21 Cal. 337 | Cal. | 1863
Cope, J. and Norton, J. concurring.
The statute regulating proceedings in criminal cases provides that when the jury do not agree, after a case has been submitted to them, without retiring for deliberation, one or more officers shall be sworn “ to keep them together in some private and convenient place, and not to permit any person to speak to them, nor to speak to them themselves, unless it be to ask them whether they have agreed upon a verdict, and to return them into Court when they have so agreed.” (Sec. 402.) And it empowers the Court to grant a new trial “ when the jury have separated without leave of the Court after retiring to deliberate upon their verdict, or been guilty of any mis
The language of the oath administered to the officer having the jury in charge points out with clearness his duties. He is required “ to keep them together f that is, he must not permit them to separate. He must keep them “in some private and convenient place;” that is, removed from access by strangers. He must not “ permit any person to speak to them,” a duty which can only be performed by following the previous requirement of keeping them in a private place. And, finally, he must not speak to them himself, except to ask them whether they have agreed upon a verdict. When either of these requirements is disregarded by the officer, he fails to perform his duty, and the trial is irregularly conducted. If a conviction follows, the prisoner has ground to complain of the irregularity. He is entitled to all the protection which the statute intends to secure, against any interference with the action of the jury, whether arising from the hostility of personal enemies or popular prejudice. If such protection be not afforded, suspicions are excited and confidence in the justice of their decision is destroyed. It would seem therefore but reasonable, where an irregularity has been committed, which may have affected the jury, that the Government, seeking to uphold their action, should be called upon to show that no injury to the prisoner has followed from the irregularity complained of. If this can be shown, their verdict will not be disturbed—for the end which the law contemplated by its provisions has been attained. In the present case the irregularity consisted in the unauthorized separation of the jury, after retiring to deliberate upon their verdict. The prisoner, in his affidavit, upon which the motion for a new trial was based, alleges the separation, and the fact is not controverted, nor is any explanation of it attempted by the State. The District Attorney appears to have considered it incumbent upon the prisoner to show affirmatively injury to him
This case, so far as it holds that separation alone vitiates the verdict in a criminal case, even when shown to have produced no injurious consequences, has been generally condemned, but in other respects has been followed in several of the States. In McLain v. The State (10 Yerger, 242) the Court said: “ The affidavits, which are uncontradicted, show conclusively that several of the jury repeatedly separated from the others, without the care of the officer appointed by the Court to attend them, and were absent for the space of fifteen or twenty minutes—long enough to have been tampered with, if there had been any disposition to do so. It is
In the case of The State v. Prescott, (7 H. H. 287) the Supreme Court of Hew Hampshire, after an extended consideration of the authorities, held that the burden of proof lay upon the Government to show that the prisoner had not suffered any injury by-reason of the separation of the jury, and that in the absence of such proof he was entitled to the benefit of the presumption that the irregularity had been prejudicial to him. “ The prisoner,” said the Court, “is in such case entitled, as a matter of right, to require, in the first instance, a compliance with the ordinary forms provided by the law to secure to him a fair and impartial trial; and if the guards provided for his security are neglected, or disregarded, he is at least entitled to require, at the hands of the Government, satisfactory evidence that he has not received detriment by reason of such neglect, and is not to be put to show, affirmatively, that such departure from the customary mode of trial has been the probable cause of his conviction. The shield which the law has provided would fall far short of affording him the protection intended, if it might be thrown aside at pleasure, and he have no right to complain unless he could prove that the want of it had been actually prejudicial to his case; a matter which it might in many cases be very difficult to prove, notwithstanding such was the fact. He has the right, therefore, to call upon the officers of the Government in such case, before they demand judgment, to show that the irregularity in the trial has not been the means of injustice in the verdict.”
In the several cases from which we have thus cited the separation occurred before the jury had retired to deliberate upon their verdict, but the reasons advanced apply with equal force to separations afterwards.
In addition to their unauthorized separation, the defendant also
Judgment reversed, and case remanded for a new trial.