In the present case, the plaintiff sought to recover damages for personal injuries which she sustained when an automobile she was operating collided with an automobile owned and operated by the defendant. The case was tried to a jury, which returned a verdict in favor of the plaintiff. The court accepted the verdict and rendered judgment thereon, from which the defendant has appealed.
We only consider the two assignments of error which the defendant has pursued in his brief. The defendant claims that the supplemental instruction given by the court to the jury after they reported their inability to reach a verdict was inadequate.
The trial of the case continued over a period of five days. The basic charge of the court to the jury, to which no exception was taken, was completed at approximately 3:35 p.m. on Tuesday, March 14, 1967, and the jury commenced their deliberations, which lasted until 4:40 p.m., at which time they were excused and allowed to go home for the night.
Deliberations were resumed at 10:45 the following morning, and they continued, except for a luncheon recess, until 3:15 p.m., at which time the jury reported they were in disagreement. The court recalled the jury and gave them a supplemental instruction adapted from the charge which had been approved by this court in
State
v.
Smith,
The defendant does not question the accuracy of the supplemental charge as a statement of a juror’s duty. It made “clear the necessity, on the one hand, of unanimity among the jurors in any verdict, and on the other hand the duty of careful consideration by each juror of the views and opinions of each of his fellow jurors, something without which no intelligent body of twelve would be likely to reach a unanimous result in any case where there was any substantial factual dispute.”
State
v.
Walters,
supra, 64. An instruction concerning the juror’s duty is proper in a civil, as well as in a criminal, trial.
Wheeler
v.
Thomas,
The defendant claims that the court erred in neglecting to mention in its supplemental instruc
The court has discretionary power to give, on its own motion, a supplemental instruction to a jury. See
Buck
v.
Robinson,
To assist the jury in the instant case to reach a unanimous verdict, it does not appear that it was necessary for the court to charge the jury that, in their reconsideration of the case, they were to be governed by an earlier instruction pertaining to the burden of proof. Whether reference to a portion of the basic charge should have been made was a matter which called for the exercise of the court’s discretion. There is nothing in the record to indicate that the court abused its discretion.
It is obvious that the statute becomes applicable only after the jury have returned a verdict. A verdict of the jury is the jury’s answer “to the questions of fact contained in the issue formed by the pleadings of the parties.”
Day
v.
Webb,
We do not agree with the defendant’s contention that § 52-223 of the General Statutes is applicable to the situation presented in this case. The jury in the present case did make three reports of disagreement to the court. A report of disagreement, however, is not a verdict. It merely serves to inform
In support of the claim that § 52-223 applies to a situation where the jury report a disagreement, the defendant relies on a statement in
State
v.
Cianflone,
In the absence of a statute to the contrary, the determination of how long a disagreeing jury will be kept together and required to continue their deliberations is a matter of sound judicial discretion. 53 Am. Jur., Trial, § 962; 89 C.J.S., Trial, § 482. The present statute in no way limits that discretion. Nor are there any circumstances indicating that the trial court abused its discretion in the instant case. As we have already noted, the trial consumed five days. The jury deliberated approximately seven hours. When the jury first announced their inability to agree on a verdict, the court gave
There is no error.
In this opinion the other judges concurred.
