33 Fla. 291 | Fla. | 1894
The indictment against the plaintiff in error was for murder, and the sentence of the court pronounced, against him was confinement in the State penitentiary for life, based upon a verdict of guilty of murder in-the first degree with a recommendation of mercy to the-court.
The other points presented by counsel for plaintiff in error for our consideration relate to the action of the trial court in refusing to accept the first finding returned by the jury, and in entering judgment upon the .second verdict, and to the sufficiency of the evidence vto sustain the verdict accepted by the court. After the case had been submitted to the jury under the charge of the court the bill of exceptions recites the following, viz: “We, the jury, find the said defendant guilty of manslaughter in the first degree. C. R. Bisbee, Foreman; which said verdict the said judge then and there refused to receive, .stating to the jury that the said verdict was mot in such form that the court could receive, and that they must return and present a verdict in proper form; that there were no degrees in manslaughter. Whereupon the said jury retired to their room; and af
At common law a verdict was either public or privy;. The public verdict was pronounced in open court in the presence of all the jury, the privy verdict in order. • to release a jury from confinement, was delivered to > the judge out of court. In all cases of felony; and treason the verdict was required to be delivered in open court and in the presence of the.-, prisoner. In the case now before us, the indictment; being for murder, the verdict was returned into opens court, and it does not become necessary to consider-in what cases a verdict may now be rendered out of' court. It may be stated, however, that in cases of. misdemeanor and in the lower grades of felonies a\ practice has obtained of consenting for the jury to reduce their finding to writing, and after sealing it up to > separate till the next meeting of the court, when the ■ paper being handed to the judge, the verdict is re- - ceived from the foreman of the jury and recorded in-the usual way. The verdict in such a case is not the-one written out by the jury, but the one openly deliv- - ered in the. court, accepted and recorded. Commonwealth vs. Carrington, 116 Mass., 37; Commonwealth
The refusal of the court to receive the first verdict,, and the acceptance and record of the second one are alleged as errors in the motion for a new trial. It is. stated in Wharton’s Criminal Pl. & Pr., sec. 751, that ‘ ‘if there is any informality, uncertainty or impropriety about a verdict, the court may require the jury to amend it before they separate.” And it may be stated generally that when a jury returns an informal, insensible or a repugnant verdict, or one that is not responsive to the issues submitted, they may be directed by the court to reconsider it and bring in a proper verdict. Thus, when the verdict is guilty as charged, where the indictment is for murder, and the statute requires the degree of the offense to be ascertained in the finding" of the jury, the court may tell the jury that their verdict is not in proper form, and that they must retire and designate in which degree they find the prisoner guilty. People vs. Bonney, 19 Cal., 426. And so the court may intercede and have the jury correct any informal or insensible verdict. State vs. Waterman, 1 Nev., 543; Cook vs. State, 26 Ga., 593; Gipson vs. State, 38 Miss., 295; Nemo vs. Commonwealth, 2 Grat., 558; Levells vs. State, 32 Ark., 585; Regina vs. Vodden, 6 Cox C. C., 226; Regina vs. Meany, 9 Cox C. C., 231. While it is eutirely clear that the trial judge may send a jury back to the consultation room for the purpose-of correcting their finding as to matters of informality, uncertainty, and where the issue has not been passed upon by them, yet the judge must not even suggest the alteration of a verdict in substance.. The action of the judge in the correction of ver
The remaining point presented by counsel for plaintiff in error relates to the sufficiency of the evidence to sustain the verdict. There is no question about the fact that the accused shot and killed the deceased, but it is insisted that the testimony does not justify the inference. that the killing was done with a premeditated design to effect the death of the deceased.
A majority of the court are impressed with the view that the testimony in the record before us is not sufficient to sustain the verdict of murder in the first degree. As the case has to be tried again, it is deemed best to omit any discussion ©f the testimony in this opinion.
The judgment is reversed, and a new trial awarded; and it will be ordered accordingly.