112 Ga. 402 | Ga. | 1900
The accused was indicted for selling whisky without license. Upon his trial the jury returned a verdict of guilty.
In the case of Russell v. State, 68 Ga. 785, it appeared that “by inadvertence only eleven jurors were called and responded to the poll, and the jury were then discharged; but on being informed of the inadvertence, the jury, who had not retired beyond the outer door of the court-room, were recalled (the juror not polled had remained in the presence of the court all the time), ordered to their' box, and the inadvertence supplied by having the usual question put to the juror who had been overlooked, and, on his answer being favorable to the verdict, it was ordered to be received and recorded.” The court, in that case, fully recognized the legal right, of the defendant to demand that the jury be polled, and in the-opinion it is said that a refusal would be error; but the case was-affirmed because the inadvertent irregularity which had occurred could not possibly have affected the result to the prisoner, who had been accorded substantially his right of polling the jury and thus-verifying the verdict. The decision rested upon the ground that-the only juror who had not been properly polled and who was subsequently questioned “ had remained in the presence of the court, unaffected by his discharge or his surroundings.” That case presented a question very different from the one presented by this case. There the jury was polled according to law, except for what the court held “scarce amounts to a slight irregularity;” here the jury was not polled at all, but was questioned collectively. There
Judgment reversed,