124 So. 802 | Miss. | 1929
Appellant was convicted in the circuit court of Sharkey county of murder, and, the jury having returned a verdict fixing the penalty at life imprisonment, the sentence pronounced was in accord therewith.
The case is made solely on circumstantial evidence, and, while the proof would be held sufficient, if there were no other question in the case, we must say that there are some features in the evidence which may well have given a conscientious juror deep concern as to what his verdict should properly be. There is therefore presented a case wherein this court should be well satisfied, and should be able to rest with entire confidence on the record that the result has been the untrammelled, free, and deliberate verdict of every one of the twelve men who composed the jury, uninfluenced by any avoidable extraneous considerations or improper pressure of events. As said in Lamar v. State,
There are two special bills of exceptions as follows:
"The above-styled case was submitted to the jury impaneled to try it at ten o'clock P.M. March 15, and the jury was instructed by the court to retire and consider their verdict. The jury retired, and after deliberating a short while was locked up on orders of the court for the night. At the reconvening of court at nine o'clock *651 March 16, the jury had not reached a verdict. They remained in their room deliberating on the case until 3:55 P.M. on March 16 the following day, when the court directed the jury at their request, to make a report, whereupon the jury returned in open court accompanied by their bailiffs, whereupon the court asked the jury if they had agreed as to a verdict, to which they replied they had not. One of the jurors stated they were trying to reach a verdict and in answer to a question if they did not think they could agree one of them said `I don't know,' whereupon the court stated to them that if they were trying he thought maybe they might reach a verdict, thereupon he looked at his watch and said he was going home this evening, that that did not mean he was going to adjourn court, that he had plenty of time and court would not be reopened until the Monday morning following. He stated he was not telling them to find a verdict but he would let them go back and try again, and after making this statement to the jury the court directed that they retire to their room and further consider their verdict, to which action of the court the defendant by his counsel, in open court, excepted and presents this his special bill of exceptions to such action and statement to said jury."
"Now comes the defendant by attorneys and for a special bill of exceptions shows to the court that after the happenings and occurrences set out in the first bill of exceptions, and the jury had been directed by the court to retire to their room and further consider their verdict as shown by the first bill of exceptions, that in a short while, a bailiff attending the jury returned in open court and informed the court that the jury stated they could not reach a verdict this afternoon, which was Saturday, March 16th. The court thereupon stated, that was all right. In a short while, possibly thirty minutes after the bailiff had so stated, which was about four-thirty Saturday afternoon, the court notified the attorneys *652 for defendant and the officers that he adjourned court until nine o'clock Monday morning, March 18th, and thereupon he repaired to the hotel, which is approximately one hundred fifty feet from the courthouse, and got in his automobile, and left Rolling Fork, in Sharkey county. That the hotel and the car in which the Judge left Rolling Fork were in plain view of the courthouse and the room in which the jury was deliberating. That about ten minutes after the judge had left as aforesaid, one of the bailiffs in charge of the jury called to the defense counsel, who was also leaving the same hotel, and informed him that the jury had reached a verdict, and the county attorney and the sheriff rushed over to counsel for defendant and gave him the same information as aforesaid. That the sheriff undertook to stop the Judge enroute to Vicksburg, in Warren county, fifty miles away, but as counsel for defense had gone and had not met the court, who had not returned to receive the verdict after having been notified at Cary, eight miles south of Rolling Fork, that said verdict had been reached and said Judge proceeded to Vicksburg and did not re-open court until nine o'clock Monday morning, March 18th, to which action of the court the defendant hereby excepts and offers this his special bill of exceptions."
The question presented by said bills has often been, in various forms, before this court. Reviewing those that may be classed as the later cases, we find them to be thus briefly stated:
In Vicksburg Bank v. Moss,
A case somewhat similar to the above on the facts is Wiltcher v. State,
In Senior v. Brogan,
In Maury v. State,
In Brown v. State,
In Shaw v. State,
In Lewis v. State,
In May v. State,
It will be observed that in a majority of the foregoing cases the question arose out of what happened on a Saturday, as is the case now at the bar; and an examination through the numerous cases from other states discloses *656 that this same feature — the hastening of verdicts by the express or implied threat to compel the jury to remain locked up from Saturday over until Monday — has appeared in many, if not most, of such cases. And this particular feature has not appeared so often as a mere matter of accident. Every judge knows the dread with which the average juror approaches the contemplation of being compelled to remain confined within the average courthouse during the long and unpleasant hours from Saturday night to Monday morning — a dread that is heightened, and in a large measure justified, by the crude accommodations towards comfort found in most of the courthouses in this country. Every lawyer who has ever had intrusted to his care, over any considerable period of years, the interests of property of any consequence or the lives or liberties of clients charged with serious offenses, will recall the anxiety and apprehension with which he has seen an important case go to the jury on a Saturday afternoon.
Confronted with this knowledge and apprehension, it is the emphasized duty on the part of the trial judge to see to it with every circumspection that, so far as within reasonable human power, nothing shall transpire, when a jury is in deliberation late Saturday, which shall operate to influence them, outside of what they themselves solely may think or do, to hasten to a verdict or to compromise their differences on any other consideration than the evidence and the law in the case. But, while this watchfulness is the more strictly required on Saturdays, the principle is one that appertains to every other judicial day of the term. It is within the sound judicial discretion of the trial judge as to how long he shall keep a jury confined for deliberation, and, because of his superior opportunities for judging in each case what is proper in that case, this discretion is seldom interfered with by an appellate court. And, this discretion and responsibility *657 being solely his own, no jury nor other person whomsoever has any business in any case to know how long they will be kept together; and it is therefore no surprise when it is found that in most of the cases, wherein reversals are had on the question we are now considering, the error has been, in some form, that the jury has ascertained either from the judge or from some other officer that the jury will be kept until, or discharged at, some particular fixed time.
Out of all this there has come the rule in most jurisdictions that the trial judge shall not mention how long he intends to keep the jury deliberating. See the comprehensive annotations to State v. Place, 11 Ann. Cas. 1129-1138. It can be sufficiently seen that this principle lies at the foundation of some, if not most, of the cases cited from our own court, because it applies whether the expression of an intention in that regard comes directly from the judge or whether from some officer whom the jury may reasonably suppose speaks as if having authority or knowledge from the judge. The rule as expressed is not only practicable, but it is sound from every standpoint. For instance, if there be a person on the jury who is there with the purpose to accomplish a certain result, a person commonly known as a "sinker," when the judge allows it to be known that the jury will be discharged at some reasonably short future time, the sinker will be the more certain to hold out until the fixed time shall arrive, whereas, on the other hand, if there be one or more who are holding out from the purest and most conscientious motives, and the judge fixes the time at a far distant hour or time, the conscientious juror or minority may at once surrender rather than submit to the ordeal of such a length of perseverance. But, when no time or intimation of time is given, the objectionable features just mentioned are thereby minimized so far as possible, and, indeed, may disappear altogether. And *658 further reasons for the rule will readily occur to the bench and bar.
In view of the frequency with which this question has arisen and the perplexities which have beset its consideration, we deem it important and requisite that a practicable and expedient rule shall be now prescribed for the removal of this question from the field of future controversy — a rule which of course must be within the existing principles of the law, but one nevertheless which shall be more definite and tangible in its statement than that apparent in many of the cases. We deduce the rule, and therefore now state it by way of resume, as follows:
(a) It shall be within the sound judicial discretion of the trial judge as to how long he will keep the jury in deliberation, and this discretion will not be reviewed on appeal, unless there has been a clear abuse of it. And this discretion shall apply to deliberations carried over from Saturday until Monday the review on appeal in such a case, however, being the more watchful than in those relating to other periods.
(b) The length of time during which he will hold the jury in deliberation being the prerogative solely of the trial judge, and a matter concerning which it is absolutely nobody else's business, he shall not state to the jury, either expressly or by any act or language which reasonably construed will carry an implication, how long he intends to keep them; nor shall he make any such statement, outside of the hearing of the jury, which is carried to them by any other officer of the court.
It is further argued by appellant in effect that, since there can be no court without a judge, Turbeville v. State,
However, it is not here necessary to decide the point since the case must be reversed on the other assignment. We reserve the question until a decision upon it shall become necessary, adding only that, if the circuit judge in this case had refrained from looking at his watch and stating in the presence of the jury that he expected to go that evening to his home in another county to remain absent there until Monday morning, but, on the contrary, he had told the jury no more than that they should retire and continue to consider of their verdict, and that he would remain and continue to remain at all times within their call, and he had returned to his hotel and made himself at home there, the question upon which this case is reversed would never have arisen.
Reversed and remanded.