Langworthy v. Connelly

14 Neb. 340
CourtNebraska Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 15, 1883
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 14 Neb. 340 (Langworthy v. Connelly) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Nebraska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Langworthy v. Connelly, 14 Neb. 340 (Neb. 1883).

Opinion

Cobb, J.

Tbis case was submitted to tbis court with neither brief nor oral argument on either side. Usually in such cases we would be disposed to affirm tbe judgment, confining our[341]*341selves to so much of an opinion as would seem to comply with the requirements of the letter of the statute; but as one of the errors assigned is quite novel in its character we will give it some consideration, although it may lead us upon debatable ground.

The first error is assigned in the following words:

“The court erred in giving to the jury and permitting them to take with them to their room, and have with them -while deliberating on their verdict, the following instruction requested by the defendant, to-wit: If the jury find from the evidence in the case that Mrs. Connelly, plaintiff, made a renewal of the $666.65 note by paying some money and giving other notes, and taking up the $666.65 note, such fact would be evidence tending to establish a settlement of all claims of a credit, including the one sued for of the $150. With said instructions marked thereon, refused by the court having written on the left hand margin of said instructions the words, ‘ Asked for by defendant. Refused. George W. Post, Judge.’”

The plaintiff in error, it will be observed, does not complain of the refusal on the part of the court to give the instruction in charge to the jury; but for, as it were, emphasizing its refusal, by allowing the instruction, with the court’s mark of refusal thereon, to be carried by the jury to their room.

The law books furnish some curious reading as to what a jury may be allowed to take with them to their room upon retiring to consider of their verdict. It was at one time held generally that all sealed instruments which had been admitted as evidence in the case, as well as all records in the case, and all matters of record which had been admitted in evidence in the case, might be carried by the jury to their room, while sworn copies of papers and unsealed instruments admitted in evidence could not be carried to their room by the jury. At a later date, the rule was stated by a high authority in an English court, as follows: “ The [342]*342jury, after going out of court, shall have no evidence with them but what was shown to the court as evidence, nor that without the direction of the court. The court may permit them to take with them letters patent and deeds under seal, and the exemplification of witnesses in chancery, if dead, but not a writing without seal unless by consent of parties.” Buller, N. P., 308.

The practice of allowing documentary evidence to be carried to their room by the jury was severely condemned by Mr. Justice Cowen in Farmers Bank v. Whitfield, 24 Wend., 419. He says: “ The evidence of the law, as it stands upon authority and practice, seems to be all one way, and that is against loading the jury with papers which they often will not understand, and sometimes perhaps cannot even read. As a general rule, it seems much safer that the contents should be communicated to them only by counsel in presence of the court.”

On the other hand, the supreme court of Pennsylvania, in the case of Alexander v. Jameson, 5 Binn., 238, say, by Tilghman, C. J.: It has been our custom to deliver to the jury all written papers except depositions taken under rule of court. These have been withheld, because it has been thought unequal, that while the jury were not permitted to call the witnesses before them who had been examined in court, they should take with them the depositions of other witnesses not examined in court. After the uniform practice which has prevailed in this state, I have witnessed the trial of many causes, particularly of the mercantile kind, in which the jury could not decide without the aid of unsealed papers — causes which required the minute and laborious investigation of a variety of books and papers, in which long calculations were necessary, founded on accounts and entries. To tell the jury that they must form their verdict on the recollections of what had passed at the bar, would be imposing on them a most unreasonable duty. Under such circumstances, they could do no more than make a vague [343]*343gness at the truth, and their verdict might be an abuse, rather than a satisfactory administration of justice.”

"While it is believed to be the law, in the absence of statutory directions on the subject, that the instructions given by the court to the jury in writing may be taken by them to their room where they deliberate, yet this doubtless is a matter of discretion with the court.

In the case of Hurley v. The State, 29 Ark., 17, which was a capital case, the deposition of one Bevans, a witness, taken down in writing, and subscribed by him before the committing magistrate, and returned to the clerk of the court, and which witness was absent from the state at the time of the trial, was read as evidence on the part of the state, and when the jury were about to retire, the court detached the deposition of Bevans from the other depositions, etc., returned by the committing magistrate, which had not been read in evidence, and they took it with them on retiring, against the objection of the appellant. Also, when the jury were about to retire to consider of their verdict, the court refused to permit them to take from the bar the written instructions given them by the court. The verdict of murder in the first degree was upheld.

In the case of The State v. Tompkins, 71 Mo., 613, the court say: And there was no error in permitting the jury to take the instructions with them to the jury-room, since this was a matter within the discretion of the court, and it is the constant practice of many of the circuits of this state for this to be done, and there has been no ruling of this court that we are aware of to the contrary. Nor do we see that any error was committed in permitting the jury to take with them the documentary evidence in the cause. The law constitutes them the triers of the facts; for those facts, so far as testified by witnesses, they will obviously have to depend upon memory. But why should the jurors be deprived, when they retire to make up their verdict, of the very papers and documents upon which their verdict must [344]*344to a great extent depend? We are unable to discover any substantial reason.”

The code of Iowa provides (§ 1783) that: Upon retiring for deliberation the jury may take with them all papers except depositions which have been received as evidence in the case.

In Shields v. Guffey, 9 Iowa, 322, it was assigned for error, that the jury took a deposition with them to their room, and had it there while deliberating on their verdict. The court, in the opinion by C. I. Wright, say: * * * “But in the second place, suppose he (the plaintiff, who was also plaintiff in error) did not lmoAv it, or knowing it made no.objection, and that he Avas not bound to; then it should appear that he Avas prejudiced by the proceedings.” The judgment was affirmed. This case is approved and followed in State v. Delang, 12 Iowa, 453.

In the case of Langworthy v. Myers, 4 Iowa, 18, it was assigned for error that the instructions (of defendants), twenty in number, AArere not read to the jury, but handed to them by the court, with the remark that they were given as asked, and allowed to be taken by the jury to their room.

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Related

Edwards v. State
204 N.W. 780 (Nebraska Supreme Court, 1925)
Fields v. State
185 N.W. 400 (Nebraska Supreme Court, 1921)
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126 P. 294 (Utah Supreme Court, 1911)

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Bluebook (online)
14 Neb. 340, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/langworthy-v-connelly-neb-1883.