41 S.E. 293 | N.C. | 1902
The Court being of opinion that the defendant's challenge to the array (which is defendant's first assignment of error) should be sustained, no other exception will be considered.
The defendant's challenge and motion to dismiss the panel is based on two affidavits — one by C. E. Taylor, register of deeds (230) and clerk of the board of county commissioners, and the affidavit of T. L. Vines. The judge finds but one fact: "That the commissioners in drawing the jury, and in acting as set out in the affidavits, did not have any corrupt intent, and counsel for defendant in arguing on the challenge stated that they did not charge any corrupt intent." But the court in this finding refers to the affidavits, "in acting as set out inthe affidavits, " and transmits them to this Court as a part of the record on appeal. They are not contradicted, and therefore must be taken as true and as a part of the findings of the court.
We, then, have the findings of the court in substance to be: That the county commissioners of Brunswick County, in August, 1901, met and proceeded to draw the jury, now objected to by the defendant; that the register of deeds, who was clerk of the board, and the sheriff of the county, and a boy under ten years old, and T. L. Vines were present. The drawing then proceeded — the boy drawing the scrolls from No. 1 of the jury box and handing them to the chairman. The names were then discussed, as to whether they should be jurors or not, and as many as ten or more of the names so drawn were rejected and returned to box No. 1.
The affidavit of Taylor states that the object seemed to be to distribute the jurors to the different townships, and not to have them too near those already drawn. The affidavit of Vines states "that said S. J. Stanly, commissioner, objected to a number of names in Shallotte Township, which were drawn from the box, and said names were discarded and *162 returned to box No. 1, and Sheriff Walker objected to several from Town Creek Township; when the name of Monroe Hickman was drawn, some one said, `He is right there among the rest,' meaning that he was from the same community or neighborhood as others whose names had (231) been drawn, and Commissioner Stanly replied, `I want him,' and his name was placed on the list; that Stanly's own son was selected because he (S. J. Stanly) said he wanted to come to Southport so bad we had better take him." These are to be taken as the facts connected with drawing the jury, and that there was no "corrupt intent."
A challenge to the array is a challenge to the entire panel summoned and returned by the sheriff as jurors, and, if allowed, the entire jury or panel is discharged; if not allowed when it should have been, it vitiates and renders void the trial by a jury selected from this improper array. This objection to either the panel or challenge to the array "can only be taken (sustained) when there is partiality or misconduct in the sheriff, or some irregularity in making out the lists." S. v. Speaks,
But the plaintiff says this statute is only directory — not mandatory — and this being so, the court should not have sustained the defendant's challenge to the array, and cites S. v. Haywood,
The statute in force when the opinion in S. v. Haywood was written seems to have been still in force when the opinion in S. v. Martin.
But in this case, while the commissioners professed to do what they did for the purpose of distributing the jury over the county, they violated this rule which they had officiously adopted, and took two jurors from the same locality, from which they had rejected other jurors who had been previously drawn. S. J. Stanly, who was one of the commissioners, objected to a number of names, drawn by the boy, who lived in Shallotte Township, and the scrolls containing their names were put back into box No. 1, and Sheriff Walker objected to several names from Town Creek Township. When the name of Monroe Hickman was drawn, some one said: "He is right there among the rest" — that is, others who had been drawn and rejected — when Commissioner Stanly said, "I want him," and his name was listed as one of the jurors. Stanly's son was selected and taken because Stanly said, "He wants to come to Southport so bad we had better take him."
In every case cited for the plaintiff in which the court had refused *164 the motion to discharge the jury on account of irregularities on the part of the commissioners in drawing the jury, the action of the commissioners has been severely criticised and condemned. But this has done no good, and, instead of their improving, they have grown from bad to worse, until, in this case, they have in effect done (234) away with the ten-year-old boy and selected the jury themselves, allowing the sheriff to put in his objection. Cui bono to have a boy under ten, if the names he draws are to be rejected, or sorted from, by the commissioners?
The plaintiff says that the court has found that there was no corrupt intent on the part of the commissioners; and that being so, the motion of the defendant was properly refused. It is true that in all the cases cited where a challenge to the array was made on the ground of irregularity and refused, the court has said there did not appear to have been any corrupt intent. But this does not show that the motion should not be allowed unless there is a corrupt intent found, as we can not think that any court would refuse such a motion where a corrupt intent was found to exist on the part of the commissioners in manipulating the drawing of the jury. This is shown by what is said in S. v. Haywood, where the Court says that if one was summoned who was not on the jury list, or one not qualified as a juror, such irregularity would not be "conformable to law," and would probably vitiate their action. And yet this might be done without any corrupt intent. In Boyer v. Teague,
So it appears to us, after a careful examination of the authorities, that so far as the action of the commissioners, as to time and place of drawing the jury or revising the jury list is concerned, the statute is considered directory; and while it is their duty to do these things at the time and place the law directs them to be done, still, if they are not done when and where they should be, but are properly done at another time and place, they will be treated as irregularities. (236) This is because the law directs the commissioners to perform these duties, and to prevent delay in the administration of justice such acts are held to be directory, and where no injustice appears to have been done by such irregularity, the court will, it seems, not make such irregularity a cause for discharging the panel. But where they assume to dothings that they have no right nor authority to do, whether at the time appointed by law or at any other time, such acts will not be held to be an irregularity, but officious, unauthorized acts on their part, and will, if properly objected to, vitiate the panel so drawn. It was no part of theduty of the commissioners to draw the scrolls from the box. In fact, the law did not allow them to do this, as it provides that it should be done by a person under ten years of age. But had they not as well draw the scrolls from the box as to pass upon and reject such as they saw proper to reject after they were drawn? Indeed, it was worse than if they had drawn them. It was a selection by them of such jurors as they wanted. When a juror was drawn from a locality that they had decided was getting too many jurors, and a proposition was made to discard him on that account, one of the commissioners said, "I want him," and his name was put on the list. And when a son of one of the commissioners was drawn and taken, "because he wanted to come to Southport so bad." Even the sheriff of the county was allowed to make *166 such objections as he thought proper. These acts go far beyond what can be termed irregularities, further than any reported case goes — further than S. v. Martin, further than Boyer v. Teague.
In Boyer v. Teague the jury seems to have been regularly drawn in every respect except that the defendant, who was sheriff and had a suit pending involving his office, was allowed by the commissioners to read the scrolls drawn by the boy, and put them in box No. 2 without (237) the commissioners reading them. The court found that this was "gross negligence" on the part of the commissioners, for which he sustained plaintiff's challenge to the array and discharged the panel. If that was sufficient cause, and the action of the judge below was sustained by this Court, should not the motion have been sustained in this case? Is not this a much stronger case for the defendant than Boyer v.Teague? This kind of business on the part of commissioners must stop somewhere.
The motion of defendant should have been allowed, and the panel discharged.
Error.
Cited: S. v. Dixon,