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loaph | 2 years ago
Lookup "jury nullification" if you're curious to learn more about juries giving arbitrary decisions.
loaph | 2 years ago
Lookup "jury nullification" if you're curious to learn more about juries giving arbitrary decisions.
dragonwriter|2 years ago
Nullification only applies to criminal cases (the discussion here is about civil, not criminal, law) and only in one direction. Lookup "directed verdict of acquittal", "judgement as a matter of law", and "judgement non obstante veredicto".
GabrielTFS|2 years ago
I think what loaph is saying is that a jury, when making a decision, can make any decision it wants, without consequences (except in exceptional cases, e.g. jury tampering).
The jury might never get to actually make a decision, and a guilty verdict can be overruled by a judgment notwithstanding the verdict (or as a result of an appeal, etc.), but legally, when a jury has made a decision, they can't be punished for making it, even if they were unreasonable in reaching that verdict.