55 Iowa 364 | Iowa | 1880
The appellants moved the court to arrest the judgment and discharge them from custody, because the “jury failed to render any verdict in said cause in open court as by law provided.” The motion was overruled.
It is provided by statute that, “when the jury has agreed upon its verdict, it must be conducted into court by the officer having it in charge. The names of the jury must then be called, and if ail do not appear the rest must be discharged without giving a verdict.” When the jury have answered to their names and have agreed on a verdict, they must declare it. Code, § § 4460, 4461.
It is the right of either the defendant or the State to have the jury polled at any time before the verdict is recorded. Code, § 4470.
It is evident the defendants were deprived of the right given by statute to poll the jury. We cannot say such right was not material, or the defendants were not prejudiced by being deprived of such statutory right. It seems to us it was a substantial right of which a defendant in a criminal action cannot be deprived without his consent. The court erred in receiving and recording the verdict, and in rendering judgment thereon.
Reversed.