1 Kan. App. 78 | Kan. Ct. App. | 1895
The opinion of the court was delivered by
At the October term, 1890, of the probate court of Republic county, the plaintiff in error submitted his final report, and asked for his discharge.
The only issue involved in the trial below was as to whether or not the plaintiff in error proceeded with due caution in taking surety and used due diligence to collect the Jones and Eyer notes, and all the evidence that was offered or introduced at the trial bore solely upon that question. The evidence was conflicting, and the jury found against the administrator. The record also discloses that after the cause was submitted to the jury, and after the jury had retired to consider as to their verdict, one of the jurors was observed talking in a confidential manner with one Jack Frame, who was not a member of the jury, and none of the other jurors were present or in the room with them at the time these two persons were so engaged. Among other instructions given by che court was the following :
“Gentlemen, you will now retire, in charge of the officer, to consider of your verdict. If you do not agree before court adjourns, you may seal your verdict, and give it to your foreman, who will hold it until court convenes, when he will present it to the court in your presence, that is, after you have agreed on your verdict. If you do, you may separate until court again*81 convenes, which, will be at 8 o’clock to-morrow morning.”
The court then admonished the jury as follows : “If you do separate, during the time you are separated you are to say nothing about your verdict, not even that you have agreed upon one.” About 4 o’clock of the following morning the jury informed the 'officer having them in charge that they had agreed upon a verdict, and thereupon they were allowed to separate, and did separate until 8 o’clock, when court again convened and the sealed verdict was presented by the foreman and read by the clerk. Thereupon the attorney for the plaintiff in error demanded a poll of the jury. One of the jurors answered that the verdict read was not his verdict, and the court, over the objection of the plaintiff in error, directed the jury to retire until they could agree upon such a verdict as they were willing should stand; that when they had done so they might return into court. This was about 8 : 30 a. m., at which time the court adjourned until afternoon. About one hour and a half after the jury had retired they again informed the officer having them in charge that they had agreed upon a verdict, and the jury were then allowed by the officer to separate until about 1: 30 o’clock p.m. of' the same day, without being admonished by the court. When the court again convened, the attorney for the plaintiff in error again asked that the jury be discharged from further consideration of the cause, and that no verdict be received from them, alleging their disqualification on account of having been allowed to separate without being admonished by the court, and without any authority from the court or the counsel, which motion was overruled by the court, and the ruling
“The violation of the statutory provisions with reference to separation and admonition, gives rise to a prejudice which will vitiate the verdict unless it affirmatively appears that no prejudice was suffered by the losing party. . . . Where there is a plain violation of statutory requirements enacted for the preservation of the purity of the verdict ... it devolves upon the prevailing party to show that the improper conduct did not prejudice the substantial rights of his opponent. In the absence of such a showing by the defendant in error, a new trial should have been granted.”
The record discloses that the attorney for the defendant in error, in his closing argument to the jury, referred to the widow and children of the deceased in the following language : ‘ ‘ This poor woman is now sick and at home with her two helpless children and unable to attend this trial, and has her living to make and her helpless children to maintain, and all this administrator wants to return out of an estate of $2,000 is $150, and this is all she has left to pay her mortgage with.” The attorney for the plaintiff in error objected to such language to the jury, as it was outside of the evidence in the case. The court then directed the attorney for the defendant in error to keep within the record, to which the attorney re
In Winter v. Sass, 19 Kas. 556, the counsel for the plaintiff, in his closing argument to the jury, stated that a former jury had, on less evidence, found for
The court is of the opinion that the errors complained of entitle the plaintiff in error to a new trial. The judgment of the court below is reversed, and a new trial awarded.