32 Ga. 581 | Ga. | 1861
delivering the opinion.
This was a case of indictment for murder, and conviction. The defendant moved the Court for a new trial, on numerous grounds, all of which were overruled, and the defendant excepted. We deem it unnecessary to consider more than three of these grounds.
1st. It is alleged that the Court below erred in refusing to continue the case, upon the showing made by the defendant. This showing presents two causes for continuance. 1st. The recent commission of the homicide charged, (less than two months having elapsed between the killing and the trial,) and the prevalence of a degree of excitement in the county, against the accused, which rendered it unsafe for him to go to trial at that term of the Court.
The affidavit of the accused on this subject is very distinct, and he offered to corroborate it by the affidavits of two of his counsel. These latter the Court refused to consider, because the proposed affiants resided out of the county of Jones, at the same time, holding the accused to the adduction of evidence, other than his own, of the excitement in the public mind.
This latter requisition, however, was subsequently abandoned by the Court, and the continuance on this ground refused upon the authority of a decision of this Court in the case of Thompson vs. The State, 24 Ga. R., 297. (See page 303.) In that case this Court held, that since the passage of the Act of 1856, providing additional and thorough tests of the competency of jurors, there was little danger to be apprehended by those charged with crime, from unfriendly excitement in the public mind, and that the existence of such excitement was not of itself a sufficient showing for a continuance of a criminal case.
In the case of Thomas vs. The State, 27th Georgia Reports, 287, it was ruled, “that popular excitement alone is not sufficient to procure the continuance of a cause, except under extraordinary circumstances." We are not prepared to say that the affidavit of the accused in this case shows any
In the connection in which it was presented, however, it was worthy of consideration. In all cases, in which this cause is superadded to others, if the Court have a doubt of the sufficiency of those other causes, this one may very properly turn the scale in favor of the motion to continue, even though there be shown no “ extraordinary ” circumstances. This I understand to be the effect of past rulings on this subject, and I should be very reluctant to see the force of such a showing further diminished.
2d. The affidavit for continuance under consideration went much further. It alleged that before, he shot deceased he had himself been shot, as he then and still believed by deceased, but that he is unable to prove this, and uninformed as to what the bystanders, who were numerous, know of the circumstances, by reason of his arrest on the day following that of the homicide, his continued confinement in jail ever since, his inability from poverty to employ counsel to prepare his case, and his lack of a friend to perform that service for him; that he believes diligent inquiry would bring to light the person who actually shot him; that the bill of indictment had been found against him at the present term, and that he had, by the charity of others, been provided with counsel only since its commencement.
The Court below held, that because the accused had residing in the neighborhood a father and a brother, he might, through their instrumentality, have prepared his case for trial during his confinement. But he swears positively that he had no friend to do this office for him. The existence of the relationship, referred to by the Court, does not negative the averment in the affidavit, and the close confinement of the accused, sick and sore from his wounds the while, relieves him from the imputation of laches.
This is his case. The 175th section of the 14th division of the Penal Code provides that “ every person against whom a bill of indictment is found, shall be tried at the term of the Court the indictment is found, unless the absence of a material witness or witnesses, or the principles of justice should require the postponement of the trial, and then the Court shall allow a postponement, etc. How, taking this affidavit to be true in fact, (and the law does not permit a traverse of it,) we think the principles of justice peremptorily required a postponement.
But again, in Allen vs. The State, 10th Ga. R., 85, this Court held that “a party'who is conscious of his innocence, should not be compelled to incur the expense and labor of procuring testimony until there is a bill found. Under this ruling had the accused known of a witness by whom he could prove the fact in question, had he failed to subpoena him before bill found, and had he in consequence thereof been unready for trial, his showing would have been good. How much more when he swears that he believes the fact to exist, and that there are witnesses who know it, but that circumstances beyond his control have prevented the investigation and inquiry necessary to their ascertainment.
We commend the zeal and fidelity with which our brethren of the Circuit Bench resist unnecessary delays in the administration of penal justice, and we know well how often
3d. The next ground of error is the ruling that the juror Dorsett was competent. It seems that to the first question propounded to this juror, under the voir dire, he failed to answer categorically, but replied, “ I have formed and expressed an opinion (as to the guilt or innocence of the prisoner) from hearsay.” This was not such an answer, nor in such form, as the statute contemplates. It presented a case of some embarrassment, and it seemed to be conceded on all sides that further interrogation to the. same point, before propounding the remaining questions, or disposing of the juror, was proper. The Court permitted the counsel for the accused to propound this question, Is the opinion you have formed and expressed from hearsay a fixed opinion ? He replied, “ It is.” Here counsel for the accused insisted that the juror should be adjudged incompetent. But the Court deemed it proper to apply still another test, and put to the juror this question, “ Would or would not your opinion yield to testimony? Do you or not think that you could do justice to the prisoner?” To which he replied, “I think I could, but I would rather get off.” The Court, after propounding the other statutory questions, and receiving answers, declared the juror competent, and he was put upon the prisoner, and peremptorily challenged.
Was the last test applied by the Court, aside from the statute, proper? Here was a juror declaring that he had a fixed opinion which he had expressed, not indeed “from having seen the crime committed, or from having heard any portion of the evidence under oath,” as expressed in the statute, but still a fixed opinion. With this state of mind unexplained, the Court would not, and did not, put him upon the prisoner. Supposing this “fixed opinion” to be
He should have been without opinion ; he had fixed opinion. He should have presumed the accused innocent; he believed him guilty. His mind should have demanded proof of guilt to restrain him from acquitting—it in fact demanded proof of innocence to restrain him from convicting. If one person, so minded, might be placed upon a jury, twelve might, and there the onus would be upon the accused, and not upon the State. It is argued, that a fair construction of the statute requires that the juror should not be set aside as incompetent by reason of his answer to this first question, unless the answer disclose that he has “ formed and expressed an opinion from having seen the crime committed, or from having heard a part of the evidence under oath. But lot us look into the spirit of the statute. Are its requisitions satisfied, by a categorical answer in the negative, to that question? Is he, therefore, declared to be competent? Ho. The statute requires that still other questions should be propounded, probing deeper the state of his mind. Let us look again in this view, to the condition of the juror’s mind, when he had answered the questions of the Court, and before the second and third statutory questions had been propounded. He had a “fixed opinion, which might yield to evidence; he thought he could do justice to the prisoner.”
With this avowal of a fixed opinion, was it not a mockery
Thus answering, charity to the juror requires us to presume, that he did not understand the questions he answered. But take a practical test the other way. What sane man, selecting his triors, under a capital charge, would have taken this juror, when put upon him ? It was not then- a question of doubt, of discretion; he was under an imperious necessity to object to the juror. To put such a juror upon a prisoner is, in our judgment, equivalent (though certainly not intended) to denying him one of the peremptory challenges allowed him by law.
We do not mean to say, by any means, that if a juror give a general negative answer to the first question, it is the privilege of the accused, then, to inquire whether or not he has formed and expressed an opinion from hearsay.
The statute has prescribed the question intended further to test his competency.
But we do say, that a juror, when asked the first question, voluntarily avows an opinion formed, fixed and expressed, discloses one of those states of the mind, the existence of which the second and third statutory questions were intended to inquire after, and upon the entertainment of which, the statute requires “he shall he set aside for cause.” We do say, any juror who declares first, “ that he has a fixed opinion as to the guilt or innocence of the accused,” and then, “ that he has resting on his mind no bias or prejudice for or against the accused, and that his mind is perfectly impartial between the State and the accused,” evinces a mental or moral obli
4th. As this case must be re-tried, we shall not express any opinion regarding the conformity of the verdict to the law and the evidence. We may say, however, that it is a very peculiar case. We find in the record no evidence of express malice entertained by the slayer toward the slain, nor yet of any injury done, or provocation given, by the slain toward the slayer. A quarrel had been progressing for hours between other parties, with which it does not appear that either of these had interfered, save to make peace. No act done, no word spoken, by either, would identify him with the one or the other belligerent party; yet just as the latter have proceeded, within a house, from words to a conflict with deadly weapons, the accused standing quietly without the house, looking in another direction, receives a painful gun shot wound; turning- quickly to the direction whencte the shot came, he sees the deceased coming out of the house, (the scene of combat) apparently unarmed, and immediately fires upon him, inflicting a mortal wound. Scarcely has the deceased fallen, when the accused receives another fire, distributing sixty shot, quite of a different kind from the first, over half his person, and falls wounded, but not mortally. Yet, no part of the evidence discloses from whom or wherefore the accused received either fire. It is very certain, that deceased did not deliver the last, though it is quite probable he may have delivered the first. I believe there is no dispute as to any fact to which I have adverted; at all events, we so understood the evidence. We are strongly impressed, that there are important facts, (probably susceptible of proof,) part of the res gestee, not yet developed. Whether they ever will come to light, and if so, what influence they may exert upon the prisoner’s fate, hangs in doubt, but the impression stated, carries our mind irresistibly back to the question of continuance, and we are constrained to exercise our legal discretion by remanding this case for another trial.
Let the judgment be reversed.