4 Willson 514 | Tex. App. | 1892
Opinion by the Court.
§ 297. Bills of exception; mandamus to compel judge to certify, will not issue when. While it is required by the statute [art. 1306, R. S.] that the jury be admonished by the court that it is their duty ■ not to converse with, or suffer themselves to be addressed by, any other person on any subject connected with the trial, still it has been held that the dispersion of the jury over night, without permission of the court, is not a sufficient ground for a new trial. [Burns v. Paine, 8 Tex. 159; Edrington v. Niger, 4 Tex. 89.] Some injury should be shown on account of such act of dispersion in order to entitle the party to the new trial sought on that ground. The ap • plication for mandamus does not show.that applicant proposes to establish the fact that he would have been injured by the dispersion of the jury. Our statute requires that bills of exception should be reserved at the time of the alleged erroneous act of omission or commission on the part of the court. [R. S., art. 1358.] They may, however, be reserved, and presented to the court within ten days after the conclusion of the trial. [Art. 1363.] In this case the party did not reserve an objection at the time of the supposed omission, nor did he call it to the attention of the court until at least a month or more after the trial by the jury, and then in an amended motion for new trial. In connection with the overruling of said motion for new trial, he demanded that the court should give him a bill to the supposed failure to caution said jury, certifying as a fact that he had
Mandamus refused.