The opinion of the Court was delivered by
It may be that, in this casé,-defendant had no-objection whatever to the juror whose name was put on the list. It
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may have preferred him above all others on the list. The record shows nothing to the contrary. Under such circumstances, the objection is purely technical, and to reverse the judgment upon such a technicality in procedure would be trifling with the administration of justice. If defendant had made it appear to the trial Court, as it could have done, if the fact had been so, that it had exhausted its peremptory challenges in striking from the list the names of others not wanted by it on the panel, and that it was thereby forced by the action of the Court to accept the juror so put upon the list, and that he, too, was objectionable to defendant, a different case would have been made; and, no doubt, if those facts had been made to appear, the trial Court would have delayed the trial until the attendance of a sufficient number of the extra venire could have been had to give defendant the benefit of the element of chance in drawing, such as is contemplated by the statute. In numerous cases, this Court has held that mere irregularities in the impaneling of a jury is not reversible error, unless shown to be harmful. Even in criminal cases, it has been held that where defendant has not exhausted his peremptory challenges, error in overruling objections for cause is hot reversible.
State
v. Hayes, 69 S. C. 295,
Judgment affirmed.
