Appellant was convicted in the county court for the unlawful sale of intoxicating liquor, and his conviction was affirmed on appeal to the circuit court from which action he appeals here. He argues two grounds for reversal.
1. The first contention is that the county court erred in overruling his motion to quash the petit jury. It avers thаt the trial judge directed the drawing of sixty names from the jury box and out of the sixty so drawn and summoned the petit juries were impaneled for the trial of cases for the week in which appellant was convicted. The motion to quash is founded upon Section 1615, Code of 1942, which provides that “for each week of the term of the county court not less than twenty nor more than forty names, in the discretion of the court, shall he drawn from the jury box of the county”, etc. Appellant contends that the drawing of sixty names from the box was such a departure from the statute that the county court’s action was void and the whole panel should have been quashed. Section 1798, Code of 1942, provides that “All the provisions of law in relation to the listing, drawing, summoning and impaneling juries are directory merely; and a jury listed, drawn, summoned or impaneled, though in an informal or irrеgular manner, shall be deemed a legal jury after it shall have been impaneled and sworn.”
The record shows that out of the sixty names drawn from the box only sixteen or seventeen qualified for jury service for the week, and the court thereupon directed that thirty more names he drawn from the jury box and summoned to appear on the sеcond day of court, and out of the grand total of ninety names only twenty-nine were qualified and impaneled for jury service. On the trial of this case later in the week twenty-eight names of the total of twenty-nine were exhausted before a jury of twelve was selected for the trial. In overruling
In the early case of Head v. State,
In the case of Rliodman v. State,
2. In the trial court appellant filed a motion requesting the county judge to recuse himself in this case for the reason that previously he had tried a civil action brought by the State Tax Collector against appellant for
In the case of Garrett v. State,
Looking to the entire record of the trial in this case we find it unusually free of anything which would warrant criticism. Appellant does not complain of a single ruling of the .trial judge on the admission of evidence nor of any instruction to the jury granted by him nor of his action in refusing to grant any instruction requested by appellant. He complains only of the action of the court in overruling his motion to quash and his motiоn for recusation of the trial judge; he does not contend that on. the hearing on the merits he failed to receive a fair and impartial trial nor does he cоmplain that the jury Avhich tried him was not a qualified, fair, and impartial jury. If we should hold that a trial judge is disqualified merely because he has previously presided at the trial of a case involving the same evidence and transaction, then it would be necessary for him to stand aside and turn the duties of his office over to a special judge in every case in which there has been a mistrial, in every case where on appeal a new trial has been ordered, in every case where he himself has granted
Affirmed.
