
    The People, Resp’ts, v. Charles Pscherhofer, App’lt.
    
      (Supreme Court, General Term, Fifth Department,
    
    
      Filed June 23, 1892.)
    
    Jury—Misconduct of.
    A verdict will not be set aside on the ground of misconduct of a juror in the use of liquor, where the liquor was prescribed as a stimulant in a case of sickness during the trial, and it does not appear that the juror took any after the case was submitted, but, on the contrary, that his mind was clear and composed during the deliberations of the jury and that he showed no effects of intoxicating liquors.
    Appeal from a judgment of the court of sessions of Monroe county, convicting the defendant of the crime of grand larceny in the first degree; and from an order denying the defendant’s motion to set aside the verdict and for a new trial, on affidavits charging-misconduct on the part of a juror.
    
      A. S. McNab, for app’lt; H. H. Widener, for resp’ts.
   Dwight, P. J.

A careful examination of the record discloses no ground either for reversing the judgment or for setting aside the verdict in this case. The affidavits on which the motion was made tend to show that during an adjournment of the court and before the submission of the case to the jury, one of the jurors was taken sick, at a hotel where they were being kept together, with symptoms of alcoholism; that a physician was called and prescribed champagne as a stimulant, and small quantities of spirits from time to time, and that the prescription was administered by the attendant who had the jury in charge. There is no evidence that the juror took any stimulant, even under the prescription, after the case was submitted and the jury retired to deliberate on their verdict; but on the contrary it appears that during the deliberations of the jury his mind was clear and composed and that he exhibited none of the effects of intoxicating liquors.

Upon these facts no case was made for interfering with the verdict. The cases in which verdicts have been set aside for misconduct of jurors in the use of liquor, are those in which the liquor has been drunk, without leave of the court or medical prescription, after the case has been submitted to the jury for their decision. People v. Schad, 58 Hun, 571; 35 St. Rep., 148, and the cases cited.

We are not aware that a charge of misconduct of a juror, such as to vitiate a verdict, has ever been based upon the use of liquor during the trial; and it is apparent that if a juror should become from that cause or any other incapacitated for his duty during the progress of the trial, it would be a proper subject for the attention of the court at the time rather than after a verdict had been rendered. There is nothing in the affidavits to show that the rights of the defendant were in any manner prejudiced by reason of the matters disclosed.

On the case as presented by the record we find no ground for the objections urged in respect to the indictment, the evidence or the alleged variance between the two. The larceny is charged, in separate counts, to have been accomplished by embezzlement and by false pretenses, both of which seem to have been substantially proved as alleged. It seems to us that both branches of the case might properly have been submitted to the jury ; but the former of them was withdrawn by the court, and the case went to the jury on the single charge of larceny committed by means of false pretences. That charge is stated in the indictment with commendable conciseness, and yet with sufficient fullness and circumstance to bring the case within the statutory definition of the crime, Penal Code, § 528, sub. 1, and § 530, sub. 3, and the evidence seems to us fully to support the charge. There was no exception taken on the trial which requires discussion, and we find no error in the record which vitiates the judgment.

The judgment and order appealed from must be affirmed.

Judgment and order of the court of sessions of Monroe county affirmed.

Macomber and Lewis, JJ., concur.  