State v. Verde

17 A.2d 39, 66 R.I. 33, 1940 R.I. LEXIS 4
CourtSupreme Court of Rhode Island
DecidedDecember 26, 1940
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 17 A.2d 39 (State v. Verde) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Rhode Island primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Verde, 17 A.2d 39, 66 R.I. 33, 1940 R.I. LEXIS 4 (R.I. 1940).

Opinion

Condon, J.

This is a petition for a new trial under the provisions of general laws 1938, chapter 535, § 5. The petitioners were convicted in the superior court of conspiracy. They now complain that their trial was not full, fair and impartial, because the trial justice “secretly” sent a physician and two deputy sheriffs into the jury room while the jurors were there, deliberating on their verdicts; and also because he allowed the jurors, during the trial, to send and *35 receive letters without any supervision of such letters by the court and without notice to the petitioners or their counsel.

The petitioners contend that the conduct of the trial justice in each instance constituted unlawful communication with the jury and per se vitiated their verdicts. In support of this contention, petitioners argue that it is a well-established rule of law that neither the trial justice nor anyone else is permitted to have any communication with the jury, except in open court in the presence of the parties or their counsel. And they contend further that infraction of this rule, regardless of the motive for it or its prejudicial effect on the verdict, requires a reversal and the granting of a new trial.

If the law were as the petitioners contend, they would, on the evidence before us, be entitled to a new trial. That evidence shows that there was irregular communication with the jury, both during the trial and during their deliberation on their verdicts in the jury room; that each instance of such irregular communication was permitted on order of the trial justice, without notice to these petitioners and without any opportunity being afforded them to object to such communications; and finally, that the petitioners did not learn of any instance of such irregular communications with the jury until after the court had received their verdicts.

Before discussing the law applicable to such a situation, we think it will be helpful to set out in some detail the evidence upon which defendants base their claim for a new trial. That evidence discloses when the unlawful communications with the jury took place, the substance of them, and how they occurred. It is contained in affidavits which were made by the trial justice, the jurors, the officers who had the custody of the jury, counsel for the state, counsel for the petitioners, the petitioners themselves, and the physician who was admitted to the jury room. There was no objection to the admission of any of these affidavits, and in the making *36 of some of them counsel for the state and counsel for the petitioners cooperated. Except in some minor particulars, there is no conflict in the evidence which they present. In addition to these affidavits we also have the testimony of the assistant clerk of the superior court who administered the oaths to the officers who were specially charged with the custody of the jury.

It appears from this evidence that on March 25, 1940, the day when these petitioners were put on trial in the superior court for conspiracy, the jury was ordered “locked up” on the motion of the attorney general. Deputy sheriff Frank Verria and deputy sheriff Anthony B. McCabe were thereupon given charge and custody of the jury and they were then and there specially sworn as follows by the clerk in open court: “You severally and solemnly swear that you will keep together the jurors now about to be committed to your care, that you will allow no one to speak to them except upon order of the court, so help you God.”

During the trial certain letters addressed to several of the jurors were delivered to these officers at the hotel where the jury was lodged; and certain letters were written by several jurors and mailed by the officers. Each officer states that he censored both the incoming and outgoing mail; that the letters which the jury received contained no reference whatsoever to the case; that the letters which were sent out were likewise read and found to contain no such reference; and that what each officer did in this connection was done on the order of the trial justice. Each juror who sent or received a letter or letters stated that there was no reference to the case on trial in such letter or letters and stated specifically the substance of the message contained therein, which, in every instance, referred to the social, financial or domestic affairs of the juror and was not of a disturbing nature.

The trial justice states in his affidavit concerning these letters: “I think that I originally gave no instructions about *37 them. I learned that letters had customarily come to them and been written by them. I found that these letters were all censored .... I afterward told the officers in charge that letters should not be opened except with the permission of those to whom they were addressed, but unless the permission was given the letters would be held until the case was over and not be allowed to go to the jurors.”

It is fair to deduce from the affidavit of the trial justice that the officers were authorized and directed to permit the jurors to receive letters if nothing referring to the trial was found in them by such officers; and that the trial justice did not concern himself further with the matter of the receiving or sending of such letters by the jurors.

It appears from the affidavits of counsel for the petitioners that they were never advised of this action of the trial justice; that, throughout the trial, they did not know nor did they have reason to suspect that the jurors were thus communicating with persons who were outside the jury room; and that they did not learn of it until several days after the trial, when they were arguing their motion for a new trial to the trial justice. Counsel further state that they did not even then know the extent to which the practice had gone but learned of it from the affidavits which were made by the officers and jurors in the instant proceeding.

The evidence before us also shows that after the jury were charged and before they retired to deliberate upon their verdicts, the court appointed deputy sheriff Frank Verria to have charge and custody of them until they returned their verdicts; and that he was again specially sworn by the assistant clerk as follows: “You solemnly swear that you will keep together the jurors now about to be committed to your care; that you will allow no one to speak to them, nor speak to them yourself except to ask if they have agreed upon a verdict, or otherwise by .order of the court, so help you God.” *38 The jury thereupon retired at about 3 o’clock in the afternoon of April 5, 1940.

Shortly after 7 o’clock, p.m., while the jury was still deliberating, the foreman of the jury came to the door and told Verria that a juror was sick and needed a doctor. Verria, without leaving his post of duty, conveyed this message to deputy sheriff McCabe, who was within speaking distance on the next lower floor of the courthouse, and asked him to telephone to the trial justice, who was then at his home, for instructions. McCabe talked on the telephone to the trial justice, who told him to have Verria ascertain the jur- or’s condition. McCabe communicated this instruction to Verria and, about a minute or so thereafter, Verria came back to him and told him the juror was very ill.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
17 A.2d 39, 66 R.I. 33, 1940 R.I. LEXIS 4, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-verde-ri-1940.