150 Ga. 680 | Ga. | 1920
Lead Opinion
In Harris v. Roan, 119 Ga. 379 (46 S. E. 433), it was ruled: " The extraordinary motions or cases contemplated by the statute are such as dó not ordinarily occur m the trans
Can we in this case be assured that the communication of the deputy sheriff did not affect the verdict? it is true that seven of the jurors say that ten of the jurors had all along been in favor of a verdict of guilty without a recommendation to mercy. Two of the jurors had all along favored a verdict of guilty with such recommendation. The two jurors themselves say that the communication of the deputy sheriff did not influence their verdict. As pointed out, two of the jurors had died since the trial of the case, and before the hearing of the extraordinary motion for new trial. The three remaining jurors did not make affidavits. Their failure to do so is wholly unexplained. As was said in the case of Smith v. State, 122 Ga. (supra), the failure of these three jurors to make affidavits sustaining the verdict, thus unexplained, “might imply that they could not truthfully do so.” The failure of the State in this case to furnish the affidavits of these three jurors, or to satisfactorily explain its inability to do so, is all the more significant because the State was allowed two months and a day in which to procure the affidavits of these jurors. Even if these jurors had all along voted for a verdict of guilty without recommendation, how can this court know that they were not ready to recommend to mercy at the time of the communication
Judgment reversed.
Dissenting Opinion
dissenting. The scrutiny will be closer by this court, and its power exercised with more hesitation, when the presiding judge lias refused to interfere with the verdict, on the ground of the disqualification of a juror. In DoyaVs case the judgment of the trial court overruling the defendant’s extraordinary motion for new trial was reversed. The ground of the extraordinary motion was that one of the jurors in the case was not impartial and had wilfully concealed this fact for the purpose of carrying out his design of convicting the defendant and causing him to be hanged. It is clear that the ground of the motion in that case was “laid in the very foundations of the purity of jury trial.” The juror had stated on his oath that his mind was impartial between the State and the accused. This statement was wilfully and designedly false. He desired to go on the jury for the purpose of convicting the