State v. Freely

89 S.E. 643, 105 S.C. 243, 1916 S.C. LEXIS 208
CourtSupreme Court of South Carolina
DecidedJuly 15, 1916
Docket9467
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 89 S.E. 643 (State v. Freely) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of South Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Freely, 89 S.E. 643, 105 S.C. 243, 1916 S.C. LEXIS 208 (S.C. 1916).

Opinion

'The opinion of the Court was delivered by

Me. Justice Gage.

The defendant is a negro man; he was tried for the murder of a Confederate veteran named Dodd; the verdict was “guilty,” and the judgment of the law was death. The homicide was committed with a blunt instrument on the head, on Saturday afternoon, some time between 4 and 6 o’clock, February 20, 1915, in the storeroom of the deceased on Hampton street, in the city of Anderson, a half mile from the courthouse. There was no eyewitness to the tragedy; all the testimony rests in circumstances. The defendant was gone from his accustomed neighborhood, two or three miles out, with Mr. Fowler, on the morning after the event, and was absent until his arrest. He was arrested near Calhoun Falls, in Abbeville county, on November 10, 1915; was tried February, 1916. The jury was charged and went to its room at 1:30.p. m., and returned a verdict the next day about 10 a. m.. Such is a rough sketch of the whole transaction.

There are six exceptions, but the appellant has argued only three questions of law. There was full and earnest argument on the issue of fact, whether the testimony proved beyond a reasonable doubt the guilt of the accused.

*246 1, 2 *245 1. The first issue of law is whether the Court observed the direction laid down in section 4050 of the Code of Laws *246 hereinafter quoted. The jury first retired to make up a verdict at 1:05 p. m., Tuesday. At some hour the same evening or night, the exact hour does not appear, the following episode occurred:

“The jury returned to the court room. Court: Mr. Foreman, the Court was informed that you knocked on the door and announced that you had not agreed on a verdict, which makes it necessary for me to inquire whether your inability to agree is due to a question of law or one of‘fact. Foreman: Why,.your Honor, it is a question of fact. Court: You do not need any further instruction on the law of the case? Foreman: I don’t think so, sir. Court: Your difference being one of fact, why the Court is totally unable to assist you. You may retire to your room.”

The Court did not then explain the law anew. No more was heard from the'jury until Wednesday morning, when the Court was convened, and the following event happened:

“Next morning, when in pursuance of the instructions of the Court issued to the sheriff the jury was brought into the court room, this then occurred: “Mr. Foreman, is your difference one of fact or one 'of law?’ Foreman: One of fact, your Honor. Court: Well, that being the case, under the Constitution of the State and under the rule of right, the Court is absolutely powerless to be of any assistance to you at all.”

Neverthéless, the Court went on and charged the jury again, saying, inter alia: “It is as much a juror’s duty to find a verdict as it is to find a true one, if it can be done without the sacrifice of an honest conviction.”

True, the Judge warned them against the sacrifice of a conviction or honest belief. He sent them back with this admonition: “Go back, Mr. Foreman and gentlemen of the jury, and make one more sincere, honest effort, as the Court has suggested, for that is the -only kind of effort you will put forth. You may retire.”

*247 The jury were not advised that they could not be sent back without their consent. They did not ask for instructions on the law.

In none of this was there any violation of the statute. The words of it are (except the numerals which we supply) :

“When a jury, after due and thorough deliberation upon any cause return into Court without having agreed upon a verdict, the Court may explain * * * to them anew the law applicable to the case, and may send them out for further deliberation; but if they return a second time without having-agreed upon a verdict, they shall not be sent out again without their own consent, unless they shall ask from the Court some further explanation of the law.”

The statute is plain. In the instant case, assuming, but not deciding, that the jury returned first after due and thorough deliberation upon the case, yet literally they did not return a second time at all; the Court sent for the jury. The word used by the statute is “return,” which means “to come back after an interval, to appear again.” Webster. It is true that when the Judge had the jury called from its room to the court room, the jury did literally return. But the spirit of the statute ought not to be sacrificed to verbalism. Without regard to a technical meaning of the word “return,” the object of the statute was to prevent forced verdicts, and to prevent undue severity of jury service. In the first instance, a jury must give the case due and thorough deliberation before they come out of the room at all to announce an inability to agree, and of such deliberation, of course, the Court must wisely judge. After the first return of the jury under such circumstances, the Court had an undisputed right to send them out for further deliberation. At the second return the jury, without having agreed upon a verdict, they might have asked for further explanation of the law, in which event the Court might have again sent them out. That will not be questioned. And at the second return without having agreed upon a verdict, they *248 might be sent out again by their own consent. That will not be disputed.

So the question is, did it appear to the Judge, under all the circumstances there presented, that the jury consented to return the third time? Plainly if the jury had said: “We can’t agree. It’s no use to send us back; we desire to be discharged” — the duty would have been imperative upon the Judge to discharge them. If the same thing had been manifest from all the circumstances, the same imperative duty would have operated. If the circumstances satisfied the Judge, 'in a wise exercise of his discretion, that the jury consented to the return, then it was lawful to return them. The exercise of such a discretion at so delicate stage of a trial ought not to be disturbed unless it was obviously wrongly exercised:

The appellant refers to the Kelley case, in 45 S. C. 659, 24 S. E. 45, to sustain his contention. Facts make a case, and the facts of that case have no likeness to those of the case at bar. A Judge may not violate the statute; but, in applying the facts of the case to the words of the statute, large dis-creation must be left to the Judge. State v. Stephenson, 54 S. C. 234, 32 S. E. 305. We think that the discretion here was wisely used.

3 2. When the jury came out Wednesday morning, “the Court explained to them anew the law applicable to the case.” In that explanation the Court said, as before quoted: “It is as much a juror’s duty to find a verdict as it is to find a true one, if it can be done without the sacrifice of an honest conviction.”

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
89 S.E. 643, 105 S.C. 243, 1916 S.C. LEXIS 208, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-freely-sc-1916.