148 Ga. 447 | Ga. | 1918
William Pollard was indicted and tried for a felony. Before arraignment lie filed a challenge to the array of jurors put upon him, on the ground that the panel of forty-eight jurors was drawn exclusively from the grand-jury box, and that therefore an illegal jury was put upon him and he was thereby deprived of a trial by jury as guaranteed by article 6, section 16, paragraph 1, of the constitution of Georgia, which declares that “The right of trial by jury . . shall remain inviolate,” and of due process of law as guaranteed by article 1, section 1, paragraph 3, and of the equal protection of the law as guaranteed by article 1, section 1, paragraph 2, of the constitution of Georgia. In his challenge to the array the defendant insisted that he was entitled to a trial by a jury drawn and selected as juries are drawn under the law of this State for the trial of all felony cases, that is, from the petitjury box. He prayed that the jury impaneled and put upon him be discharged, and that a jury drawn according to the laws of the land be put upon him. The court overruled the challenge to the array, and-compelled the defendant to select a jury from the panel drawn exclusively from the grand-jury box. To this ruling the defendant excepted pendente lite. The trial resulted in a verdict of guilty, and the defendant made a motion for new trial upon several grounds. His motion was overruled, and he excepted, assigning error Upon his exceptions pendente lite to the order overruling the challenge to the array of jurors.
“If the jury was improperly impaneled at common law, and the objection went to the panel as a whole, the defect could be taken advantage of by a challenge to the array. Likewise, under the system of selecting jurors by a board of jury commissioners, if the objection goes to the validity of the panel as a whole, it can be made by way of challenge to the array. Thompson v. State, 109 Ga. 272 (34 S. E. 379).” Carter v. State, 143 Ga. 632, 639 (85 S. E. 884); Penal Code, § 998. In Boon v. State, 1 Ga. 631, it was held: “It is a good cause of challenge to the array in a criminal case, that the tales jurors presented on the panel and put upon the prisoner were drawn from the grand-jury box by the presiding judge, and the list of the names so drawn was furnished to the sheriff by .the court with instructions to summon them to serve as tales jurors on the trial.” In that case it was strongly inti
It is true that section 862 of the Penal Code of 1910 (of force and effect at the time of the trial of Woolfolk) authorizes the presiding judge to draw tales jurors from the „“jury boxes” of the county, if a jury can not be made_up of the regular panels. Section 863 likewise provides that the presiding judge may draw the tales jurors from the “jury boxes” of the county, when the regular panels of petit jurors, or either of them, can not be furnished to make up panels of forty-eight for the trial of felonies, or panels of twenty-four for the trial of misdemeanor causes. When, from challenge or from any other cause, there are not a sufficient number of jurors in attendance to complete the panel of fqrty-eignt jurors, the judge may in his discretion draw the tales jurors from the “jury boxes” of the county, as provided in section 867 of the Penal Code. Every section in our present code which in terms authorizes the judge, under any circumstances, to draw the tales jurors for the trial of criminal causes from the “jury boxes” was enacted at a time when the whole body of qualified jurors were to be found in both the grand and petit-jury boxes, and not in either box alone. They were enacted prior to the legislation of 1892, noted above,
It is suggested that the controlling question is, did the accused have a fair trial by an impartial jury? It is also said that statutes regulating the selection, drawing, and summoning of jurors are intended to distribute jury duties among the citizens of the county, provide for rotation in jury service, and are merely directory. This is undoubtedly true. See Rafe v. State, 30 Ga. 60. Obviously, however, a disregard of the essential and substantial provisions of the statute will have the effect of vitiating the array. In the Rafe case, supra, it was ruled that such statutes, that is, statutes regulating the selection, drawing, and summoning of jurors, “are no part of a regulation to secure to parties impartial juries.” It would perhaps be more accurate to say that such statutes are not primarily designed to secure.to parties impartial juries. Certain it is that they were not designed to destroy the right of trial by jury nor to permit its destruction under the guise of legislation. Since they do not form any part of the constitutional scheme to secure to parties impartial juries, the right of trial by jury is not affected-by such statutes. Under such statutes the competency of jurors may be determined, and the judge is given power and direction to draw juries in such a manner as to distribute jury duty equally among the citizens of the county. When it has been determined who are competent and qualified jurors, the constitutional guaranty takes hold of the situation, and is entirely unaffected by any merely regulatory statutes that may have been passed for the purpose of distributing jury duty among the citizens of the county. The jury commissioners are, under our law, the judges of the qualifications of the citizens to be placed on the jury lists and in the jury boxes of the county. Neither the opinion of witnesses nor of judges can override their discretion when legally exercised. Dickens v. State, 137 Ga. 523 (73 S. E. 826); Wilson v. State, 69 Ga. 224, 238; Thomas v. State, 67 Ga. 460 (1), 463; Campbell v. State, 48 Ga. 353, 356. In the trial of Bridges' (Bridges v. State, 103 Ga. 31 (39 S. E. 859), it became necessary to complete a panel of jurors, and talesmen who had served during the preceding week! of the court, and whom the judge had directed to report for duty during the week in which the case was tried, were, by direction of
Judgment reversed.