LD 1652
pg. 1
LD 1652 Title Page An Act Regarding the Number of Jurors Required To Render a Verdict in a Civil T... LD 1652 Title Page
Download Bill Text
LR 2267
Item 1

 
Be it enacted by the People of the State of Maine as follows:

 
Sec. 1. 14 MRSA §1204, sub-§1, as enacted by PL 2003, c. 299, §1, is
amended to read:

 
1. Number of members. The court shall seat a jury of either
8 or 9 members, and all jurors shall participate in the verdict
unless excused for good cause by the court. Unless the parties
otherwise stipulate, the verdict must be decided by the unanimous
votes of at least 3/4 2/3 of the jurors participating in the
verdict and no verdict may be taken from a jury reduced to fewer
than 7 members.

 
SUMMARY

 
Public Law 2003, chapter 299 revised the laws governing civil
juries to allow jurors chosen as alternates who hear the entire
case to participate in rendering a verdict. Because the new law
increased the potential number of voting jurors, the new law
inadvertently abrogated an attribute of the civil trial system,
which allowed for the existence of up to 2 dissenting jurors
before the declaration of a mistrial. Under the new law, the
number of jurors participating in the verdict may be 7, 8 or 9
and the verdict must be reached by the unanimous votes of 3/4 of
the jurors.

 
This bill requires that at least 2/3 of the jurors
participating must unanimously agree in the verdict. The purpose
of this bill is to avoid the expense and inefficiency that would
be associated with an increased number of declared mistrials and
to restore to the civil trial system the potential to have 2
dissenting jurors without the necessity of declaring a mistrial
and without increasing beyond 6 the number or jurors who must
unanimously agree to render a verdict. Only in the event that
the jury is reduced to 7 members would a verdict be decided by
the unanimous votes of fewer than 6 jurors.


LD 1652 Title Page Top of Page LD 1652 Title Page