69 Ga. 577 | Ga. | 1882
This section is codified from the acts of 1869 and 1878, and it gives clearly the right of trial before the jurors to the number of twelve to be selected from these two panels, unless some jurors thereon are absent or disqualified. Nobody was absent or disqualified, or lawfully excused, Therefore, the jury which tried the case was not the jury the law prescribed, and as the case is a close one on the facts, no one can foresee how much the plaintiff in error may have been hurt. In the case of Winter vs. The Muscogee Railroad Company, 11 Ga., 438, it was held that the failure to fill up the list of grand jurors from which the traverse jury was taken, to eighteen, was error, and a new trial was granted for that among other reasons, though it did not appear that the twelve who did try the case were otherwise than perfectly impartial jurors. It was put upon the right which the law gave to have the list filled up, just as this case stands on the right which the law gives to have the twelve stricken from the original twenfy-four, unless some be absent, excused or disqualified. - The principle there ruled controls here, and decisions of other state courts as to their practice under their statutes, do not apply. Whether the juror be left on the jury which tries the issue or not, under our law, if he be wrongfully discharged, a new trial
And this covers all points necessary to be adjudicated when the case is heard again.
We express no opinion on the facts, further than to repeat, that they do not require necessarily the verdict rendered.
The new trial is granted because the court erred in ruling that citizens of Cartersville were not competent jurors, and thus the plaintiff in error was forced to strike from a jury list other that prescribed by law, and may have been hurt thereby.
Judgment reversed.