Harris v. State

George, J.

In Harris v. Roan, 119 Ga. 379 (46 S. E. 433), it was ruled: " The extraordinary motions or cases contemplated by the statute are such as dó not ordinarily occur m the trans*682action of human affairs; as, when a man has been convicted of murder, and it afterwards appears that the supposed deceased is still alive, or where one is convicted on the testimony of a witness who is subsequently found guilty of perjury in giving that testimony, or where there has been some providential cause, and cases of like character.” See also Cox v. Hillyer, 65 Ga. 57; Wheeler v. State, 149 Ga. 473 (100 S. E. 568). This court in Doyal v. State, 73 Ga. 72, announced the rule governing in cases of this character, as follows: (1) “After the trial of a cause by the jury and the return of a verdict of guilty, and the refusal of a new trial by the circuit court, and the affirmance of that judgment by this court, the grounds of the second motion for a new trial will be scrutinized closely, and must be laid, in the very foundations of the purity of jury trial, to authorize the grant of such an application.” (2) “The scrutiny will be closer by this court, and its power exercised with more hesitation, when the presiding judge has refused to interfere with the verdict, on the ground of the disqualification of a juror.” In that case the judgment of the trial court overruling the defendant’s extraordinary motion for new trial was reversed. The ground of the extraordinary motion was that one of the jurors in the case was not impartial and had wilfully concealed this fact for the purpose of convicting the defendant and causing him to be hanged. In Gholston v. Gholston, 31 Ga. 625, 639, a divorce case, this court granted a new trial, on original motion, because the sheriff, under whose official charge the jury had been placed, informed the jury that “unless they should agree speedily, the judge would carry them with him to Elbert county, and that he was making preparations for that purpose.” In the course of the opinion it was said: “It is an inflexible rule of law, that after a jury shall have been charged with a cause, having had the law and the evidence placed before them, by or under the supervision and direction of the court, all communication between them and the rest of mankind shall be suspended, except by permission of the court, until they shall have been discharged from the case. It is of the last importance that this rule be rigidly enforced, to the end that the administration of justice may be both pure and free from the suspicion of impurity. The ascertainment that some unauthorized communication had been had with the jury, *683tlie nature and purport of which was unknown, ought to vitiate a verdict. Iiow much more a known communication, calculated to intimidate jurors, to unsettle resolution, based upon fixed and well-considered opinion — to produce a conflict between a sense of duty and personal comfort, convenience, or interest. . . We can not be assured that the agreement subsequently made, but unattainable before, was not effected by this communication. The communication itself was clearly illegal; it was calculated to influence the jury, or some of them, and therefore the verdict is not free from taint.” In Obear v. Gray, 68 Ga. 182 (original motion for new trial), it was said: “For a bailiff in charge of a- jury to tell them, while considering the case and apparently finding it difficult to agree, that in his opinion the judge would keep them out a week or compel 'them to agree, was such practice as necessitates a new trial” In Smith v. State, 122 Ga. 154, 155 (50 S. E. 62), it was said: “The law is, in the trial of felony cases, that if any irregularity is shown in the conduct of the jury or the officers that have them in charge, the burden is upon the State to show that the accused is not injured by such misconduct. In this case, as before remarked, ten of the jurors depose that their minds were not influenced by any of the irregularities detailed above; but we think that for the State to fully carry the burden it must prove by all the jurors such facts as will tend to show to the court that no injury has been suffered by the accused. The record does not disclose why two of the jurors did not join with the others in making these affidavits. This, unexplained, might imply that they could not truthfully do so.” Sec also Cooper v. State, 103 Ga. 65 (29 S. E. 439). In Renfroe v. State, 13 Ga. App. 655 (79 S. E. 758), a misdemeanor case, the Court of Appeals reversed the judgment denying a new trial, on original motion, upon the following state of facts : “ The jury had had the ease under consideration for about 18 or 20 hours, and, being unable to agree, called the sheriff and requested him to communicate with the court and ask the court either to recharge the jury, or. to order a mistrial. The sheriff replied: * Gentlemen, if it is a new charge you want, I am ready to go right down and submit it; but if it is a mistrial, I would feel embarrassed to do it, because I have heard the judge say that he was conscientiously opposed to mistrials in “Wilcox county. But *684I will submit it if you insist on it/ This was all that passed between the sheriff and the jury; and shortly afterward the jury returned a verdict of guilty.” In that case each of the twelve jurors made affidavit to the effect that they were not influenced by the conduct of the sheriff to return a verdict of guilty; but the affidavits were not properly entitled in the cause. In Smith v. State, 2 Ga. App. 574 (59 S. E. 311), the judgment overruling an extraordinary motion for new trial, based upon the ground that one of the jurors who rendered the verdict finding the defendant guilty was disqualified by reason of his relationship to the prosecutor witln'n the ninth degree, was reversed. As before noted, the case of Doyal v. State, 73 Ga. 72, was an extraordinary motion for new trial, and this court there recognized that the ground of the motion, to wit, the partiality of one of the jurors in the case and his wilful concealment of that fact for the purpose of carrying out his design of convicting the defendant and causing him to be hanged, was laid “in the very foundations of the purity of jury trial.”

Can we in this case be assured that the communication of the deputy sheriff did not affect the verdict? it is true that seven of the jurors say that ten of the jurors had all along been in favor of a verdict of guilty without a recommendation to mercy. Two of the jurors had all along favored a verdict of guilty with such recommendation. The two jurors themselves say that the communication of the deputy sheriff did not influence their verdict. As pointed out, two of the jurors had died since the trial of the case, and before the hearing of the extraordinary motion for new trial. The three remaining jurors did not make affidavits. Their failure to do so is wholly unexplained. As was said in the case of Smith v. State, 122 Ga. (supra), the failure of these three jurors to make affidavits sustaining the verdict, thus unexplained, “might imply that they could not truthfully do so.” The failure of the State in this case to furnish the affidavits of these three jurors, or to satisfactorily explain its inability to do so, is all the more significant because the State was allowed two months and a day in which to procure the affidavits of these jurors. Even if these jurors had all along voted for a verdict of guilty without recommendation, how can this court know that they were not ready to recommend to mercy at the time of the communication *685to the jury by the deputy sheriff? And how can this court know that a change of sentiment upon the part of these three jurors would not have resulted in a change upon the part of the seven jurors who had all along voted with them for a verdict of guilty without recommendation. In so grave a case we are not permitted to speculate upon the probable effect of the communication made by the deputy sheriff to the jury. He had been requested by the jury to advise the court of the jury’s inability to agree. The jurors, according to the undisputed affidavit of the deputy sheriff, were impatient and anxious to go home. Immediately after the communication to the jury, the jury did agree, and in our opinion the movant’s case “ fulfils the requirements of a meritorious extraordinary motion for new trial.” We assume that the deputy sheriff was unauthorized by the court to make the statement as made by him to the jury; that, however, is not the question. The question reduces itself to this: The communication was highly improper; it was in fact made to the jury; the jury, theretofore unable to agree, thereafter “immediately agreed” upon a verdict. The State having failed to carry the burden thus placed upon it, of showing that the communication did not in fact prejudicially influence the jury selected for the trial of .the case, the court erred 'in overruling the extraordinary motion for new trial.

Judgment reversed.

All the Justices concur, except