The two classes of cases relating to erroneous
or defective verdicts, and the mode of correction to be pursued, are carefully considered in Little v. Larrabee, 2 Maine, 37.
From that case and the cases there cited, and subsequent decisions in the same line, we gather that in those of the first class, where the error is merely formal, and has no connection with the merits of the cause, and the amendment when made in no respect impairs or changes the rights of the parties, the verdict may be amended under the direction of the court after it has been affirmed and constructively recorded, and after the jury have separated, and even at a subsequent term. Hoey v. Candage, 61 Maine, 263; Barnard v. Whiting, 7 Mass., 358. But in those of the second class, where the error has been committed by the jury, either by returning a verdict for the wrong party, or for a-larger or smaller sum than they intended, and by the amendment proposed the verdict would be reversed, or the damages increased or diminished, and the substantial rights of the parties thus changed, when the verdict has been affirmed in open court, and the jury have separated and become accessible to the parties, the only *496remedy for a mistake is by setting the verdict aside and granting a new trial.
In Goodwin v. Appleton, 22 Maine, 453, the verdict had not been affirmed nor does it appear that the jury had separated, but the case was re-committed to them on the spot with further instructions by the presiding judge.
In Ward v. Bailey, 23 Maine, 316, relied on by the plaintiff, the jury had not separated and no opportunity for any'unfair practices with them had occurred. The absolute impossibility of such a thing is made the ground of distinguishing that case from Little v. Larrabee, and justifying the re-commitment to them with more precise instructions.
But the case at bar cannot be distinguished in any of its essential facts from Snell v. Bangor Steam, Navigation, Co., 30 Maine, 337. In that case the court saw no reason to doubt that the error which the jury had been allowed to correct after the affirmation of a sealed verdict was one of a clerical character, or capable of being corrected by computation merely, upon the principles on which the jury must necessarily have acted in finding for the plaintiff, and they expressly declare that there was no suggestion that the jury had in fact been influenced by any one, or that any conversation had taken place between any member of the panel and other persons during the separation — still they sustained the exceptions.
We have not the remotest suspicion that there was any unfair practice in the present case; but we think it better that a party should occasionally suffer the delay and expense of a new trial, than that su'ch a source of embarrassing and troublesome inquiries, with doubtful and possibly pernicious results, should be opened as would inevitably follow the allowance of the re-commitment of cases to juries after verdict rendered and affirmed, and opportunity afforded for them to be influenced by conversation with the parties or others.
Jurors should understand that the affirmation of their verdict in open court is not a matter of mere form — that it is their duty *497to attend to it as it is read to them, and not to allow it to go upon record as their verdict unless it truly expresses the conclusion which they reached and agreed upon. That their duty to the case is not at an end until their verdict has been not only rightly written out, but rightly^read to and affirmed by them, may be seen by a reference to the case of Bucknam v. Greenleaf, 48 Maine, 394. In that case it was held that the judge had no power to direct the correction of a verdict wrongly read and affirmed, even though the written verdict, as well as the affidavits of the jurors, showed how they intended to decide the ease. It is not necessary to carry the doctrine we hold to such an extreme in order to conclude that in the case before us, the entry must be
Exceptions sustained.
Appleton, C. J., Dickerson, Danforth and Yirgin, JIT., concurred.