Patrick v. Victor Knitting Mills Co.

37 A.D. 7, 55 N.Y.S. 340

This text of 37 A.D. 7 (Patrick v. Victor Knitting Mills Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Patrick v. Victor Knitting Mills Co., 37 A.D. 7, 55 N.Y.S. 340 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1899).

Opinion

Putnam, J.:

Under the doctrine stated in Rose v. Smith (4 Cow. 17); The People v. Douglass (Id. 28), and Brant v. Fowler (7 id. 562), the verdict rendered by the jury in this case could not, under the circumstances, be allowed to stand. In those cases it was held that the mere fact that one of the jurors drank intoxicating liquors during the progress of the trial was, of itself, sufficient cause to set aside the verdict. In Wilson v. Abrahams (1 Hill, 207) the correctness of this doctrine was denied. I shall hereafter have occasion to consider this case.

In People v. Schad (58 Hun, 571) the General Term of the fifth department held that, after the jury had retired to deliberate upon their verdict, the fact that one of them was allowed to drink spirituous liquors was a sufficient ground to set aside the verdict.

In Hanrahan v. Ayres (10 Misc. Rep. 436) the Special Term of the Superior Court of Buffalo also reached the conclusion that the drinking of spirituous liquors by members of the jury without leave of the court, when deliberating upon a verdict, is a sufficient ground [10]*10for setting it aside. In other States the same doctrine has been held. (The State of Iowa v. Baldy, 17 Iowa, 39; Ryan v. Harrow, 27 id. 494; People v. Gray, 61 Cal. 164; People v. Lee Chuck, 78 id. 317-330; Davis v. State, 35 Ind. 496; Leighton v. Sargent, 31 N. H. 119.) Many other authorities to the same effect might be cited.

In some of the authorities it has been held that the act of a member of a-jury, in using alcoholic beverages at any time during a trial, warranted the setting aside of a verdict; in others, that the misconduct of a juror or jurors in using liquors after they had retired to deliberate, was a sufficient cause to invalidate the verdict.

A distinction, however, has, I think, properly been made between the act of a juror in using liquors during the progress of a trial, at a time when he is allowed to separate from his fellow-jurymen, and a similar act after the jury has retired to deliberate upon a verdict.

In People v. Pscherhofer (64 Hun, 483) it appeared that a juror had taken wine medicinally during the trial and before the final submission of the case. This was held not a ground for disturbing the verdict, and Dwight, Ch. J., used the following language, adverting to the distinction between the misconduct of a juror using liquor during the progress of the trial and after the final submission of the case : “ The cases in which verdicts have been set aside for misconduct of jurors in the use of liquor are those in which the liquor has been drank — without leave of the court or medical prescription— after the case has been submitted to the jury for their decision. (People v. Schad, 58 Hun, 571, and the cases cited.)

“ We are not aware that a charge of misconduct of a juror, such as to vitiate a verdict, has ever been based upon the use of liquor during the trial.”

This distinction is alluded to in The State v. Bruce (48 Iowa, 530-537) as follows: There is a wide distinction between the duty of a juror during the adjournment of court pending the trial and his duty after the case is submitted to him for his determination. * * * If, during the adjournment of the court, they do no act which impairs the mind or clouds the understanding, when again called to hear the evidence or arguments of counsel, we think it cannot be said that there was misconduct to the prejudice of any[11]*11one. When the cause has been finally submitted, the parties have-the right to the calm, deliberate and sober consideration of the jury,, and any conduct which tends to impair this right may well be said to be prejudicial.

An examination of the numerous cases cited in argument has-led us to the conclusion that when the indulgence in intoxicating, drinks occurs during the ad journment, and before the cause is finally submitted to the jury, the better rule is, in the absence of a showing of prejudice, that the verdict should stand, and we think there is no-good reason for making any distinction between civil and criminal causes in the application of the rule.” (See, also, People v. Lee Chuck, 39 Alb. L. J. 354, 358; Grottkau v. The State, 70 Wis. 462, 469; Hanrahan v. Ayres, supra, p. 441.)

In Wilson v. Abrahams (1 Hill, 207) the verdict was sought to-be set aside because one of the • jurors had drunk liquor while the-trial was in progress, and before the evidence was closed.

To understand the opinion of Bronson, J., in that case, we must bear in mind the facts that appeared therein. It was shown that-,, during the adjournment for dinner on the second day of the trial,, the jurors being allowed to separate, and before the evidence had been closed, one of the jurors went to a tavern and drank about half a gill of brandy. There was no allegation that he was rendered less-capable by his act for the proper discharge of his duties. He after-wards during the trial sat as one of the jurors, apparently unaffected by the liquor he had taken. This was the misconduct for which the verdict was sought to be set aside, arid the remarks of Bronson, J., were made in reference to that state of facts. It was-held, under the'circumstances shown in that case, that the verdict should not be overruled.

The facts in the case under consideration are very different. The-misconduct of the members of the jury was while they were deliberating on their verdict. They must be deemed to have known that their act was wrongful, as well as the act of the officer in charge, in allowing them to have spirituous liquors; and hence their misconduct was willful. It is shown that members of the jury drank intoxicating liquors three or four times during their deliberations,, some of them perhaps five times, if such members drank at the bar before breakfast on the morning of the fifteenth of December. It [12]*12might well be held under the facts disclosed in the case of Wilson v. Abrahams, that the slight misconduct of one juror should not invalidate the verdict; while under the circumstances appearing in this case, that the verdict should be set aside. The question here presented is whether a verdict shall be allowed to stand, when it appears that the members of the jury during their deliberations indulged in what might be called a carousal.

In Wilson v. Abrahams (supra), Justice Bronson, discussing the ■cases where the misconduct of one or more of the members of a jury should or should not cause a verdict to be set aside, uses the following language: “ When * * * there is reason to suspect that he has drank so much, at his own expense, as to unfit him for the proper discharge of his duty, or where he has so grossly misbehaved himself in any other respect as to show that he had no just sense of the responsibility of his station, the verdict ought not to stand. But every irregularity which would subject the juror to censure, whether in drinking spirituous liquor, separating from his fellows, or the like, should not overturn the verdict, unless there be some reason to suspect that the irregularity may have had an influence on the final result.”

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Related

People v. Gray
61 Cal. 164 (California Supreme Court, 1882)
Rose v. Smith
4 Cow. 17 (New York Supreme Court, 1825)
People v. Schad
12 N.Y.S. 695 (New York Supreme Court, 1891)
Hanrahan v. Ayres
10 Misc. 435 (Superior Court of Buffalo, 1894)
Grottkau v. State
36 N.W. 31 (Wisconsin Supreme Court, 1888)
Davis v. State
35 Ind. 496 (Indiana Supreme Court, 1871)
State v. Baldy
17 Iowa 39 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 1864)
State v. Bruce
48 Iowa 530 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 1878)

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Bluebook (online)
37 A.D. 7, 55 N.Y.S. 340, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/patrick-v-victor-knitting-mills-co-nyappdiv-1899.