7 N.M. 306 | N.M. | 1893
The defendant below, A. M. Swan, was indicted, as postmaster at Gallup, for the embezzlement of five hundred and sixty odd dollars, alleged to belong to the money order funds of the postal department of the United States. He entered ■a plea of not guilty, was tried and convicted (the jury ■finding the amount embezzled to be $139), and was thereupon sentenced to pay a fine of $200. The cause is here for review upon writ of error. The indictment was drawn under the provisions of section 4046 of the Revised Statutes of the United States, the portions of which, pertinent to the disputed points involved in the case, are as- follows: “Every postmaster * * * employed in or connected with the business or operation of any money order office, who converts to his own use, in any way whatever, or loans, or deposits in any bank, except as authorized by this title, or exchanges, for other funds, any portion of the money order funds, shall be deemed guilty of embezzlement; * * * and any failure to pay over or produce any money order funds intrusted to such person, shall be taken to be prima facie evidence of embezzlement; and upon the trial of any indictment against any person for puch embezzlement, it will be prima facie evidence of a balance against him to produce a transcript from the money order account books of the sixth auditor.” The chief errors urged by plaintiff in error to secure a reversal of the judgment are, in substance: First, the admission in evidence, over defendant’s objection, of the certified transcript from the money order account books of the sixth auditor of the treasury, purporting to show the balance due from the defendant to the postal department; second, separation of the jury before they had agreed upon a verdict, after the cause-had been submitted.
‘ ‘ ‘We, the jury, find the defendant guilty as charged in the indictment, and that the amount of money embezzled was the sum of one hundred and thirty-nine dollars; ’ had it read to them, and inquired of them if that was their verdict. Some of them answered ‘Yes,’ but, on being polled, the second juror who responded answered ‘No,’ that it was not his verdict. The court then told the jury to go back to their quarters in charge of the bailiff, to deliberate upon their verdict, and that, if they could find that verdict as written out by the court to be their verdict, to sign it, and return it inte court; and further instructed them that they need not necessarily find that verdict, but might find the defendant not guilty if they so chose, or words to that effect. They retired to their quarters, were locked up by the bailiff, and something like an hour or so later returned into court the verdict so written out for them by the court, — in fact the very same paper, duly signed by their foreman, — and answered that it was their verdict, and affirmed such fact on being polled.” Such is the history of the error complained of as disclosed by the record. There are no provisions in the statutes of the territory regulating the practice in such particulars, hence we must be controlled by the rules recognized at the common law. The decisions of the state courts, predicated, as they are, to a great extent upon local statutes, are not always in harmony upon the subject. The court correctly refused to receive the “sealed verdict,” as no legal judgment could be entered upon it.< It was not a finding upon the issue, determining the-guilt or innocence of the accused; and a finding not. determining that fact is no verdict. The jury should have been kept together until they had agreed upon a verdict, and when they separated before such agreement they did so in violation of the instructions given them by the court, and, even if that could change the result, without the express or implied consent of the defendant.' It is true they no doubt believed that they had agreed upon a verdict before the separation, but in that belief they were mistaken, as correctly held by the trial court. But jurors’ mistakes can not be allowed to impair the rights of the party accused. The rules of the common law require, especially in trials of felonies, that, after the cause is submitted, and the jury charged by the court, no separation intervene; that no intermingling with the public be allowed until a verdict is returned. This, of course, does not include the temporary withdrawal of a juror from his fellows under charge of a bailiff for a proper or necessary purpose. If there be an exception to the general rule, it is applicable only to civil causes or misdemeanors, but we do not find that a departure has ever been tolerated in case of felonies in the absence of statutory enactment. The rule favored by the supreme court of the United States appears to be that when there is nothing in the record showing the harmlessness of the separation, the unlawfulness of such conduct is sufficient to warrant a presumption that the verdict was not properly found against the defendant. The rule heretofore announced, as applied to the facts in this case, in Edie v. Territory, 6 N. M. 555, is not in conflict with these views; and, even if it were incorrect in the statement, upon a rehearing of the latter cause at the present term we felt bound to modify the rule as therein expressed in deference to the doctrine announced by the federal supreme court in Mattox v. U. S., 146 U. S. 140. The present is a United States case, and in its trial the courts of the territory should conform to the rules established by the supreme court of the United States, as contradistinguished from those of the state courts. The federal supreme court, adopting the rule laid down by Judge Wharton, says: “Hence the separation of the jury in such a way as to expose them to tampering may be reason for a new trial, variously held as absolute, or prima facie, and subject to rebuttal by the prosecution; or contingent, on proof that tampering really took place.” Resuming, Chief Justice Fullee, speaking for the court, thus declares the rule: “Private communications, possibly prejudicial, between jurors and third. persons or witnesses or the officer in charge, are absolutely forbidden, and invalidate the verdict, at least unless their harmlessness if made to appear.” Mattox v. U. S., supra. This jury remained separated for three hours, mingling and conversing with the general public during all that time. There is nothing in the record disclosing the harmlessness of such transaction. On the contrary, it appears that the jurors during this protracted separation associated and conversed with the citizens of Albuquerque, exposed to all the unfair influences that might be brought to bear upon them by persons interested in the result. They may have heard nothing to disturb convictions formed upon the evidence submitted in court, and they may have heard a great deal. In such case we hold, that, when a jury trying a capital or noncapital felony separate, after the cause has been submitted, before reaching a verdict, such misconduct is presumably injurious to the rights of the accused in case of conviction, and entitles him to a new trial. It follows that the court below erred in denying defendant’s motion for a new trial; hence the judgment below must be reversed, and the cause remanded for further proceedings in accordance with the views herein expressed.