116 Tenn. 355 | Tenn. | 1905
delivered the opinion of the Court.
The plaintiff in error was convicted in the criminal ' court of Davidson county of murder in second degree for the unlawful killing of one Horace Dozier, and sentenced to the State prison for a term of twenty years. He has appealed in error. The only question made on the appeal is that the prisoner in his trial was denied the
It is shown by the record that the killing occurred in a negro saloon near the corner of Cedar and Cherry streets in the city of Nashville. The plaintiff in error and other - negroes were engaged in a game of cards at a table in the rear of said saloon when one Yates, another negro, came into the room and began to guy the plaintiff in error, whereupon the latter arose, threatening to kill Yates if he did not let him alone. While these parties were engaged in an angry colloquy, a negro employee of the saloon interposed, and thereupon Yates retired. About this time, the deceased, Horace Dozier, a young negro, perhaps about 20 years old, remarked to plaintiff in error: “Sit down, you are just checking” — meaning that the defendant was bluffing; whereupon the plaintiff in error said: “You think I am checking. I will show you whether I am or notand, suiting the action to the word, he immediately struck the deceased on the forehead, whereupon the deceased returned the blow with his fist; The two clinched, and wrestled with each other towards the wall of the house. The deceased at this point broke away from the prisoner, and, holding his hand to his léft side, ran out through the barroom, and, when he was about to pass through a set of- swinging doors, the plaintiff in error, who was in pursuit, caught hold of the deceased, and, turning him around,
The theory of the defendant was that he had committed the act in self-defense. He claimed that Avhile he and others were at the table, and after, the controversy with Yates had subsided, the deceased, who was standing behind him, cursed him, and when the defendant looked around, the deceased struck him a severe blow in the mouth, and was in the act of following it up with another blow, but was prevented by doing so by his foot slipping; that the defendant then arose and began to de-. fend himself from the assault made upon him by the deceased. He further insisted that the deceased was a man of equal strength with himself, and that he only used sufficient force to repel the threatened violence on the part of the deceased. The defendant also insisted the entire fight occurred in the poolroom, and that he did not pursue the deceased out to the front door of the barroom, The record, however, shows that he is not only contradicted in this statement by the witnesses for the State, but also by several of his own' witnesses. The theory of
It is not insisted there is error in the charge of the court or in the admission or exclusion of evidence, nor is the guilt of the defendant seriously controverted on this appeal; hut the whole contention made in this court is that the plaintiff in error was denied the equal protection of the laws on his trial in the court below. The questions now sought to be made are predicated upon the refusal of the trial judge to sustain a motion interposed on behalf of the plaintiff in error to quash the indictment and set aside the panel, for the alleged reason that negroes had been excluded from the jury box on account of their color. The facts necessary to be noticed to present the question are as follows:
The murder was committed on the 1st of August, 1905, and within twenty-four hours, the plaintiff in error was arrested and bound over to the next term of the circuit court which convened on September 4, 1905. On the the first day of the court, to wit, September 4th, the court selected from the venire a grand jury to serve during the ensuing September term, 1905. On the 8th of September, 1905, the grand jury returned a true bill against the plaintiff in error, charging him with the crime of murder in the first degree. Thereafter the defendant demanded a special panel and on the 21st of October, 1905, the court ordered that the jury box be brought into open court and a panel drawn therefrom to
The trial judge overruled this motion, which motion is now made the basis of the first assignment of error. We are of the opinion that the ruling of the trial judge was correct for the following reasons:
(1) The indictment was in all respects regular on its face, and could not be invalidated on a mere motion to quash by objections presented to' the constitution of the grand jury. Under the practice in this State, such extraneous matters lying beyond the four corners of the indictment should have been presented by a plea in abatement duly verified and sustained by competent evidence.
(2) The objection to the formation of the grand jury was not seasonably interposed.
It was held by the supreme court of the United States in Agnew v. United States, 165 U. S., 42, 17 Sup. Ct., 235, 41 L. Ed., 624, that where the indictment was returned against the defendant December 12,1895, and on
“Another general rule is tfiat for sucfi irregularities as do not prejudice tfie defendant, fie fias no cause for
The court continued: “The original venire was issued November 18th. The second venire was issued December 2,1895. The court opened December 3,1895, and the indictment was returned December 12th, yet defendant did not file his plea in abatement until December 17th. The plea does not allege want of knowledge, nor want of threatened prosecution on the part of defendant, nor want of opportunity to present his objection earlier, nor assigned any ground why exception was not taken or objection made before; and moreover, the plea is fatally defective in that, although it is stated that the drawing ‘tended to his injury and prejudice,’ no grounds whatever are assigned for such conclusion, nor does the record exhibit any such. Bishop’s New Criminal Procedure, section 877.”
Applying the rule announced in that case to the facts herein, we find that the plaintiff in error was arrested on the 2d day of August, 1905, and bound over to the criminal court of Davidson county to' await the action of the grand jury, yet with notice of the fact that his case would be investigated at the ensuing September term, he takes no step to object to the formation of the grand jury, for the reason that negroes were excluded therefrom, and no objection in fact was ever interposed until October 24th, the day set for his trial, which was six weeks after the finding of the indictment against him.
The trial court then proceeded to impanel a jury when one Benzine was qualified as a competent juror and accepted by the State. He was challenged by counsel for the plaintiff in error because the jury commissioners who placed the names in the jury box from which this juror was drawn excluded from that box the names of colored men. The trial court, however, ruled that no such fact appeared, and the challenge was insufficient and the juror Benzine was directed to take a seat in the jury box. Counsel for plaintiff in error continued to challenge the remaining jurors as they were called and accepted by the State, but, for the reasons already stated, his challenge was overruled by the trial court.
It appears, however, that after said, jury had been selected, but before it was sworn, the plaintiff in error, by his counsel, interposed the following motion, viz.:
“Now comes the defendant in his own proper person and moves the court to set aside and quash the panel, array, or venire drawn from the jury box on the 21st day of October, 1905, from which a jury is to be drawn, to try this cause, because the box from which the panel, array, or venire was drawn contained no names of per
“Ernest Ransom.
“Sworn to before me, October 24, 1905. R. Hailey, D. C.’’
In support of this motion, counsel for the plaintiff in error submitted nine affidavits of colored citizens of Davidson county. The following affidavit of J. C. Napier is a fair specimen of the matter contained in the remaining affidavits: “Affiant J. 0. Napier makes oath in due form of law that he is a colored citizen, house-
W. H. Hodgkins, colored, in his affidavit, in addition to the facts stated by J. C. Napier, said that he “was present in the courtroom when the jury in this case was made up and no colored man was offered or called as a juror in this case.”
There was no other or different character of testimony offered in support of the motion to discharge the panel. The trial judge overruled the motion.
We are of the opinion that the action of the trial judge was correct for the following reasons: (1) That the bill of exceptions fails to state, as required by the rules of this court, that it contains all the evidence heard by the trial judge on the motion to discharge the panel. The established rule of practice requires that it shall affirmatively appear from the bill of exceptions that it contains all the evidence heard by the trial judge-on any plea or motion presenting disputed or controvert
Tbe judgment of tbe lower court must therefore be affirmed.