DocketNumber: No. CV92-0339761S
Citation Numbers: 1996 Conn. Super. Ct. 5344-A
Judges: CORRADINO, J.
Filed Date: 9/26/1996
Status: Non-Precedential
Modified Date: 4/18/2021
This motion was then filed in arrest of judgment for extrinsic causes. In the motion, the plaintiff argued that based on what the Court indicated had transpired, the motion should be granted or "In the alternative, the jurors should be subpoenaed and queried about (the foreperson's) remarks." The matter was continued for a hearing on this motion. The defendants then filed a motion for a protective order some two weeks after this verdict was received and this incident occurred. In the motion the defendants requested that the court order that neither party be permitted to speak with any of the jurors prior to any hearing on the motion in arrest of judgment. On a Friday, the Court denied the motion for protective order, did not prohibit parties from talking to jurors but did indicate it would be best if any such interviews took place between the lawyer and investigator and a juror. The Court also gave plaintiff's counsel a continuance of the hearing date from a Monday to a Wednesday, if memory serves me correctly, so he could prepare for a hearing on the motion in arrest for judgment.
At the hearing, on the motion in arrest for judgment, the plaintiff argued that the motion should be granted based solely on what the Court had reported, offered no further evidence as a result of juror interviews and relied on the motion filed some two or three weeks earlier.
The plaintiff in her motion relied on Williams v. Salamone,
The Court cannot conclude on the basis of the information it learned and revealed to counsel that juror misconduct occurred, let alone that the plaintiff suffered prejudice thereby. The Court cannot find that the "probable prejudice" threshold standard has been met, Speed v. Libero,
Under the circumstances presented here, where the statements from the foreperson did not indicate he, despite his feelings, CT Page 5346 could not follow the law or weigh the evidence or that he talked about the case to a non juror member, the court concluded that it should not conduct a fact finding foray on its own. Such an inquiry would necessarily have to go into the thought processes of the jury and even if it were brought out that the foreperson's views about our system were conveyed to other jury members, based on this unfortunate but generic criticism uttered, the Court can not conclude probable prejudice was caused to the plaintiff by such remarks.
Corradino, J.