15 Ga. App. 545 | Ga. Ct. App. | 1914
Boberson was indicted for the offense of assault with intent to murder, and was convicted with a recommendation that he be punished as for a misdemeanor. He excepts to the .overruling of his motion for new trial. In addition to the usual general grounds, the defendant alleged, in his motion for new trial, that during the trial of the case and after the judge had charged the jury and the jury had retired to the jury-room, the jury obtained a copy of the Penal Cod.e of Georgia, and a member of the jury read to and in the presence of the jury certain portions of the law therein contained, in order to convince the jurors that he was right in his recollection of the charge as given them by the presiding judge. It was .further alleged that the book was obtained
1. No errors of law are alleged to have been committed in rulings upon the testimony nor in the charge of the court, and there was sufficient evidence to authorize the verdict of guilty; so that the only ground which requires consideration is the amendment to the motion for a new trial, relating to the alleged misconduct of the jury. Upon consideration of this special ground of the motion numerous affidavits were submitted to the court, some of them supporting the ground, and others, in behalf of the State, tending to show that the circumstance referred to was not prejudicial to the accused, and also that two of defendant’s counsel had knowledge of the irregularity before a, verdict was rendered and while the case was still pending before the jury. It is uncontradicted that Burk-halter, the foreman, separated himself from his fellow jurors by leaving the jury-room when they were considering a verdict, and that when he returned he brought with 'him a copy of the Penal Code of Georgia and proceeded to read to the jury from the code upon a question about which there had been some difference among the jurors as to the charge of the court. The sections read by Burkhalter related exclusively to the punishment imposed in cases of assault with intent to murder when there was no recommendation, and to the right of the jurors to recommend punishment as for a misdemeanor in such eases.
This case differs from that of Lovett v. State, 60 Ga. 357, where it was held that the fact “that the jury had a copy of the code in their room for a brief time, which, without reading a single line, they sent out, is of no consequence,” for in this case two sections of the code were read by a juror and were discussed by the jury;
However, the real point at issue upon the hearing of the motion in the instant case was as to whether the defendant’s counsel knew of the misconduct of the jurors prior to the verdict, and whether he did not waive the point by taking his chances upon a verdict of acquittal. Upon this point the testimony was in conflict. The testimony for the movant tended to show that while counsel for the defendant had heard a rumor that the jury had a code in their room, he did not in fact know that the statement was true, that he promptly called the attention of the court to this rumor and the court ordered an investigation by the sheriff, and that counsel did not hear anything more of the matter. Had the court accepted this view of the evidence it would be held that counsel for the defendant might naturally and reasonably have assumed that the rumor was groundless.
Movant’s counsel testified by affidavit that upon the sheriff’s return from the jury-room that officer reported to the affiant that his information as to the jurors having a code was incorrect, and for this reason counsel was not apprized of the actual facts as to the misconduct of the jurors until the jury that tried the case had been discharged. On the other hand, there was testimony on the part of the sheriff (merely negative it is true) that he did not remember telling counsel that the book had not been in the jury-room and that he did not remember having any conversation with the defendant’s counsel (Mr. Frizelle) concerning the book one way or the other. However, there was also before the court an affidavit of one of State’s counsel to the effect that he learned in the morning, after the case had been submitted to the jury the previous night, that one of the jurors had obtained a Penal Code during the night, and that about half past eight o’clock of that morning he informed defendant’s attorney of the fact that the jury had obtained a Penal Code during the night, and that thereupon the 'defendant’s counsel told him that he had already found out
2. It is the paramount duty of all courts to insure fair 'and impartial trials, and this court has held that the conduct of jurors during the consideration of a case should be free from all suspicion of extraneous or improper influence. Improper conduct on- the part of a juror .is to be presumed to have been prejudicial to a-fair-
3. The reason why the verdict of a jury should be free even from suspicion of improper influence is based upon considerations of sound public policy so just and so compelling that we have preferred not to rest the decision of this case upon the proposition that the irregularity was shown to have been harmless to the defendant, but to place our ruling rather upon the ground that the trial judge, having found that the defendant knew of the misconduct of the jurors prior to 'the return of the verdict, the lower court properly held that the defendant had waived all objection to any irregularity which might otherwise have vitiated the trial. It is true that it has been held not to be error to overrule a motion for a new trial based upon acts of misconduct on the part of members of a jury, the acts in themselves not being hurtful to the accused or prejudicial to his rights. Jones v. State, 135 Ga. 357 (69 S. E. 527). In the Jjovett case, supra, the court held that proof that the code which the jury had in their room for a brief time was not opened or read by any juror was of no consequence. And in Allen v. State, 61 Ga. 166, there was a code in the room with the jury, which was affirmatively shown not to have been opened or read, .as well as evidence of certain remarks foreign to the ease made by certain of the jurors to passers by, and evidence of contact on the part of one of the jurors with an outsider whose interest in the case (if any existed) was in favor of the accused. Judge Jackson, speaking for the court, in the Allen case, said: “The rule of law is that if affidavits are made which show that the conduct of the jury was so irregular that the defendant was or could have been injured by that conduct, then the State must rebut fully and clearly and satisfy the court that he was not injured and could not have been injured by such conduct.” In Shaw v. State, 83 Ga. 92 (9 S. E.
Though it is well settled in'this State that misconduct on the part of jurors will be presumed to be injurious to the losing party and casts upon the prevailing party the burden of showing, in the event of any irregularity, that this departure from orderly proceedure did not injure the losing party, and though it is equally well settled that there are some acts of misconduct so gross that public policy forbids any inquiry into their probable effect and conclusively presumes such injury as demands another trial, we are not compelled to decide whether the jurors5 examination of the Penal Code for themselves, to ascertain the rules prescribing punishment for assault with intent to murder, may properly be held to have been harmless (in view of their having recommended that the defendant be punished as for a misdemeanor), or to rule that the acquisition and use of principles of law from any other source than the judge, who is the only tribunal authoritatively empowered to
4. The trial was free from material error, the verdict was supported by evidence, and there was no abuse of discretion in passing upon the testimony submitted for and against the ground of the motion for a new trial relating to the presumptively prejudicial misconduct of the jury. Judgment affirmed.