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Scottish Court of Session Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Scottish Court of Session Decisions >> Watson v. North British Railway Co. [1901] ScotLR 38_252 (12 January 1901) URL: http://www.bailii.org/scot/cases/ScotCS/1901/38SLR0252.html Cite as: [1901] ScotLR 38_252, [1901] SLR 38_252 |
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Page: 252↓
In the trial of an action of damages against a railway company, at the instance of the widow and daughter of a man who had been accidentally killed on the line, G. D., who was in the employment of the defenders, served on the jury. His duties had no connection with anything which was said to have caused the accident, or with the place where it happened. The jury returned a unanimous verdict for the defenders. In a motion for a new trial, where it was not alleged that the verdict was contrary to evidence, and where the judge who had tried the case intimated that he agreed with the jury, held that the fact of G. D. having served on the jury did not make it “essential to the justice of the case,” under section 6 of the Jury Trials (Scotland) Act 1815 (55 George III. cap. 42), that there should be a new trial.
The Jury Trials (Scotland) Act 1815 (55 George III. cap. 42) enacts (section 6)—“That in all cases in which an issue or issues shall have been directed to be tried by a jury, it shall be lawful and competent for the party who is dissatisfied with the verdict to apply to the Division of the Court of Session which directed the issue for a new trial, on the ground of the verdict being contrary to evidence, on the ground of misdirection of the judge, on the ground of undue admission or rejection of evidence, on the ground of excess of damages, or of res noviter veniens ad notitiam, or for such other cause as is essential to the justice of the case.”
Mrs Helen Strang Nash or Watson, Slam-annan, widow of James M'Ghie Watson, insurance agent there, and Miss Ruth Watson, his daughter, brought an action against the North British Railway Company concluding for payment of £2000 as damages for the death of the said J. M. Watson.
They averred that Mr Watson was run over and killed at Slamannan station, and that the accident was due to the defective lighting of that station.
The case was tried before the Lord President and a jury, and the jury returned a unanimous verdict for the defenders.
One of the jurymen who tried the case was George Deans, Wellington Street, Portobello, who was in the employment of the North British Railway Company. The pursuers and their counsel and agents, and the counsel and agent for the defenders, were not aware of this at the time of the trial. Deans was employed in the engineer's department of the company, and his duties were mainly to check gas and water meters. He had nothing to do with Slamannan Station, which is lighted by oil-lamps. The number of persons employed by the North British Railway is about 18,500.
The pursuers moved the Court to grant a rule for a new trial on the ground that Deans had served on the jury.
The Court granted a rule.
Argued for the pursuers—It was essential to the justice of the case that there should be a new trial. No juryman could sit in a case in which he had an interest— Bailey v. Macaulay and Others, July 11, 1849, 19 L.J. Q.B. 73. The disqualification of a juryman was a sufficient ground for setting aside a verdict— Bailey, supra; Sutherland v. Prestongrange Coal Company, March 2, 1888, 15 R. 494. At common law the relationship of master and servant was sufficient to disqualify. Coke upon Littleton 157, cited in Chitty's Archbold's Practice, 14th ed. i, 619, where it is laid down by Lord Coke that it is a ground of challenge propter affectum. The defenders were not
Page: 253↓
bound to establish that the verdict was contrary to evidence, or that the mind of the juryman was in fact biassed. Possibility of bias was enough, as in the cases of declinature by judges. Even stronger were the rules which disqualified justices of the peace or county councillors, and when these rules were disregarded the decision could not stand— Blaik v. Anderson, December 20, 1899, 7 S.L.T. No. 302, where the English cases are collected and discussed in the opinion of Lord Stormonth Darling. [ Lord Kinnear referred to Wildridge v. Anderson, November 26, 1897, 2 Adam 399, 25 R., J.C. 27.] Argued for the defenders—The pursuers must show that it was essential to the justice of the case that there should be a new trial. That was the statutory provision to which they appealed. But they did not dispute that the verdict was right. How then could it be essential to the justice of the case that there should be a new trial? Apart from this a merely nominal interest on the part of one of the jury, as here, was not a ground for setting aside the verdict. No statute disqualified a man in the employment of one of the parties from serving on a jury, nor was there any rule of law to that effect. The right to challenge a juryman, referred to by Lord Coke in the passage cited by the pursuers, was an entirely different matter. The only case in which a verdict had ever been upset on the ground of interest on the part of one of the jury was that of Bailey (cited supra). There the juryman was practically trying his own case. Sutherland v. Prestongrange Coal Company (cited supra) did not touch the present case, and the precise limitations of the principles on which that case was decided were shown in Hope v. Gemmell, November 17, 1898, 1 F. 74. It was the duty of the pursuers to find out who the jury were, and to challenge those to whom they objected.
It appears to me that none of the grounds for a new trial enumerated in section 6 of 55 Geo. III. c. 42, exist in this case, nor do any of the authorities cited support the pursuer's contention. In the English case of the provisional committee man ( Bailey, 19 L.J., Q.B. 73), the juryman was substantially sitting as a judge in his own case, because if the defendants, who were also members of the provisional committee, were liable, so was he. Again, the case of Sutherland v. Prestongrange Coal Co. ( 15 R. 494,) was pressed upon us, but the circumstances of it were entirely different from those of the present case. There a juryman, while sworn to give a verdict according to the evidence led before the jury, went on an intervening day
Page: 254↓
On these grounds I am of opinion that no sufficient cause has been shown for setting aside the verdict of the jury, especially as it is not alleged that that verdict was wrong.
Something was said as to the duty of the parties to challenge persons called to serve on a jury who may have an interest in the case. I do not know what the practice is now, but the agents used to make inquiries in regard to the jurymen before the trial, and to instruct counsel to challenge those to whom they objected when they were called to enter the jury-box. I do not wish to make it a ground of judgment that this was not done in the present case, but I think it would be very undesirable to encourage a practice of not making inquiries as to the jurymen summoned with a view to challenging those who were regarded as objectionable when they were called to serve, and afterwards seeking to have the verdict set aside on the ground that one of them was interested in the case.
If, then, it was not incompetent that this juryman should sit, in the sense of his presence vitiating the whole proceedings, is a new trial essential to the justice of the case? In the English case of Bailey v. Macaulay the juryman was practically a party to the case, because a verdict against the defendants would have been really a verdict against him. That case comes under the head of a cause essential to the justice of the case. But this is not a case of the same kind; the interest here is of the most shadowy description. What interest has a clerk in a railway company that the company should succeed in an action of damages brought against them? But here comes in the importance, as your Lordship has remarked, of considering the ground on which alone a new trial here could be granted. It must he essential to the justice of the case. Now, the verdict was right—that is not disputed—and it is not said that the presence of Deans on the jury induced a wrong verdict. How can it then be essential to the justice of the case that it should be set aside?
The case of Sutherland v. Prestongrange Coal Company ( 15 R. 494) was a case where a juryman failed to fulfil his oath to try the case according to the evidence led, and conducted a trial for himself, and saw how the operations which resulted in the accident were carried out. That was held to justify a new trial, but in contrast to that case, where, in Hope v. Gemmell, a juryman went to walk over and look at a road which was in question in a right-of-way case, the motion for a new trial was refused. I do not think these cases bear out the pursuer's contention, and agree with your Lordship that the rule should be discharged.
Page: 255↓
On the whole question I agree with your Lordships that there is no technical reason, and there cannot be any just or equitable reason, for setting aside a just verdict.
The Court discharged the rule and applied the verdict.
Counsel for the Pursuers— M'Lennan— A. M. Anderson. Agents— Donaldson & Nisbet, S.S.C
Counsel for the Defenders— Salvesen, Q.C.— Grierson. Agent— James Watson, S.S.C.