em
Instead, however, of reversing the cause and entailing upon these respondents the expense of a new trial, the judgment of the court will he that, if the respondents within twenty days from the filing of this opinion remit from the judgment obtained the amount of $4,000, the judgment, as so amended, will be affirmed; otherwise the judgment will be reversed and a new trial granted.
Fullerton, O. J., and Mount, Hadley and Anders, JJ., concur.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- Annie Vowell v. Issaquah Coal Company
- Cited By
- 12 cases
- Status
- Published
- Syllabus
- WITNESSES-CROSS-EXAMINATION. In an action for the death of a coal miner, due to the fact that the timbers in the air-shaft caught fire from fires outside the mine, it was not error to allow a witness to be asked on cross-examination, although not examined in chief on the point, as to whether, if a system of bells had been provided in the mine, deceased could have been notified of the fire in time to have saved his life, where the witness had testified in chief that he was superintendent of the mine and had been examined as an expert upon the proper handling of the mine. TRIAL-MISCONDUCT OF ATTORNEY' — ■ INDULGENCE IN COLLATERAL REMARKS. The fact that attorneys in the course of a heated trial indulged in collateral remarks, not pertinent to the issues, would not be ground for reversal, in the absence of a showing that the jury was unduly influenced thereby to the prejudice of the adverse party. JURORS-MISCONDUCT-CONVERSATION WITH PARTY. The refusal of the court to discharge a jury during trial because one of the jurors and one of the plaintiffs had indulged in a conversation together during an intermission was not error, where it appeared that the talk had by them was not upon the subject of the trial, was publicly had in the corridor of the court house before many people and in the presence of some of them, and there was no showing indicating intrigue between the juror and the party. EXCESSIVE DAMAGES-DEATH BY WRONGFUL ACT. A verdict of $10,000 for the death of a coal miner through defendant’s negligence was excessive, where the deceased was a man fifty-five years of age, with an expectancy of life of seventeen years, and an earning capacity of $50 per month, which could not presumably be continued without intermission until he was seventy-two years of age, especially in view of the fact that his employment had never been constant prior to the time of his death.