The appellants, Frank D’Angelo, Richard Delcazal and Wade A. Freman, were tried together and convicted on different offenses arising from a scheme to distribute marijuana. 1 We affirm the convictions.
Appellants Delcazal and Freman raise two issues on appeal. First, they argue that the district court erred in allowing the government’s chief witness — a co-conspirator not indicted by the grand jury — to testify concerning a marijuana delivery that was
allegedly intended originally
for Delcazal but was diverted to another buyer.
*1003
No objection was made to the testimony at trial and there was no error in its admission. The testimony was evidence of overt acts committed by other conspirators during the life of the conspiracy and as such was admissible.
United States v. Elliot,
Second, Decazal and Freman claim error in the district court’s refusal to grant a motion for an indefinite continuance to obtain the presence of a witness the defendants had first tried to locate only three days prior to trial. The court denied the motion on the grounds that the defendants had failed to exercise due diligence in attempting to procure the witness. The exercise of due diligence is a prerequisite to the grant of such motions.
United States v. Uptain,
The sole issue raised on appeal by the appellant D’Angelo concerns a note sent to the trial judge by the jury after the jury reached its verdict. The note reads:
We have had great difficulty deciding and coming to agreement about Frank D’Angelo and have decided as we did only because we believe he knew about the transactions and thus was a conspirator. (Emphasis by the jury)
After discussing the significance of the note with counsel out of the jury’s presence, the court decided that the note could not impeach the jury’s general verdict of guilty. The jury was brought into the courtroom and polled, and all jurors adhered to the verdict. None of the jurors made any reference to the note or in any other way attempted to qualify or elaborate on the verdict. 2
We cannot divine with certainty why the jury sent the note or what it was intended to mean. It is entirely possible that the note means what D’Angelo claims it means: that the jury found D’Angelo guilty only because he
knew
about the transactions and thus was a conspirator. Willful participation is an essential element of the crime of conspiracy; mere knowledge of a conspiracy does not itself make a person a conspirator.
E. g., United States v. Binetti,
The possibility that the jury misunderstood or even intentionally misapplied the law, however, does not warrant reversal of the conviction. D’Angelo’s attack on the verdict is an attempt to expose the jury’s collective mental process to judicial scrutiny. There is no claim that the court erred in giving the law to the jury as it did. In *1004 fact the court’s instructions placed heavy emphasis on the necessity óf a finding of willful participation in the conspiracy. There is no claim that evidence of knowing participation did not exist. Indeed, there could not be such a claim for there was testimony by a government witness of direct dealings with D’Angelo. There is no claim that the jury was corrupted by some extraneous influence, that the verdict was not unanimous, or that the verdict was anything other than a general verdict of guilty. 3 Rather, D’Angelo’s attack on the verdict is, as the trial judge characterized it, an attempt to use the jury’s note to probe its process of deliberation and find out how and why the jury reached its verdict. That is the one form of attack on a verdict that has always been forbidden in Anglo-American criminal law.
A jury has an obligation to follow the law as it is given by the trial court, but it is a peculiar facet of the jury institution that once a verdict is rendered, no judicial inquiry is permitted into the jury’s deliberative process to determine if in fact the court’s instructions were properly followed. As the Supreme Court noted long ago, in that limited sense a jury passes both on law and fact, for “ ‘in practice, the verdict of the jury, both upon the law and the fact, is conclusive; because, from the nature of the proceeding, there is no judicial power by which the conclusion of law thus brought upon the record by that verdict can be reversed, set aside, or inquired into.’ ”
Sparf v. United States,
Severe limitations exist on all attempts “to breach the shroud surrounding jury deliberations,”
United States v. Gipson,
The necessary consequence of the rule against examination of the jury’s mental process is that convictions must stand despite the presence of plausible suspicion that the jury’s mental process was ill-conceived. In
Davis v. United States,
“[T]he essential feature of a jury lies in the interposition between the accused and his accuser of the commonsense judgment of a group of laymen.”
Williams v. Florida,
All convictions are
AFFIRMED.
Notes
. All three appellants were indicted along with fourteen other persons for conspiracy to possess marijuana with intent to distribute, 21 U.S.C. § 841(a)(1), 846. Decazal and Freman were also indicted on one substantive count of possession of marijuana with intent to distribute, 21 U.S.C. § 841(a)(1). Decazal was additionally charged with three counts of the use of a communication facility to facilitate the distribution of marijuana, 21 U.S.C. § 843(b). D’Angelo, Decazal and Freman were granted a severance from the other fourteen co-defendants and were tried together before a jury. The jury found the defendants guilty on all counts.
. Defense counsel present in the courtroom when the judge received the note neither requested nor suggested any procedure different from that followed by the court. Before bringing the jury back into the courtroom, the court heard comments on the note from D’Angelo’s counsel, the counsel for the other defendants, and the prosecutor. After rereading the note aloud several times, the court stated that the jury appeared to be attempting to explain its verdict. Mr. Zibilizh, counsel for Freman, noted that the contents of the note “could fly in the face of the law” as the judge gave it, stating that “just because somebody knew of a transaction doesn’t make him a conspirator necessarily.” Following up on Mr. Zibilizh’s comment, the judge agreed that the jury would have to find that D’Angelo Was a willful participant before it could convict him. A dialogue then took place between the judge and Mr. Rodriguez, D’Angelo’s counsel. The judge spoke of the note as the jury’s “mental processes working,” and Mr. Rodriguez agreed, stating that “There seems to be some doubt or there’s something in the back of their mind.” It was not suggested by D’Angelo’s counsel or any of the other lawyers present that the court declare a mistrial or send the jury back for more deliberation. Nor was there any effort to seek to interrogate the jurors to determine the purpose of the note, a procedure condemned in
United States v. Sexton,
. Because there is no question in this case as to what the jury’s verdict actually was or as to whether or not it was unanimous, it is different in kind from cases in which a jury sends a note to a judge that casts suspicion on whether the verdict is unqualified or unanimous. Such cases usually involve a verdict accompanied by a jury request for leniency. See e.
g., Cook v. United States,
It is true that in
United States v. Cook, supra,
a conviction was reversed because of circumstances that included a jury request for leniency. However, in
Cook,
the jury found a defendant guilty but included an asterisk on the verdict which referred to a footnote requesting “every degree of leniency possible.” When polled, ten of the jurors responded to the question guilty or not guilty by answering, “Guilty, based on the note at the bottom.” On appeal this court held that the note, coupled with the conditional answers given by the jurors when polled, created doubt as to what the verdict actually was and to whether or not it was unanimous.
Cook
held that it was error to deny defense counsel’s requests for a second poll, or for further jury deliberations accompanied hy an instruction that the jury had no power to control the sentence once a verdict was returned.
Cook
has been described as
“sui generis
in federal decisional law.”
United States v. Lee, supra,
. Professor Moore writes: “There must come a time when the temptation to analyze and fragment a jury verdict must yield to the perspective that lack of perfection inheres in the jury system.” 8A Moore’s Federal Practice 1131.-08[1][a],
