78 Miss. 348 | Miss. | 1900
delivered the opinion of the court.
George Carter was tried and’convicted in the circuit court of Sunflower county of grand larceny, and was sentenced to the penitentiary for three years. He excepted to several rulings of the court in the admission of testimony and in giving of instructions, but we find no error committed in that behalf. He also moved for a new trial, which was refused. One ground of the motion was that the jury had, during the trial, gone from the court room and into and across the public street to a house or office there situate, and during that time they were not under the supervision of any officer. Upon the hearing of the motion B. P. Miller testified that he was deputy sheriff, and was in the court room when the jury, or one of them, requested permission of the court to retire for a few minutes; that permission was given, and that the jury left the court room, and went some hundred yards across a public street to the water-closet, and that no officer went with them, so far as he knew. This is the substance of the record on this point, and it is claimed that it is insufficient to overcome the effect of the maxim, “ Omnia rite acta proesumuntur. ’ ’ But we think the testimony of Miller shows that the jury were unattended by an officer while absent from the court room, and we suppose that, if the fact had been otherwise, the judge would have so certified in the bill of exceptions, as such matters are under his supervision. But, if the matter had passed from his recollection, it would have been
Beversecl and remanded.