76 P. 954 | Cal. | 1904
The defendant was convicted of murder, the charge being that she murdered her infant child, a boy a little over two years old; and the prosecution contends that there was sufficient evidence to warrant the jury in finding that she willfully and feloniously caused the death of the child by giving it carbolic acid. Defendant contends that the child took the poison accidentally, and without her knowledge. *209 She appeals from the judgment and from an order denying her motion for a new trial.
The evidence on which the appellant was convicted was entirely circumstantial, and was undoubtedly conflicting, and she contends that it was insufficient to warrant the verdict; but it is not necessary for us to consider that point, because, in our opinion, a new trial must be granted on the ground of a separation of the jury after the case had been submitted to them.
The facts as to such separation are these: The cause was finally submitted to the jury on July 29, 1899, and the court directed the officer sworn to take charge of them, to take them to their meals during the day, and in the evening "to lock them up for the night together in one room," and he "was specially enjoined by the court to keep them together during the time that they should be deliberating upon their verdict, and not to let them separate." Instead of doing as the court directed, the officer, when night came, divided the jurors into three groups, and put them into three different rooms in a hotel, each room being on a different floor, or story; and they were thus separated and kept not only in three different rooms but on three different stories of the hotel, for about eight or nine hours. The officer testified that he locked the jurors in these separate rooms.
In some of the cases where this subject was involved courts had difficulty in determining whether the facts relied on constituted a "separation" within the meaning of the law; and it has been held that a mere momentary absence of one or two jurors, through necessity or accident, did not amount to such separation. But no such question arises in this case; there was here clearly a separation — the jurors having been willfully and intentionally kept apart in three separate groups for eight hours. Instead of sitting and consulting together as one jury, they were during this long time divided into three separate and distinct deliberative bodies, the members of each being prevented from conferring with those of either of the other two. Beyond doubt this was such a separation as the law forbids.
Under our law there is a marked difference between a separation during the progress of the trial and a separation after *210 final submission of the case. As to the former there is no law requiring the jury to be kept together, although the court may order them to be so kept; and it is not necessary in the case at bar to consider the significance of a violation of such an order. But it is provided in the Penal Code (secs. 1128, 1135, 1136) that after the jury have finally retired for deliberation they must be kept together; and one of the express grounds for a new trial is "when the jury has separated without leave of the court after retiring to deliberate upon their verdict." (Sec. 1181.)
Whether such a gross violation of the law touching the separation of a jury as occurred in the case at bar should be held to be absolutely, and without any further inquiry, a cause for new trial, or whether the prosecution should be allowed to show, if it could, that nothing occurred during such extraordinary and prolonged separation prejudicial to defendant, is a question which does not here occur, for there was here no such showing. It is true that the officer testified that he "did not permit any person to speak to any member of the said jury," and did not permit any member of the jury "to speak to any person on any subject connected with the trial herein or about the case at all"; but it is evident that this statement was of no value, for, in the first place, he could not have been present at the same time at all the rooms on the three different stories, if he had kept awake, and, in the second place, he himself went to bed during a part of the night. Certainly in this case — if the law would countenance an attempt to show absence of prejudice — nothing less than the affidavits of the jurors would be sufficient to establish that fact.
And it is clear that the burden was not on appellant of proving affirmatively that she was prejudiced by the said separation of the jury. In this state the law on the subject was first declared in People v. Backus,
The foregoing cases established the law in this state as above stated. The only case cited by respondent is Saltzman v. SunsetTel. etc. Co.,
There are no other points necessary to be determined. It is contended that instruction No. 10, upon the subject of circumstantial evidence, is erroneous within the rule declared inPeople v. Vereneseneckockockhoff,
The judgment and order appealed from are reversed and the cause remanded for a new trial.
Shaw, J., Angellotti, J., Van Dyke, J., Henshaw, J., and Lorigan, J., concurred.