Bryant v. State
Citation | 246 Ind. 17,202 N.E.2d 161 |
Decision Date | 17 November 1964 |
Docket Number | No. 30421,30421 |
Parties | Jasper BRYANT, Jr., Appellant, v. STATE of Indiana, Appellee. |
Court | Indiana Supreme Court |
Frederick F. McClellan, Muncie, for appellant.
Edwin K. Steers, Atty. Gen., Frederick J. Graf, Deputy Atty. Gen., for appellee.
The appeal in this case stems from the judgment of appellant's conviction for grand larceny upon an affidavit charging him with the commission of a crime while armed with a deadly weapon. Appellant was sentenced for a term of one to ten years in the Indiana Reformatory.
The sole question of error presented by the motion for new trial is that the trial court erred in overruling appellant's motion for a mistrial due to separation of the jury while they were deliberating on their verdict. The motion concerned the propriety of the trial judge giving one juror permission to make a five or ten minute telephone call home to arrange for the caring of his livestock.
The record shows that on February 13, 1963, the jury returned its verdict into open court. The trial judge ordered a presentence investigation by the probation officer, and fixed February 21, 1963, as the date for the passing of sentence. On February ruary 21, just prior to the sentencing of the accused, counsel for the accused for the first time questioned the propriety of the separation of the juror by an oral motion for a mistrial. The record in this respect shows:
Appellant cites Burns' Sec. 9-1810 (1956 Repl.), 1 providing:
(Our italics.) Burns' Sec. 9-1903 (1956 Repl.), 2 provides:
'The Court shall qrant a new trial to the defendant for the following causes, or any of them:
* * *
* * *
(Our italics.)
Appellant has asserted that the permission here given the juror by the trial judge authorizing him to call home for the stated purposes was not in the presence of appellant or the attorneys and that all communications by the court with the jury after the submission of the cause must be in open court, citing: Hall v. State (1857), 8 Ind. 439, 444; Fish and Another v. Smith (1859), 12 Ind. 563, and Danes et al. v. Pearson (1893), 6 Ind.App. 465, 471, 22 N.E. 976, 978. Appellant further argues that the trial judge had no power to allow the juror to separate.
The foregoing statute (Burns' Sec. 9-1903, supra) 3 providing a new trial shall be granted upon the separation of the jury without leave of court after retiring to deliberate, of course is not applicable to cases where the separation occurred after granting leave. Appellant has not argued that the permission here granted the juror was different from leave being granted to such juror, nor that the purpose for which separation was allowed was improper nor that appellant was harmed by the separation.
The above cases cited by appellant are not in our judgment controlling of the case at bar as the facts are entirely distinguishable.
If the separation by a juror is requested, the court if at all possible should hear the merits of such request in open court in the presence of the parties or their counsel with opportunity to make seasonable objection, if desired. Such practice is fair to the litigants and their attorneys and should be adhered to in order to avoid improper influences reaching the jury and to prevent the commission of error prejudicial to a party litigant. We know, however, that emergencies do arise during the deliberations of a jury when there is no opportunity for the court of delay acting until the parties or their attorneys can be reached and brought into open court. Such a situation occurred in Smith, Peak v. State (1961), 241 Ind. 311, 325, 170 N.E.2d 794 801, where the separation of the woman juror from the remaining jurors grew out of her sudden severe illness at a restaurant where the jury had gone for supper. We there stated...
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