dissenting.
I respectfully dissent. The standard of review employed by the majority gives no deference to the determinations made by the district court on remand, contrary to the clear import of the Court’s earlier decision in Watson I. In my view the district court on remand did not abuse its discretion in concluding that Navistar had failed to make a clear showing that each juror severally agreed to be bound by the average of either liability or damages.
Watson I concluded that the district court had abused its discretion by failing to apply the proper legal standard for determining whether a verdict is an impermissible quotient verdict. The Court noted that the district court improperly limited its focus to whether the jurors had “agreed to be bound,” rather than considering the entire legal standard of whether the verdict was based upon adequate deliberations and whether each juror severally agreed in advance to be bound by an average. Having articulated the proper legal standard, the Court remanded the case to have the district court determine whether the verdict was valid in light of that standard. The Court stated:
[W]e hold that the determination of whether the conduct of the jury in returning a verdict based on averaging has deprived a party of a fair trial, and whether to. grant or deny a new trial, is left to the sound discretion of the trial court____ [0]nce the trial court in the instant appeal applies the standards set forth herein to the first *354set of affidavits, and after considering all of the circumstances of the jury’s deliberative process, it will be in a position to determine whether an impermissible verdict was reached and whether the conduct of the jury in reaching its verdict denied any of the parties a fair trial.
Watson I, 121 Idaho at 655, 827 P.2d at 668.
On remand, the district court reevaluated the juror affidavits in light of the standards set forth in Watson I, and determined that the verdict was based upon adequate deliberations, and that the juror affidavits failed to clearly show the jurors severally agreed in advance to be bound by their average.
Now on appeal for the second time, the majority has decided to apply a wholly different standard of review, stating:
[TJhis Court exercises the privilege of passing upon the weight to be given statements contained in affidavits of jurors as did the trial court.
Ante at 351, 870 P.2d at 1310. Had the Court applied this standard in Watson I, there would have been no need to remand the case to the district court. The Watson I Court simply would have weighed the meaning and credibility of the juror affidavits in light of the appropriate standard, and decided for itself whether the affidavits constitute a clear showing that the jury rendered a quotient verdict, just as the majority has done today.
The district court did not abuse its discretion in determining that Navistar failed to clearly show the verdict was based on inadequate deliberation or that the jurors severally agreed in advance to be bound by an average. Watson I urged the district court, on remand, to reexamine the first set of affidavits in light of the purpose of I.R.E. 606(b), stating:
In addition to the standards articulated in our prior cases, the purposes underlying the chance verdict rule should also be considered by a trial court. An explicit focus on the purposes of the rule follows from the current formulation of the rule in I.R.E. 606(b) and prevents undue emphasis on conclusionary language scripted from our cases in the juror affidavits. A focus on the purposes of the rule allows the trial court to better assess whether a verdict was truly the result of chance or the result of meaningful deliberation.
Watson I, 121 Idaho at 656, 827 P.2d at 669. (Emphasis added.) Watson I also noted that the focus of I.R.E. 606(b) was to address the policy concerns of finality of verdicts and that jury deliberations remain relatively free of post-trial inquiry. The Rule also attempts “to avoid the practical concern that an affidavit by a juror to impeach his or her own verdict is potentially unreliable.” Id. at 657, 827 P.2d at 670.
By avoiding potentially misleading affidavits of jurors attempting to impeach their verdict, Rule 606(b) helps focus on the purpose of our chance verdict rule. The purpose of the rule is to assure that a jury participate in “solemn deliberation” and avoid a verdict that was irrationally skewed by a minority of “inveterate jurors.”
Watson I, 121 Idaho at 658, 827 P.2d at 671 (citations omitted).
The Watson I Court thus cautioned the district court on remand to keep in mind the overall purpose of Rule 606(b), and not to be unduly swayed by language in affidavits that was “scripted,” “eonelusionary,” “potentially unreliable” or “misleading.” In his opinion on remand, the district judge wrote that he was well aware of Watson I’s admonitions. Other recent decisions of the Court, in the context of summary judgment proceedings, have cautioned that eonclusory statements do not provide the kind of specific, admissible facts that will support or prevent the entry of summary judgment. See, e.g., Hecla Mining Co. v. Star-Morning Mining Co., 122 Idaho 778, 784, 839 P.2d 1192, 1198 (1992).
Turning to the analysis of the affidavits themselves, the district judge considered on remand five juror affidavits from foreman Rocky Dover and jurors Diana L. Bull, Cynthia A. Hochhalter, Alan Don Hines, and Laura Warnock. Alternate juror Barbara J. *355Hopkins also gave an affidavit. Four subjects were addressed by one or more juror affidavits: (1) the taking of an average as to the percentage negligence of the plaintiff and defendant; (2) whether the jurors agreed to be bound by the average of negligence percentage; (3) the taking of an average as to the amount of money damages; and (4) whether the jurors agreed to be bound by the average of the money damage amount.
As to the subjects numbered (1) and (2) above, the affidavits of Bull and foreman Dover show that the first average liability figure was rejected by the nine voting jurors, and that a second average was taken as to which all jurors agreed. No juror affidavit states that each juror severally agreed in advance to be bound by the second liability average.2 I therefore find it well within the bounds of its discretion for the district court to have concluded that Navistar failed to clearly show an impermissible quotient verdict with respect to percentage of negligence. This conclusion is bolstered by the statement in Watson I that “our eases have noted that subsequent discussions or increases in the amount awarded after an average has been taken demonstrates that a prior agreement to be bound either did not exist or that it was not followed by the jurors.” 121 Idaho at 655, 827 P.2d at 668 [citations omitted]. The fact that here the jurors undertook to calculate the negligence percentage a second time renders illusory the so-called agreement to be bound by the average.
As to subjects numbered (3) and (4), relating to damages, the district court could have
properly concluded that the jury’s ability to discard its “agreement” as to negligence percentage also rendered a nullity the purported agreement to be bound by their damages average. Additionally, the district court could have correctly viewed the statements in the affidavits as deficient on these points.
Nowhere in the affidavits does any juror aver that “each juror severally” agreed in advance to be bound. In Hines’ affidavit, relied on by the majority, only the conclusory terms “it was the consensus” and “so we all agreed” are used. This affidavit gives none of the supporting detail that would, in my view, establish “clearly,” as required by Watson I and established precedent, that there was an agreement by each juror severally. For example, nowhere does Hines aver that each juror stated he or she would be bound by the average of liability, or that each juror raised his hand or otherwise affirmatively assented in advance to be bound. Without such supporting facts, Hines’ subjective opinion that “it was the consensus” or that “we all agreed” is conclusory. The lack of any specific factual recitation (as Hecla would require in the summary judgment context) could properly have led the district court to reject Hines’ affidavit as not clearly establishing an agreement by each juror severally.
The affidavits of Bull and Hochhalter do not support the conclusion that each juror severally agreed to be bound by the average damage figure. When read in context, the statements quoted in the majority opinion, ante at 353, 870 P.2d at 1312, do not refer to the issue of damages, only to negligence.3 *356' Bull does not address the issue of damages at all in her affidavit. Hochhalter states only that “I felt I was bound by my previous agreement to accept the average of the percentages of negligence and the average of money damages.” Hochhalter does not state that “each juror severally” agreed to be bound by an average of money damages, only that she herself felt so bound.
Foreman Dover’s affidavit, not mentioned in the majority opinion, also lends support to the district court’s conclusion the affidavits do not clearly show that each juror severally agreed to be bound by an average of negligence percentage and an average of money damages. Dover did not vote with the nine jurors because he was one of three who decided that Navistar was not negligent. Nevertheless, his affidavit demonstrates that he actively participated in calculating the averages. Although the language of his affidavit in some respects is patterned after those of Bull and Hochhalter, the affidavit notably lacks any statement whatsoever that each juror severally agreed in advance to be bound by the average of either negligence percentage or money damages. Dover says nothing about any agreement. Moreover, Dover notes in his affidavit that after the “preliminary vote on negligence, after discussing the instructions and discussing the different opinions, another vote of negligence was taken with the same ending result.” Dover’s affidavit directly contradicts, at least with respect to the vote on percentage of negligence, any semblance of blind adherence to a preexisting agreement to be bound, stating as it does that there was discussion, i.e., deliberation on the instructions and the different opinions. The Dover affidavit supports the district court’s conclusion as to both adequate deliberations and no prior agreement by each juror severally to be bound by an average, at least as to percentage of negligence.
As to the “inveterate juror” problem noted by the majority, ante at 353, 870 P.2d at 1312, the majority’s analysis of the issue is flawed, in that it uses the inveterate juror as a defining reason to find that averaging, which is proper where no prior agreement to be bound exists, is here improper. The affidavits can be reasonably and permissibly read as not clearly showing a prior agreement by each juror severally to be bound. Therefore, because each juror retained his or her ability to reject the average, the problem of the inveterate juror is not present here, because each juror has not been shown to be an automatic adherent to an average.
Watson I explained at length that the district court on remand was to keep in mind *357the underlying policy of I.R.E. 606(b), which is to preserve finality of judgments and avoid attacks on jury verdicts post-trial. I believe that the district court’s interpretation of these affidavits comports with these policy objectives, with the standard requiring a clear showing of a prior agreement to be bound, and with the cautious method of interpreting affidavits urged by Watson I. Because I believe that the district judge did not abuse his discretion in concluding that each juror did not agree in advance to be bound by an average on the issues of liability and damages, I would affirm his denial of the motion for new trial.
. The rule which pertains to verdicts determined by averaging was correctly stated in .Watson I:
[E]ven if affidavits from every juror are not presented with the motion for a new trial, the affidavits filed with the court must establish that all jurors agreeing to the verdict were impermissibly bound. Reflecting our reluctance to expand a potentially broad exception, the requirement that juror affidavits make a clear showing that each juror severally agree to be bound has been repeated in our recent cases. Lombard, v. Cory, 95 Idaho 868, 522 P.2d 581 (1974); Clark v. Foster, 87 Idaho 134, 391 P.2d 853 (1964).
Watson I, 121 Idaho at 655, 827 P.2d at 668. See also Butland v. City of Caldwell, 51 Idaho 483, 6 P.2d 493 (1931); Giffen v. City of Lewiston, 6 Idaho 231, 55 P. 545 (1898).
. The following passage is from juror Diana Bull’s affidavit:
In voting on the negligence of the plaintiff Larry Watson and defendant International Harvester Company, the opinions of the jurors, as verbally expressed, varied greatly. Some jurors thought that the plaintiff Watson was responsible for most of the negligence, while other jurors thought and said that International Harvester Company was responsible for a majority of the negligence. Each juror seemed to be very firm in his or her individual opinion;
*356Because of the wide varieties of opinions, and the firmness of each of the jurors in their opinions, the jurors realized that we would never be able to reach a verdict unless each juror’s opinion was averaged with the others. As a result, the nine jurors then participating agreed to average their opinions and to be bound by the average;
The jurors each submitted a written ballot to the foreman on which that juror had written his vote on the percentage of negligence for the plaintiff Larry Watson and for the defendant International Harvester. The foreman took the ballots and added the percentages and divided by nine. The foreman then reported the average which resulted;
Because there was some dissatisfaction with our first vote on the percentages of negligence, we decided to vote again, and that this vote would be our decision;
(Bull Aff. ¶¶ 8-11.)
The following passage is from juror Cynthia Hochhalter’s affidavit:
When the jurors began deliberating on the percentages of negligence attributable to the plaintiff Larry Watson and defendant International Harvester Company, it was clear that the opinions of some jurors as to the negligence of the parties were vastly different from the opinions of other jurors. The jurors held their opinions very strongly.
Because of the wide difference in the opinions of the jurors, and the great strength with which those opinions were held, we discussed and understood that we would never be able to reach a verdict without averaging the opinions. We agreed to average the nine jurors' opinions and be bound by the average of the votes. We then averaged the nine remaining jurors' opinions of the negligence of the parties. Each of the nine jurors submitted a written percentage of negligence for the plaintiff and a written percentage of negligence for defendant International Harvester Company. The foreman added the percentages of the plaintiff together and divided by nine. The foreman then added the percentages of negligence- of International Harvester and divided that total by nine.
(Hochhalter Aff. ¶¶ 7-9.)