Doyle v. United States

10 F. 269, 11 Biss. 100, 1881 U.S. App. LEXIS 2574
CourtUnited States Circuit Court
DecidedDecember 5, 1881
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 10 F. 269 (Doyle v. United States) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Circuit Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Doyle v. United States, 10 F. 269, 11 Biss. 100, 1881 U.S. App. LEXIS 2574 (uscirct 1881).

Opinion

Dbumiiond, C. J.,

(orally.) At the last May term of the'district court the plaintiff in error was tried on an indictment for passing false and forged bonds of the United States, knowing them to be forged. He was found guilty by the jury, and a motion for a new trial was made and overruled, and sentence of imprisonment passed [270]*270upon bim by the court. The case was given to the jury under instructions from the court on the afternoon of the third of June. On the morning of the fourth; before they had agreed upon a ferdict, and while the jury were together in their room having it under consideration,; the judge who tried the causé received, by the hand of the bailiff in charge of the jury, from one of the jurors, the following communication: “Has there been any evidence as to Doyle’s knowledge that these bonds were forged, and can a person be convicted without positive evidence as to his guilt ?” To which communication the judge caused to be delivered, by the hand of the bailiff to the juror,' his answer written upon the back of the communication as follows: “The jury are to determine, from all the evidence in the ease, whether the defendant knew these bonds to-be forged. If the circumstances are such as to satisfy you beyond a natural and reasonable doubt of defendant’s guilt, then you should so find; otherwise, you should acquit. Please preserve this.”

There is nothing in the record to show whether the juror wrote this communication and addressed it to the judge of his own motion or at the instance of other members of the jury. Neither does it affirm■atively appear that the answer of the judge was made known to any of,the jurors. The communication and the answer were made and received, as stated above, not in open court, the court in fact not being in session on the fourth of June, nor in the presence nor with the knowledge or consent of the plaintiff in error or his attorney. The answer of the judge to the communication of the juror, under the circumstances stated, is assigned for error on the record.

After the ease was submitted to the jury by the court, the plaintiff in error and his attorney consented that, when the jury had agreed upon a verdict they might sign and seal the same, and if the court was not then in session they might hand it to the officer in charge of 'the jury to deliver to the clerk, and that the jury might then disperse to meet the court when it should again convene, and thereupon the court on Friday, June 3d, adjourned, and did mot again meet until Monday morning, Jime 6th. On the opening of the court then, the jury not being present in their seats, nor having been called in the cause, the court addressed the clerk and asked if he had-the verdict, whereupon the clerk replied that he had such verdict, and produced a sealed envelope from which he took a paper writing which he then read in open court as follows: “We, the jury, find the defendant, James B. Doyle, guilty, and recommend him to the mercy of the court.” Which verdict was signed by all the jurors and duly recorded. At the time [271]*271this paper was read in court no objection was made by the plaintiff in error or bis counsel to the opening of the sealed envelope, nor to the reading of the verdict, but the counsel moved the court to have the jury polled, which motion the court overruled and refused to allow the jury to be polled. This action of the court in thus receiving this paper writing as the verdict of the jury and refusing to allow the jury to be polled is also assigned for error.

It is unnecessary to consider the various other errors assigned, as not much reliance was placed upon them by the counsel, and as, I think, they are untenable. There can be no doubt that the communication of the judge to the jury was irregular and objectionable. The instructions of the judge ought always to be in open court, in the presence of all the jurors and of the defendant. It is true that in cases of protracted deliberation by the jury it is sometimes difficult and inconvenient to observe this rule; and yet it is important that it should be followed, not that where it may be violated the fact would necessarily oblige an appellate court to reverse a conviction, but because there is always so much danger in giving these private instructions not open to the observation of counsel or of the parties. If there is nothing in instructions thus privately given prejudicial to the defendant, then an appellate court would not, perhaps, reverse. It is probable that the judge in this case may have inferred that the communication addressed to him was sent by the foreman, or a,t the instance of all the jury; and there was nothing objectionable in the law as laid down by the judge; and,, indeed, the judge had already given substantially the same instructions to the jury in open court. It was, no doubt, inadvertently done, and nothing wrong was - intended on his part, as is manifest from the memorandum he added to his answer, requesting that it might be preserved for the purpose of being subject to examination and criticism if the law warranted it. I doubt whether I should reverse this ease merely in consequence of this irregularity of the judge, because I think it is not .clear that it necessarily worked any prejudice to the plaintiff in error.

On the second point, numerous authorities have been cited by the counsel for the plaintiff in error to show that the right .exists on the part of a defendant in a criminal case always to poll the jury, whether the verdict be rendered in open court, or by being sealed under the direction of the court or with the consent of the parties. There can be no doubt that in most of the states, including Illinois, it is decided that it is the absolute right of a defendant in a criminal case, both upon an open verdict rendered in court and a sealed ver-[272]*272diet, to poll the jury. But it seems to be a right which has grown up as a matter of practice. It was not a right which existed at common law. The court always had the right to poll the jury, and if a different verdict-was rendered from that which was delivered privily to the judge,, or which was-first rendered in court, the court had authority to punish those jurors who dissented from the verdict. In some of the states the right of a defendant in a criminal case to poll the jury is denied. In the federal court in this district the practice has been not to allow a defendant, as of right, to poll the jury when he has agreed that a verdict may be signed and sealed by the jurors and delivered in court. If this were a question merely of polling the jury, under this practice I should not feel inclined to disturb the sentence of the court. For example, if the jury had been allowed to. separate upon the understanding and agreement that they were not again to meet the court, in such case it would seem as though the right to poll the jury had necessarily been waived. But in this case-they were required to meet the .court when it again convened, and the necessary construction to be given to this is that the jury should be present in court when the verdict was opened. They had formed their verdict and sealed it in the place of their deliberations. They had handed it to the officer to be delivered to the clerk. It was the right of the defendant, under the circumstances, to have the jury present in court whén the verdict was opened, in order that they might know that the verdict on which they had agreed and signed was delivered in court to be entered of record. In states where the jury is not permitted to be polled, the practice has always been to require the jury to be present upon the delivery of a sealed verdict.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
10 F. 269, 11 Biss. 100, 1881 U.S. App. LEXIS 2574, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/doyle-v-united-states-uscirct-1881.