20 S.E. 1021 | N.C. | 1895
The question for determination is, do the findings of his Honor show such misconduct on the part of the jury as to vitiate the verdict, and to make it in law no verdict? For otherwise (974) the verdict would simply be erroneous, and, therefore, under the final control of the judge below as to his discretion in granting or refusing a new trial. The answer to the question depends most largely upon the proper construction of the words, "Nearly all of them drank of this whiskey, some of them under its influence." We think the fair, reasonable and natural meaning of these words is that some of the jurors were under the controlling power, sway and ascendancy of the whiskey which they drank. This being so, they were in a condition which unfitted them to discuss evidence, and to properly consider its weight and the effect of their conclusions. They were, on this account, not good and lawful men, as the law required them to be, and therefore their verdict was null. There was a mistrial. There is no room for the inference that these jurors might have been *573
under the influence of strong drink on the night before they delivered their verdict on the next morning at ten o'clock, and have been sober at and before that hour. The findings of fact show that other whiskey was passed through a window to the jury on that very morning. The law requires that jurors, while in the discharge of their duties, shall be temperate and in such condition of mind as to enable them to discharge those duties honestly, intelligently and free from the influence and dominion of strong drink. No prudent man would be willing to have the facts of his case passed upon by a jury some of whom were under the influence of whiskey. Our reports contain no case in which the facts found on motions for new trials for misconduct of jurors are the same, in words or substance, as in this case, and we do not, by this decision, overrule or modify any opinion heretofore rendered by this Court in matters of this nature. In some of the states of the American Union, drinking in any degree by any of the jurors in the progress of a trial vitiates the verdict. This is not the rule in North Carolina. In S. v. Sparrow,
As we have already said, we have no reported case in which the use of strong drink, to the extent found in this one, has been made to appear. All the cases reported on this subject are easily to (976) be distinguished from this.
We are of the opinion that his Honor erred in refusing the motion for a new trial, and that there was a mistrial on account of disqualification of the jury because some of them were under the influence of whiskey while they were engaged in making up their verdict. The defendant is therefore entitled to a
New Trial.
Cited: S. v. Tyson,