The appellant’s first conviction upon the present charge of delivery of marihuana was reversed on appeal. Norris v. State,
First, it is argued that the jury panel should have been quashed because two of the jury commissioners who selected the wheel of jurors had served on a petit jury within the preceding two years and had in fact served on the petit jury which convicted the appellant at his first trial. The pertinent statutes provide: (a) Jury commissioners shall possess the qualifications for petit jurors (Ark. Stat. Ann. § 39-201 [Supp. 1975]); (b) a petit juror is ineligible to serve for two years after he is excused from further service (§ 39-103); (c) except by consent of the parties a person cannot serve as a petit juror in a case if he was a petit juror in a former trial of the cause (§ 39-105); and id) no person shall be appointed as a jury commissioner who has served in that capacity within the preceding four years (§ 39-202). It is argued that the effect of the statutes is to disqualify the two jury commissioners in question.
The court was right in refusing to quash the jury panel. No possibility of prejudice is shown. Polk County has some 8,000 registered voters, as we know by judicially noticing the records of the Secretary of State’s office. Mid-State Homes v. Knight,
Second, it is argued that delivery of marihuana is not an offense under Arkansas law. Counsel rely upon White v. State,
Affirmed.
