48 A. 32 | Md. | 1900
The traversers, with others, were indicted in the Circuit Court for Allegany County, and were convicted on the second count of the indictment of unlawful assembly at the town of Lonaconing. They were duly sentenced by the Court below, and have appealed. During the course of the trial two exceptions were taken by them. We will briefly consider the questions thus presented.
(1.) The first exception is to the refusal of the Court to allow the following question to be asked of John W. Jackson, one of the jurors, on his voir dire.
"Q. Have you made up your mind, concluded from what you read in the newspapers and from what you heard, that there was a riot or unlawful assembly in Lonaconing on the night of June 22nd?"
Before this question was asked the juror had been interrogated by the Court as follows:
"Q. Have you formed or expressed any opinion as to the guilt or innocence of any or either of these parties?
A. I have not.
Q. Do you feel that your mind is perfectly free and clear from all prejudice or bias of any kind that might prevent you from rendering a proper verdict?
A. I think so."
At the conclusion of this examination, the Court pronounced the juror competent, and he was sworn.
It has long been settled in this State and many others, that opinions formed upon rumor or newspaper reports do not necessarily disqualify a juror. All that is required is "that he shall be without bias or prejudice for or against the accused, and that his mind is free to hear and impartially consider the evidence and to render a verdict thereon without regard to any former opinion or impression existing in his mind" so formed on rumor or newspaper reports. Garlitz v. State,
(2.) But in the second place it was contended that the defendants were entitled to ask this question to test the juror's mind and to inform themselves so that they could act intelligently in the selection of a jury, and in exercising their right *174 to strike from the panel four names. If we are correct, however, in what we have already said, the question asked was not proper nor pertinent to determine the qualification of the juror; nor do we think it was proper or pertinent to enable the defendants to strike from the list. If, as we have said, it is immaterial to a fair trial of the issue that the juror had an opinion that there was an unlawful assembly, it was not necessary for a fair trial that the defendants should ascertain the juror's opinion on that fact, any more than his opinion on many other facts that have no necessary relation to the issue to be tried, to wit, whether the defendants were guilty of an unlawful assembly. If, on the other hand, the juror had so formed an opinion that there was no such unlawful assembly, and had so answered, he would clearly have been disqualified, if that opinion had been a fixed and deliberate one, for such an opinion would have been equivalent to a judgment in favor of the innocence of the accused. In other words, the question is susceptible of only two answers, either that a fixed opinion had been formed that there was, or that such an opinion had been formed that there was not an unlawful assembly. The first answer embodies a fact immaterial to the issue, and the second in effect declares that the juror believed the accused to be innocent. In neither case will the accused be heard to complain — for they have no right to ask a question, the answer to which is immaterial, nor to object to the swearing of a juror who declares his belief in their innocence.
But without further elaboration of this question it is sufficient to say that conceding the right of the accused to ask pertinent and proper questions on the voir dire in order to exercise intelligently and legally (Hamlin v. State,
(3.) The remaining exception relates to the admissibility of certain testimony which was admitted by the Court below against the objection of the defendants under the following circumstances. The defendant Warner having testified on *175
examination-in-chief to the effect that the crowd which was assembled at Lonaconing on the occasion mentioned in the indictment, was neither angry nor unruly, and that he had not used certain language derogatory to the character and habits of the speaker who addressed the meeting nor of his audience, he was asked by the State whether he had not written a report or a letter describing the meeting which was printed in a newspaper published in Indiana. He replied that he had made such a report to the newspaper indicated, and that the printed letter or report which was then offered in evidence for the purpose ofcontradicting him was no doubt the letter he wrote to the paper mentioned, but that he could not tell whether it was correct word for word, because he did not preserve a copy of the original. It is perfectly apparent, indeed it is conceded, that this printed letter contradicts the witness flatly, but the contention is that the original which was sent by the witness out of the State "was not produced, its loss was not accounted for or even alleged, and that the newspaper statement was not shown to be a correct
copy." This position, however, entirely ignores the testimony of the witness to the effect that the printed letter offered in evidence was substantially a correct reproduction of what he had written, and that the original was not in his possession, but beyond the jurisdiction of the Court. It is clear, therefore, that independent of the question as to whether the original letter written by the witness, was correctly reproduced in the printed copy, the latter was admissible to contradict him, he having admitted its correctness, and that inasmuch as the original was conceded not to be in his possession, but beyond the jurisdiction of the Court, it would have been folly to give him notice to produce it. Nor was it possible in a criminal case to get possession of the original letter either by commission or otherwise. Young v. State,
Judgment affirmed.
(Decided December 13, 1900.) *176