The defendants were tried and convicted for an assault with intent to murder, and sentenced to suffer imprisonment in the penitentiary. The material question is whether there was a legal verdict upon which the sentence of the law could be pronounced. The bill of exceptions states that after the instructions to the jury were given and the “Jury was about to retire to consider their verdict, the judge, being unwell, instructed the bailiff in charge of the jury, that if the j ury desired to bring in a verdict before morning, they could come in his charge to the hotel some three hundred yards distant.” The verdict was received at the hotel, in the presence of the ■ defendants, and the jury then and there discharged.
Section 749 of the Code provides, that “The circuit courts in the several counties shall be held at the court houses thereof, in each year as follows.” It is here declared that the court-house is the place where the several courts shall be held. In the case of Ex parte Branch & Co.,
The verdict of the jury was not received by the court, but by the judge, not sitting as the court. The jury was not discharged, in legal sense, but dissolved and finally separated without just cause or excuse, and without the rendition of any legal verdict. The prisoners had been placed in jeopardy. They can not again be placed in jeopardy for the same offense. — McCauley v. The State,
An order will be made by this court, discharging the prisoners from further custody for the offense for which they were indicted and put upon trial. The jury should have been kept together until court convened in session.
Reversed, and defendants discharged.
