96 Ga. 406 | Ga. | 1895
1. The law provides the method by which juries are to be selected for the trial of criminal cases. It requires that from the jury-boxes the names of jurors shall be drawn to serve upon the several panels which sit during the term for which they are drawn. These are the legally constituted juries. If, for any reason sufficient in law, the court should see proper to discharge a juror from attendance upon the court, his place may be supplied by a tales-juror; and if for any cause a juror
2. In the present case, some of the jurors constituting the regular panel had sat upon a former trial of this defendant, at which a mistrial had been declared. Whether they could qualify or would have qualified under such examination as to their impartiality as the court might direct, was not determined. They were otherwise competent. Whether the former trial at which the mistrial was declared had progressed so far as that they could not have qualified under an examination of the character above referred to, was a matter for each of the individual jurors to have answered. They were not, because of that circumstance alone, disqualified as a matter of law. The court, however, taking the contrary view of it, directed that a panel of jurors be made up by summoning talesmen to supply the places of those jurors who had been engaged upon the former trial, and accordingly excused the latter from the panel. When the panel was put upon the accused, he filed a challenge
Judgment reversed.