310.50 - Verdict; form; reconsideration of defective verdict.

§ 310.50  Verdict; form; reconsideration of defective verdict.    1.    The  form  of the verdict must be in accordance with the court's  instructions, as prescribed in article three hundred.    2.  If the jury renders a verdict which in form is not  in  accordance  with  the  court's instructions or which is otherwise legally defective,  the court must explain the defect or error and must direct the  jury  to  reconsider  such  verdict,  to resume its deliberation for such purpose,  and to render a proper verdict.   If the jury persists  in  rendering  a  defective  or  improper  verdict, the court may in its discretion either  order that the verdict in its entirety as to any defendant  be  recorded  as an acquittal, or discharge the jury and authorize the people to retry  the  indictment  or  a  specified  count  or  counts  thereof as to such  defendant; provided that if it is clear that the jury intended to find a  defendant not guilty upon any particular count,  the  court  must  order  that the verdict be recorded as an acquittal of such defendant upon such  count.    3.  If the court accepts a verdict which is defective or incomplete by  reason  of  the jury's failure to render a verdict upon every count upon  which it was instructed to do so, such verdict is deemed  to  constitute  an acquittal upon every such count improperly ignored in the verdict.    4.  In  a  prosecution  involving a charge of enterprise corruption in  violation of article four hundred sixty of the penal law, the jury  must  separately and specifically render a special verdict with regard to each  criminal   act  and  any  lesser  included  offense  submitted  for  its  consideration as a part of a pattern of criminal activity in addition to  its verdict on the charge of enterprise corruption. In the absence of  a  unanimous  special  verdict  of  guilty  with regard to each of at least  three criminal acts and/or lesser included offenses  submitted  for  its  consideration   and   legally   sufficient   to  constitute  a  person's  participation in a pattern of criminal activity within  the  meaning  of  subdivision  four  of  section  460.10  of the penal law, the court must  order that the verdict on the count charging  enterprise  corruption  be  recorded as an acquittal.