151 S.W.2d 82 | Ark. | 1941
Appellees, M. A. Blackford and others, sued appellants, G. J. Hallum and A. McAlister, in the Crawford circuit court to compensate personal injuries received by them as a result of a collision between an automobile in which appellees were riding and appellants' truck, on highway No. 64, in Moffett, Oklahoma. Upon a jury trial judgments aggregating $12,235 were rendered in favor of appellees. Appellants have appealed.
Two errors are argued here: (1) That the evidence was insufficient to take the case to the jury; and (2) that error was committed in the selection of the jury to try the cause.
This is the second time this case has been here on appeal. The cause on the former appeal is reported in
Under the rule many times announced by this court, the decision on the former appeal becomes the law of the *546 case on this appeal unless we can say that the testimony on this second appeal is substantially different from that on the first appeal. We think it unnecessary to attempt to set out or abstract the testimony presented in this record. Suffice it to say, that after carefully reviewing it and comparing it with the testimony on the first trial, we find no substantial or material difference. Of course, there may be slight differences and variations but we think not of a substantial nature. It is conceded that the photographs in evidence on this trial are identical with those used on the former trial. As in the former trial, so in this, the testimony of the witnesses is in irreconcilable conflict.
In Missouri Pacific Rd. Co., et al. v. Foreman,
"Where the record on a second appeal is substantially the same as on the former appeal, the holdings of this court on the former appeal become the law of the case. This rule has been followed by this court throughout its history."
And in the recent case of Missouri Pacific Rd. Co. v. Burks,
See, also, Missouri Pacific Rd. Co. v. Sanders,
We conclude, therefore, that the trial court did not err in submitting the cause to the jury.
Appellants next insist that the trial court erred in the manner in which the jury was selected. We cannot agree to this contention.
Appellants seem to base this assignment on the following contentions: They say in their brief "that after this cause had been called for trial and both sides had announced ready, and after the court announced that this would be the first cause tried at this term, the court, upon the suggestion and request of appellees' counsel, displaced the case on the docket and ordered another case to be tried first," the court erred in "denying to appellants a trial by a jury selected by the jury commissioners," that error was committed by the court in excusing "without cause and in an improper manner, various jurors" and for refusing to "delay the start of the trial until such time as the jury then deliberating should be available for this case."
The record reflects that the cause could not be reached on the day on which it was set for trial. On the following day, at the request of appellees, this case was replaced by the court by the next case on call for the reason that some of appellees' witnesses were not then present.
It appears that at the beginning of the term of court out of the 33 jurors selected by the jury commissioners only 15 had reported for duty. Those not reporting had been excused for various reasons by the court. The court then filled out the regular jury panel of 24 from bystanders.
When the case was finally reached only 18 jurors were available, another jury of 12 being out at the time *548 on another case. Just how many jurors of the regular panel were on this jury the record does not clearly indicate. Upon appellants' request for a drawn jury, the sheriff summoned six bystanders to complete a jury panel of 24 men from which the jury was selected.
It is a well settled rule of law that no litigant is entitled to the services of any particular juror. In excusing, empaneling and selecting jurors for the trial of causes, the trial judge must of necessity be given much latitude and a wide discretion. This is necessary if the machinery of our courts is to function with dispatch and without unnecessary delays and expense. Unless there has been an abuse of this discretion this court win not reverse. After a careful search of this record we have been unable to find any act of the trial court which can be said to be an abuse of discretion, and able counsel for appellants have been unable to point us to any such abuse. All of the matters complained of by appellants, as we view them, were acts of the trial court clearly within his discretion and, as indicated, we think no abuse thereof has been shown.
In the case of Sullivan v. State,
"We think no error was committed in the respects stated. These were matters over which the circuit judge must necessarily have a wide discretion. It is thoroughly *549 settled that a defendant has no right to the services of any particular juror. He may only demand that he be tried before a fair and impartial jury, and it is difficult to imagine a case where the judge had excused a juror from further service on the regular panel which would afford any defendant just cause of complaint.
"In the matter of summoning the special veniremen the trial judge is also necessarily vested with a wide discretion. He is charged with the duty of dispatching the business on his docket, and should, of course, do so in a way to avoid either unnecessary delay or unnecessary expenses . . . and there is no assignment of error that the defendants were compelled to accept any juror who was in fact disqualified for any reason." See, also, Rogers v. State,
And again in Rumping v. Arkansas National Bank,
Section 8334 of Pope's Digest provides: "A panel of twenty-four petit jurors shall be formed from the list of petit jurors and alternates, and bystanders if necessary, in the manner prescribed in 8326 and 8327 for the selection of the grand jury, which shall be organized and sworn as provided in 6375."
Section 8335 provides: "Such panel shall be the regular jurors for the trial of all jury cases both civil and criminal."
Section 8339 provides: "If, for any cause any of said jurors shall, at any time, be released from serving for the balance of the term, others shall be summoned and sworn so that there shall be at all times a panel of twenty-four regular jurors."
Under the above sections, together with 8345 of Pope's Digest, we think appellants were entitled to a *550 jury selected out of the regular panel of twenty-four men, provided this panel of twenty-four regular jurors were available to them at the time of the selection of the jury. In the instant case it appears that twenty-four regular jurors were not available at the time the jury was selected for the reason that some of the regular panel were deliberating on another case. It also appears that when the instant case was called the court waited for a reasonable length of time for the other jury to report and when it failed to report a sufficient number of bystanders were summoned to fill out a panel of twenty-four from which the jury in question was selected.
As indicated, we think the law contemplates and intends that appellants had the right to select the jury from the regular jury panel, but only in case the regular panel were available at the time.
Litigants have no right to demand that the business of trial courts be suspended pending the verdict of a deliberating jury. Juries sometimes deliberate for days, and certainly the machinery of our courts may not be stopped for unreasonable periods to afford a litigant the opportunity to select the jury from the regular panel.
In Pate v. State,
"No error was committed in this ruling. This exact question was raised in the case of Johnson v. State,
No error appearing, the judgments are affirmed.