107 So. 35 | Ala. Ct. App. | 1926
Appellant, a married man, was convicted of the offense of seduction. The woman, Miss Zoda Morton, of full age, alleged to be seduced, testified as a witness for the state, and during the course of her cross-examination the following, according to the recitals of the bill of exceptions, occurred:
"At this point, the witness, Zoda Morton, apparently fainted in the witness chair and keeled over to the side of the chair. The court then suspended and Mrs. C. T. Morton, the mother of the witness, appeared in court in the presence of the jury to take the witness from the room. The mother appeared to be very much agitated, was weeping and crying in substance: 'Nobody knows how we have suffered over this trouble. Lord have mercy on us.' All this took place directly in front of the jury and in full view and hearing of them. The defendant then moved the court to take the case from the jury and order a mistrial on account of the action of the mother of the witness and because the defendant could not get a fair trial from this jury after the above-described occurrence. The court overruled the defendant's motion and refused to take the case from the jury and order a mistrial, and to this action of the court the defendant then and there duly and legally excepted."
Without discussing the evidence, we may say that under our decisions it would appear that it was properly submitted to the jury. However, as was said by Mr. Chief Justice Anderson in Seay v. State,
"The accused, being entitled to a trial by an impartial jury, is deprived of this right when the jury is overawed or coerced by outside influence, pressure, or conduct."
"Overawe" means to subjugate or restrain by awe. One of the definitions given by standard dictionaries for "awe" is "profound reverence." True, this is oftenest used in reference to the Deity. But it likewise may be applied to things or beings regarded as sublime. And we here in the Southland know that our women, and their rights, are yet, even in the face of the rapidly changing and already changed relation between the sexes, brought about by the modern innovations of thought and conduct, held in the common mind as being properly classified among the things sublime. It requires no stretch of the imagination to see that where, as here, a young woman was laying her alleged grievances — grievances which, if genuine, were grave indeed — before a jury of her neighbors for redress, and a scene of the kind narrated occurred, with the mother of the said young lady taking the leading role, the jury were, in all probability, in fact almost surely, "overawed." The average man fears not the bayonet as he does a woman's tears. Furthermore, the question is not whether this occurrence did in fact influence the verdict, but, as said by Bricken, P. J., in Driver v. Pate,
We are of the opinion that the trial court committed reversible error in denying defendant's motion to withdraw the case from the jury and order a mistrial, as requested. Seay v. State,
The other questions presented will not likely arise on another trial and will not here be considered.
Reversed and remanded. *222