274 Mass. 291 | Mass. | 1931
This action was tried to a jury. It was given to the panel for final consideration on a Friday afternoon with instructions to report a sealed verdict on the following Monday morning; soon afterwards the court adjourned until that time. The jury deliberated until about half past ten o’clock in the evening óf that Friday, when they were allowed to disperse by the sheriff acting by order of the court. During this interval, until Monday morning, they were free to go where they desired and to talk with people indiscriminately. When the court opened on Monday morning, a disagreement was reported in open court. The presiding judge asked the jury if they had reached an agreement and the foreman answered in the negative. This colloquy then occurred: “The judge : Do you think after further deliberation you could come to any agreement? The foreman: No, sir. We are willing to try. The judge: Have any of the members of the jury talked about this case since adjournment, or since you were relieved on Friday night? The foreman (consulting the jury): The jurymen answer ‘no.’ The judge: You have had no conversation. It is de
It is recited in the plaintiff’s motion for a new trial that the sending out of the jury on Monday morning with directions to deliberate on the case further occurred in the absence of the plaintiff or his counsel. There is no statement in the exceptions that this recital is true. Whether it be true is of no consequence in the view we take of this case, because it was the duty of the plaintiff or his counsel to be present unless content to rely upon rights afforded him in such absence. See Common Law Rule 45 of the Superior Court (1923); Energy Electric Co., petitioner, 262 Mass. 534, 537, 538.
The provisions of G. L. c. 231, § 127, are a constitutional regulation of the right of trial by jury. Opinion of the Justices, 207 Mass. 606. Edwards v. Willey, 218 Mass. 363, 365. Commonwealth v. Gedzium, 261 Mass. 299, 305. Thereby the common law power of the trial judge to set aside a verdict of his own initiative and volition for any cause deemed by him sufficient is narrowed and confined to those causes set out in the written motion for a new trial filed by a party to the cause. Wright v. Apekian, 270 Mass. 302, 304, 305, and cases there collected. McDonnell, petitioner, 197 Mass. 252.
It is manifest that the only ground set out in paragraph 4 of the plaintiff’s motion is the fact that the jury, having been given the case for determination of their verdict, were allowed to disperse late on a Friday evening and to go and remain where they chose, to talk with any persons and to do whatever they wanted to do from that time until the following Monday morning, when they reported a disagreement, which the court did not accept as the final result of the trial but directed the jury to consider the case further. It is not there alleged that the
The mere circumstance of a separation of the jury such as is here disclosed does not require the ending of the trial, but the judge rightly may require further and renewed consideration of the case by the jury provided he determines upon adequate investigation that nothing prejudicial to the cause of justice has happened during the separation. Charles v. Boston Elevated Railway, 230 Mass. 536. It is assumed that ground 4 of the motion for a new trial sets out a sufficient cause for a new trial. See, however, Simmons v. Fish, 210 Mass. 563, 672; Harrington v. Worcester, Leicester & Spencer Street Railway, 157 Mass. 579. Since the motion for a new trial was not granted on any of the first three grounds alleged, they need not be considered.
Clearly, the judge did not adopt the general ground set forth in paragraph 4 of the motion. He had been conscious on Monday morning of the duty resting on him to ascertain that nothing had been said or done to or by any of the jury to render improper for any sound reason a direction to consider the case further. He had made from the bench direct inquiry of the jury on this point. He had been assured by the foreman, after consulting with his fellows, that none of them had conversed with anybody about the case. Apparently he had the correct principle in mind that, after assuring himself that there was no impediment to justice in the way, the case might be recommitted to the jury for further consideration.
The cause assigned by the judge for setting aside the verdict was a ruling of law. It was not and does not purport to be the exercise of his discretion. That ruling of law was that the inquiry as to the existence of prejudicial circumstances arising during the period of separation was not made by the jurors themselves in the jury room as “ indicated ” in Charles v. Boston Elevated Railway,
The circumstance that some of the jury did not reply to the questions from the bench does not invalidate the general assent. The foreman spoke and purported to answer for the entire panel. He consulted with them. They all stood by in silence while he answered. No one of them dissented. This was in substance and effect approval of his answer as the voice of the jury. All the jurymen were bound by it and could not be heard to complain of it. No one else can dispute it. Nesbitt v. Parrett, 18 T. L. R. 510. Ellis v. Deheer, [1922] 2 K. B. 113, 118. Rex v. Wooller, 2 Stark. 111. Shields v. Nathans, 268 Mass. 360, 364, 365.
We think this is not a case where we ought to order judgment for the defendant on the verdict, but that the judge who tried the case ought to pass anew upon the motion in the light of the principles here stated.
Exceptions sustained.