14 S.C. 396 | S.C. | 1881
The opinion of the court was delivered
by
In this case, at the trial below, “the jury had been authorized to seal up their verdict and render it next morning. Then, before rendering it, the foreman * * * stated that the jury liad agreed on a verdict, which had been sealed as directed, and that, subsequently, in the morning, some of them had notified him that they did not assent to the said verdict.” The Circuit judge, upon being informed that there was no dissent until after the jury had separated for the night, received the verdict and directed the clerk to publish and record it. A motion for a new trial was made on various grounds, one of which was “because the verdict was not the verdict of the jury, but only of a majority of them,” which motion was refused, and the defendant now appeals upon the ground above stated. So that the precise question made by this appeal is, whether a sealed verdict, which was assented to by all of the jurors at the time it was sealed and before the jury were permitted to separate, can be afterwards received by the court, published and recorded, in face of the statement made by the foreman as the organ of the jury, that some of the jurors did not then assent to the verdict. This question is, we think, conclusively settled by the case of Perry v. Mays, 2 Bail. 354. In that case, the jury not having agreed when the court was about to adjourn for the day, leave was granted them, with the consent of the parties, to separate after they had agreed and to deliver their verdict next morning. At the opening of the court on the next day the foreman delivered a sealed verdict, when one of the jurors stated that “ it was not his verdict, but he had agreed not to oppose it,
The judgment of the Circuit Court is reversed and a new trial is ordered.