Ryan v. State

36 S.W. 930, 97 Tenn. 206
CourtTennessee Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 22, 1896
StatusPublished
Cited by22 cases

This text of 36 S.W. 930 (Ryan v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Tennessee Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ryan v. State, 36 S.W. 930, 97 Tenn. 206 (Tenn. 1896).

Opinion

McAlister, J.

The prisoner was convicted in the Criminal Court of Shelby County of murder in the second degree, and sentenced to the penitentiary for a term of ten years. Since the judgment of the lower Court must be reversed for errors committed in the conduct of the trial, we pretermit any discussion of the facts.

The first assignment of errors we will notice is [208]*208based upon the misconduct of the jurors. It was shown, upon the motion for a new trial, that one Reasonover, one of the jurors who tried the case, had stated at some time during the progress of the trial, in the presence of several other jurors, that he, Reasonover, was a member of the grand jury when the defendant, Ryan, had been indicted for an attempt to commit murder upon one Kehoe, and that the facts of that case were, that Ed. Ryan, the defendant, went up behind Kehoe, who was stooping-over a waterpipe, and hit him with a heavy wrench, and that case was still pending in the Criminal Court. It was also shown that, at another time, Reasonover had' stated to some of the jury that Ed. Ryan was a bad man, or a dangerous man to the community, or words to that effect, the exact language not being remembered.

The Court, it appears, had permitted the Attorney-general to ask the defendant,' on cross-examination, if he had not been indicted for an assault on one Kehoe. Counsel for defendant objected to this question. The objection was overruled by the Court. Thereupon counsel for defendant demanded the best evidence of this charge, whereupon the Attorney-general introduced the original indictment, which charged that Ryan had premeditatedly, willfully, maliciously, and feloniously made an assault upon the body of Kehoe, with intent to commit murder in the first degree. The Circuit Judge, in his disposition of the question of the misconduct of the juror, [209]*209stated there was no material difference between the language used in the indictment, which' was properly in evidence, and the language used by the juror, which is made the subject of criticism and the basis of a new trial.

The Circuit Judge also found that the remarks of Reasonover in respect of the assault of Ryan upon Kehoe, was not made after the jury retired to consider their verdict, but was casually made some time during the progress of the trial, and was not heard by all the jury, and was not made when they were discussing the question 'Of the guilt or innocence of the defendant, but was made by Rea sonover when he was reciting to his fellow jurors his reasons for not wishing to serve upon the jury. The Circuit Judge also states, in his opinion, that all the other jurors who tried the case were examined before the Court, and, without exception, testified that the statement casually made by Reason-over as to the assault made by the defendant upon Kehoe, did not in the' least affect their opinions as to the innocence or guilt of the defendant.

The Court also found that the evidence that Rea-sonover stated to some of the jury that Ryan was a dangerous man to the community, or words to that effect, is very indefinite and unsatisfactory. Says the Court: “The affidavit [of Monteith, one of the jurors] does not fix the time when this language was used by Reasonover, and Monteith fails to state, when a witness on the stand, that Reason-[210]*210over used this language, but, on the contrary, says, that while the question as to the admissibility of the evidence of other indictments against Ryan was being argued before the Court, he drew the conclusion, from what Reasonover said, that Ryan was a bad man. Some of the other jurors, in an indefinite way, did say that they heard some such language as that used, without fixing the time, but none of them say that it was used while they were considering the evidence in the case as to the guilt or innocence of the defendant. Reasonover himself denies using such language,” etc.

The Court continues: “The evidence of Reason-over upon this point is not contradicted by any other evidence in the case, nor is there any evidence in the case showing that any such language was used, if used at all, except at the time fixed by Mr. Reasonover, to wit, when the question as to the admissibility of these indictments against Ryan for other crimes was being argued before the Court. There is no evidence that any such language was used in the jury room after the case had been closed and was given to the jury under the charge of the Court to consider of their verdict, upon the guilt or innocence of the defendant,” etc.

“Upon all the evidence the Court is of opinion that while there was some irregularity and perhaps improper' talk on the part of Reasonover before the case was finally submitted to the jury for their consideration as to the guilt or innocence of the de-[211]*211fenclant, yet the court is of the opinion that nothing occurred that was calculated improperly to influence the verdict of the jury or that was calculated to prejudice the jury against the defendant in rendering their verdict upon the law and evidence in the case.”

While the rule is well settled that the finding of a Circuit Judge upon controverted questions of fact arising upon a motion for a new trial is equivalent to the verdict of a jury, and will not be disturbed if supported by any material evidence, the rule is inapplicable when the written findings of the Circuit Judge upon the motion are set out in the record, and show affirmatively that a new trial should have been granted.

T. J. Reasonover, the juror charged with the misconduct, admitted, in his examination on motion for a new trial, that he stated in the presence of several jurors, during the progress of the trial, that he was a member of the grand jury that indicted defendant, Ryan, for the assault upon Kehoe, and the proof before the grand jury was that Kehoe was stooping, with his head down, and Ryan struck him with a monkey wrench. Several jurors testified that Reasonover used this language in their presence.-

We think such statements must have been highly prejudicial to the defendant, and nothing is better settled than that they invalidate the verdict of a. jury. Proof of such a collateral issue would have been wholly inadmissible if the witness had been [212]*212offered before the Court under the sanction of an oath and with an opportunity given the defendant for cross-examination. The Circuit Judge was of opinion that, because these statements were made before the defendant had introduced any evidence, and not after the jury had been charged and had retired to consider their verdict, they were innocuous. It is wholly immaterial at what stage of the trial the statements were made. It was testimony Reasonover had no right to give and the other jurors no right to hear, and vitiated the verdict, no matter when given. As stated by Judge McKinney in Sam v. State, 1 Swan, 63, the verdict of a jury must be founded upon the evidence delivered to them in Court in the presence of the Judge and of the parties. And, as a consequence necessarily flowing from this doctrine, the rule was established at an early day that, if a juror possessed any knowledge in respect to the matter in issue as to which he might testify, he must be sworn as a witness and give . his testimony openly in Court as other witnesses. Such has been the long-established and inflexible rule, to which no exception can be admitted, either in a civil or criminal case.

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Bluebook (online)
36 S.W. 930, 97 Tenn. 206, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ryan-v-state-tenn-1896.