27 F. Cas. 927 | E.D. Wis. | 1879
The question bearing upon the right of the defendant to a new. trial arises upon the misconduct of one of the jurors while the trial of the cause was in progress. At the beginning of the trial the jury were cautioned against having any conversation with any person about the case, and against allowing any person to approach them for the purpose of having such conversation, and against permitting any conversation relating to the ease to be had in their presence. The admonition was pointedly given and must have been well understood by the jury and by all parties present. At a subsequent stage of the case the defendant, through his counsel, made application for an order granting to the jury leave to visit and examine his rectifying house, where it was alleged illicit spirits had been manufactured. His application was denied, and the denial was accompanied with observations on the part of the court, which must have given the jury and all parties interested distinctly to understand that the case was to be heard and determined upon the evidence adduced in court, and that no other sources of knowledge or information were to be consulted. Nevertheless, before the conclusion oi the trial, one of the jurors, without the knowledge or leave of the court, visited the rectifying house and made extensive examinations of the same in company with the defendant. The circumstance was first brought to the knowledge of the court after verdict, by affidavits of the facts made by the defendant and certain of his witnesses. • Proceedings were at once taken for an investigation of the conduct of the juror, which resulted in the imposition of such punishment as the court at the time thought his misconduct warranted. This act of the offending juror has been earnestly urged as ground for a new trial.
Invoking, as counsel did in support of their view, the rule which limits the inquiry of a juror in the case he is called to hear to the evidence adduced at the trial, unless otherwise ordered by the court, and also those general principles regulating jury trials which are essential to a pure and impartial administration of justice, and impressing also upon the attention of the court the circumstance that there had been such transgression by the juror as merited, and made it the duty of the court to impose, suitable censure aDd punishment, my mind was at the time strongly impressed by the argument which counsel for defendant made upon this branch of the case. In testing its soundness as applicable to the ease at bar, it seems essential that we look closely into the particular circumstances and facts connected with the admitted misconduct of the juror.
The affidavit of the juror, made in the proceeding against him for contempt, varies in some particulars from that of the defendant, but it is in substance an admission of the alleged misconduct, and shows that the defendant participated with him in the examination of the premises, and pointed out to him various places and objects in the rectifying house referred to in the testimony. For the purposes of the pending question of a new trial, we may accept the affidavit of the defendant as giving a truthful statement of the occurrence.
The facts then being as stated by the defendant, the question is, do they entitle him to a new trial? That the rule touching the-effect of misconduct of a juror upon a verdict is a strict one, cannot be denied.- That it is-also a salutary rule, and one to be faithfully observed as essential to the purity of jury trials, must without hesitation be admitted. The books are full of cases where the rule has been enforced. And, although there is some disagreement in the authorities on the point, I think the weight of authority is, that it is not necessary in order to justify the court in setting aside a verdict for irregular conduct of a juror, to show affirmatively that such conduct influenced the jury or affected the verdict. The misconduct of a juror, if it occurs without the knowledge or participation of the party litigant, taints the verdict; that is, provided it was of such a character that it might have had an undue influence. Says Judge Clifford in Johnson v. Root [Case No. 7,409]: “Irregularity on the part of the party charged or of the jury, must be satisfactorily proved in order to lay a foundation for the interposition of the court, but when the irregular conduct is established, it is not necessary that it should certainly appear that it influenced the jury. In that state of the case it is sufficient that the irregularity appears to be of a character that it might have affected the impartiality of the proceedings.” Such was the rule laid down in Com. v. Roby, 12 Pick. 520, and it appears to be correct. In thát case the court says that where there is an irregularity which may affect the impartiality of the proceedings, as where meat and drink or other refreshments have been furnished by the party, or where the jury have been exposed to the effect of such influence, as where they have improperly separated themselves or have had communications not authorized, inasmuch as there cannot be any certainty that they have not been improperly influenced, the proper and appropriate mode of correction or relief is by undoing what has thus been improperly and might have been corruptly done. Text writers have stated the rule as follows: “That whenever it seems satisfactorily to appear that the jury were influenced by improper motives, or that they acted corruptly or under restraint, and it clearly appears that a fair trial has not been had, the verdict will be set aside and a new trial granted. Any improper interference with the jurors may afford sufficient grounds for granting such a motion, and it is not necessary that the attempt to influence the jurors should be made by one of the parties, nor even by his agents. It is sufficient, if it clearly appear that it was done in his behalf, and it is never necessary to show that the misconduct controlled or determined the verdict, provided it was of a character that it might have had an undue influence.” In Knight v. Inhabitants of Freeport, 13 Mass. 21S, the plaintiff’s son-in-law said to one of the jurors that the cause was of great conse-
As illustrative of the extent to which the courts go in setting aside verdicts for improper attempts to influence jurors, the following cases are in point: Hamilton v. Pease, 38 Conn. 115; Perkins v. Knight, 2 N. H. 474; Bennett v. Howard, 3 Day, 223. See, also, Sargent v. Roberts, 1 Pick. 337; Dana v. Roberts, 1 Root, 134; Farrer v. Ohio, 2 Ohio St. 54; Riley v. State, 9 Humph. 646; Foster v. Brooks, 6 Ga. 287; State v. Andrews, 29 Conn. 100, and many other cases which might be cited.
In this connection it may be observed that in Mcilvaine v. Wilkins, 12 N. H. 474, the court, in discussing this subject, say, that “scattered throughout the reports there are far more eases than there should be of applications for new trials, founded upon evidence tending to show sometimes attempts by a party to prejudice a jury in his favor, and sometimes conduct in jurymen indicative of a forgetfulness of the important responsibilities resting upon them.” And Mr. Hilliard says in his work on New Trials (Hal. New Trials, c. 10, § 11) that the weight of authority would seem now to be that conversation with jurymen, more especially, unless held when they are together, is not ground for a new trial; citing Davis v. Taylor, 2 Chit. 268; Parke’s Case, 2 Rolle, 85; Hall’s Case, 6 Leigh, 615; Luster v. State, 11 Humph. 169; Rowe v. State, Id. 491. Visiting the scene of the res gestae by jurors, without permission of the court, ahd with a view to obtain information touching the facts of the case on trial, or for explanation of testimony, is ground for a new trial. Such, in effect, was the ruling in Eastwood v. People, 3 Park. Cr. R. 25; Ruloff v. People, 18 N. Y. 179; and Deacon v. Shreve, 22 N. J. Law, 176.
In the light of the authorities to which I have referred, and many others to which reference might be made, if it appeared in the case at bar that the juror held conversations with other parties than the defendant about the merits of the case while the trial was in progress, or visited the defendant’s rectifying house for the purpose of examining the same, without defendant’s knowledge or cooperation, I should have little hesitation in setting aside this verdict. The question now is, is the defendant in a position to invoke the application of the rule which gives to a party, pz-esumably prejudiced by the misconduct of a juror, the benefit of a new triál. He had knowledge of the refusal of the court to permit the jury to visit the premises. Xet, finding the juror there while the trial was in progress, he conducted him over the premises, and, as appears by his own sworn statement, pointed out localities and objects concerning which testimony had been given. He knew that the court had forbidden the jury to have conversations with persons concerning the case, yet, according to his own affidavit, he held such conversation with the juror while accompanying him through the rectifying house. In view of what had transpired in court in his presence, and in view of the statement in his affidavit that the juror told him that he did not want any one to know he had been at the rectifying house, it is to my mind clear that the defendant knew that the conduct of the juror was a violation of his duty, and was in disregard of the orders of the court. Xet he made no report of the transaction to the court, nor even to his counsel, but sat silent and permitted the trial to proceed without complaint until after verdict when he makes complaint in the form of a motion for a new trial, on the ground that he was prejudiced by the misconduct of the juror, in which he participated, and to which he was a party.
I have examined with care all the cases cited by counsel, and many more bearing upon this question, and I have been unable to find a case in which a new trial was granted for misconduct of a juror, in which the party asking for a new trial participated. The cases in which such misconduct was held ground for a new trial were, so far as my observation extends, where the misconduct was between the juror and a third party, or between the juror and the successful party in the litigation, and of which the losing party was at the time ignorant, and with which he was in no manner connected. Now, although “the utmost precaution should be observed to prevent any attempt to forestall the judgment or to bias the mind of a juror in reference to the merits of an issue which he is called on to decide,” and although “all trials by jury ought to be effectually guarded against the exertion of every species of improper influence,” the question is. whether, when a defendant makes himself a party to the miscon
Motion for a new trial denied.