Green v. State

72 Miss. 522 | Miss. | 1895

Cooper, C. J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

The juror, Mosely, was not disqualified by the character of the opinion he had formed of the guilt or innocence of the defendant, and the appellant has no just cause of complaint because he was forced to exercise his right of peremptory challenge to exclude the juror from the panel. The code provides that “any person, otherwise competent, who will make oath that he is impartial in the case, shall be competent as a juror in *524any criminal case, notwithstanding the fact that he has an impression or opinion as to the guilt or innocence of the accused, if it appear to the satisfaction of the court that he has no bias of feeling or prejudice in the case, and no desire to reach any result in it except that to which the evidence may conduct; but any juror shall be excluded if the court be of opinion that he cannot try the case impartially, and the exclusion shall not be assignable for error.” Code 1892, § 2355.

The juror, Mosely, on his voir dire stated that he lived in the immediate neighborhood where the crime was committed, and had heard it discussed, and had formed an opinion as to the guilt or innocence of the defendant, which opinion was of such a fixed character it would require evidence to remove it, but he thought he could try the case fairly and impartially according to the evidence.

In Mabry v. The State, 71 Miss., 716, it was held that a juror was incompetent who had heard parts of a former trial of the case, and had formed a " definite and fixed opinion, ’ ’ and would not say positively that he could try the case as though he had no opinion.

In many cases in this court, decided before the enactment of the code provision above quoted, it has been held that a juror was not impartial who, either from hearing the evidence, conversing with the witnesses, or from rumor only, had formed an opinion which it would require evidence to remove. Nelms v. State, 13 Smed. & M., 500; Cotton v. State, 31 Miss., 504; Alfred v. State, 37 Ib., 296; Logan v. State, 50 Ib., 269. In the latter case Judge Simrall, in delivering the opinion of the court, declared that "if the mind of the juror is so far prejudiced as to require testimony to annul a preopinion, derived from whatever source or origin, the juror is incompetent,” and this test he declared was one upon which all the authorities agreed. In the same opinion there is a dictum to the effect that any act of the legislature which should encroach upon the qualifications of jurors in such wise as to " weaken or endanger ” *525their impartiality, would, be an infringement of the constitutional provision protecting the right of trial by an “ impartial jury,” and in Alfred v. State Judge Harris said: “It is well settled that an.opinion formed from rumor, so fixed as to require testimony to remove it, constitutes such bias as to render the juror not impartial, and, consequently, under our constitution, to disqualify him for service.” It is dangerous to affirm that on any given proposition all the authorities support a particular view, as was done by Judge Sim rail in Logan v. State. We very much doubt if the weight of authority in or out of this state was ever as stated; certainly it was never uniform.

In the trial of Aaron Burr, Judge Marshall said: “Were it possible to obtain a jury without any prepossessions whatever respecting the guilt or innocence of the accused, it would be extremely desirable to obtain such a jury; but this is, perhaps, impossible, and therefore will not be required. The opinion which has been avowed by the- court is, that light impressions, which may fairly be supposed to yield to the testimony that may be offered, which may leave the mind open to a fair consideration of that testimony, constitute no sufficient objection to a juror; but that those strong and deep impressions which will close the mind against the testimony that may be offered in opposition to them, which will combat that testimony and resist its force, do constitute a sufficient objection to him.” In the notes to sections 207 and 215 of Thompson & Merriam on Juries, a multitude of cases are cited as supporting the rule as announced by Judge Marshall, that an opinion formed from rumor which will readily yield to the testimony, does not disqualify one from sitting as a juror.

But the rule as formulated in the case of Logan v. State, cannot be said to have been uniformly followed in this state. In King v. State, 5 How., 730, a juror who had formed an opinion of the guilt or innocence of the accused, but who declared that his mind was free to act upon the testimony, was held competent. In Ogle v. State, 33 Miss., 383, a juror *526stated that he bad an impression as to the killing for which the accused was being tried which it might require evidence to remove, and this was held not to disqualify him. In Sam v. State, 13 Smed. & M., 189, the jurors who had formed opinions it would require evidence to remove were held to be incompetent, but the rule under which they were excluded was said not to be inflexible. Speaking on the question, the court said: “Every case, however, must depend in some degree upon its own peculiar facts, i Circumstances may exist which would render a departure from a rule necessary and unavoidable which, in a different state of case, would be inflexibly adhered to. In some cases of very great notoriety, and of general concern, it might be impossible to find men in the vicinage who had not formed some opinion of the matter. The recent Astor place riots and murders in New York, referred to in argument, are of this character. In such cases some modification of the doctrine may be imperatively required. The rule must yield to the necessity, but only so far as the necessity demands.” In Williams v. State a juror had stated that “he did have conscientious scruples on the subject of capital punishment, and that it would be against his conscience to render a verdict by which a party would be subjected to the punishment of death, but that he thought he could do justice as between the state and the accused. ’ ’ He was challenged by the state for cause and the challenge sustained. On appeal the juror was held to be competent.

We have, perhaps unnecessarily, protracted this examination of what is to us a very simple matter, but the suggestion of the court in Logan v. The State that all the authorities concurred in upholding the rule that an opinion entertained by a juror, which would require evidence to remove, disqualified him; and that such juror was not an impartial one within the meaning of the constitution, and that an act of the legislature ‘ ‘ which should encroach upon the qualifications of jurors in such wise as to weaken or endanger their impartiality, would be an in*527fringement of this constitutional privilege, ’ ’ bas led us to make a more extended examination than we otherwise would have done. All the state constitutions contain the provision preserving the right to trial by “an impartial jury.” An examination of the authorities cited in the note by Thompson & Merriam on Juries, to which we have referred, will demonstraté that the rule so frequently applied in the decisions in this state was against the decided weight of authority elsewhere, as was recognized by Judge Handy in his dissenting opinion in Williams v. State, 32 Miss., 397.

Notwithstanding the remarks of the judges delivering the opinions of the court in Logan v. State, 50 Miss., and Alfred v. State, 37 lb.., 296, we are entirely satisfied that it was within the legislative power to change the rule as has been done, and that in the present case the juror was rightly held to be competent. None of the errors assigned are well taken, and the judgment is

Affirmed.