57 P. 317 | Or. | 1899
delivered the opinion of the court.
F. S. Ivanhoe was indicted for the crime of assault with intent to kill, alleged to have been committed in Wallowa County, by shooting and wounding one R. O. Greig with a pistol; and, having been convicted of an assault with a dangerous weapon, he was sentenced to pay a fine of $500, from which sentence he appeals. The testimony given at the trial is not contained in the bill of exceptions, but it is certified therein that evidence was introduced tending to show that defendant went to the place where the difficulty occurred to suppress a combat between Mrs. Dalzell and Greig, whom he, in self-defense, shot. The jury, having been in consultation all night, were sent for, and reported that it was impossible for them to agree upon a verdict, stating that they were equally divided, whereupon the court again sent them out, after instructing them as follows : “The court will
In Randolph v. Lampkin, 90 Ky. 552 (10 L. R. A. 87, 14 S. W. 539), the jury, after having been out for some time, returned, and reported that there was no possibility of their agreeing, whereupon the judge said to them : ‘‘Gentlemen, how do you expect this case to be decided, unless you do it ? This is, as you know, the third trial of this case, and it has become an incubus upon the business of the court. You were examined in your selection as members of this jury, and none of you disclosed anything to cause me to doubt your capacity to try the case
In Whitelaw’s Ex’r v.Whitelaw, 83 Va. 40 (1 S. E. 407), the court, upon the failure of the jury to agree upon a verdict, said to them: “Under the particular circumstances of this case, .you should be disposed to yield something in deference to the opinions of others, and especially should you do so when those differing from you exceed in numbers, other things being even;” that an honest purpose to agree excluded all self-will and obstinacy of purpose; that the very construction of a jury supposes concessions, and the man who cannot concede is unfit for a juror, “yet a case may arise in which a duty may be so plain that concessions cannot properly be made. But this exists only in plain cases.. It cannot arise in cases in which the weight of conflicting evidence is somewhere about even. Do your duty, gentlemen, and leave the rest to me.” Mr. Justice Lacy, in reversing the judgment based upon a verdict obtained under such circumstances, says : “In this case the court was not satisfied with charging the jury at great length upon their general duties as jurors, but, in effect, instructs them that the minority should yield to the majority— that is, concede to the majority something in this particular case ; that the evidence was very conflicting, etc. How much this judge thought the minority must concede to the majority, the jury is not informed ; but upon what principle could this be held, except that the majority should govern, and that the question should be decided by a vote, the voice of the majority being then reported
In Cranston v. New York, etc. R. R. Co., 103 N. Y. 614 (9 N. E. 500), the jury, after deliberating some time, returned into court, and, one of them having stated that there was no probability of their agreeing, the court said to them, “I can’t take any such statement as that, gentlemen, you must get together upon a matter of this kind adding, “No juror ought to remain entirely firm in his own conviction, one way or another, until he has made up his mind, beyond all question, that he is necessarily right, and the others necessarily wrong.” The jury were thereupon again sent out, and, having found a verdict in favor of the plaintiff, the judgment rendered thereon was reversed. Mr. Justice Rapallo, speaking for the court, says: “We are of the opinion that the instruction excepted to was not a correct statement of the law. It was incumbent upon the party holding the affirmative of the issue, who in this case was the plaintiff, to satisfy the jury, by a preponderance of evidence, of the facts upon which her right to recover depended. If she failed to do so, the defendant was entitled to a verdict. The jurors
In State v. Bybee, 17 Kan. 462, the defendant was indicted for the crime of assault with intent to kill, and the jury, having heard the evidence, which tended to show that the “defendant was guilty as charged, or not guilty, retired; but, being unable to agree upon a verdict, the court sent for, and said to, them : “I am led to infer, from the character of your communications to me, that you think it impossible to agree, and desire to be discharged. You have heard the evidence, and the case has been ably argued by counsel, and the court has afforded every facility to enable you to understand the case. The trial has been very expensive to the public, and has occupied a great deal of time and attention, and it is not possible that it will ever be more clearly presented than it has been in this its first presentation to a jury. I do not desire to try the case again. It is often considered a reflection on the court, and upon you, as jurors, should you not agree. You have been impaneled to come to an agreement, not to wrangle over pet ideas and theories. It is the duty of the jury to agree, if
in reversing the judgment, says : “It also appears, both from the bill'of exceptions and from other parts of the record, that the jury were for a long time unable to agree, and, if we may credit some of the affidavits filed upon the motion for a new trial, were evenly divided. It seems to us, under these circumstances, that the remarks of the learned court were calculated to exert too strong a pressure upon the jury in favor of the agreement. It may not, perhaps, be possible to single out any particular sentence, and say that this is, strictly speaking, and taken by itself, erroneous, and sufficient to justify a reversal, though there are some that seem to trespass a good deal on the right and duty of each juror to the free exercise of his individual judgment. Yet the general impression of these instructions, as we read them, and, as it seems to us, must have been received by the jury, is that the jury ought, by compromise and surrender of individual convictions, if necessary, to come to an agreement, and that a failure to do so would be an imputation upon both jury and court. Now, while a court may properly call the attention of the jury to many matters which increase the desirability of an agreement, such as the time already taken, the improbability of securing additional testimony, the general public benefit in' a speedy close of a litigation, and, at least in cases where the matters at stake are of minor importance, the question of expense to the parties and the public, yet no juror should be influenced to a verdict by a fear of personal disgrace or pecuniary injury. No juror should be induced to agree to a verdict by a fear that a failure to so agree would be regarded by the public-as reflecting upon either his intelligence or his integrity. Personal considerations should never be permitted to influence his conclusions, and the thought of them should never be presented to him as a motive for
If a verdict is to be attained by mutual concessions on the part of the jurors, the result must necessarily be a general average of the sum of the different opinions entertained by each, and, when a juror consents to the average agreed upon, the verdict is eventually his own. The bill of exceptions not containing any of the testimony, we cannot say whether it was possible for six of the jurors conscientiously to entertain an opinion therefrom that defendant was guilty as charged in the indict