12 N.Y.S. 695 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1891
The specification in the notice of appeal, of the order denying the defendant’s motion for a new trial, was unnecessary, since the statute provides that upon an appeal from the judgment the decision of the court on the motion for a new trial may be reviewed. Code Crim. Proc. §§ 485, 517. The conviction was of a felony, and the judgment pronounced was of imprisonment in the state-prison for the term of five years and eight months. The motion for a new trial was on the ground of misbehavior of the jury. The facts, in this respect, conceded to be true, are that after the jury had retired to deliberate on their verdict, the officer having them in charge, without leave of the court, took them to dinner at a hotel a quarter of a mile distant from the court-house; that before dinner one of the jurors separated himself from his fellows, and entered -the public bar-room of the hotel where he called for and drank brandy at the bar; that on the same occasion another juror, after dinner, went alone to the water-closet in the basement of the hotel, and the jury having in the mean time set out to return to the court-house he followed, but did not overtake them until they arrived at the court-house; that when, by leave of the court, the jury, not having yet agreed upon a verdict, were taken to the hotel for supper, the same juryman who had taken brandy before .his dinner repeated the indulgence before eating his supper, going alone as before to the bar-room for that purpose. We have no hesitation in saying that this narrative discloses misconduct on the.part of the jury which vitiated the verdict, and for which a new trial should have been granted. The conduct of the officer in taking the jury to dinner without leave of the court, and permitting two of the jurors to separate from their fellows, was in violation of his oath “to keep the jury together in some private and convenient place without meat or drink, water excepted;” and, by express provision of the statute, it was in the power of the court in which the trial was had to set aside the verdict for the sole cause of the separation of the jury. Code Crim. Proc. § 465, subd. 3. The provision cited specifies, among other eases in which the trial court may grant a new trial, the case “when the jury have separated without leave of the court after retiring to deliberate upon their verdict.” The concluding-clause of the subdivision, viz., “or have been guilty of any misconduct by which a fair and due consideration of the case has been prevented, ” is disjunctive in effect as it is in form, and relates to acts of misconduct other than that particularly specified. In this case, in the absence of evidence that either of the jurors, while separated from his fellows, conversed with any person on the subject of the trial, we should, no doubt, support the trial court in the exercise of its discretion not to grant a new trial for the sole cause of the separation of the jury. But the conceded fact that during the time devoted to the deliberations of the jury, one of their