In the Wilde and Taylor case the jury disagreed. The foreman said they could not agree upon certain of the questions submitted to them, and that there was no possibility of agreement. Upon the counts of conspiracy, the judge had early in the day directed verdict of not guilty, but the judge observed that all the material questions were unhappily undecided. He discharged the jury, and refused to admit Wilde and Taylor to bail, informing Sir Edward Clarke that any application for bail must be made to a judge in Chambers. Mr Gill, who appeared for the Treasury, notified that the case would be retried.

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