The issue in this case is whether the constitutional guarantee of equal protection of the laws prohibits the exercise of peremptory challenges on racial grounds by private litigants in the trial of a civil case; if it does, did the respondents present non-racial based reasons for their peremptory jury challenges. 1 We reverse and remand for a new trial.
The case arises from an automobile accident. The appellants are black and the respondents are white. Both are represented by private counsel. The petit jury list for the common pleas term consisted of seventy-five potential jurors. Sixty were white and fifteen were black. The panel drawn for the case contained twenty potential jurors. Four were black. The respondents utilized their four peremptory challenges to remove the four prospective black jurors from the panel. The appellants objected to the respondents’ peremptory challenges asserting they were exercised solely on race. The court, after conducting a Batson hearing, overruled their objection. The jury returned a verdict for the respondents.
This is a novel issue in South Carolina and in most of the states in the Union. The disposition of this provocative issue requires a two-step analysis. First, we must determine if Batson v. Kentucky applies to a civil action. If it does, we must review the record to determine if a prima facie showing of purposeful racial discrimination was established and then consider if racially neutral explanations for the exercise of the peremptory challenges were given.
*400 I.
The Fourteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution prohibits any state from depriving the equal protection of the laws to any person within its jurisdiction. It does not, however, prohibit private discriminatory conduct. In
Batson v. Kentucky
the United States Supreme Court held the Equal Protection Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment prohibited a state prosecutor from exercising peremptory challenges to strike potential jurors solely due to race or based upon an assumption black jurors as a group could not impartially consider the state’s case against a black defendant.
Batson,
The South Carolina Supreme Court subsequently set forth a “bright line test” for a
Batson
hearing in a criminal case.
State v. Jones,
293 S. C. 54,
Batson
and the cases decided by our Supreme Court all dealt with criminal prosecutions where state action is
*401
clearly present because the prosecutor, an agent of the state, exercised the peremptory strikes. In civil cases neither the parties nor private counsel is ordinarily identified with the state. The United States Supreme Court has long held that private conduct “however discriminatory” does not raise a constitutional violation under the Fourteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution.
Shelley v. Kraemer,
In analyzing this equal protection issue under the due process clause of the Fifth Amendment, the Eleventh Circuit Court of Appeals held that the trial judge, in overruling objections to peremptory challenges, became guilty of the sort of discriminatory conduct that the equal protection clause prohibits. Fludd v. Dykes, 863 F. (2d) 822 (11th Cir. 1989), rehearing denied, 873 F. (2d) 300 (1989). 2 The Fifth Circuit Court of Appeals also applied Batson to a civil case finding the requisite governmental action in the tacit approval by the trial judge of the exercise of peremptory challenges. “The government is inevitably and inextricably involved as an actor in the process by which a federal judge, robed in black, seated in a paneled courtroom, in front of an American flag, says to a juror, ‘Ms. X, you are excused.’ ” Edmonson v. Leesville Concrete Co., Inc., 860 F. (2d) 1308, 1313 (5th Cir. 1988), rehearing en banc granted, 860 F. (2d) 1317 (1989). On the other hand, the Eighth Circuit Court of Appeals has expressed “strong doubts” about the application of Batson to a civil case without directly deciding the issue. Wilson v. Cross, 845 F. (2d) 163 (8th Cir. 1988); Swapshire v. Baer, 865 F. (2d) 948 (8th Cir. 1989) (articu *402 lated reasons for strikes did not violate Batson assuming it applied).
The function of a jury in South Carolina is to determine the facts from the evidence and apply those facts to the law as charged by the trial judge. There is no underlying distinction between the function of a criminal jury and a civil jury. One is not more important than the other. Justice under the law for all parties is the goal of any trial. Racial injustice has no more place in the courtroom on the days the court is conducting civil trials than it does on the days it conducts criminal trials.
The United States Supreme Court has stated that the peremptory challenge has always been considered “a necessary part of trial by jury ... [and] one of the most important rights secured to the accused.”
Swain v. Alabama,
II.
Having determined the principles of Batson v. Kentucky apply to a civil case we now address the exercise of the peremptory strikes in this case. The potential jury panel consisted of twenty individuals categorized as follows:
9 white males
7 white females
2 black males
2 black females
The respondents struck the two black males and the two black females. The appellants struck one white male and three white females. The seated jury consisted of eight white males and four white females.
The respondents provided the following explanation for their challenges:
[Two] of the strikes are of the female gender. I am concerned about the young plaintiffs scarring, facial scarring, and it is my belief that females would be more receptive to the damages aspect of that particular part of the case than would males. So [two] of the strikes were females. One of the strikes was unemployed and has never worked. I felt that she would be an unduly liberal juror and would not have a good well rounded background to give my client a fair trial. One girl worked for a Pepperidge Farm bakery and was very young. I was concerned about young jurors who would be more concerned about the scarring on a young fifteen or sixteen year old boy than would older jurors who have experienced more of life’s bumps and falls and have seen scars as they developed. One of the jurors name was Bush. She was a black female. I understand Mr. Diggs is married to a Bush, maiden name. I was concerned that she may be distantly or even more closely related to ... excuse me. It was a male juror— Finance Bush. That last name concerned me. He may be related to plaintiff’s counsel____and the last juror came from the same basic background as Mr. Chavous, Jr. and *404 therefore, I thought he would identify with Mr. Chavous very closely and had a reason to strike him because he came out of the same basic background, socio-economic background and education and same type of work field. And is roughly the same age as Mr. Chavous, Jr.
From this explanation, the black women were struck because of their gender combined with their unemployment or youth. The two black men were struck because one was thought to have a possible family relationship to the plaintiffs’ counsel and the other because he had personal background similarities with the father of the injured minor.
We note initially it was proper for the trial court to hold a
Batson
hearing upon request in this case under the guidelines outlined in
State v. Jones.
The appellants were members of a cognizable racial group and the respondents exercised peremptory challenges to remove members of the appellants’ race from the venire. Once this
prima facie
case was established the respondents were required to present a racially neutral explanation for the strikes.
State v. Jones,
293 S. C. at 58,
The trial judge ruled in this case that if
Batson
applied the respondents gave racially neutral explanations for the strikes. Understandably, the South Carolina Supreme Court has had some difficulty in the review of articulated explanations for peremptory strikes. The court unanimously affirmed a challenge in
State v. Lewis
where the prosecutor’s explanation was that the juror knew defense counsel.
State v. Lewis,
293 S. C. 107,
A cursory review of the strikes without explanation leads to the conclusion the strikes were racially motivated. Four *405 black jurors were on the panel; the respondents had four strikes; four blacks were struck. However, the trial court and the appellate courts do not simply look at the result of the strikes. The focus is upon the explanation for the strikes.
We find the articulated reasons for the strikes of the two black men to be racially neutral. Respondents’ counsel felt one could be related to appellants’ counsel.
See State v. Lewis,
293 S. C. 107,
As to the black women, the explanation for striking them because of their possible reactions to facial scarring is not by itself a supportable racially neutral reason. The respondents chose not to exercise strikes against seven white women for the same reason. However, the respondents combined the gender concern with other factors. The factor as to one black woman was unemployment. Unemployment was deemed a racially neutral explanation by the South Carolina Supreme Court in
State v. Martinez. See State v. Martinez,
294 S. C. 72,
We recognize that by this decision many will claim we have effectively destroyed the concept of peremptory challenges. Others will complain that we have added additional burdens to the already difficult task of the trial judge. Still others will view the decision as affording black litigants an unfair advantage because it does not expressly prohibit black litigants from striking white jurors based solely on race. These, of course, are legitimate concerns. Our position, like that of the court in Edmonson, is that we should not ignore these problems because of the difficulty of resolution. As stated in Edmonson:
*406 If racially-motivated challenges are exercised by both parties, the remedy is not to condone them but to insist, when objection is made, that the guarantee of equal protection against all racial prejudice is enforced.
Edmonson, 860 F. (2d) at 1314.
We hold that the principles of Batson v. Kentucky apply in a civil case. Because respondents did not satisfactorily show that they excluded blacks from the jury for non-racially motivated reasons, we reverse and remand for a new trial.
Reversed and remanded.
Notes
The record indicates the appellants’ objection was based solely upon
Batson v. Kentucky,
“The trial judge’s decision — to proceed to trial, over the party’s objection, with a jury selected from the venire on the basis of race — is the one that harms the objecting party. In overruling the objection, which informed the court that the peremptory challenger may be excluding blacks from the venire on account of their race, the judge becomes guilty of the sort of discriminatory conduct that the equal protection clause proscribes.” Fludd, 863 F. (2d) at 828.
The Equal Protection Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment provides in pertinent part that “no state ... shall deny to any person within its jurisdiction equal protection of the laws.”
