Hughes v. State

Bussell, C. J.,

dissenting. Upon the facts is presented the controlling question as to whether a verdict can be received and returned into court during a recess of the court. The petition to set aside the judgment alleges that after the court took a recess at about .8:30 o’clock on the night of January 24, 1924, the court presided over by the judge was not again in session or reconvened as a court in any capacity whatever until the following day, January 25, 1924, at 9 o’clock a. m. One undisputed fact is that his' honor G-. H. Howard, the judge presiding, was at his home more than a mile from the court-house during all of the negotiations as to the reception of the verdict in the case and at the time that the verdict was received, and that the counsel in the case were not in his presence to address him face to face, nor he in theirs, and that whatever direction-may have been given by the judge was communicated by telephone by persons not in his sight or presence..

That there can be no court' without a judge present to direct it is well settled. Can a judge by telephone effect a substitution for his personal presence ? I think not. I am of the opinion that the *822lower court erred in overruling the defendant's demurrers to the • answer of the State, and in refusing to set aside the verdict. The fact that there was an oiler to allow the defendant to poll the jury the next morning when the court reassembled is of no importance, because nothing is better settled than that after the dispersal of the jury the right of polling has passed; but even if this were not so, the offer to allow the defendant the right to poll the jury was made before the verdict was read, which was a tacit admission that the result of the verdict was already known, because unless this had been so it is not only universal practice to poll the jury after the verdict is read but in fact any other course would be impossible if the verdict is legally returned. Of all things most sacred in judicial proceedings the sanctity of a verdict should be most inviolate. The finding of the jury should not only be reached by the strictest observance of all the well-ordered rules of procedure but it should even be above and beyond suspicion. This has uniformly been the rule of all the courts, even where mere property is concerned; and certainly the rule should not be relaxed when human life is at stake. In Silvey v. State, 71 Ga. 553, it was held that where a jury charged with a criminal case had dispersed, the -burden was on the State to show that the accused had sustained no injury thereby, and that the fact that “before dispersing, the jury agreed upon a verdict, ’reduced it to writing and left it with their foreman, did not show that the accused was not injured. Such a writing was not a verdict, but was a mere resolution, which it was in the power of the jury to alter or change at any time before it was delivered into court.” In this case Mr. Justice Blandford said: “The right of trial by jury is one of the dearest and most sacred rights of freemen, and courts can not guard it with too much jealousy. The jury should not only be free from fault, but the appearance of evil should be avoided.” See also Monroe v. State, 5 Ga. 85, 150; Roberts v. State, 14 Ga. 8, 15 (58 Am. D. 528); Westmoreland v. State, 45 Ga. 225; Jones v. State, 68 Ga. 760. It is well settled, then, that a jury can not disperse without the consent and knowledge of the court and under his supervision; and so the question recurs, can a court sit at home instead of at the courthouse, and give direction and supervision to so critical and important a part.of the trial as the reception of the verdict in a capital case? Included in the bill of exceptions is a certificate *823of the trial judge, from which I quote, on the point of the absence of the judge. “After the jury had been charged and had deliberated until about 9 o’clock p. m., . . being sick at the time, I notified the deputy sheriff, Mr. White, I was sick, and made the statement to him . . to the effect that I would go home, and to bring the jury in the next morning at 9 o’clock if they made a verdict during the night. I don’t recall telling him to take the jury to the hotel, though he had been instructed the day before to provide quarters at the hotel, and I knew he would do so and would not keep them in the jury room all night. . . When I arrived at home, in about fifteen minutes the deputy sheriff telephoned me that the jury had notified him that a verdict had been reached within about five minutes after I left the court-room. I told him I was quite sick but would return to the' court-room if he 'would notify the defendant’s attorneys or get them or Mr. Allen there; otherwise I would come down next morning. Later Mr. Stephens, assistant solicitor-general, telephoned me that an agreement had been reached between the defendant and her counsel and himself to deliver the verdict to the deputy sheriff and to waive the call and poll of the jury and permit the jury to disperse until court convened the next morning.” It will be noticed that the certificate of the trial judge does not state that he gave his consent in terms to the agreement between Mr. Stephens, representing the State, and Mr. Allen, representing the defendant. The judge also certifies the truth of a part of the affidavit of G-. F. Wells, which is as follows: “Deponent further says that he heard a conversation in regard to the reception of the verdict in said case, that transpired between the court officials, the lawyers, and the judge; . . that during said conversation he heard his honor, G-. H. Howard, the judge in said case, say, T am sick. I am going home. Bring the jury here in the morning at 9 o’clock a. m., and we will receive the verdict at that time if they have reached one.’ ”

The findings of juries have frequently been set aside for occurrences in the absence of the defendant (Chance v. State, 156 Ga. 428, 119 S. E. 303); but this case differs from these adjudications in that it is the absence of the judge, and not the defendánt, of which complaint is made.- It would seem to be a sound principle that a gathering large or small, even at the appointed time and place, has no jurisdiction to try any case, civil or criminal, great or *824small, and to be entitled to the denomination of a court, in the absence of a duly qualified judge. Can a constructive presence be created by telephone which may be substituted for what must be conceded as a paramount essential of a trial, which will be the equivalent of the actual presence in propria persona of a duly qualified judge? In Carnes v. Carnes, 138 Ga. 1, 6 (74 S. E. 785), it was held that a telephonic affidavit would not supply the place of an affidavit in person, to support an application for the writ of ne exeat; the court saying: “Telephonic affidavits are unknown to the law. A moment’s thought will show a sound reason for this. An officer hears a voice coming through the receiver of a telephone. Eor identification he must rely on recognition of the voice (if he knows it) and the statement of the person as to who he or she is. Reference is made to some paper, more or less fully described. Later a third person presents to the notary a paper as being the one sworn to. How'does the notary know, except by hearsay, that the paper presented is the identical paper mentioned?” In Horne v. Rogers, 110 Ga. 362, 370 (35 S. E. 715, 49 L. R. A. 176), it was said: “The judge is such a necessary part of the court that his absence destroys the existence of the tribunal, and public policy demands that the tribunal authorized to pass upon the life, liberty, and property of the citizen should be constituted during the entire trial in the manner prescribed by law. The great weight of authority is in harmony with this view. The very definition of trial carries with it the idea of the superintendence of a judge.” In Turbeville v. State, 56 Miss. 793, the court said: “There can be no court without a judge, and his presence, as the presiding genius of the trial, is as' essential during the argument as at any other time.” In Capital Traction Co. v. Hof, 174 U. S. 1, 13 (19 Sup. Ct. 580, 43 L. ed. 873), Mr. Justice Gray, delivering the opinion of the court, says: “A trial by a jury of twelve men, in the presence and under the superintendence of a judge empowered to instruct them on the law and to advise them on the facts, and (except on acquittal of a criminal charge) to set aside their verdict if in his opinion it is against the law or the evidence.” Numerous authorities could be cited to sustain the proposition that a legal trial can not be had except when the judge is present at all stages of the proceeding, and that in the absence of the judge the case is suspended and a recess should be taken, which, as it appears from the *825certificate of the judge, was the expressed intention of trial judge while on the bench and before he left for his home in the case at bar,-—a recess until 9 o’clock a. m. on January 25, 1-924.

Among others which might be referred to are the cases of People v. Eckert, 16 Cal. 111; Shaw v. People, 3 Hun, 272; People v. Shaw, 63 N. Y. App. 38; Palin v. State, 38 Neb. 862 (57 N. W. 743); Meredith v. People, 84 Ill. 479; State v. Smith, 49 Conn. 376; Blend v. People, 41 N. Y. App. 604; Hayes v. State, 58 Ga. 35. In Rodgers v. Price, 105 Ga. 67 (31 S. E. 126), Mr. Justice Lewis said: “The solution of the question raised by the assignment of error in this record depends upon what construction should be given the word ‘court’ as used-in section 4793 of the Civil Code. Sometimes this word, as applied to a particular branch of the judiciary, is used in its comprehensive sense, and embraces all of the official machinery of a particular court, including judge and jury, if a jury should be one of its tribunals in determining issues. But we have never known the word applied so as to designate a jury alone. Where the term is used in the statute that is intended to designate what official shall determine and pass upon certain issues in the court, it invariably means the presiding judge. Whenever it is the legislative intent that the issues in any proceeding should be submitted to a jury, the word ‘jury’ is used, and not ‘court.’ ” There is a distinction between the meaning of the words “court” and “judge.” The term “judge” may designate the individual who holds that office, but the word “court” relates to all the machinery provided by law, including the judge, or the judge acting alone when performing his functions at the place fixed by law for the trial under consideration. Hence it was held, in Stewart v. Crane, 87 Ga. 328 (13 S.E. 552), that “While it may be true that a court of equity is always open, and that the judge accordingly may, at chambers, pass all proper orders in an equity cause, we are of the opinion that the language of section 4203 of the code restricts the authority of the court as to master’s reports to such things only ás may be done in term time. The section provides that the master’s report, ‘when returned to court, shall be subject to exceptions for such time as the court may allow.’ The word ‘court,’ as first above used, evidently can not mean the judge.” From the foregoing authorities I am of the opinion that when the trial judge in open court told the deputy sheriff, “I am sick. I *826am going home. Bring the jury here in the morning at 9:00 o’clock a. nr.,” etc., and left the court-house and went to his home, all judicial authority and power was lost over the person of the plaintiff in error and of the subject-matter at issue upon her trial until the time designated by the judge as judge at the court-house. After the judge had gone to his home the defendant could not have pleaded guilty had she so desired, and by reason of his absence she could no more waive her right as to the poll of the jury during that absence than she could enter a plea of guilty. The plaintiff in error had the right to have her case tried in a court of competent jurisdiction with a judge presiding and present at every stage of the trial. As held in Lamar v. Prosser, 121 Ga. 153 (48 S. E. 977), “‘Due process of law,’ as required by the fourteenth amendment to the constitution of the United States, means only that a man is to be tried, as every other man is tried, in accordance with the law of the land in the State where he is charged with crime.” This case presents features so unusual that it can not be said that the plaintiff in error has been tried as others are tried. See Hoye v. State, 39 Ga. 718, 724.

It appears from the record that the only direction given by the presiding judge while personally present and presiding at the courthouse was to keep the jury together and bring them into court at 9 o’clock the following morning, and that any agreement made by the judge as to the reception of the verdict and the dispersal of the jury was made during his absence; and for this reason the separation and dispersal of the jury was improper. For this reason the trial did not reach a conclusion by the orderly procedure to which each one charged with- crime is entitled. The trial had not ended; and, where life and liberty are involved, the jury should be kept together from the commencement of the trial to its final termination and the return of their verdict into court. If there can be no court in the absence of the judge, regardless of any waiver, the verdict was received and the jury dispersed before the trial had ended. “The right to poll the jury is the right to call upon each member to answer whether the verdict rendered is his verdict, before he has had an opportunity to be influenced either to adhere to or depart from the finding. This right is lost as soon as the jury have dispersed and cease to be a jury and the individuals become again simply members of the community.” Prescott v. *827Augusta, 118 Ga. 549 (45 S. E. 431). It has been held that the giving of a recharge to a jury in the absence of the accused is cause for a new trial, even though counsel for the accused are present and remain silent. Bonner v. State, 67 Ga. 510. See also Hopson v. State, 116 Ga. 90 (42 S. E. 412), where a new trial was granted because the judge recalled the jury for an additional charge, even though the charge was the same in substance as the original charge. If it be said that counsel for the plaintiff in error were anxious that the verdict should be returned and the jury allowed to disperse until the next morning, it must be remembered that the authority to bind their client, conferred upon them by § 4955 of the Civil Code, is confined to written agreements; the language of that section, so far as material, being, “They have authority to bind their clients in any action or proceeding, by any agreement in relation to the cause, made in writing,” and certainly agreements by telephone, as is the case in the present instance, would not bind the plaintiff in error. An oral agreement made by counsel in the presence of the court in session may be enforced; but for reasons heretofore stated, a telephonic conversation is not the -equivalent of a statement in judicio. That the agreement that the jury hand the verdict to the deputy sheriff and be permitted to disperse, being oral, can not be enforced, see Huff v. State, 29 Ga. 424; Cable Co. v. Parantha, 118 Ga. 913 (45 S. E. 787); Evans v. State National Bank, 19 Fed. 676. We are aware of the numerous rulings of this court holding the extent to which waivers by defendants are operative. It is only necessary to say that those rulings were based upon waivers of rights by the defendants in the presence of the court, and not under the circumstances which surrounded the alleged waiver in this case.

The defendant in error insists that the verdict and judgment should have been attacked only by motion for new trial, and submits this as a reason why the court did not err in refusing the prayer of the petition. Conceding, for argument’s sake, that the receiving of the verdict and dispersal of the jury under the circumstances of this case might have been taken advantage of by motion for a new trial, it is certainly not the exclusive mode of procedure. The right to proceed to set aside a verdict alleged to be void has always been recognized in this State, and has been employed in many eases. There may have been good and sufficient reasons why the counsel first employed did not wish to raise the issue presented by the *828present bill of exceptions. But be that as it may, this court will .not undertake to decide questions raised for the first time in this court, preferring to review in each instance the case as it was actually tried in the lower court. If the present insistence of the defendant in error is meritorious, that point could have been raised by a timely demurrer to the petition, but none was presented.

The court erred in not setting aside the verdict and judgment.