Filed Date: 6/29/1933
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 11/11/2024
This writ brings up the conviction of the plaintiffs in error upon an indictment for possession of liquor after a trial at the Essex Quarter Sessions before Judge Yan Biper.
The single question here presented is the propriety of the actions of the court clerk when the jury came in to render ■ a verdict.
What happened was this: After the jury retired to deliberate, Judge Yan Biper instructed the clerk to receive the verdict in his absence and left the court house. Sometime later the jury came into the court room and announced it had reached a verdict. The foreman announced the verdict as “guilty with leniency.” Counsel for defendants demanded that the jury be polled. Nine jurors answered “guilty with leniency;” two “guilty with extreme leniency;” and one “not guilty.” Thereupon the clerk telephoned the judge and was told to send the jury back to reach a verdict.
Later the jury returned and announced a verdict of guilty with leniency. Upon a poll, ten so answered and two mentioned extreme leniency.
The judgment is affirmed, with costs.