58 So. 217 | Miss. | 1912
delivered the opinion of the court.
Appellant, having been in the court below convicted of murder and sentenced to imprisonment for life in the state penitentiary, appeals to this court. When the case came on for trial, he filed a motion for a continuance on the ground of the absence of witnesses, who would testify to matters material to his defense.
In order to ascertain the truth of the matters set up in this application, the district attorney, over the objection of appellant, cross-examined him with reference thereto, but asked him no questions with reference to his guilt or innocence of the crime for which he was on trial. The action of the court in permitting appellant to be thus examined is assigned for error, but we cannot consider the same for the reason that the point was not reserved in the motion for a new trial, and was therefore waived.
It appears from the special bill of exceptions that during the progress of the trial in the above cause,, which had proceeded to the point of impaneling the jury to try the cause, the state had accepted a full panel of twelve competent, qualified jurors to try the cause, and
It appears from the evidence that Pitchford, after he had been accepted by the state, and while being examined by the defendant, indicated that he would not convict any man on trial for murder upon negro testimony; thereupon, the court permitted the district attorney to further examine him, and, in answer to specific questions, he stated that he would not accept, or convict upon, negro testimony. The witnesses by whom the state expected to, and did, prove the guilt of appellant, were negroes. Pitchford was therefore an incompetent juror, and it became the duty of the court to set him aside, even though he had been accepted by both the state and the defendant.
That he was challenged peremptorily by the state, instead of being set aside for cause, is wholly immaterial, for the reason that we must presume that the court, without this challenge, would have discharged this duty of setting the juror aside. The rule announced in Stewart v. State, 50 Miss. 587, is therefore not here involved.
During the progress of the trial, it became necessary for the judge presiding to leave the court and absent himself therefrom for several days, and the governor, in accordance with the statute governing such eases, appointed Judge Robert Powell as special judge to preside
The jury retired to consider their verdict on Saturday night, and at 12:06 a. m. Sunday morning reported that they were ready with their verdict, which the circuit judge' thereupon received in open court. This action of the court is assigned for error on the ground that, Sunday being in law dies non, a verdict rendered on that day is a nullity. It is true that we have no statute providing that verdicts- may he received on Sunday, and it may be that a judgment rendered on Sunday is void, hut “in regard to the delivery and reception of verdicts a different rule applies, as the rendering of a verdict is a mere ministerial act, and it is an act of necessity and charity to receive it, and not keep the
After making a careful investigation of all of the other matters complained of, we find no reversible error therein. Affirmed.