165 A. 614 | Md. | 1933
On September 29th, 1932, Euel Lee, the appellant, was found guilty of murder in the first degree, by a jury in Baltimore County, whence the case had been removed at the instance of the appellant from Worcester County. On October 22d 1932, he was sentenced to death, and from this sentence he appeals. The offense for which he was indicted was the murder, on or about the 11th day of October, 1931, of Green Davis at Worcester County. A suggestion for removal was made in the Circuit Court for Worcester County, by the appellant, and that court removed the case to Dorchester *552
County, an order which was later stricken out and an order passed removing the case to Baltimore County (Lee v. State,
The appellant, before proceeding with the trial, first filed a formal motion for a removal to a county "where there are no Jim Crow or segregation regulations against negroes," which was overruled, and abandoned at the argument on appeal. The right had been and can only be exercised once. Cooke v. Cooke,
The defendant then moved in writing for a continuance on the ground that certain "Jim Crow" regulations of the County Commissioners of Baltimore County were prejudicial to his rights, that the court bailiffs or other authorities segregated negro spectators and witnesses into a portion of the court room, and that they "are excluded from the lavatories and toilets, open for use by white people, and are forced to refrain from using such toilets, but on the contrary, are directed, ordered and compelled to use only such toilets as are specifically set aside for use by negroes which fact is publicly announced by placards and signs prominently posted in said court room," and "that in Baltimore County negroes are excluded from hotels, restaurants, theatres, moving picture *553 houses, etc., visited and patronized by white people, solely on account of their race and color," and that by reason of these facts and circumstances the defendant could not have a fair and impartial trial until such practices and regulations are discontinued.
No authority for such a motion, based on such reasons, was cited by defendant's counsel, the granting of a continuance, in the absence of abuse, resting in the discretion of the court.Downs v. State,
The next question submitted was to the validity of the panel of two hundred, from which the petit jury for the September Term, 1932, was drawn. At the first trial of the appellant, a challenge was made to the array, because the names of twenty-five petit jurors were drawn from a panel of two hundred from which negroes had been excluded, and it was held on the former appeal (
When the names of two hundred persons taken from the tax and registration lists were placed in the jury box at the September Term, 1932, the term at which the second trial was held, it appears that the names of all except forty-six had been in the panel of two hundred at the December Term, 1931, when the first trial was had, and the contention of the appellant now is that the decision in the former appeal (
If the names of negroes, legally qualified, had been placed in the list from which the jury at that term had been drawn, the decision in the last appeal would have been an affirmance instead of a reversal. The panel was held to be bad, but the individuals whose names were in the list from which the jury was drawn were not, merely because their names were in that list, thereafter disqualified to be drawn so long as they individually possessed the necessary qualifications. Two terms of court with two jury drawings, March and May, 1932, had intervened between the first and second trials, so that there were in the box the names of those who had not been drawn the two, and many of them more, terms before. The names in the box at the September Term, 1932, which had also been there, and not drawn at the December Term, 1931, were those of qualified jurors, whose qualifications had been considered and determined by the court, and their inclusion in the new list was simply using the names of qualified jurors for a new and different list and, because again considered and selected, was a fresh and new selection for the panel in question. If there had been an attempt at the December Term, 1931, after the drawing of the petit jury for that term, to correct the mistakes made in the composition of the panel, there might have been some point to the contention. When the drawing occurs at a subsequent term, the objections to the list of a former term avail nothing if the names of those in the box at the subsequent term are of persons qualified individually and collectively to serve as jurors. 35 C.J. 267, 268; State v.Welch,
The second point raised in the challenge to the array was as to the identity of Edgar Keifer, one of the jurors accepted, but this was abandoned at the argument.
The third question argued was on the exceptions to the refusal of the court to allow certain questions to be asked jurors on their voir dire. *556
The question "Do you regard negroes as your social equal," was not permitted to be asked Henry H. Grimes, John G. Mays, Gordon H. Pearce, and Daniel J. Edell, and substantially the same of Joseph F. Nee, all of whom were challenged by the defense, except Grimes. It has been held that a white juror is not disqualified to sit in a case against a negro because he thinks his race superior to another, or does not believe in the social equality of white and colored races. State v. Casey, 44 La. Ann. 969, 11 So. 583; State v. Green, 229 Mo. 642, 129 S.W. 700.
The question was asked William A. Freeman: "Do you have feeling against colored people?" which he answered, "No." He was then asked: "Would you believe a colored man's story just as quickly as a white man's?" which was objected to by the State, objection sustained, and exception noted. The same question and same ruling as to Daniel J. Edell, J. Howard Anderson and Joseph F. Nee. This question was refused by the trial court as being "too general," and in that we concur. The question held proper in Hill v.State,
The court refused to allow one juror to be asked whether he had noticed the lavatory signs, one, if he knew of the exclusion of negroes from moving picture houses, and one, if he knew of the "Jim Crow practices in Baltimore County." We have already said enough on this subject to indicate that such questions are not a test of fitness of a juror.
Exceptions twenty-three to thirty-three, both inclusive, to rulings on the evidence, were abandoned at the argument, and are, therefore, not considered.
Finding no error in the rulings of the trial court on the challenge to the panel of two hundred from which the petit jury was drawn, on the motion for a continuance, and on the examination of the jurors on their voir dire, the judgment appealed from should be affirmed.
Judgment affirmed, with costs. *558