’ On the evening of August 17, 1965, a tractor-trailer unit owned by PlaintiffAppellee Global Van Lines and driven by Plaintiff-Appellee Charles Parnell was heading north on U. S. Highway 11 when it collided with the east side of a bridge just outside Epps, Alabama, went through the railing, and fell about twenty-five feet. According to Parnell, who sustained serious personal injuries, the collision was caused by the negligence of Horace Huguley, who was crossing the bridge from the opposite direction in a tractor-trailer unit owned by Appellant Atlas Roofing. Parnell testified that he was crossing the bridge at thirty to forty miles per hour, which was within the speed limit, when he saw the oncoming truck being driven slightly on the wrong side of the white center line dividing the two-lane highway. The highway was about twenty feet wide. He jerked his wheels to the right, got just past the oncoming truck without colliding, but then hit the railing on the east side of the bridge. Trial to a jury resulted in a $25,000 verdict for Parnell for injuries, medical expenses, and lost earnings and a $10,000 verdict for Global Van Lines for damages to its rig.
Appellants’ first and least persuasive specification of error is that they were prejudiced by the failure of two jurors to disclose on voir dire that they were involved in lawsuits in which damages were claimed for personal injuries or property damage. Since both of these jurors were personally involved in damage suits as defendants, we are unable to accept the thesis that they *1193 might have been prejudiced against" th/1 defendants in this case. The moticcase: for new trial on this ground was prc erly denied.
The next specification of' ror relates to the statutory disqual"' tion of a juror and is more difficu^11 answer to the question propound ^y the trial judge on voir dire, “Hmy” one of you been convicted in a “e or Federal court of record of a cr pun' ishable by imprisonment for r than a year?”, there was no respe ^rom any juror though, in fact, of the jurors who tried the cas'iad pled guilty to distilling whiskey and been given a probated serlce one year and one day. 1 By iron ^or new trial, appellants urged t; they were denied the protection c28 u-s-c- § 1861(1), which providfthe foll°wing exception to the gene’ class of citi_ zens qualified to serve'* &rand or petit jurors in federal coi,:
Any citizen of the,ni^ed states who has attained the-Se of twenty-one years and who h resided for a period of one ye? within the judicial district, is coi?etent to serve as a grand or petituror unless—
(1) He has bn convicted in a State or Fede?1 court of record of a crime mishable by imprisonment ft more than one year and his erd rights have not been restorerby pardon or amnesty. 2
But sincere statutory disqualification of a juro? was not raised by appellants until after the verdict and since there is no indication that the presence on the jury of a man who had been convicted cf distilling whiskey twenty years before resulted in actual prejudice to appellants, the matter comes squarely with-the holding of a prior Fifth Cireuit
While previous conviction of a felony does not render the convicted person fundamentally incompetent to sit as a juror, it is a ground for challenge for cause, which the defendant may insist upon or waive, as he elects. If not seasonably exercised, the objection is waived. It is the right and duty of a defendant to discover on voir dire examination, or from other sources, whether a talesman is subject to disqualification for cause. Where the objection to a juror relates, not to actual prejudice or other fundamental incompetence, but to a statutory disqualification only, such disqualification is ordinarily waived by failure to assert it until after verdict, even though the facts which constitute the disqualification were not previously known to the defendants. The objection based upon the previous felony convictions comes too late after verdict, no actual bias or prejudice being shown.
Ford v. United States, 5th Cir. 1953,
We requested and counsel furnished supplemental briefs on the applicability
*1194
of Rabinowitz v. United States, 5th (1966,
These two bases for the decision afford at least two approaches to the question presented in the ease at bar. First, it could be argued that Rabinowitz makes absolutes out of the statutory qualifications and therefore that any jury is fatally defective if one or more of the members is subject to statutory disqualifications. A second possible t wouid be that a jury list is áefective if COurt officials have followed the federal statutory scheme tak- gteps to exclude disqualified Put another way, the argument , de in this case that the /»/»• • i o. t i „ ■hod used by court officials to obtain vnames of prospective jurors was defSt because it did not include saféis against persons disqualified from iulUrvice because of a criminal convict 3
Without deciding the merits of eit, of the arguments we have posed; ' conclude that so far as this case is '•cerned
pord
and
Rabinowitz
do not in different directions.
Ford
hold^at in tbe absence of actual bias or pre^-ce an objection based on the statutordjgqUajjfjcation of a juror is untimely .made for the first time after the vei^. on -¿be matter of timeliness,
owitz
is not to the contrary because ithe cases consolidated for that appealdmely objections had been made in the rm 0f motions to dismiss the indictm^g and motions to quash the petit jui panels. While the question of when i objection to the array must be made ,as not before the Court in
Rabinowitz
other decisions make it clear that in th absence of actual bias or prejudice an Ejection to the composition of the gram 0r petit jury panel comes too late afte the verdict. Shotwell Mfg. Co. v. United states, 1963,
Finally, appellants contend that their motion for judgment notwithstanding the verdict should have been granted because Parnell was contributorily negligent as a matter of law. Through the testimony of Huguley and a police officer, appellants attempted to show that the accident was Parnell’s fault either because he was driving too fast or because he jerked his wheels to the right when there was no necessity for doing so. Parnell, on the other hand, testified that he was not driving too fast and that his collision was entirely the result of Huguley’s forcing him to the right and into the railing by driving on the wrong side of the road. To our minds, this was a factual dispute for the jury to resolve. To show contributory negligence as a matter of law, appellants rely on Teague v. Alabama Coca-Cola Bottling Co., 1923,
No other errors having been alleged, the judgment of the district court is affirmed.
Notes
. Che failure to disclose could have been in innocent mistake if the juror understood the trial judge to be asking whether anyone had actually served a year or more in prison. On the other hand, it is possible that he was simply too embarrassed to acknowledge in open court the moonshine conviction in his distant past.
. The other two exceptions to the general qualifications set forth in section 1861 are that a person is disqualified if “he is unable to read, write, speak, or understand the English language” or if “he is incapable, by reason of mental or physical infirmities to render efficient jury service” [28 U.S.C. § 1861(2) and (3)].
. From what appellee has told us, this second argument could not be advanced successfully in the instant case because the jury commissioners in the Northern District of Alabama have always taken reasonable precautions to exclude persons disqualified from jury service because of a criminal conviction. Under the new jury plan for the Northern District of Alabama, a prospective juror must pass through three different screenings as to his statutory qualifications. First, the names of prospective jurors are taken from voter registration lists and the same criminal record which will disqualfy one from jury service will disqualify on> from voting. Second, people whose names are taken from the voter lists are sent questionnaires which also ask about qrior convictions. Finally, the trial judge tsks the same questions on voir dire. Appellee says, and it is not denied, that essentially the same precautions were take» before the new jury plan went into effect so that at the time this case was tried the method used to select jurors not subject to statutory disqualification could not be said to be defective.
