By the Court,
It has always been the policy of the law to watch over the deliberations of the jury with great care, and scrupulously to guard them against any extraneous influences. Many of the cases on this subject are collected in Trials per pais, 247, ch. 12, Co. Litt. 227, (b) and Cowen’s Treatise, 541, 543.
In general, the jurors cannot take with them, when they retire to deliberate, any thing but records and sealed instruments, without the consent of parties. But if they take an unsealed paper without reading it, that will not avoid the verdict. Hacklie v. Hastie, 3 Johns. R. 252. The fact that the paper taken by the jury in that case was not read, was proved by the oaths of three of the jurors. Had *it not been proved, [ *187 ] the verdict would, I think, have been set aside.
The justice gave the jury his minutes or notes of the trial, and the case is much like those in which the jurors have re-examined a witness, or conferred with the justice in relation to the evidence, or some other matter, after they
There is no room in this case for referring the consent of the parties to the delivery of the minutes to the jury. And besides, in Taylor v. Botsford, it was said by the court, that the consent ought not to be mat- [ *188 ] ter of inference ; it *ought to appear affirmatively, that it was done with the consent of parties.
The common pleas were right in holding this to be a fatal error.
Judgment affirmed.