State v. Harrison

18 L.R.A. 224, 15 S.E. 982, 36 W. Va. 729, 1892 W. Va. LEXIS 115
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 1, 1892
StatusPublished
Cited by85 cases

This text of 18 L.R.A. 224 (State v. Harrison) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering West Virginia 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. Harrison, 18 L.R.A. 224, 15 S.E. 982, 36 W. Va. 729, 1892 W. Va. LEXIS 115 (W. Va. 1892).

Opinion

BRANNON, Judse :

On the 14th day of April, 1892, Allen Harrison was sentenced to death by the Circuit Court of Cabell county for the murder of Bettie Adams, and he comes to this Court for relief from that sentence.

Should the verdict be set aside because of separation of the jury ? Between twelve and one o’clock at night a juror rose from his bed, and went to the water-closet of the.hotel where the jury .boarded, to answer a call of nature. . The deputy sheriff in charge of the jury unlocked the door of the room wherein the juror slept and went with him into the hall leading to the closet- and saw that uo one was in [732]*732the ball and saw that the door of the closet was open and saw no one in the closet and says no one was in it, though there was a portion of the closet — the two apartments containing the bowls — which he could not see from where he stood; and the juror walked down the hall forty or fifty feet to the closet, the shei’iff returning to bed but listening, and the juror remained absent from four to eight minutes and returned to the room. There was some rooms along the hall towards the closet, occupied perhaps by others, one by the high sheriff.

"Without regard to the statements of the juror, it does not in any manner appear that this juror mingled with, saw, talked or had any sort of communication with any persons while absent. The facts, that it was at the dead hours of the night, that the hall was clear of persons, and that the apartment to which the juror went was not like the public rooms of an hotel, but a water-closet, render it highly improbable that the juror met or conversed with any one.

In all the Virginia and West Virginia cases, where verdicts have been set aside on account of separation of the jury, it appeared that the j uror during the separation mingled and talked with other persons, or had ready opportunity to do so. I hardly think that where it safely áppears that the juror has no communication nor opportunity for it with others, the mere separation, if we can call it “separation” in a legal sense, would vitiate a verdict.

But if we can read and credit the statement of the juror in question, then the fact, that he had no intercouse or opportunity for it with any other person, will not depend simply on the probability arising from the facts above stated; for he states that he neither spoke to nor saw any one while so absent. That we can consider the juror’s statement is shown by the syllabus and opinion in State v. Cartright, 20 W. Va. 32, and instances in Virginia cases therein cited, (page 43) which are binding on us, in which affidavits of-jurors were received.

We can not read that portion of the affidavit wherein the juror states that he did not go to the closet for any improper purpose connected with the trial, and that his absence had no influence upon his verdict, but we can read its state[733]*733ment that he met with no one, saw no one, talked with no one. There is no showing in the slightest degree to the contrary; and if we give this affidavit any weight, corroborated and rendei’ed probably true by the other circumstances spoken of, we must be satisfied that its statements are true. Would it not be a stigma and reproach upon the administration of criminal law to reverse a solemn trial for such a cause, we being confident that the prisoner suffered no harm from the occurrence ? Separation merely does not necessarily annul a verdict; it does so onl j prima facie.

Two Virginia cases are spoken of as holding that separation per se annuls the verdict — McCaul's Case, 1 Va. Cas. 271; Overbee’s Case, 1 Rob. (Va.) 756. Perhaps I may add Wormley’s Case, 8 Gratt. 712, though Judge Rives, in Philips’s Case, 19 Gratt. 541, says, perhaps correctly, that it is not to be interpreted as so holding. In none of these cases is there any reasoning by the court, except in Mc-Caul’s Case, and in it Judge Nelson, after saying that the one view of the subject was that the law required the jury to be kept entirely inaccessible, so that communication with them would be impossible, and the other view was that' mere separation, unless it be proved that there has been some conversation or tampering with a member of the jury, shall not vitiate a verdict, and there must be proof to work this effect, disclaims a decision of the general principle, saying the court was not called on to decide between the two views, and 'would decide only whether the separation in that particular case should overthrow the verdict.

But later and well-considered cases hold that mere separation will not per se impair a verdict. State v. Cartright, 20 W. Va. 32; State v. Robinson, Id. 713; Thompson’s Case 8 Gratt. 637; Philips’s Case, 19 Gratt. 485; McCarter’s Case, 11 Leigh, 633. Even in the old Case of Thomas, 2 Va. Cas. 479, the doctrine that separation per se is fatal to the verdict is repelled, and, what is pointedly applicable to this case, it was held that “the bare possibility of tampering' with the jury is not sufficientto set aside a verdict;” and Judge Dade said: “But we think we have shown that in this case there was a bare possibility of such consequence, and we do not think ourselves justified, on account of remote possibil[734]*734ity, to obstruct the justice of the country in a case where we cannot doubt that the prisoner has received no injury.”

So we may say in this case that the possibility of any communication of the juror with a soul is very remote, it being almost absolutely certain that he had not, and we are confident the defendant suffered no harm from the occurrence. The rule-to be deduced from these cases is that a mere separation of the jury will not entitle the person to a new trial; but where there has been an improper separation he is entitled to the benefit of the presumption that it was prejudicial,'and the burden is on the State to show beyond reasonable doubt that he suffered no injury. State v. Robinson, supra; State v. Cartright, supra.

This rule is an ample safe-guard over the purity of a jury trial. Any other rule would, as Judge Thompson said in Thompson’s Case, supra, in these days, when criminal trials and adjournments in them are so numerous audprotracted, result in frequent miscarriages in trials, and delay and defeat the ends of justice, when there is not the slightest presumption or probability, or even possibility, of injustice to the prisoner. It clearly appears that in this case he suffered no harm. "While we must at all times guard the rights of the accused, we must not be so technical in procedure as to overturn fair trials for mere shadows, thus blunging criminal justice into endless delay and public derision.

Another occurrence relied upon to anuul the verdict is this: The sheriff in charge of the jury had them in a public room of the hotel, and allowed a juror to converse with two persons, one a notary, touching the execution of a deed. The sheriff and a deputy were present, within eight to ten feet of the juror, when he met these persons and signed the deed. He saw the deed. The evidence of these two persous, the sheriff, and the juror shows clearly that nothing whatever touching the trial took place, aud there was no conversation about anything save the mere signing and acknowledging the deed, which occupied three to five minutes, including the drafting of the certificate of acknowledgment. The other jurors were right at hand. There was no low’ conversation.

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Bluebook (online)
18 L.R.A. 224, 15 S.E. 982, 36 W. Va. 729, 1892 W. Va. LEXIS 115, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-harrison-wva-1892.