183 Ind. 199 | Ind. | 1915
To the above proceeding defendant objected and moved the court to discharge him. The motion was overruled. The judgment here was rendered on the above corrected verdict, and the first one returned was not recorded. After the return of the corrected verdict, the appellant made no motion to require the polling of the jury. Reversible error is predicated on the denial of appellant’s motion to poll the jury. §2142 Burns 1914, Acts 1905 p. 584, §266, confers on a defendant in a criminal case the right to have a jury polled, which consists in asking each juror separately in relation to his assent to the verdict before its recording. State Life Ins. co. v. Postal (1909), 43 Ind. App. 144, 84 N. E. 156, 1093. Had such a motion been made and overruled after the return of the corrected verdict, the court’s action doubtless would have constituted reversible error, but we are constrained to hold otherwise where, as here, the verdict first returned was not accepted by the court or recorded. When the jury returned to the jury room, although sent back to correct its verdict, it retained its power to find the appellant guilty or not guilty. The failure to move for a poll of the jury when it returned the second time, or to renew the former motion, deprives appellant of any just ground of complaint.
Note. — Reported in 108 N. E. 579. As to right of parties to poll jury» see 30 Am. Rep. 497. See, also, under (2) 12 Cyc. 846, 873; (3) 12 Cyc. 904; (4) 12 Cyc. 934, 699.