No. 5 | Ga. | Aug 15, 1853

By the Court.

Lumpkin, J.

delivering opinion.

[1.] The record in this case, shows that the defendant was put upon his trial the day after the indictment was found. He meved to continue the cause, on. several grounds; and among the rest, he swore that he expected to prove by Thomas Whit-ten, at the next term of the Court, that he was on his way to Georgia with horses, and lodged all night at the house of Whit-ten, in the county of Murray, in this State, on the night of the 14th of October, 1852; the alleged robbery having been committed in Monroe county, on the night of the 12th of the same month (some two hundred miles distant): and he further swore, that he expected to prove at the next term, by one Fredric Short of the said county of Murray, that he (the accused) could *24not have been at tbe place where the offence was committed, as the witness Short saw defendant at Whitten’s house in Murray county the second night thereafter; and that the showing was not made for delay, but for the purpose of getting a fair trial.

[2.] The motion for a continuance for the term having been overruled, the prisoner’s counsel made application to the Court to suffer the trial to be postponed till the Monday of the next week, to enable him to procure the attendance of Whitten and Short, which was refused, and the party was ruled to trial.

From the facts stated in the bill of exceptions, was not the defendant entitled to a continuance or postponement of the trial?

The 17th section of the 14th division of the Penal Code provides that “ Every person against whom a bill of indictment is found, shall be tried at the term of the Court the indictment is found, unless the absence of a material witness or witnesses, or the principles of justice should require a postponement of the trial; and then the Court shall allow a postponement of the trial until the next term of the Court: and the Court shall have power to allow the continuance of criminal causes from term to term as often as the principles of justice may require, upon sufficient cause shown on oath.” (Cobb’s New Digest, 835, 836.)

[3.] Ours is a liberal code upon the subject of continuances in criminal cases. Under it an improper refusal of a continuance is matter of error. But with the latitude of discretion in allowing continuances from term to term as often as the principles of justice may require, the exercise of discretion in favor of criminals must be very arbitrary or very erroneous, to make the granting of continuances cause for reversal. Fortunately for prisoners at least, under our organization, this question can never perhaps be tested.

Was the testimony in this case material? I will not affirm that it was utterly irreconcilable with the guilt of the accused: but I will say, that if true, it made it very improbable that he perpetrated the crime at the time and ¡dace specified; and of its sufficiency to acquit, it wras the ¡peculiar province of the jury *25and not of the Court to judge. That it was material, there cannot be a shadow of a doubt — and if so, then the Court was peremptorily required by the law of the land, the indictment having been just found, to postpone the trial until the next term of the Court; or at any rate, for a few days, to enable the party to obtain his proof. And upon this ground, the judgment of conviction must be reversed, and a new trial awarded.

[4.] Eor notwithstanding applications for continuances are ordinarily addressed to the discretion of the Court, and the presiding judge must in the main be left free to act in such a manner as to secure a speedy as well as fair trial, yet in the case made in this bill of exceptions, the Statute of the State is imperative, and he is bound to yield obedience to its mandate, whatever may be his opinion as a man, as to the guilt of the accused, or the falsehood in fact, of the showing which he makes, for the postponement of the trial.

[5.] Criminal Courts should be doubly guarded whenever notorious offenders are arraigned before them, for the greater the crime, the greater the temptation and danger of being betrayed into error, in their over anxiety to bring incorrigible culprits to merited punishment. Delay, which might well have been avoided, and increased expense and burden to the counties, are the usual consequences of this laudable, but intemperate zeal, to visit with exemplary rigor, these daring and desperate felons.

[6.] There was some irregularity in the manner of selecting the jury; and although it may be well enough to correct it, to prevent these departures from growing into a precedent, still we should not esteem it good cause for granting a re-hearing. Our object will be best accomplished, by stating the correct practice, as it is to be gathered from the standard writers on criminal law.

Challenge to the favor is left to the discretion of triers.— These do not exceed two, unless by the consent of the prosecutor and the defendant, or some special cause is alleged by one of them, or where one juror is sworn, and two triers appointed with him. If the challenge be made to the first juror, of course *26before any one has been sworn, then the Court will direct two indifferent persons, taken from the bystanders, to try the question, and if they find the party challenged indifferent, he will be sworn, and join with the triers in determining the next challenge. But when two jurors have been found impartial, and have been sworn, then the office of the triers will cease, and every subsequent challenge will be referred to the decision of the jurymen. If the prisoner challenge ten, and the State one, and the twelfth be sworn, one trier shall be chosen by each party, and added to the jurymen sworn, and the challenges be referred to their decision. But if several be sworn, and the rest challenged, the Court may assign any two of the persons sworn, to determine the challenges. To the triers thus chosen, no challenge can be admitted.

The triers being thus chosen, the following oath is administered to them: “You shall well and truly try whether A. B. (the juror challenged) stand indifferent between the parties to this issue, so help you God.” The trial then proceeds by witnesses before them; and the truth of the matter alleged as cause of challenge, must be made out to the satisfaction of the triers. One witness to establish the cause of challenge is sufficient. The triers, also, may examine the juryman challenged, upon his voir dire as to the leaning of his affections, or whether he hath given his opinion before hand, and ask all other questions which may enable them to test his impartiality, provided they do not interrogate him as to facts and circumstances, which tend to his infamy or disgrace.

It is said that if the array be challenged, it lies in the discretion of the Court how it shall be tried; that sometimes it is done by tivo attorneys; and it was this practice, which likely suggested the idea of trying a challenge to a particular juror, in the present case, in this way. More need not be said on this subject.

Judgment reversed.

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