Long v. Brusco Tug & Barge, Inc. ( 2016 )


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    IN THE SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON
    BRIAN LONG,
    Petitioner,
    NO. 90976-8
    v.
    BRUSCO TUG & BARGE, INC., a                         ENBANC
    Washington corporation; BRUSCO
    MARITIME CO., a Washington
    corporation; and BO BRUSCO and his                          FEB 2 ~:; 2016
    Filed - - -----
    marital community,
    Respondents.
    STEPHENS, J.-Brian Long appeals the denial of his motion for a new trial
    based on a claim of juror misconduct. The question before us is whether the juror
    declarations Long submitted in support of his motion describe actual misconduct by
    jurors or instead reveal matters that inhere in the verdict.      We conclude the
    declarations expose the jury's deliberative process behind closed doors and cannot
    be considered to impeach the verdict. Accordingly, we affirm the trial court and the
    Court of Appeals' conclusion that Long is not entitled to a new trial.
    Long (Brian) v. Brusco Tug & Barge, Inc., eta!., 90976-8
    FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY
    Long sued his former employer, Bo Brusco and Brusco Tug & Barge Inc.
    (Brusco), alleging wrongful termination in retaliation for opposing Brusco's
    discriminatory conduct against another employee. The underlying facts were hotly
    disputed and centered on Brusco's response to Long's having hired as a deckhand
    Anthony Morgan, an individual who had a prosthetic leg. Morgan was not a party
    to this lawsuit. As Judge William Downing explained in his order denying Long's
    motion for a new trial, "It was repeatedly conveyed to the jury that whether or not,
    in hindsight, Mr. Morgan was discriminated against was not their concern; rather,
    their focus should begin with the question of whether or not Mr. Long, at that time,
    had a reasonable belief that Mr. Morgan was being discriminated against." Clerk's
    Papers (CP) at 1948.
    The reasonable belief element of Long's claim was not strongly disputed.
    Indeed, Brusco conceded that Long reasonably believed Morgan was discriminated
    against. 19 Verbatim Report of Proceedings (VRP) (May 7, 2013) at 2329-30. "The
    elements that developed as constituting the crux of the jury's work were (a) whether
    the plaintiff engaged in opposition conduct (or did his support for Mr. Morgan cease
    once the discriminatory act was done?), (b) whether the plaintiff suffered an adverse
    employment action (or was he given a lateral transfer to a higher paying position?),
    and (c) whether any such adverse employment action was taken with a retaliatory
    motive (or was it because of his missing a ship assist job?)." CP at 1949. To
    establish his claim, Long needed to prevail at trial on all of these disputed issues.
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    Long (Brian) v. Brusco Tug & Barge, Inc., et al., 90976-8
    Following a two-week trial and at the end of two days of deliberations, the
    jury returned a verdict in favor of Brusco, by a vote of 10-2. Long's attorneys
    thereafter interviewed jurors who were willing to talk, and secured declarations from
    4 of the 12. In support of his motion for a new trial, Long submitted the 4 jurors'
    declarations, which address various aspects of the trial and deliberations. CP at
    17 68-79' 1780-92. 1
    The trial court denied Long's motion, and the Court of Appeals affirmed in an
    unpublished opinion. Long v. Brusco, noted at 
    182 Wash. App. 1052
    , 
    2014 WL 3937336
    , at *7. We granted Long's petition for review. 182 Wn.2d 1021,345 P.3d
    785 (2015).
    ANALYSIS
    Central to our jury system is the secrecy of jury deliberations. Courts are
    appropriately forbidden from receiving information to impeach a verdict based on
    revealing the details of the jury's deliberations. Thus, in considering whether to
    declare a mistrial based on alleged juror misconduct, the first question is whether the
    facts alleged "inhere[] in the verdict"; this is a question of law we review de
    1
    All four declarations address statements made during deliberations by juror 12
    (and two mention a second juror) regarding whether a person with a prosthesis could
    lawfully and safely work on a boat deck. Additionally, three of the declarations address
    statements made by jurors about what Long could earn as a firefighter or emergency
    medical technician. CP at 1781, 1785, 1791. Two of the declarations also address the
    jury's reaction to a photograph defense counsel displayed of Bo Brusco and his wife on
    their honeymoon. CP at 1782, 1791. Although Long's argument now focuses solely on
    juror statements concerning the first issue, the motion for new trial raised a separate
    allegation of juror misconduct concerning damages, as well as issues of misconduct by
    counsel. Long offered the juror declarations in support of all of these claims.
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    Long (Brian) v. Brusco Tug & Barge, Inc., et al., 90976-8
    novo. Ayers v. Johnson & Johnson Baby Prods. Co., 
    117 Wash. 2d 747
    , 768, 
    818 P.2d 1337
    (1991).
    Our case law recognizes two tests for determining whether facts in a juror
    declaration inhere in the verdict. Under the first test, facts "linked to the juror's
    motive, intent, or belief, or describ[ing] their effect upon" the jury inhere in the
    verdict and cannot be considered. Gardner v. Malone, 
    60 Wash. 2d 836
    , 841,
    376 P.2d 651
    (1962).     This includes facts touching on the mental processes by which
    individual jurors arrived at the verdict, the effect the evidence may have had on the
    jurors, and the weight particular jurors may have given to particular evidence. Cox
    v. Charles Wright Academy, Inc., 
    70 Wash. 2d 173
    , 179-80, 
    422 P.2d 515
    (1967). A
    second test asks whether facts alleged in juror declarations can be rebutted by other
    testimony without probing any juror's mental processes. 
    Gardner, 60 Wash. 2d at 841
    .
    Circumstances in which it is '"universally agreed"' that matters inhere in the
    verdict include when "'one or more jurors misunderstood the judge's instruction; or
    were influenced by an illegal paper or by an improper remark of a fellow juror; ...
    or had miscalculated accounts by errors of fact or of law."' 
    Id. at 841-42
    (footnote
    omitted) (quoting 8 JOHN HENRY WIGMORE, EVIDENCE IN TRIALS AT COMMON LAW
    681 (McNaughton rev. ed. 1961)). The policy behind refusing to consider matters
    that inhere in the verdict is to protect the sanctity of the jury room by '"prevent[ing]
    the jury from divulging what considerations entered into its deliberations or
    controlled its action[s]."' 
    Id. at 843
    (quoting Md. Cas. Co. v. Seattle Elec. Co., 
    75 Wash. 430
    , 436, 
    134 P. 1097
    (1913)). At the same time, the rule "'does not close
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    Long (Brian) v. Brusco Tug & Barge, Inc., et al., 90976-8
    what is often the only avenue to a showing of actual facts constituting misconduct."'
    
    Id. (quoting Md.
    Cas., 75 Wash. at 436).
    Only if a court concludes that juror declarations allege actual facts constituting
    misconduct, rather than matters inhering in the verdict, does it proceed to "decide
    the effect the proved misconduct could have had upon the jury." 
    Id. at 841.
    A trial
    court's decision in this regard will not be reversed on appeal unless the court abused
    its discretion. State v. Balisok, 
    123 Wash. 2d 114
    , 117, 
    866 P.2d 631
    (1994).
    As noted, Long submitted declarations from 4 of the 12 empaneled jurors. He
    argues that the "unrebutted juror declarations prove that two jurors instructed the
    jury about outside Maritime and Coast Guard laws," and that their statements
    introduced into the deliberations "definitive legal premises" comparable to
    erroneous jury instn1ctions. Suppl. Br. ofPet'r Long at 8-9. We find the declarations
    to be more equivocal than Long suggests. We conclude they reveal matters that
    inhere in the verdict. Accordingly, there is no need to further consider the effect the
    alleged statements may have had on the verdict.
    We begin by noting that the four juror declarations are not uniform in their
    description of the facts Long relies on to establish misconduct. For example, two of
    the declarations omit any reference to the second juror alleged to have introduced
    "definitive legal premises" into the deliberations. CP at 1783-89. With respect to
    juror 12, who is mentioned in all the declarations, the characterization of his actual
    statements varies among the four accounts. All give the impression that juror 12
    was persuasive, opining that he "presented his position well," CP at 1781, that he
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    Long (Brian) v. Brusco Tug & Barge, Inc., et al., 90976-8
    was "very authoritative about the content of his presentation," CP at 1784, and that
    he "persuasively commanded the floor," CP at 1788. And, they all note that he
    mentioned he had spent many years in the navy and was familiar with maritime laws,
    navy rules, boats, and boat safety. CP at 1780-92. But, exactly what juror 12 said
    about any applicable laws is less clear. For one thing, a second juror, identified in
    two of the declarations as "Robert P." or "Bob P.," reportedly offered his view that
    coast guard law would not allow a person with a prosthesis to work on the deck of a
    ship or boat. CP at 1781, 1791. This same juror is described as having "applied his
    experience in construction" to offer opinions on "sending people home from job sites
    if they didn't have their physical or [urinary analysis test] completed." CP at 1791.
    Reading the declarations as a whole, it is difficult to ascertain the "definitive
    legal premises" that were allegedly introduced into the deliberations. Was it that
    navy and coast guard rules (or maritime law generally) disallow people with
    prosthetic limbs from working on ship decks; or instead that juror 12, being familiar
    with maritime laws generally, was unaware of any law that would have allowed
    Long to hire Morgan as a deckhand; 2 or that it showed bad judgment to hire someone
    2
    One juror said juror 12 talked about "Navy laws, and that none of the Coast
    Guard/Ocean/Maritime laws would allow anyone with prosthesis to work on the deck of
    either a ship or boat," adding that "Robert P." agreed as to coast guard law. CP at 1781.
    A second juror said juror 12 "talked at length about maritime laws, navy rules and repeated
    multiple times that no laws existed that would allow a deckhand with a prosthetic leg to be
    on a boat." CP at 1784. A third declared that juror 12 "started by telling us that he had
    spent many years on ships and in the U.S. Navy and knew about the law, and about boats,
    and about safety. He said that he did not know of any law on the books including the Coast
    Guard laws that would every [sic] let someone [with a prosthesis] work as a deckhand on
    a boat." CP at 1788. The fourth juror stated, "Dave [juror 12] mentioned that he spent
    many years in the Navy and is quite familiar with the laws of the organization and stated
    that there would be no way that theN avy (or other maritime organizations such as the Coast
    -6-
    Long (Brian) v. Brusco Tug & Barge, Inc., et al., 90976-8
    with a prosthesis to work on a deck; 3 or something else? Indeed, one declaration
    states that the "point [juror 12] emphasized the most" was that "[h]e knew from
    serving on ships that boats are very dangerous, and that someone like Anthony
    Morgan should not be on a boat by law." CP at 1788. Although this statement
    relates a general sense of "law," it also reflects juror 12' s (strongly held) view based
    on his personal experience. 4
    We conclude that the matters revealed in the declarations inhere in the verdict
    and cannot be considered. Although portions of the declarations identify (in varying
    accounts) statements made by fellow jurors touching on questions of fact or law,
    these statements were expressions of personal belief based on life experiences.
    During jury deliberations, jurors may "rely on their personal life experience to
    evaluate the evidence presented at trial." Breckenridge v. Valley Gen. Hasp., 
    150 Wash. 2d 197
    , 199 n.3, 
    75 P.3d 944
    (2003). Juror 12's relevant life experiences were
    Guard) would have let a man with a prosthetic leg work on the deck of a ship .... Bob P.
    agreed." CP at 1791.
    3
    One juror described juror 12 as having stated that "[Long's] hiring Morgan showed
    very bad judgment." CP at 1789.
    4
    Apart from their varying accounts of the facts, it is also notable that the four
    declarations reveal more about each juror's impression of their fellow juror's statements
    than the content of the statements. One juror observed that juror 12 "presented his position
    well, and relied on notes that appeared organized and prepared in advance." CP at 1781.
    She stated, "I felt the expectation from [juror 12] to not interrupt." I d. Another juror noted
    that juror 12 was "very authoritative" about the content of his presentation, even describing
    his manner as "very aggressive." CP at 1784. A third juror felt that juror 12 "very
    persuasively commanded the floor," and was "very convincing," stating, "It really seemed
    to turn things around and get things heated up when he was done." CP at 1788. With
    respect to "Bob P.," whose statements on this and other issues are identified, one juror
    declaration stated, "He became quite intense and vociferous several times which seemed
    to dominate the attitude in the room." CP at 1791. These statements all describe the
    declarants' perceptions of the other jurors' remarks, which unquestionably inhere in the
    verdict.
    -7-
    Long (Brian) v. Brusco Tug & Barge, Inc., et al., 90976-8
    known to both parties, as he disclosed during voir dire that he was a retired member
    of the navy and an avid boater. See 1 VRP (Apr. 22, 2013) at 172 (juror 12 stated:
    "I'm retired from the U.S. Navy.... [M]y favorite activities are boating on Puget
    Sound, motorcycling, backpacking, and being a grandfather.")                Neither party
    exercised a peremptory strike against him. Drawing from his personal experiences,
    it is unsurprising that juror 12 opined about the legality and safety of allowing
    someone with a prosthetic leg to work on a ship. We have been reluctant to find
    juror misconduct when a juror injects personal knowledge and experience known to
    the parties into deliberations. McCoyv. Kent Nursery, Inc., 163 Wn. App. 744,763-
    64, 
    260 P.3d 967
    (2011) (finding no misconduct when juror drew on disclosed
    background in real estate and piping in tort action involving a failed pipe drainage
    system); Richards v. Overtake Hasp. Med. Ctr., 
    59 Wash. App. 266
    , 274, 
    796 P.2d 737
    (1990) (finding no misconduct when jurors applied specialized medical
    knowledge during deliberations because that information was disclosed during voir
    dire). 5
    This case is similar to others in which we have rejected attempts to set aside
    a jury verdict on the ground that a juror brought specialized experience to bear on
    jury deliberations. In Breckenridge, the plaintiff sued her physician for medical
    5
    Had any jurors failed to disclose their relevant background, this may have been a
    basis for finding misconduct. See Robinson v. Safeway Stores, Inc., 
    113 Wash. 2d 154
    , 158-
    59, 
    776 P.2d 676
    (1989) (misconduct when venire member failed to disclose bias against
    Californians in personal injury action by a California resident); Gordon v. Deer Park Sch.
    Dist. No. 414,71 Wn.2d 119, 121,426 P.2d 824 (1967) (misconduct when venire member
    failed to disclose prejudice in favor of schoolteachers in a personal injury action against a
    schoolteacher).
    -8-
    Long (Brian) v. Brusco Tug & Barge, Inc., et al., 90976-8
    negligence after she suffered a brain aneurysm, alleging that he "should have ordered
    a CT (computerized tomography) scan" during her emergency room 
    visit. 150 Wash. 2d at 198-99
    . Following a defense verdict, the plaintiff alleged juror misconduct
    because one of the jurors "related his experience with his wife's migraines during
    jury deliberations, comparing her symptoms to [the plaintiffs symptoms]." 
    Id. at 199.
    The juror also opined that the defendant was not negligent in treating the
    plaintiff because his wife received similar treatment. 
    Id. at 206
    ("Because [the juror]
    felt that his wife's symptoms were similar to [the plaintiffs] and his wife had not
    been given aCT scan, [the juror] believed that [the physician] was not negligent in
    his diagnosis and treatment of [the plaintiff]."). We concluded that the juror's
    statements inhered in the verdict because the juror used his experience with his
    wife's migraine headaches to evaluate the evidence presented at trial. 
    Id. In State
    v. McJ(enzie, this court reversed an order granting a new trial
    premised in part on juror misconduct.         
    56 Wash. 2d 897
    , 
    355 P.2d 834
    (1960).
    Concerning an eminent domain claim, we held that the trial judge improperly
    considered a juror declaration stating that "during the course of deliberations, one of
    the other jurors had argued (despite the trial court's instruction to the contrary) that,
    as the juror understood the law, respondent had no right of access to primary state
    highway No. 18, for which compensation should be paid by the [S]tate." !d. at 900.
    Finding the matter attested to inhered in the verdict, though clearly a statement of
    the law, we "rather summarily dispose[ d)" of the claim of misconduct. Id.; see also
    Johnston v. Sound Transfer Co., 
    53 Wash. 2d 630
    , 631-32, 
    335 P.2d 598
    (1959) (in
    -9-
    Long (Brian) v. Brusco Tug & Barge, Inc., et al., 90976-8
    action for injuries sustained while horseback riding, the fact that two jurors relayed
    their experiences about horseback riding inhered in the verdict); Marvin v. Yates, 
    26 Wash. 50
    , 60,66 P. 131 (1901) (affidavit thatjuryused improper method to calculate
    damages inhered in the verdict).
    Like the juror statements at issue in these prior cases, the juror statements here
    inhered in the verdict because they reflected personal beliefs based on life
    experiences. It is true that juror 12 and Robert P. sometimes declared their views as
    a matter of fact or law; their fellow jurors-or at least the four who signed
    declarations-understood them to believe that a person with a prosthetic leg could
    not lawfully work as a deckhand. But, attaching the word "law" to their remarks,
    without more, does not change the fact that the jurors naturally used their life
    experiences to evaluate Long's wrongful termination claim. We cannot know their
    intent and are not allowed to probe any juror's thought processes. See 
    Ayers, 117 Wash. 2d at 768
    ("[J]uror affidavits may not be used for the purpose of contesting the
    thought processes involved in reaching a verdict.").
    The circumstances here stand in contrast to those in which we have granted a
    new trial on the ground that empaneled jurors improperly introduced extrinsic
    evidence into jury deliberations. In such cases, the juror statements were plainly not
    matters of opinion based on personal experience, but expressions oflaw or fact based
    on outside sources. See, e.g., Bouton-Perkins Lumber Co. v. Huston, 
    81 Wash. 678
    ,
    680, 
    143 P. 146
    (1914) (finding juror misconduct when, during deliberations, one
    juror "produced a pamphlet which purported to contain the forest protection laws of
    -10-
    Long (Brian) v. Brusco Tug & Barge, Inc., et al., 90976-8
    this state, and that portions of the pamphlet were read and commented upon");
    Adkins v. Alum. Co. of Am., 
    110 Wash. 2d 128
    , 131, 
    750 P.2d 1257
    , 
    756 P.2d 142
    (1988) (granting new trial due to misconduct of bailiff and jury, where bailiff
    provided jury with Black's Law Dictionary to look up definitions of "negligence"
    and "proximate cause"). Such misconduct warrants a new trial, just as surely as
    when an empaneled juror introduces into deliberations extrinsic facts about one of
    the parties. See, e.g., State v. Parker, 25 Wash. 405,410, 
    65 P. 776
    (1901) (granting
    new trial due to one juror's statements during deliberations that he knew the
    defendant to be a member of a gang and to have been implicated in a murder; the
    juror had falsely denied any knowledge during voir dire). Here, we have only the
    somewhat conflicting declarations of four jurors, which characterize what one or two
    of their fellow jurors said based on their disclosed experiences. To consider such
    declarations would open the door to the impeachment of verdicts any time jurors
    make categorical assertions about what they believe the law to be based on their
    personal experience. This would undermine our "long held and cherished ambition
    [of] rendering ... final and definitive judgments." 
    Cox, 70 Wash. 2d at 180
    ; see also
    Alger v. City of Mukilteo, 
    107 Wash. 2d 541
    , 551, 
    730 P.2d 1333
    (1987) (stating that
    courts have a strong interest in upholding jury verdicts).
    -11-
    Long (Brian) v. Brusco Tug & Barge, Inc., et al., 90976-8
    CONCLUSION
    Because the matters relayed in the juror declarations inhere in the verdict and
    cannot be considered, Long's claim of juror misconduct fails. We affirm the lower
    courts' denial of his motion for a new trial.
    -12-
    Long (Brian) v. Brusco Tug & Barge, Inc., et al., 90976-8
    WE CONCUR:
    -13-
    Long v. Brusco Tug & Barge, et. a!., No. 90976-8 (Gonzalez, J., dissenting)
    No. 90976-8
    GoNzALEZ, J. (dissenting)-I respectfully dissent. Despite the trial judge's
    instruction to follow the law as set forth in the jury instructions, one juror
    forcefully inserted his own definitive statement of the law on a critical issue into
    the jury's deliberations. I have grave doubts the juror was right about the law,
    which, given it was not either parties' theory of the case, has not been tested by
    them. At the very least, the juror's insistent statement of supposed law undermined
    the instructions given by the judge and the case presented by the parties. I would
    hold that it is misconduct for a juror to make a legal assertion during deliberations
    that undermines the court's instructions. Since the court today countenances that
    misconduct, I respectfully dissent.
    Brian Long sued his former employer, Brusco Tug & Barge Inc., for
    discrimination, claiming it had fired him for hiring Anthony Morgan, a man with a
    prosthetic leg. If in fact Brusco had fired Long for hiring Morgan, it would likely
    have violated Washington's Law Against Discrimination, chapter 49.60 RCW-
    but only if Brusco had retaliated against Long for opposing what he reasonably
    believed was unlawful discrimination. Rcw· 49.60.210(1); see also Renz v.
    Spokane Eye Clinic, PS, 
    114 Wash. App. 611
    , 619, 
    60 P.3d 106
    (2002) (quoting
    Graves v. Dep 't of Game, 
    76 Wash. App. 705
    , 712, 
    887 P.2d 424
    (1994)). The jury
    was instructed consistently:
    1
    Long v. Brusco Tug & Barge, et. al., No. 90976-8 (Gonzalez, J., dissenting)
    [P]laintiffBrian Long has the burden of proving each one of the following
    propositions by a preponderance of the evidence:
    (1)    That the plaintiff was opposing what he reasonably believed to
    be discrimination on the basis of disability;
    (2)    That the plaintiff was subjected to an adverse employment
    action by his employer; and
    (3)    That the plaintiff's opposition to discrimination was a
    substantial factor in the defendant's decision-making in taking
    the adverse employment action.
    Clerk's Papers (CP) at 1756. Brusco conceded that Long reasonably believed
    Brusco had discriminated against Morgan, but it vigorously defended against the
    other two elements.
    Fairly read, the juror declarations establish that one juror brought in a
    prepared presentation on the law that gutted the jury instructions and Long's ability
    to make his case according to the law as given to the jury. Taken together, these
    declarations establish that one juror insisted, backed by his status as a navy
    veteran, that naval laws "simply do not allow people to crew boats and act as Able
    Bodied Seamen with prosthetics." CP at 1788; CP at 1780-92. If that juror was
    correct and Morgan was not legally allowed to work as a deckhand, then Brusco
    had a legitimate, nondiscriminatory reason to take adverse actions against Long for
    hiring him.
    This case could have been tried that way. Brusco could have insisted it had
    the law on its side for not wanting Morgan on its boats and that Long was
    2
    Long v. Brusco Tug & Barge, et. al., No. 90976-8 (Gonzalez, J., dissenting)
    unreasonable in believing it was discriminating in so doing. But Brusco did not
    make that argument. For whatever reason, it conceded that element of Long's
    case. Perhaps its research suggested what mine did: that Washington law forbids
    discrimination based on disability and that this civil rights protection is not
    preempted by federal maritime law. Hoddevik v. Arctic Alaska Fisheries Corp., 
    94 Wash. App. 268
    , 282, 
    970 P.2d 828
    (1999). Perhaps it did not want to call attention
    to Morgan's federal Equal Employment Opportunity Commission complaint.
    Perhaps it did not want to argue to this jury it had a right to discriminate. But the
    simple fact is it conceded the issue, and thus Long had no cause to contest the legal
    underpinnings of it.
    I agree with the majority that there is much in these declarations that inheres
    in the verdict and thus cannot be considered. I disagree, however, that the juror's
    definitive statements about the content of naval law inheres. Washington common
    law recognizes two tests for determining what inheres in a verdict. See Gardner v.
    Malone, 
    60 Wash. 2d 836
    , 841, 
    376 P.2d 651
    (1962) (citing State v. Parker, 25 Wash.
    405, 
    65 P. 776
    (190 1)). First, when "that to which the juror testifies to can be
    rebutted by other testimony without probing a juror's mental processes," it may not
    inhere in the verdict. !d. The jurors' declarations that one of them definitively
    declared that naval law would prohibit someone with a prosthetic limb from
    working on a boat survives this test. These statements could have been (but were
    not) rebutted by other jurors' testimony that no such statements had been made
    without probing the jurors' mental processes. This does not inhere in the verdict.
    Second, when "the facts alleged are linked to the juror's motive, intent, or belief,
    or they describe their effect upon [the juror] ... , the statements cannot be
    3
    Long v. Brusco Tug & Barge, et. al., No. 90976-8 (Gonzalez, J., dissenting)
    considered for they inhere in the verdict." !d. While some of the material in the
    declarations does not survive this test, the fact the juror made definitive statements
    about alleged naval law does. It is a statement of supposed law. It does not inhere
    in the verdict.
    I also agree with the majority that it is entirely proper for jurors to bring their
    life experience to bear on deliberations. See Breckenridge v. Valley Gen. Hasp.,
    
    150 Wash. 2d 197
    ,204,
    75 P.3d 944
    (2003). But these statements went beyond one
    juror recounting his own life experience. The statements instead intruded into the
    fundamental role of the judge: to say what the law is. WASH. CONST. art. IV,§ 6;
    Hale v. Wellpinit Sch. Dist. No. 49, 
    165 Wash. 2d 494
    , 506, 
    198 P.3d 1021
    (2009)
    (quoting Marbury v. Madison, 5 U.S. (1 Cranch) 137, 177, 
    2 L. Ed. 60
    (1803)).
    Allowing jurors to substitute their potentially erroneous and untested views of the
    law for the law set forth in the jury instructions undermines the constitutional
    division of authority between judges and jurors. WASH. CONST. art. IV, § 6; 
    Hale, 165 Wash. 2d at 506
    ; see also WASH. CONST. art. I, § 21. "[W]here a juror supplies
    the jury with evidence. which was not admitted at trial, jury misconduct results.
    Jury misconduct also results where a juror provides the jury with erroneous
    statements of the law." Adkins v. Alum. Co. ofAm., 
    110 Wash. 2d 128
    , 137-38, 
    750 P.2d 1257
    (1988) (footnote omitted) (reversible misconduct for jurors to consult
    Black's Law Dictionary); see also Bouton-Perkins Lumber Co. v. Huston, 
    81 Wash. 678
    , 683-84, 
    143 P. 146
    (1914) (reversible misconduct for juror to bring in
    a pamphlet on relevant law into the jury room). I would extend these cases and
    hold that a juror who provides the jury with a statement of the law that undermines
    the judge's instructions commits misconduct that does not inhere in the verdict.
    4
    Long v. Brusco Tug & Barge, et. al., No. 90976-8 (Gonzalez, J., dissenting)
    The juror's definitive, and likely incorrect, statements about naval law went
    to the heart of Long's case. It was misconduct. I have little doubt it prejudiced
    Long's ability to make his case. I would reverse the courts below and remand for a
    new trial. Accordingly, I respectfully dissent.
    5
    Long v. Brusco Tug & Barge, et. al., No. 90976-8
    6