SUPERIOR COURT OF NEW JERSEY
APPELLATE DIVISION
A-6382-95T2
SHAWN MOHAN and VASA MOHAN,
Plaintiffs,
v.
EXXON CORPORATION, JOHNNY JONES,
HUSKY COMPANY, ABC COMPANY (a
fictitious name), GHI COMPANY
(a fictitious name), JKL COMPANY
(a fictitious name), MNO COMPANY
(a fictitious name), PQR COMPANY
(a fictitious name), STU
COMPANY (a fictitious name),
THUNDER NOZZLES, VWX COMPANY (a
fictitious name),
Defendants,
EXXON CORPORATION,
Third Party Plaintiff/Appellant,
v.
JOHNNY JONES, THUNDER NOZZLES, INC.,
SUBURBAN FIRE EQUIPMENT COMPANY, INC,
and TEN HOEVE BROTHERS, INC.,
Third Party Defendants,
and
HUSKY CORPORATION,
Third Party Defendant/Respondent.
THUNDER NOZZLES, INC.
Fourth Party Plaintiff,
v.
QUALITY NOZZLES OF NEW JERSEY INC.,
Fourth Party Defendant.
HUSKY CORPORATION,
Third Party Plaintiff,
v.
TEXASGULF, INC.,
Third Party Defendants.
Argued January 21, 1998 - Decided February 10, 1998
Before Judges Pressler, Conley and Carchman.
On appeal from Superior Court of New Jersey, Law
Division, Passaic County.
Richard V. Jones argued the cause for appellant Exxon
Corporation (Bressler, Amery & Ross, attorneys;
Charlene C. McHugh, on the brief).
Judith A. Heim argued the cause for respondent Husky
Corporation (Heim, McEnroe & Urciuoli, attorneys; Ms.
Heim, on the brief).
The opinion of the court was delivered by
CARCHMAN, J.S.C. (temporarily assigned).
The jury in this civil case returned a verdict but failed to respond to two written interrogatories which required answers to dispose of the remaining issues in the case. Nevertheless, the jury was dismissed and dispersed. Four days later the trial judge reconvened the jury and instructed the jurors to respond to the two interrogatories. The jury resumed deliberations and reached a verdict. We hold on this appeal that the reconvening of the dismissed and dispersed jury was plain error, and
accordingly, we reverse and remand for a new trial limited to the
issues decided after reconvening the jury.
The relevant facts are not complex. On October 9, 1987,
plaintiff Shawn Mohan (Mohan) was sixteen years old and employed
by defendant Exxon Corporation (Exxon) to pump gasoline at a
gasoline station owned and operated by Exxon. After pumping
gasoline into a customer's automobile, Mohan was removing the
hose to return it to one of the station's pumps when the metal
"swivel" connecting the hose nozzle to the hose separated. This
caused the nozzle to separate from the hose, which caused
gasoline to discharge from the hose's open end and spray onto
Mohan's clothing. After completing the sale transaction, Mohan
walked toward the station's office to change out of his gasoline-soaked uniform. On the way, defendant Johnny Jones (Jones) a
"bystander" on the station's premises, lit and threw a match at
Mohan, setting his clothing on fire. Mohan was severely burned.
Mohan and Vasa Mohan, his father, sued Exxon and others.See footnote 1
Exxon settled with Mohan for $440,000, and Exxon continued its
contribution action against Husky Corporation (Husky), which had
designed and manufactured the swivel, and Thunder Nozzles, Inc.
(Thunder or Thunder Nozzles), which had inspected the station's
pumps on October 9, 1987.See footnote 2
On Friday, April 19, 1996, the jury returned its verdict by
answering a nine-question verdict sheet. In answer to question
nine, the jury apportioned 70" of the liability to Exxon and 30" to Jones. The jury, however, did not answer questions three and
four, which addressed Exxon's design-defect claim against Husky.
The jury's verdict was taken by the court clerk. After
responding to questions one through eight, excluding questions
three and four, the jury foreperson announced the jury's answer
to question nine:
COURT CLERK: On question number nine; what
amount of liability do you attribute to Husky
Corporation?
JURY FORELADY: Oh, percentages?
THE COURT: Yes.
JURY FORELADY: Husky zero.
COURT CLERK: As to Exxon Corporation?
JURY FORELADY: Seventy.
COURT CLERK: As to Thunder Nozzles?
JURY FORELADY: Zero.
COURT CLERK: As to Johnny Jones?
JURY FORELADY: Thirty.
COURT CLERK: And, is that verdict unanimous?
JURY FORELADY: Say that again?
THE COURT: Well, that -- that's not a
verdict. That's -- okay, that's all right.
COURT CLERK: You can be seated.
The trial judge then announced:
THE COURT: All right, ladies and gentlemen
of the jury, we thank you; we thank you for
your time; we thank you for the sacrifices
that you've made. The litigants thank you,
because they have had an opportunity to fully
present to you the facts of this case. We've
had an opportunity to analyze those facts,
and to resolve the issue.
So, with that you're excused.
After the jury was dismissed by the judge, Exxon's counsel
requested an opportunity to see the verdict sheet. He observed
that the jury had failed to answer interrogatories three and
four. This information was conveyed to the judge, whereupon the
trial judge returned to court and noted that the jurors had
already been dismissed.
Verdict sheet questions three and four read as follows:
3. Do you find that Husky
Corporation's Swivel 1 + 6 design
was defective:
YES: NO:
If your answer is "YES," please
proceed to question #4. If your
answer is "NO," please end your
deliberations as to Husky
Corporation.
4. Was the design defect a proximate
cause and substantial factor of
Shawn Mohan's injuries?
YES: NO:
If your answer is "YES," please
proceed to question #5. If your
answer is "NO," please end your
deliberations as to Husky
Corporation.
After an ex parte conversation with Exxon's counsel on
Friday, April 19, 1996, the judge decided to "bring back the jury
for Monday morning, and let them deliberate on that question of
defective design," because "I don't know what their answers would
have been to three and four." The judge asked Exxon's counsel to
advise Husky's counsel about this.
Thereafter, the judge rescheduled the matter for Tuesday
morning, April 23, 1996, at which time the judge noted that he
had "reconvened the jury for the purpose of consideration of
questions 3 and 4." With only Husky's counsel present in court,
the judge gave the jurors the filled-in interrogatory sheet and
an unfilled-in copy of that interrogatory sheet, and he asked
them "to complete questions 3 and 4 predicated upon the
instructions previously given to you by the court," and "to use
only the evidence and the instructions of this Court that were
given to you on Thursday of last week."
After the jury retired to deliberate, Exxon's counsel
entered the courtroom. Thereafter, the jury sent out a note,
which (in part) said: "We have answered question 3 and 4. Yes
to 3 and no to 4." When the judge indicated that, in response to
this note, he intended to have the jury "come out and give [the]
verdict," Exxon's counsel requested a sidebar conference, but the
judge refused his request, because he wanted to "take the verdict
first." The jury returned to the courtroom, and the foreperson
announced that the jury had answered "yes" to question three, and
that the jury had answered "no" to question four. Following
this, the judge again discharged the jury. On May 3, 1996, the
judge entered a judgment dismissing Exxon's complaint against
Husky, based on the "jury having found no cause for action in
favor of defendant Husky Corporation and against Exxon
Corporation."
Exxon filed a motion for judgment notwithstanding the
verdict or, in the alternative, a new trial. On May 28, 1996,
the judge denied this motion. On July 2, 1996, Exxon filed its
notice of appeal.
Although our courts have not addressed the issue of
reconvening a dismissed and dispersed jury in the context of a
civil case, we have addressed the issue in criminal matters. In
State v. Brandenburg,
38 N.J. Super. 561 (Cty. Ct. 1956), the
trial court dismissed the jury after it returned a verdict of
"not guilty" in a criminal case. After the jury had left the
courtroom, some of the jurors complained that the foreman had not
announced the correct verdict. The trial judge reconvened the
jury which, after deliberation, announced that "it could not
agree on a verdict." On defendant's motion, the trial judge
deleted from the trial record the entry reflecting the jury's
inability to agree upon a verdict and entered a finding of "not
guilty."
The judge concluded that the "words `the jury is discharged'
do not in themselves terminate the case." Id. at 563. The
critical fact was that the jury had been dispersed. The jury had
left the room, and the jurors were no longer in the presence or
control of the court. Id. at 567.
To all intents and purposes the jury ceased to be
a unit. In the opinion of this court, whether they had
contact with others during the interval between
discharge and reassembling is immaterial, for they did
have an opportunity to do so.
[Id. at 566.]
In State v. Fungone,
134 N.J. Super. 531 (App. Div. 1975),
certif. denied,
70 N.J. 526 (1976), we relied on the reasoning of
the court in Brandenburg in overturning a verdict which was
based, in part, on a discharged jury being reconvened to
determine the value of a vehicle which was the subject of a
larceny conviction. We noted:
The essential factor in determining whether a
discharged jury can be reassembled in order to further
deliberate or report on verdict already reached is
whether it has dispersed, left the jury box or
courtroom, and has had an opportunity to mingle with
court attendants, other jurors, or third persons. The
fact that the court has announced the jury's discharge
will not foreclose subsequent proceedings by the jury
if its members have remained in the jury box or
otherwise within the continuous control of the court.
. . . .
In the present case there is no question but that
the jury dispersed. They were reassembled on the
morning following their discharge. Clearly, in these
circumstances the efforts of the trial judge to correct
the defective verdict was of no avail.
[Id. at 535-36.]
The operative element in determining when and whether a
jury's functions are at an end is not when the jury is told it is
discharged but when the jury is dispersed, that is, has left the
jury box, the court room or the court house and is no longer
under the guidance, control and jurisdiction of the court. This
clearly is the rule in criminal cases; there is no reason why the
same rule should not apply in civil cases as well. Our focus is
not limited to the issues to be decided by the jury. Our
objective is to insure the integrity of the jury system. Whether
the issues before the jury are civil or criminal in nature, the
admonitions of the trial judge restrict jurors' conduct while
they are within the jurisdiction and control of the court even
when the jurors are dispersed during deliberations. See Pessini
v. Massie,
115 N.J. Super. 555 (Law Div. 1955), aff'd sub nom.
Eberhardt v. Vanarelli,
121 N.J. Super. 293 (App. Div. 1972); R.
1:8-6(b) ("[f]ollowing the instructing of the jury by the court
and during deliberations, the court may, in its discretion, in
both civil and criminal actions, permit the dispersal of the jury
for the night, for meals, and during other authorized
intermissions in the deliberations."). This is markedly
different from jurors who have been discharged from their
responsibilities as jurors and now return to society to resume
their normal lives unfettered by restriction or limitation
imposed by the court.
Other jurisdictions have addressed the issue in the context
of a civil case. In Nails v. S & R, Inc., 639 A.2d 660 (Md.
1994), the trial court, after the jury had rendered a verdict but
not yet left the jury box, submitted a supplemental verdict sheet
for consideration. The Maryland Court of Appeals concluded that
"in a civil case, after a jury has rendered an initial verdict,
the trial judge ordinarily may ask the jury to amend, clarify or
supplement the verdict in order to resolve an ambiguity,
inconsistency, incompleteness, or similar problem with the
initial verdict, up until the jury has been discharged and has
left the courtroom." Id. at 667 (emphasis added). See also
Sierra Foods v. Williams,
816 P.2d 466 (Nev. 1991) (recognizing
the general rule that a trial judge may not reconvene a jury once
it has been dismissed, but since the jury had not left the
courthouse it was under the de facto control of the court); David
J. Marchitelli, Annotation, Propriety of Reassembling Jury to
Amend, Correct, Clarify or Otherwise Change Verdict After
Discharge or Separation at Conclusion of Civil Case,
19 A.L.R.5th
622, 648 (1994).
Once the jury is beyond the control of the court and
relieved from the adherence to and strictures of court
instruction, the jury is no longer a functioning entity capable
of resurrection at the call of a judicial officer. We do not
consider it of any moment that individual jurors may not have
discussed the case with anyone or been subject to improper or any
influences. We are mindful of the admonition set forth in Sumers
v. United States,
11 F.2d 583 (4th Cir.), cert. denied, 271 U.S.
681,
46 S. Ct. 632,
70 L. Ed.2d 1149 (1926), where the court
noted:
The duties of a jury ordinarily are presumed
to be at an end when its verdict has been
rendered, received, and published. If
thereupon, with or without further positive
direction of the court, it is allowed to
disperse and mingle with the bystanders, with
time and opportunity for discussion of the
case, whether such discussion be had or not,
the discharge of the jury becomes final, and
its functions are at an end.See footnote 3
[Id. at 586.]
In the present case, not only was the jury dispersed, it was beyond the control and instruction of the trial judge for a period of four days. We conclude that the jury determination as to questions three and four were ultra vires and cannot serve as
the basis for a resolution of the issues presented by those
questions. We further conclude that the matter must be retried
as to those issues only and the case will be remanded for that
purpose. Obviously, if the jury on retrial, answers the
questions in the affirmative, then the liability of the
tortfeasors must be apportioned, so that to the extent the new
trial requires proofs as to the liability of Exxon and Jones,
proofs may be adduced as to their liability as well.
We comment on an additional matter. In both the jury charge
and special interrogatories, the trial judge joined "proximate
cause" and "a substantial factor" conjunctively ("[w]as the
design defect a proximate cause and a substantial factor of Shawn
Mohan's injuries?"). On the retrial, and to avoid any confusion,
the jury instruction and written interrogatories should refer to
either "proximate cause" or "a substantial factor." See, e.g.,
Model Jury Charges (Civil), 8.20 (D), "Comparative Negligence:
Proximate Cause."
Exxon raises additional claims of trial error which we have
carefully reviewed. After consideration of the entire record, we
conclude that the claims are without merit. R. 2:11-3(e)(1)(B)
and (E).
Reversed and remanded for a new trial in accordance with
this opinion.
Footnote: 1Because Mohan was sixteen years old at the time of the
accident, he was not barred by the Workers' Compensation Act from
recovery for negligence as against his employer. See N.J.S.A.
34:15-10.
Footnote: 2Jones was never served by Mohan, Exxon or Husky. Shortly
before trial, PCS Phosphate (formerly known as Texasgulf, Inc.,)
served Jones "with a Summons and Fourth-Party Complaint."
However, Jones did not file an answer thereto and did not appear
at trial.
Footnote: 3In deciding a related issue of whether the failure to
answer written interrogatories invalidated a general verdict, we
affirmed the trial court's denial of a motion for a new trial.
Bree v. Jalbert, 91 N.J. Super. 38 (App. Div. 1966), aff'g
87 N.J. Super. 452 (Law Div. 1965). Judge Botter, then sitting in
the Law Division, alluded to the inherent danger of reconvening a
dispersed jury:
If the claim of error had been timely made
known to the court, the court could have
taken steps to cure the alleged error . . . .
When the court, without objection, has
accepted a general verdict despite unanswered
interrogatories the jurors, who have returned
to the community at large, should not be
recalled for examination on the basis for
their verdict.
[87 N.J. Super. at 478.]
Cf. Roland v. Brunswick Corp., 215 N.J. Super. 240 (App. Div. 1987) ("[T]he jury had a right so to reconsider and correct its own verdict while the matter is still before it.").