State v. Lash

225 Mo. 556 | Mo. | 1910

GANTT, P. J.

This is an appeal from a conviction in the circuit court of Jasper county of an assault with intent to kill C. C. Keyes on November 11, 1908. The defendant was duly arraigned and entered a plea of not guilty and upon trial was convicted and his punishment assessed at five years’ imprisonment in the penitentiary. Within due time he filed his motions for new trial and in arrest of judgment, which were overruled by the court, and he brings his cause here for review.

No error is assigned on the record proper. The information is sufficient and no objections or exceptions are urged against any of the instructions given by the court. The verdict and sentence are in due and regular form. None of the evidence on the merits of the case has been preserved and there is therefore no exception to the admission or rejection of any testimony.

The parties filed a stipulation whereby they agreed that the bill of exceptions in this case should contain only the evidence heard on the motions for a new trial. The sole question presented by this appeal is the alleged misconduct of the judge and deputy sheriff after the case had been submitted to the jury for final determination. It appears from that evidence that the cause was submitted to the jury about 7:30 o’clock in the evening on Saturday. The trial was at Carthage and had been heard before Judge Blair, the judge of Division number Two of that court. It seems that after the jury had retired, Judge Blair left for his home in Joplin about nine o’clock, and after Judge Blair had gone home the deputy sheriff who had charge of the jury reported to Judge Bright, the other judge of that court, that the jury desired to be brought in. The deputy sheriff testified: “My recollection is they reported to me and I reported to the court and then they came in and they were asked by the court if they had agreed upon their ver-*559diet and they answered that they could not agree, thereupon the judge sent them back to their room for further deliberation, saying at the time that Judge Blair’s instructions were to keep them over night” — the deputy saying that there might have been a certain hour to keep them, but he would not be positive about that. It also appears that the deputy sheriff said to the jury when he took them back to their room: “If you do not agree to-night you will be kept until tomorrow morning.” In a short time after they had returned to their room, the jury agreed upon a verdict and reported the same and were discharged.'

The defendant now insists that the sheriff had no right to tell the jury anything except to ask them if they had arrived at a verdict and the court had no right to tell them they would be kept together until Sunday morning if they did not arrive at a verdict before that time, and that the statements of the sheriff and the court to the jury constitute reversible error.

I. This appeal is without merit. It is significant that defendant was unwilling to submit to this court the testimony upon which he was convicted. He confesses there was no error in the instructions of which he could complain and no irregularity in his trial other than the two points already stated. The claim is that the court and sheriff coerced the jury into a verdict after they reported they could not agree. There is no substantial basis for either of these complaints. There is a well known indisposition on the part of jurors to find a verdict of guilty and nothing is more common than for the court to refuse to relieve them of their just responsibility by discharging them upon their request. Experience has shown that juries often try conclusions with the judge in their endeavor to avoid rendering a verdict of guilty where the offense is serious. In this case the judge simply directed them to retire to their room and deliberate on their verdict *560and if they could not agree they would be left in charge of the sheriff until morning. This was nine o’clock at night. There is nothing in the nature of a threat in this action of the court. Such directions are given every day in the courts of the State and no one regards them as any thing more than a desire on the part of the court that the jury shall deliberate further to avoid a mistrial.

Equally without merit is the charge against the deputy. There is not the slightest pretence that the deputy or the jurors referred in the most remote degree to the merits of the case they were considering. In State v. Spaugh, 200 Mo. l. c. 612, it was said: “Wherever it has been shown that jurors have been exposed to improper influences, the courts have required that it should be shown affirmatively that no prejudice in fact resulted, but it has not been ruled that every irregularity and violation of the statute shall of itself work a new trial.” The facts presented here are far more trivial and insignificant than those pointed out in that case. The statute safeguarding jurors from all improper influences is wise and salutary and has been enforced and will be, but in construing it the courts must be reasonable, and to reverse this judgment upon this showing would be to bring the administration of the law into' disrepute. The judgment is affirmed.

Burgess and Fox, JJ., concur.