122 Ga. 154 | Ga. | 1905
Smith was indicted and convicted of the offense of murder. He made a motion for a new trial on many grounds. We do not deem it necessary to discuss them all, but 'will put our judgment upon the one attacking the verdict on account of the gross misconduct on the part of the officers in charge of the jury and of the jurors themselves. It appears from the record that after the jury had been empaneled, the court adjourned for the night and left the jury in the court-room, where they, together with persons not members of the jury, engaged in playing the violin and organ and in dancing. It also appears that some of the jurors engaged in conversation with a person not a member of the jury, but not upon the subject of the case which they were to try, and that before the conversation had long ensued the bailiff forbade further talking by the jurors with outside parties ; whereupon those who were not jurors withdrew from within the bar railing, where the jurors were, and sat down in another part of the room. It does not appear for how long the jury thus amused themselves and the crowd, before they went from the court-house to the town hotel, where they spent the night, occupying two rooms, a bailiff also sleeping in each room. ' On the second night of the trial the jury were removed to a boardinghouse, where they occupied four different rooms, one juror sleeping in a hallway with the bailiffs. On the morning following, this juror who had slept with the bailiff had a conversation with
The law is, in the trial of felony cases, that if any irregularity is shown in the conduct of the jury or the officers that have them in charge, the burden is upon the State -to show that the accused 'is not injured by such misconduct. In this case, as before remarked, ten of the jurors depose that their minds were not influenced by any of the irregularities detailed above; but we think that for the State to fully carry the burden it must prove by all the jurors such facts as will tend to show to the court that no injury has been suffered by the accused. The record does not disclose why two of the jurors did not join with the others in making these affidavits. This, unexplained, might imply that they could not truthfully do so. While the ten jurors all depose that they
• This court, from the time of its organization to the present time, has striven to protect the purity and impartiality of jury trials, and wherever there have been irregularities, unless fully explained and the court satisfied that the accused has not been injured, new trials have been granted. Where the misconduct of the officers and jury has been gross, this court and others have held that a new trial should be granted on account of public policy, whether the accused was injured or not. In the case of Shaw v. State, 83 Ga. 99, this court said:. “There are- other things, however, which if done by an individual member of the jury, or by the whole jury, are so contrary to the public policy of the State in the procurement of fair and impartial trials for the citizens of the State, as to require that a verdict rendered by such jury be set aside, whether the defendant has been injured thereby or not; and, in our opinion, the case under consideration belongs to this class.” And again, on page 101, it was further said: “ After mature deliberation of all these facts, we think the misconduct of this bailiff and jury was so gross that the public policy of the State requires a new trial for the defendant. It was such a gross violation of all order, decorum, and decency in the trial of a case of life and death, that the verdict should be set •aside, whether the defendant was injured or not.” See also Rainey v. State, 100 Ga. 82; Central Ry. Co. v. Hammond, 109 Ga. 385. For upright, intelligent jurors, who have been charged with the life and death of one of their follow-citizens, to engage in music and dancing after they have been sworn, is almost incredible. The constant separation of the jury, their leaving the court-room without permission of the judge and against the oath of the bailiff, for the purpose of making experiments upon the testimony sworn before them; all of these facts make this a case where the public policy of the State demands a new trial. The courts must uphold the impartiality, decorum, and decency of jury trials; and wherever misconduct like this is shown, the •courts must condemn it by granting new trials. It is much better for the accused to have a new trial, even though he be guilty, than for the courts to countenance such deportment.
Judgment reversed.