The first poiut made by the appellants is that the judge who presided at the trial erred in refusing a nonsuit. According to the practice of the English courts, a plaintiff can not be non-suited on the trial against his assent, but may insist on the cause going to the jury, and thus take his chance of a verdict.. (Grah. Pr. 2d ed. 311, and the cases there cited!) With us, however, a plaintiff may be compelled to be nonsuited on the trial,
If the evidence will not authorize the jury to find a verdict for the plaintiff, or if the court would set it aside if so found, as contrary to evidence, it is the duty of the court to nonsuit the plaintiff; but the court “ should be extremely cautious on the subject of interfering with the province of the jury,” who by the principles and plan of our jurisprudence, have exclusive jurisdiction over the facts of a case. (Stuart v. Simpson, 1 Wend. 376.) The case under consideration did not come within the above general rules, nor authorize the judge to take it from the jury. The testimony of Bogardus, if true, clearly proved ah unjustifiable assault and battery by both the defendants upon the plaintiff; and even if the testimony of Fox was to be considered as conflicting with that of Bogardus, this circumstance did not diminish the necessity of sending the cause to the jury, whose peculiar duty it was to weigh conflicting testimony, and the degree of credit due to witnesses.
The appellants’ second point is that the judge erred in refuse ing to direct a verdict in favor of Sylvester Koplin, one of the defendants. The answer to this point is included in that given to the first point. There certainly was some evidence against Sylvester; if so, the judge had no power to discharge him. The rule on this subject is that in actions for tort against several, if on the conclusion of the plaintiff’s case it appears that there are some defendants against whom no evidence has been given, they may be discharged, or rather acquitted, and examined as witnesses for the other defendants. This is allowed to avoid the consequences of the improper joinder, by the plaintiff, of persons, merely for the purpose of depriving the defendants of their testimony as witnesses. But if there be any, even the slightest evidence against them, they can not be discharged before the rest, and the case must go altogether to the jury. (1 Phil. Ev. Dunlap's ed. of 1816, p. 61. Brown v. Howard, 14
On the return of the jury with a general verdict for the plaintiff against both defendants, the counsel for the defendants requested the judge that the jury might be polled by asking them if that was their verdict “ against each” and, both defendants— which the judge refused to permit; and such refusal constitutes the subject of the appellants’ third point. It is a general rule, that no verdict is of any force but a public verdict given in open court; until that is received and recorded there is no verdict. When the jury come to the bar to deliver their verdict, all or any of them have a right to dissent from a verdict to which they had previously agreed. (Root v. Sherwood, 6 John. 68.) A verdict is not recognized as valid and final until it is pronounced and recorded in open court: the jury may change their mind and disagree to their verdict after they have pronounced it in open court before it is received and entered on the minutes. After a verdict is rendered or announced and before it is entered, the jury may be examined by the poll, if the court please, and either of them may disagree to the verdict. (Blakely v. Sheldon, 7 John. 32.) The expression in the last case, “ if the court phase” would seem to imply that the polling of the jury was in the discretion of the court; but in the case of Fox v. Smith, (3 Cowen, 23,) and Jackson ex dem. Fink and others v. Hawks, (2 Wend. 619,) it is decided to be the absolute right of a [551]
Judgment affirmed.