Richard BROWER, Appellant,
v.
STATE of Florida, Appellee.
District Court of Appeal of Florida, Fourth District.
Richard L. Jorandby, Public Defender, and Joseph R. Chloupek, Assistant Public Defender, West Palm Beach, for appellant.
Robert A. Butterworth, Attorney General, Tallahassee, and William A. Spillias, Assistant Attorney General, West Palm Beach, for appellee.
STONE, C.J.
In accordance with the supreme court's opinion in State v. Brower,
During voir dire, defense counsel alerted the court that a witness for Appellant overheard some of the prospective jurors making remarks assuming Appellant's guilt, such as "hang him," "they ought to just hang him," and "Why are we going through this? Where I come from, we would have just strung him up." The court took testimony from the witness, who identified certain individuals as having made the offending comments, including one who said, "`They're going to have to prove to me that he did not do it.'," and then questioned venire members about what they had heard and said. The testimony indicated that the improper remarks were not directed at the guilt of Appellant, were made out of the boredom in waiting to be called, and as a reference, in jest, to ways of getting out of jury duty. Following the witness's testimony, Appellant moved to strike jurors making the offensive remarks. All were excused. Juror Evans and juror Rabbit, both of whom had heard but not spoken the offensive remarks, remained on the panel throughout voir dire. Neither side wanted to strike Rabbit; however, Evans was not one of the jurors finally selected.
After the prospective jurors retired, defense counsel requested testimony be taken from the judge's deputy clerk, Lori Swenson (Swenson). She stated that during the individual questioning, other prospective jurors, who had remained unsupervised in the courtroom, were not taking the proceedings seriously; they were talking loudly and applauding when one of them was excused. Based on Swenson's and the witness's testimony, defense counsel moved that the court strike *1027 the entire panel. The trial court denied the motion.
Appellant asserts the court abused its discretion in failing to strike the venire and relies on Richardson v. State,
The determination of juror qualifications is a discretionary function of the trial judge. E.g. Adams v. Elliott,
We recognize that the conduct of the prospective jurors in question is not only shocking, but represents sad and cynical attitudes held and demonstrated by certain segments of our citizenry. Nevertheless, Appellant was not deprived of a fair trial by the trial court's decision to conduct an inquiry and proceed with those jurors who had not acted offensively and who Appellant has not shown were otherwise tainted. To hold otherwise would impose a per se reversal rule, undermine the trial court's discretion, and effectively impugn the integrity of the remaining jurors who were able to disregard their inadvertent exposure to the boorish and insolent antics of their fellow citizens.
The offending members of the venire were facing a three week murder trial and were enduring a tedious and lengthy jury selection process. They certainly used poor taste and worse judgment in the manner they chose to relieve their boredom. However, there is nothing in the record to indicate that the offensive remarks were offered or taken seriously, or that they referred to the facts of this case, and all evidence is to the contrary. Although the trial court could certainly have granted the motion to strike the venire, we cannot say, upon reviewing the record, that the denial of the motion was an abuse of discretion. Cf. Watson v. State,
The right in question is a right to an impartial jury. Prospective jurors are frequently exposed, before and during voir dire, to innumerable comments, attitudes, and points of view, the subscription to which would be improper for an unbiased juror. Simply because the offensive comments were made during the time the prospective jurors were members of a jury venire, there is no reason to apply a different standard here than is generally applied in reviewing the trial court's decisions in voir dire under analogous circumstances. See United States v. York,
As to all other issues raised, we also find no reversible error or abuse of discretion. Therefore, Appellant's conviction and sentence are affirmed.
*1028 SHAHOOD, J., concurs.
FARMER, J., dissents with opinion.
FARMER, J., dissenting.
As I was saying before the supreme court reversed our previous decision in this case,
"The spoken word can be no less lasting than the written; in this setting, words do not have to be on paper to linger in the mind's ear. Some voices will resound in the courtroom long after they have stopped speaking. To paraphrase (however profanely) the wondrous poet Khayyàm:
`The waggling tongue speaks; and, having spoken,
Echoes: nor all thy piety nor wit
Shall lure it back to cancel half a tone,
Nor all of thy protests conceal a word.'
Unless we are willing to let juries become lynch mobs, the trial judge should have started over. I would now require him to do so, but not because of a possible procedural error (as to which I have strong doubts there was error, anyway) in the exercise of peremptory challenges."
Brower v. State,
I will not respond in detail to the rationalization to save the result of the trial before a jury exposed to the most pernicious influences possiblea mob psychology to punish a man who appears to them to be obviously guiltyexcept to repeat what I also said before:
"To show our condemnation, we should refuse to go forward with prospective jurors exposed to such corrupt and destructive influences. Nor do I believe that the lame attempts of the jurors to minimize the words justify any discretion of the trial judge. There are some things that simply may not be said or done by prospective jurors without poisoning the entire pool. The comments here are surely among them. No amount of after-the-fact justification can possibly remove the stain and save the venire. I do not understand why any trial judge would not unhesitatingly get rid of the entire room of jurors who had been subjected to these comments and start anew with an uncontaminated group."
Id.
