Defendant was convicted in the court below of receiving stolen goods. The court, in its charge to the jury, said: “As to receiving stolen goods, if you do not find that he stole them but are satisfied that he received them, then you can find him guilty on the fourth count in this indictment.” The record shows that the jury “ say, September 9, 1902, they find the defendant guilty on the fourth count in the indictment—receiving stolen goods.” It is urged here that the memorandum submitted to the clerk by the jury omitted the words “ on the fourth count in the indictment.” We are bound to take the record as it is. But it is alleged that the paper returned by the jury is on file. This does not make it a part of the record. There is, therefore, nothing by which the record can be corrected, even if there were any irregularity in it, which in our opinion there is not. We said in Com. v. Mills et al., 3 Pa. Superior Ct. 161 : “ The writing prepared in the jury room and presented to the court forms no part of the record. The finding delivered by the jury in open court decides the issue, and what is recorded by the court is the only proper verdict.” This practically disposes of the first and third assignments of error.
As to the second—the refusal of the court to grant a new trial—being purely a question of discretion, is not ordinarily assignable for error, and this case is not in any respect exceptional.
All of the other assignments are in violation of Rule 15 which requires that “ When the error assigned is to the charge of the court or to answers to points or to findings of fact or law, the part of the charge or the points and answers or findings referred to must be quoted totidem verbis in the assignment.” No part of the charge, of which the appellant complains, is quoted. His conclusions as to what the charge meant or as to its unfairness, or as to the failure of the court to instruct, do not concern us *55so much as what the court actually said, from which we may judge for ourselves as to positive errors or infer the failures complained of, but nowhere is there contained in any of the assignments a single word of what was said by the court in the charge.
We may say, however, that, upon a careful reading of the charge, we find it clear and painstaking. The rights of the. defendant were carefully guarded and the essentials of .the crime of which the defendant was convicted, as to which also there was sufficient evidence, fully stated.
The defendant suffered no harm, of which he could justly complain, at the hands of the court.
Judgment affirmed.