83 Va. 40 | Va. | 1887
delivered the opinion of the court.
The cause is as follows : Mary Whitelaw, of said county, executed her will on the eighth day of December, 1874, which was probated on the twenty-second of February, 1875. H. A. Sims, the executor named in the will, qualified as such at that term. The will gave to the son of the testatrix, Benjamin R. Whitelaw, $50. To her daughter, Elizabeth C. Yager, all that portion of her estate which the testatrix should receive from the estate of her son, Isaac D. Whitelaw. To her said daughter, Elizabeth C. Yager,, she loaned all the rest of her estate of every kind, both real and personal, during her life, at her death to be equally divided between her grandchildren, Pamelia W. Sims and Willie A. Wiseman, share and share alike, these two being the daughters of the said Elizabeth C. Yager; and appointed the said H. A. Sims, the husband of the said Pamelia W. Sims, her executor. In July, 1879, the said son, Benjamin R. Whitelaw, filed his bill to set aside the said will, upon the ground that the said testatrix was not mentally capable of making any testamentary disposition of her property at the date of the will, and that the execution of said will was procured unlawfully, by undue and unwarrantable means and influences operating upon an enfeebled and im
The first error assigned here is that on the day after the argument was closed, and the issue given to the jury for their consideration, the court, upon its own motion, read an address to the jury. This address is apparently based upon the idea that the jury was unevenly divided in sentiment on the issue, and is a lengthy homily upon the duty of jurors to compromise their views, and yield something in deference to the opinion of others, especially when those differing were in the majority'in number; that the burden of proof was on the plaintiffs to the issue-; if the evidence was evenly balanced, they should find against the will; that, in consid’ering the mass of conflicting evidence in the case, it was not surprising that there should be a difference of opinion, saying: “ Under the particular circumstances of this case, you should be disposed to yield something in deference to the opinions of others, and especially should you do so when those differing from you exceed in numbers, other things being even; ” that an honest purpose to agree excluded all self-will and obstinacy of purpose ; that the very construction of a jury supposes concessions and the man who cannot concede is unfit for a juror; “ yet a case may arise in which a duty may be so plain that concessions cannot properly be made. But this exists only in plain cases. It cannot arise in cases in which the weight of conflicting evidence is somewhere about even. Do your duty, gentlemen, and leave the rest to me.”
The probable effect of this was perhaps well understood;
But I can find no case which can be said to be exactly like this on this point. It is said by the counsel for the-appellants to be unprecedented, and that seems to be so in this State at least. The case of Dejarnette v. Com., 75 Va. 877, was a case where the court appears of its own motion-to have proceeded to instruct the jury upon the principles-
In this case the court was not satisfied with charging the jury at great length upon their general duties as jurors, but, in effect, instructs them that the minority should yield to the majority,—that is, concede to the majority something in this particular case; that the evidence was very conflicting, etc. How much this judge thought the minority must concede to the majority the jury is not informed; but upon what principle could this be held except that the majority should govern, and that the question should be decided by a vote, the voice of the majority being then reported to the court as the unanimous verdict of the jury. The minority of the jury may thus have been induced to believe that by such a course all responsibility would be removed from them upon their oaths, and placed upon the majority, or possibly upon the court; for the judge loftily concludes, “ Do your duty, gentlemen, and léave the rest to me.” We think a verdict thus obtained cannot be said in any just sense to be the verdict of the jury. The course of the trial' judge, we think, was an altogether unwarrantable invasion of the domain of the jury, and, if upheld, would tend to render jury trials a mockery. It lies at the foundation of jury trials that by their verdict the jury shall determine the issue joined upon their consciences without outside influence or coercion from the ■court or elsewhere.
The province of the court is to instruct the jury upon questions of law, and express no opinion, make no com
The case will be remanded for a new trial to be had. therein in the circuit court of Orange county.
Decree reversed.