151 Ga. 208 | Ga. | 1921
Lead Opinion
Mrs. Gertrude Reynolds brought a libel for divorce against her husband, Edgar Reynolds, on the three grounds of cruel treatment, habitual intoxication, and adultery. The husband denied the alleged acts of cruel treatment, habitual intoxication, and adultery. The jury returned a verdict refusing a divorce; and the plaintiff made a motion for a new trial, which was overruled.
The rulings made in headnotes 1, 2, 4, 5, and 6 require no elaboration.
The remaining ground of the motion for a new trial is based upon the alleged fact that one of the jurors, after having been empaneled and after having heard a part of the evidence in the case, read an article in a daily newspaper published in the city where the trial took place, which contained comments upon the case on trial, and which, it is contended, ridiculed the plaintiff’s grounds for divorce, intimating that the same were frivolous, etc. The alleged fact of the juror’s having read this article is not proved by competent evidence. In reference to this ground, the plaintiff
Judgment affirmed.
Dissenting Opinion
dissenting. In the ease of Styles v. State, 129 Ga. 425 (59 S. E. 249), the judgment was reversed solely on the ground of newly discovered evidence as to misconduct of certain jurors in reading an article in a newspaper prejudicial to the accused, after they had been selected to serve in the case. The defense submitted an affidavit of a juror tending to show the alleged misconduct; but as a juror can not be heard to impeach his verdict (Civil Code, § 5933), the affidavit of the juror was considered of no value by this court, and it was held: “ Where a motion for new trial predicated upon the improper conduct of certain of the jurors charged with the trial of the case recites that ‘the jurors, after they had been impaneled and before all the evidence had been submitted, read copies ’ of a certain ‘ newspaper containing a certain editorial,’ which was ‘calculated to mislead the jurors, prejudice their verdict,’ etc., and there is no denial by the State, and the recitals of the motion are certified by the judge to be true, the motion and certificate will be construed to mean that the jurors actually read the editorial to which the objection related.” The decision thus rendered was decisive of the exact question involved in the ruling made in the third division of the opinion. The case was decided by all the justices, and has never been reviewed and modified, and is controlling.