7 S.E.2d 611 | Ga. Ct. App. | 1940
Where a jury in a justice's court reached a verdict during the noon hour, while the court was recessed, and dispersed, and when the court reconvened after the noon hour the jury reassembled in the jury box and the verdict was read, and the foreman of the jury thereupon stated that the jury had intended to find for the defendants instead of for the plaintiff as the verdict read, and the justice of the peace polled the jury and ascertained that they had intended to find for the defendants, and *774 the justice instructed the jury as to the identity of the parties as plaintiff and defendants, the justice did not err in ordering the jury back to the jury room to make a verdict, there being no suggestion that the jury had been tampered with, and they not having been discharged from the consideration of the case.
"A verdict may be amended in mere matter of form after the jury have dispersed; but after it has been received and recorded, and the jury dispersed, it may not be amended in matter of substance, either by what the jurors say they intended to find or otherwise." Code, § 110-111. A verdict may not be amended in substance after it is received and recorded and the jury dispersed. Wood v. McGuire,
The jury reached a verdict at the noon hour while the court was adjourned, and then dispersed. They reassembled in the jury box when the court convened after the noon hour. When the verdict was read and as the clerk was recording it the foreman of the jury stated that the jury had intended to find for the defendants instead of for the plaintiff as their verdict read, and the justice, after polling the jury, instructed them as to who was the plaintiff and who were the defendants, and then ordered the jury to retire and make up their verdict. The jury accordingly returned a verdict for the defendants. It does not appear that the jury had been discharged nor does it appear that any of its members were tampered with during the noon hour. Neither does it appear that the verdict had been recorded. *776
In Johnson v. Oakes,
The decision in Shelton v. O'Brien,
The justice of the peace did not err. The superior court erred in sustaining the certiorari and in remanding the case for a new trial.
Judgment reversed. Sutton and Felton, JJ., concur. *777