135 S.W. 144 | Tex. Crim. App. | 1911
In this case the defendant was indicted, tried and convicted in the District Court of Grayson County, charged with violating the local option law and sentenced to one year confinement in the penitentiary.
The original statement of facts is not sent up with the record, as provided by the Act of the Thirty-first Legislature, but there is what purports to be a statement of facts copied in the record. The Assistant Attorney-General moves to strike out this purported statement, and under the decisions of this court the motion is sustained. Sections 5 and 6, chapter 39, Act of the Thirty-first Legislature, page 376, Session Acts.
In bills of exception Nos. 1 and 2 appellant complains of the action of the court in requiring him to select a jury from the panel regularly drawn and summoned, the grounds being that a portion of the regular panel had sat upon the jury that tried Tom Peterson for violating the local option law, and a portion thereof had sat on the jury trying Buster Davis for violating the local option law. Defendant alleged that the witnesses in the case against this defendant were also witnesses against Peterson and Davis, and the only witnesses against him, and he desired to ask the jury if they had formed an opinion as to the truth and veracity of the State's witnesses, Dearton and Ricketts, who had testified to a sale in the other two cases, and would testify to a sale in this case. The court sustained an objection to an examination into the question as to whether the jurors had formed an opinion as to the truth and veracity of a person who was alleged to be a witness for the State, but did permit an inquiry as to whether they had formed an opinion as to the guilt or innocence of the defendant on trial, and each of the jurors stated that he had no opinion as to the guilt or innocence of the defendant in this case, had no bias in his favor or prejudice against him, and he could and would try the case fairly and impartially under the law; that he knew nothing of the facts, had no opinion, and nothing he had heard from any source would influence his action if chosen on the jury to try this cause.
In the bills of exception it is shown that each of the jurors would have answered that from being on the jury in the other cases and hearing these witnesses testify they had formed an opinion that they were truthful, and on their testimony had convicted the defendants. Defendant challenged for cause all jurors who had been members of the juries trying Davis and Peterson, which challenge was by the court overruled. Defendant further shows that after exhausting his peremptory challenges, he was forced to accept eight of the persons *424 who had served on the Davis and Peterson juries. In the case of Green v. State, 54 Tex.Crim. Rep., this court holds:
"In the case of Hanes v. State, 107 S.W. Rep., 818, we said: `Complaint is made that the defendant was compelled to accept at least a portion of the jury, after the exhaustion of his peremptory challenges, who had sat on a jury in the trial of a companion case, and who had heard in detail all the evidence in reference thereto. The objection to the jury was made in a timely way, and the point reserved by proper bill. The court, in allowing the bill, states that all of the jurors on their voir dire examination declared they had formed no conclusion as to the guilt or innocence of defendant and that they were neither biased nor prejudiced for or against him, and that whatever testimony had been developed in any other case would not in the least influence them in arriving at a verdict in defendant's case. The court affirms that he knew these men to be good citizens and believed them to be fair and impartial men. That they were good citizens and good men we should not hesitate to accept the assurance of the learned judge; but in a case where the transaction was the same kind and in the same place, and where the jury had in a former case affirmed their belief of the credibility of the prosecuting witness by their solemn verdict, it is not believed, however good and true they may be, that they are of that impartial quality that the law provides that every defendant may submit his case to and leave the determination of his rights with. See Obenchain v. State,
In accordance with the former holdings of this court this judgment is reversed and the cause remanded.
Reversed and remanded.