Lead Opinion
delivered the opinion of the court.
Plaintiff in error, Roy Kennedy, was tried by the police justice of the city of Norfolk, upon a warrant charging him with unlawfully operating an automobile while under the influence of intoxicants. He was found guilty, and sentenced to pay a fine of one hundred dollars and costs. He appealed to the corporation court of that city. A jury was unable to agree upon a verdict on his first trial therein. When the case was again called for trial, there were in attendance and remaining in court, eleven of twelve jurors previously impaneled for the trial of felony and all other cases during the term. Instead of first selecting a panel of seven for the trial of the case, the trial judge caused to be placed on the panel the names of all of the eleven jurors, each being free from exception as to their qualifications as prospective jurors. He then directed the attorney for the Commonwealth and the accused each to alternately strike off three names from the list of the eleven jurors until a panel of five should remain.
The case then proceeded to trial, and the five jurors, after having heard the evidence and argument of counsel, returned a verdict finding the defendant guilty, and fixing his punishment at a fine of one hundred dollars. Thereupon, the accused moved the court to set aside the verdict as contrary to the law and the evidence, and also because of the former action of the court in forming a panel of eleven jurors, and requiring the accused and the Commonwealth each to exercise three peremptory challenges instead of one, “as required by law.” The court overruled this motion, and the accused again duly excepted.
The case is now before us upon two assignments of errors, based upon the foregoing exceptions.
The evidence was in conflict, and it is admitted here by counsel for the accused that since there was sufficient evidence upon which the jury could base its verdict, the assignment of error with reference thereto has been abandoned. It is not necessary, therefore, to relate the evidence herein.
The objections to the number of the panel and to the challenges allowed are so closely related and interwoven that they will be treated together.
The questions for us to consider are whether there was merely an irregularity in the impaneling of the jurors, which could come under the curative provisions of Virginia Code 1936, section 4895, and whether the provisions of Code, sections 4927 and 4898 are mandatory.
It is evident that there was no waiver of the irregularity, in view of the objections made and exceptions noted to the
Virginia Code 1936, section 4927, provides that: “Seven jurors shall constitute a panel in the trial of misdemeanors, but the jury therefore shall be composed of five.”
Virginia Code 1936, section 4898, provides that: “In every case of misdemeanor, whether on an appeal from a justice, or an original trial, the Commonwealth and the prisoner shall each be allowed one peremptory challenge. No other challenge shall be allowed except for cause.”
Although these two statutes specifically provide for the number to constitute a panel in a misdemeanor case and the number allowed to be struck therefrom on peremptory challenge, there is no statutory method prescribed for the selection of a panel, it simply being required that a panel of seven jurors, free from exception, should be assembled.
The language of each of sections 4927 and 4898 is so simple, clear, distinct and express that we can see no good reason to depart therefrom. Both statutes contain requirements that are safeguards provided by legislation for both the Commonwealth and the accused, and should not be disregarded either for matters of expediency or for haste. They are provided in proceedings which involve the liberty of the accused and the protection of the Commonwealth. Whether the accused be guilty or innocent, he should be tried according to the rules ordained by law, and any departure therefrom is a violation of his fundamental rights. As a part of the orderly administration of human law, it is necessary to adhere closely to the exact standard or methods which the law lays down for criminal procedure.
That portion of section 4898, which provides that the “Commonwealth and the prisoner shall each be allowed one peremptory challenge,” is further emphasized by the next following sentence, “No other challenge shall be allowed except for cause" (Italics ours.)
To select first a panel of eleven, and then to allow each side three peremptory challenges, confers on both the Commonwealth and the accused a greater selective power in
The fact that the evidence is conflicting, and that the jury on the first trial was unable to agree on a verdict, indicates the several speculative possibilities that might have happened had the trial jury been composed of some of the six struck off from the panel of eleven, who might otherwise have been on a panel of seven, from which only two could have been struck.
It has been consistently held in Virginia that the statutory requirements for impaneling jurors are mandatory and not merely directory.
In Elkins v. Commonwealth,
Chief Justice Campbell, in the above case, said: “In the absence of waiver of any rights upon the part of the accused when charged with a misdemeanor, section 4927 is mandatory.” He then reviewed Hall’s Case (Hall v. Com.),
In Hoback v. Commonwealth, supra, Justice Harrison, speaking for the court, quoted from Jones v. Commonwealth,
In Patrick v. Commonwealth,
We think that section 4898 is likewise mandatory in permitting the allowance of one peremptory challenge only. In addition to the clear language of this section, it is obvious that the allowance of more than one such challenge to each party necessarily involves the selection of a larger panel than seven, if only five are to constitute the jury.
That part of the opinion in the case of Clarke v. Commonwealth,
The judgment of the trial court will be reversed, the verdict of the jury set aside, and the case remanded for a new trial.
Reversed and remanded.
Dissenting Opinion
dissenting.
The accused was driving on the Ocean View Boulevard at 70 miles an hour when two police officers arrested him. He had a pint bottle half filled with whiskey and according to the testimony of the officers, he was under the influence of intoxicants. When he was taken to the police station the police sergeant there observed him and testified that at that time he was under the influence of intoxicants. The accused testified in his own behalf and admitted that he had taken about five drinks during the evening from the pint bottle which was in the car, but denied that he was under the influence of intoxicants. His amazing statement is that he and his wife and three friends had been drinking from that bottle and had consumed only about one-half pint of whiskey.
The assignment of error based on the insufficiency of the evidence was abandoned. This concession was entirely proper because the evidence abundantly supported the verdict. In
The main assignment of error is that the jury was improperly selected. The record clearly shows that the court provided a panel of 11 men free from exception and in all respects qualified to serve as jurors in this case and in selecting five jurors the court directed counsel to strike three each from the list. This was objected to by counsel for the accused for the sole reason that he wanted only one challenge and not three. He did not claim that his rights were prejudiced. He contended that he was entitled to a panel of seven instead of a panel of 11.
There seems to be two methods of selecting a jury to try a misdemeanor case; one by the provisions of Code, section 4895, which expressly states that “the jury so summoned may be used for the trial of all cases which may be tried at that term, including civil cases as well as felonies and misdemeanors”; and the other by the provisions of Code, section 5992, which declares that jurors chosen under that section “shall constitute a jury for the trial of civil and misdemeanor cases * * By section 5996, it is provided that jurors shall be selected by lot. For the trial of misdemeanor cases either method may be used. Gray v. Commonwealth,
No motion was made by the accused to select the jury by lot under section 5996. The qualification as jurors of the 11 men placed in the jury box was unquestioned. Every single one of them was competent to serve. When five of them were finally chosen in the manner indicated, no constitutional right of the accused was thereby invaded. He had an impartial jury and a fair trial and if he had desired he could have invoked section 5996 and secured a jury by lot. He waived his right to that manner of selection by not asking that the jury be selected in that way.
Even if error was committed it was harmless. An outstanding fact is that the accused has shown no prejudice. In the language of section 4895, it does not appear “that such irregularity, or error, or failure, was intentional or such as to probably cause injustice * * * to the accused; # * Under sec
The evidence, as indicated, shows clearly that the accused was guilty and that no other proper verdict than one of guilt could have been rendered. The accused has not shown that he was injured in any way by the manner of selecting the jury adopted by the court. See Walker v. Commonwealth, supra; Thacker v. Commonwealth,
For the foregoing reasons I am unable to agree with the majority.
Hudgins, J., concurs in dissent.
