The sole question presented on this appeal is whether it was reversible error for the trial judge, in the absence of counsel for the parties and without notice to them, to send instructions in writing to the jury, pursuant to an inquiry by them, after they had retired from the court room and while they were in the jury room deliberating upon their verdict. , The instructions thus given consisted of a copy of two points for charge which had been presented by the plaintiffs at the close of the trial judge’s charge, affirmed by him and excepted to by the defendant. The plaintiffs urge that they correctly stated the law. In our view, however, their accuracy as abstract statements of the law is immaterial.
In Fillippon v. Albion Vein Slate Co.,
While the Supreme Court in the Fillip-pon case also pointed out that the additional instructions given were actually erroneous, its decision in the case appears to have been rested primarily on the manner in which the instruction was given. In Shields v. United States,
The due process clause of the Fifth Amendment to the Constitution requires that a defendant be accorded the right to be present in person or by counsel at every stage of his trial. Hopt v. Utah,
The action of the trial judge in the present case in sending instructions to the jury from his chambers in the absence of the defendant or his counsel and without giving them notice and an opportunity to be present amounted to a denial of due process of law. We hold that it was the denial of a right so fundamental as necessarily to affect the substantial rights of the defendant regardless of the nature or propriety of the instruction given. The inquiry of the jury and the trial judge’s response were not reported by the court stenographer. The record does not disclose the phraseology of the jury’s question. Consequently we cannot know whether the instructions given, even though entirely sound as abstract legal statements, were appropriate to answer it, or whether additional instructions, appropriate and indeed necessary to supplement those given, might not have been suggested to the trial judge by counsel for the defendant if he had been given the opportunity to be present.
*824 It is urged that- the parties agreed that the trial judge might take the verdict of the jury in their absence. This is conceded. Waivers of the right to be present at a particular stage of the trial are to be strictly construed, however. Consequently the waiver given in this case may not be extended beyond its express terms to authorize the action here taken. Shields v. United States, supra.
The judgment of the district court is reversed and the cause is remanded for a new trial.
Notes
The suggestion of this court in Breslin v. National Surety Company, 3 Cir.,
