This case has been here once before.
The next day after the verdict had been rendered and .'after the jury had sеparated, three of the jurors jo'inedin an ■•affidavit to the Court, the substance of which was, that after the jury had retired, apart were for conviction anda' part were for aequittal and still remained so, after a consultation .which lastеd all night. Whereupon, Bateman, one ■of the number, “ a man of learning and a former Sheriff of the County, ” suggested that they could recommend the prisoner to the mercy of the Court, and that the Judge would recommend him for the Governor’s pardon. That •bеlieving the prisoner had not been proved guilty of murder, yet thinking the weight of evidence was against him* ¿hey, as a kind of compromise, agreed to bring in a verdict *562 of guilty upоn the conviction that their recommendation for mercy would prevent the prisoner from being hanged» That they did not and do not now believe the prisoner guilty of murder, and that they never wmuld have consent.ed to the verdict, had they known the full effeсt of it, and liad they not been fully satisfied that they had effected a compromise whereby they had saved the prisoner from the-death penalty. And finally, that in any other sense, the verdict of guilty of murder was not their verdict and had never been agreed to by them. The Court refused to set aside the verdict. In this there is no error. The affidavit is mаde a part of the case.
If1 the mоtion for a new trial is based, not upon the misconduct, but upon the mistake of the jury in the Court below, the Supreme Court cannot take notice of such mistake, whethеr they find against the facts or the law; be-' cause the jurisdiction of this Court is confined to matters of law adjudged by the Court below, and to ascertain what matters of law wеre so adjudged, -we look to the case stated.. This Court corrects errors оf law committed by the Judge below and not those committed by the jury. For errors of the lаtter kind, the remedy is for the Court below to grant a 3iew trial.
State
v.
Gallimore,
7 Ire 147;
Long
v.
Gantley,
4 Dev. & Bat. 315;
Goodman
v.
Smith,
*563
No other point in behalf of the prisoner was made or pressed in this Court. Whether his case is a fit one for executive clemency, belongs to the appropriate tribunal.
No error. This will be certified.
Per CujriaM. Judgment 'affirmed.
