State v. Bland

76 P. 780, 9 Idaho 796, 1904 Ida. LEXIS 97
CourtIdaho Supreme Court
DecidedMay 10, 1904
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 76 P. 780 (State v. Bland) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Idaho Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Bland, 76 P. 780, 9 Idaho 796, 1904 Ida. LEXIS 97 (Idaho 1904).

Opinion

AILSHIE, J.

In this case the defendant was on the fifth-day of June, 1903, indicted by the grand jury of Shoshone-county charged with the murder of one Emma B. Aubrey, and the offense was alleged to have been committed by the defendant aiding and abetting one Arthur K. Goode in killing and' murdering the deceased. The case came on regularly for trial in July following and the evidence both for the state and the.[800]*800defendant was submitted and the jury were instructed by the court. On the evening of July 31, 1903, the jury were sent to the juryroom under the charge and control of a sworn bailiff. At about 10 o’clock the following morning, August 1st, they returned into court and rendered their verdict as follows: “We, the jury in the above-entitled action, find the defendant, Joseph L. Bland, guilty of the crime of manslaughter, with the utmost mercy of the court.”

The district judge thereafter sentenced the defendant to a term of ten years in the state penitentiary. From the judgment and the order denying defendant’s motion for a new trial this appeal has been prosecuted. Eleven assignments of error are presented to this court as grounds for a reversal of the judgment. Counsel for the appellant practically relied upon the eleventh assignment at the argument of this case, and we therefore give that our first consideration. Upon the motion for a new trial the defendant presented his own affidavit and that of his attorney, Henry P. Knight, setting forth the fact, among other things, that without the knowledge or consent of the defendant or his counsel, the trial judge, in response to the request from a juror, appeared in the juryroom at about the hour of 9 o’clock on the morning of August 1st, and prior to the finding of the verdict, -and had some conversation with one or more of the jurors, “and that at that time the said judge was asked by one of the said jurors whether or not there were two degrees of manslaughter, and whether or not the said jury could find, the defendant guilty of manslaughter in the second degree; that thereupon the said judge answered that there was no such thing as manslaughter of the second degree, but that the jury could find the defendant guilty of manslaughter and recommend him to the mercy of the court. That the said K. T. Morgan [the trial judge] was further questioned by one of the jurors as to whether the jury could fix the penalty for manslaughter, and that he answered that they could not, but that they could recommend him to the mercy of the court. That the said juror further asked what was the lightest punishment for manslaughter, and that he was answered by the said judge that the punishment was imprisonment in the state penitentiary [801]*801for a period of not less than one year and not exceeding ten years.”

It was also alleged in the affidavits that several jurors had made substantially the same statement as to what occurred in the juryroom, but that each of them refused to make an affidavit to that effect for personal, business and social reasons, and that neither the defendant nor his counsel discovered what had taken place until after the rendition of the verdict. In reply to these two affidavits the trial judge filed his own affidavit, and we here quote in full all references made in the judge’s affidavit to this particular transaction. “Affiant further says that the only communication between affiant and the jury in said case was when a member of said jury asked affiant if the crime of manslaughter was divided into degrees, and affiant told him it was not; and that said juror then asked affiant if the jury could recommend the defendant to the mercy of the court, and affiant told Mm they could do as they liked about it.”

It stands as an admitted fact in this case that prior to the finding of the verdict by the jury the trial judge, in the absence of defendant and his counsel, had some kind of a conversation with at least one member of the jury. The appellant contends 'that it is reversible error for the trial judge to go to the jury-room or to have any communication whatever with the jury except in open court. In support of this position we are cited to a long and uniform line of authorities. Mr. Spelling, in his very recent work on New Trial and Appellate Practice, volume 1, section 44, says: “Communications between judge and jury are very jealously scrutinized. Any information or suggestions imparted by the trial judge to the jury otherwise than in the manner prescribed by statute, or through approved channels and by established methods, will usually be held ground for a new trial without regard to circumstances or motives, unless the absence of prejudice be obvious.”

Blashfield in his Instructions to Juries, volume 1, section 179, collects the authorities on the subject and says: “After the jury have retired the judge should not go to the juryroom to communicate with the jury, nor should he send additional instructions by the hands of an officer — all communications should be [802]*802made in open court.....The judge has no more right in the juryroom while the jury are deliberating than any other person, even though he holds no communication with them, and if he does so, the honesty of his intentions in no way lessens the impropriety of such action.”

Among the strongest cases supporting the position taken by appellant is that of State v. Wroth, 15 Wash. 621, 47 Pac. 106, where Justice Gordon, speaking for the court, said: “In the discharge of his official duty, the place for the judge is on the bench. As to him the law has closed the portals of the jury-room and he may not enter. The appellant was not obliged to follow the judge to the juryroom in order to protect his legal rights, or to see that the jury was not influenced by the presence of the judge; and the state cannot be permitted to show what occurred between the judge and the jury at a place where the judge had no right to be, and in regard to which no official record could be made.”

One of the early cases in this country laying down this rule in emphatic language is that of Sargent v. Roberts, 1 Pick. 337, 11 Am. Dec. 185, where it was observed: “The public interest requires that litigating parties should have nothing to complain of or suspect in the administration of justice, and the conven-' ience of jurors is of small consideration compared with this great object.....It is better that everybody should suffer inconvenience, than that a practice should be continued which is capable of abuse, or, at least, of being the ground of uneasiness and jealousy.”

The doctrine is announced to the same effect in Read v. Cambridge, 124 Mass. 567, 26 Am. Rep. 690; Taylor v. Belsford, 13 Johns. 467; Chicago etc. R. R. Co. v. Robbins, 159 Ill. 598, 43 N. E. 332; Johnson v. State, 100 Ala. 55, 14 South. 627; Watertown Bank etc. Co. v. Mix, 51 N. Y. 558; Galloway v. Corbitt, 52 Mich. 460, 18 N. W. 218.

Our attention has been called by the attorney general to Goldsmith v. Solomons, 2 Strob. 296, where the supreme court of South Carolina, in an early opinion, held that there was no error in the trial judge having a private communication with the jury. The same rule seems to prevail in New Hampshire. [803]*803(Allen v. Aldrich, 29 N. H.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
76 P. 780, 9 Idaho 796, 1904 Ida. LEXIS 97, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-bland-idaho-1904.