| Tex. | Jul 1, 1874

Devine, Associate Justice.

The appellant, George B. Lyles, was indicted, with four others, who were charged at the January term, 1874, in the District Court of El Paso county, as accessories with Lyles in the murder of José Maria Gamboa, on the 27th of October, 1873. The case being called for trial, one of the parties charged as an accessory was discharged, and the case dismissed as to him. *176On the close of the evidence, the court, on motion, directéd the jury to render a verdict of .not guilty as to another of the defendants, there being no evidence against him, which was immediately done, and the accused discharged from custody. The jury, after receiving the charge of the court, rendered a verdict of guilty of murder in the second degree against appellant Lyles, and a verdict of not guilty as to the other defendants, William Brown and Antonio Wieto. The court overruled defendant’s motion for a new trial, and the cause is now presented for our revision on the grounds set forth in the motion for a new trial, and accompanying affidavits and the exceptions of defendant to the ruling of the court before and during the trial of the cause. So much of the bills of- exceptions taken by defendant’s counsel will be noticed as are deemed material to the decision of this case. The first- bill of exceptions states, “while the jury was being impaneled to try said cause, the counsel for the defendant moved that no.one be permitted to act as a juror who did not understand the English language, and the court overruled and refused said motion, and permitted nine jurors to sit upon said cause who did not speak nor understand the English language, to which ruling of the court defendant’s counsel objected at the time,” &c., &e.

The accused was entitled to a jury to pass upon his case who could understand the proceedings had during the trial. It is scarcely necessary to remark that the proceedings in the courts of Texas are in the English language. Wo other is allowed. There is no exception, save in the limited authority to use the Spanish language in judicial proceedings before justices of the peace in certain counties west of the Guadalupe river, “when neither the justice of the peace nor-the parties are able to write or understand the English language.” '(Pas. Dig., arts. 1223, 1224.)

It would seem, therefore, a necessity that the jurors should have a reasonable knowledge of the language in *177which the proceedings are conducted, to enable them to perform their duties. This necessity becomes of the greatest importance in trials for capital felonies.

The Constitution declares that “The right of trial by jury shall remain inviolate.” It cannot be considered as remaining inviolate when the jurors can neither speak nor understand the language in which the proceedings are had. If the trial by jury is to remain a substantial fact and an important right, and is not to be substituted by a legal fiction bearing the name, but wanting in the most important qualification of a jury, namely, the capacity to understand what the pleadings contain, what is said by the counsel in their addresses to the jury, and utterly unable to comprehend the charge of the court, then it is necessary that jurors unable to speak or understand the English language should be excluded from the panel. The code does not, in express terms, make this one of the disabilities of a juror; and the reason would seem to be, that neither the framers of the code nor the Legislature which approved and adopted it supposed it possible that jurors would be forced on a party to try a cause when they could neither speak nor understand the language in which the trial was had—the only language recognized in this State as the language to be used in the district or other courts, save the exceptions cited in this opinion. A trial by such a jury as sat in this case was violative of section 16, article 1, of Bill of Bights of the Constitution, which declares that “Bo citizen shall be deprived of life, liberty, property, or privileges, outlawed, or exiled, or in any manner disfranchised, except by due course of the law of the land.”

In the case of The State v. Marshall, 8 Ala., 802, two persons were called as jurors who, on being questioned as to their qualifications, said, upon oath, they did not understand the English language sufficiently well to serve as jurors. The court set them aside. The defendant’s counsel excepted to the action of the court, and, on appeal, it *178was held to have been no error on the part of the judge to direct the jurors “to stand aside,” as it was evident they were not competent jurors—the inability of a juror to understand or speak the English language being, under the law of Alabama, as with us, no express ground of challenge. The court, in the opinion, declared that it was not the intention of the framers of the act that the enumerated causes of challenge should be exclusive of all others, and that it was evidently not the design of the Legislature to impair the discretionary power of the court to set aside any one summoned as a juror who, from any cause, was unfit to serve as a juror. We believe a large discretionary power necessarily exists, and is properly vested in the presiding judge, respecting the admission or rejection of jurors, ■but we believe in this case the court erred in overruling defendant’s exceptions to the nine jurors for the want of •knowledge either to speak or understand the English language.

The third exception by defendant is, that “ The charge -of the court was written in English and • translated to the jury through an interpreter. Thereupon the defendant’s counsel objected, on account of the charge not being written in the Spanish language, that being the only language which nine (9) of the jurors in said cause could understand, which motion the court overruled,” &c.

However irregular it maybe in ordinary cases to permit ■translations of the charge to be given to the jury in a foreign language, the translation should have been permitted, -in this case, to go to the jury. Art. 3059, Paschal’s Digest, provides that a written charge shall be delivered to the jury in all cases of felony; and art. 3066 requires, if the jury request it, a copy of the charges given shall be taken by the jury to their room. Art. 3067 declares that, on the giving a verbal charge, or a departure from the requirements of art. 3066, (among others,) the judgment (on appeal) shall be reversed.

*179The court, in this case, delivered a written charge in English. It was translated to the jurors by a person stated in the motion for a new trial to be wholly incompetent, and who translated to the jurors the word murder, wherever it occurred, as “ assassination.” So far as nine of the jurors were concerned, it was, in effect, a verbal charge, and nothing more. The law", in requiring the district judge to deliver his charge, in a trial for felony, in writing, was not alone for the purpose of requiring greater circumspection and deliberation on the part of the presiding judge, or to enable counsel to avail themselves in this court, with greater certainty, of any errors or omissions in it. The right, on the part of the jury, to take a copy of it “with them to their room,” when desired, shows that it was also intended to enable them to have the entire charge before them during their deliberations, exactly as delivered by the court, with not a sentence added nor a line erased, so that in all cases of felony the jurors might be relieved from the liability to misconstrue its meaning or mistake its statements. Were they compelled to rely upon their confused recollection as to its terms, contention as to what the charge meant would naturally arise from their imperfect recollection. The refusal of the court to permit the jury to have a copy of the charge translated into Spanish, (doubtless arising from the belief on the part of the court of its not being authorized by law, the practice not prevailing in that or other counties,) left nine of the jury in the condition of jurors who had only received a verbal charge'in a case of felony. It left them, in effect, dependent upon the reading or construction which the three jurors who understood English might think proper to give them respecting any portions of the charge not recollected. While such statements by the three jurors may have been correct, it was not, in substance, giving the accused a fair trial by a jury, such as is contemplated by the Constitution and the Criminal Code. The necessity for a translation of the charge *180into another language, in this case, illustrates the error of compelling a defendant or the State to accept jurors unable to speak or understand the English language. The court erred in refusing to permit the jury (under the peculiar circumstances of this case) to harm a translated copy of the charge.

The second ground of motion for a new trial, “because the court erred in its charge to the jury,” is supported by that portion of the charge as follows: “ Should you find from the evidence that defendant, Lyles, killed Gamboa without lawful excuse or provocation, but without express malice, you will find him guilty of murder in the second degree.” This portion of the charge excluded from the jury the consideration of the crime of manslaughter, and compelled them, if they believed the prisoner guilty of a felonious killing, to find him guilty of murder either in the first or second degree. When the evidence in this case is considered, it is evident that “the law applicable to the case” was not set forth to the jury. The statement of facts shows that the defendant was in possession of the land for two years; that about three weeks before, deceased and his brother came on the land armed, and prevented the agent of defendant from receiving rent-corn from one of defendant’s tenants, deceased (Gamboa) claiming the land; that, one day after, deceased and his brother came again on the land, both armed, and with eight or ten peons, (laborers,) and carried off the corn which defendant’s tenant had set apart for him. The deceased and brother came again on the land and carried off the rent, consisting of near eighteen bushels of wheat, from another of defendant’s tenants. The day on which the homicide took place the deceased and his brother, both armed, came again on the laud, compelled several men at work for defendant to quit work, and on defendant’s coming from his dwelling to the place where the men had been at work, and inquiring who had stopped their work, de*181ceased replied that he had stopped them, at the same time raising his. rifle as if going to fire at defendant. This evidence is contradicted by the brother of deceased. The evidence, taken altogether, however, shows such a condition of affairs and state of mind on the part of the accused as required the judge to instruct the jury on the law of manslaughter. The failure to do so was error.

The fourth ground of the motion fór a new trial is based on the refusal of the court to direct the jury to pass, after all the evidence had been given in, upon the cases of William Brown and Antonio Nieto, jointly indicted as accessories with Lyles, with the view of using them as witnesses for defendant, Lyles, in the event of their being acquitted. In this respect we believe the court did not err. Pas. Dig., art. 3054, declares that “When it is apparent that there is no evidence against a defendant * * * * jointly indicted with others, the jury may be directed to find a verdict as to such defendant, and if they acquit, he may be introduced as a witness in the case.”

In this case, however, there was evidence that tended to implicate Brown and Nieto; and the judge, under the provisions of the Code, was authorized to overrule the motion as made on the trial. The case of Jones v. The State, 13 Tex., 178, relied on by appellant, was a decision rendered before the adoption of the code.

The seventh ground of the motion for a new trial, that the acquittal of William Brown and A. Nieto placed defendant in a condition to introduce evidence on a new trial which it was not in his power to use, by reason of their being jointly indicted with accused, and the affidavits of Brown and Nieto attached to the motion was, we believe, sufficient to warrant the granting of a new trial.

In the case of Jones v. The State, already cited, the court decided, and quote the remark of Chief Justice Savage in the case of The People v. Vermilyea, 7 Cow., 369" court="N.Y. Sup. Ct." date_filed="1827-08-15" href="https://app.midpage.ai/document/people-v-vermilyea-5464920?utm_source=webapp" opinion_id="5464920">7 Cow., 369, that a new trial ought to be granted under such a *182state of facts, “not on the ground of newly-discovered evidence, but on the ground that important evidence was now within their power to produce that the rules of law had put beyond their reach on the fornier trial.”

' The judgment is therefore reversed and the cause remanded.

Reversed and remanded.

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