delivered the opinion of the court:
In a jury trial in the Circuit Court of St. Clair County the defendants were found guilty of attempt murder and attempt robbery. Defendant, Danny Peterson, was sentenced to three years on probation conditioned upon serving the first six mоnths in the county jail. Defendants, Riggins and Braggs, were each sentenced to the penitentiary for conсurrent terms of 5 to 12 years on attempt murder and 5 to 10 years on attempt robbery. In this appeal it is cоntended that defendants were denied the right to trial by a fair and impartial jury; that they were not proven guilty beyond a reasonable doubt; that the State failed to prove the essential elements of either attempt murder or attempt robbery; that the final argument by the prosecutor was so prejudicial as to deny defendants a fair trial; and finally, that the sentences imposed were excessive.
We shall not review the facts relating to the crimes charged because, in our opinion, the jury question requires а reversal and remand for new trial.
Immediately after the jury had been selected and sworn in, defense counsel brought to the court’s attention that one of the jurors had approached him in the hall and stated that she “was praying that the defendants will plead guilty” so she could go home. He then orally moved that this juror be relieved from service on the jury. The prosecutor com-merited that the juror may have mаde the statement in a facetious manner, but that if the court wanted to inquire he would have no objection. He added that he thought the juror was the one who indicated that this had happened in the last cаse she served on. The record shows no further discussion other than a summary denial of the motion by the court. However, the record does show that an alternate juror had been chosen and was availаble for service.
The State’s brief devotes little time to this question. It merely contends that the juror’s statement was obviously made in jest; that it may have been in poor taste, but that it hardly warrants a reversal; and that it did nоt warrant an inquiry on the part of the trial judge to determine the juror’s attitude because her impartiality had already been determined during the voir dire. We cannot agree. The State’s conclusion that the remark was made in jest is pure conjecture. The record contains no information upon which tp bаse that judgment. If conjecture is to be engaged in the remark could just as well be construed as indicating a belief in defendants’ guilt and a hope that they would plead guilty so that she could go home and not waste her time. The difficulty is that the remark itself vitiates any previous conclusion made as to impartiality on vоir dire, and, without further inquiry, there was no way for the trial court to make a sound judgment on her present state оf mind. It is this failure to inquire that, in our opinion, constitutes the error.
The opinion in People v. Cox,
We believe that in the case beforе us it was likewise imperative that the determination of the impartiality of the juror here in question should not hаve been allowed to hang in balance on conjecture when inquiry could have resolved the issuе and, if necessary, an alternate juror could have been seated.
Faced with a similar question in People v. Cravens,
For the reasons stated the judgment of the Circuit Court of St. Clair County is reversed and the cause is remanded for a new trial.
Reversed and remanded.
G. MORAN, P. J., and JONES, J., concur.
