3 S.D. 255 | S.D. | 1892
This was an action to recover the value of a stock of merchandise levied upon by writs of attachment issued in suits against one Sibb Peterson, a son of the plaintiff, and subsequently sold by the defendant, as sheriff, under executions issued on judgments obtained in the said attachment suits. The jury found a verdict in favor of the defendant, upon which judgment was rendered, and plaintiff appeals. A motion for a new trial was made in the court below, one of the grounds of which was as fol
The question presented is, did the acts of the defendant constitute such an irregularity as to entitle the plaintiff to a new trial? While it may be that the defendant intended no wrong, and neither did nor said anything to the jurors to influence them in arriving at their verdict, the acts of the defendant were grossly improper. It appears the jury were in charge of a sworn officer, as bailiff, yet the defendant makes no explanation why he did not communicate the request of the judge to the jury through him, instead of going himself to the jury and mingling with the jurors. While the explanation of the defendant of his acts tends to present them in a more favorable light, still the fact remains that the proceedings of the defendant were so irregular as to subject them fo a just criticism; and the fact that the jury returned a verdict soon after in his favor was calculated to arouse in the minds of the opposite party a grave suspicion that an improper influence had been exerted upon the jury. To avoid these suspicions, and give confidence to parties in the fairness and impartiality of jury trials, courts guard the jurors from all communications on the part of parties to the action while they are deliberating upon their verdict. This view was forcibly expressed by the supreme court of Massachusetts in Knight v. Inhabitants of Freeport, 13 Mass. 217. The court in that case says: “Too much care and precau
Tbe confidence of litigants in tbe verdicts of juries should not be weakened, nor tbe rule dictated by public policy relaxed, in cases of this character. Tbe probability that a party who inter-¡meddles with tbe jury while they are deliberating upon their verdict does so for an improper purpose is so great that courts will look with suspicion upon tbe evidence given in explanation of tbe act. But were this tbe case of an ordinary defendant, who bad inadvertently mingled with the jurors while deliberating upon
It is contended by the counsel for the respondent that, as the counsel for the appellant had knowledge of the irregularity before the verdict .was rendered, he should have brought it to the attention of the court, and that his failure to do so was a waiver of such irregularity. But the irregularity was of such a character that the court could not have corrected it before verdict. It is only when the irregularity can be so corrected by the trial court before the verdict that a failure to bring it to the attention of the court.
Numerous errors are assigned upon the admission and rejection of evidence that it will not be necessary now to consider. Errors are also assigned upon the charge of the court, but an examination of the abstract discloses the fact that no exceptions appear to have been taken to any part of such charge, or to any requests refused or given. If errors are relied upon for a reversal of the judgment, they must be made to affirmatively appear by the abstract. If it is claimed that there were errors in the judge’s charge, or in the giving or refusing instructions requested, it must affirmatively appear in the abstract that exceptions were taken at the proper time. Lumber Co. v. Pennington, 2 Dak. 467, 11 N. W. Rep. 497. The judgment of the circuit court is reversed, and a new trial ordered.