25 Mo. 167 | Mo. | 1857
delivered the opinion of the court.
Sarah Buckner was indicted at the March term of the Bol-linger Circuit Court, in the year 1855, as principal in the second degree of the murder in the first degree of Whiston Buckner. On the application of the prisoner the venue was changed to the Circuit Court of Stoddard county. The trial of the cause was postponed from term to term until the May term, 1856. At this term the prisoner moved for a continuance, and the record shows that she filed three different affidavits in support of the motion. This motion was overruled, and the defendant excepted, and saved the point by a bill of exceptions. This point will be noticed hereafter. -When the trial was ordered the record shows that the prisoner by her-counsel “ moved the court to order the sheriff to summons a jury of thirty-six to try this cause,” which motion was overruled, and excepted to, and this point was saved by the defendant by bill of exceptions. The bill of exceptions shows that the'prisoner moved the court to order the sheriff to summon thirty-six venire men, out of whom a jury might be selected ; and “ that she might be furnished with a copy of the names of those summoned forty-eight hours previous to the trial; but the court refused to order the sheriff so to do, and decided that, under the laws regulating jurors in Stoddard county, she was not entitled to have the said number of jurors expressly summoned, and was not entitled to a copy of the panel forty-eight hours; but defendant’s attorney could obtain a copy any time from the clerk.” The record
There were divers matters in regard to questions proposed to some of the witnesses, which the court overruled, and which were excepted to ; but we consider them of no importance. The jury found the defendant guilty of murder in the first degree. This verdict was rendered in the absence of the prisoner. The sheriff, when called on to produce her in court in order to hear the verdict, replied to the court that the prisoner had escaped from his custody, and that he could not then produce her in court. The court received the verdict and discharged the jury. During the term the sheriff again brought the prisoner into court. She moved for a new trial; which being overruled, she excepted, and prayed an appeal to this court. The court below passed sentence upon the prisoner, but ordered the same to be suspended until the judgment of this court be had upon the premises. The appeal was taken at the May term, 1856, and the record filed in this court on the 9th day of June, 1856.
The record in this case is presented without any brief or without the appearance of any counsel. In examining this record we come to the conclusion that the court below erred in refusing to direct the sheriff to summons thirty-six venire men out of whom a jury might be impanneled ; also erred in refusing to direct that a copy of this venire be delivered to the defendant or to her counsel forty-eight hours before commencing the trial. The “ Act to regulate and pay grand and petit jurors in Stoddard county,” approved February 13th, 1855, does not take away the right of the defendant to challenge peremptorily twenty persons summoned as jurors in trials for murder; nor does it pretend to take away the right of the accused to have a copy of the venire, from which the
. There is nothing in the point complained of by the defendant in regard to the sheriff’s not being ordered to summon fourteen by-standers or talesmen and giving a list of them to defendant. Whenever there has been a proper panel summoned and the defendant has been properly furnished with a list of the panel, and such panel becomes exhausted before a jury be made up, then in summoning from the by-standers there is no law requiring any particular number to be thus summoned, and nonp requiring a list of them, when summoned, to be furnished to the' defendant.
The record shows that the prisoner filed three different affidavits for a continuance. This shows a very loose practice, and the affidavits are drawn very carelessly — without precision or skill. Had the matters set forth in these vari
In regard to the receiving of the verdict of the jury by the court in the absence of the prisoner, we think this is a fatal error. Our statute expressly declai’es “ That no person indicted for a felony can be tried unless he be personally present during the trial.” (B. C. 1855, p. 1191; Practice in Criminal Cases, art. 6, § 16.) “ The verdict, in all cases of felony and treason, must be delivered in open court in the presence of the defendant.” (1 Archb. C. P. 17S, note 2.) £! The verdict, whatever may be its effect, must in all cases of felony and treason, be delivered in the presence of the defendant in open court, and can not be either privily given or promulgated while he is absent; and in all cases where the jury are commanded £ to look on him,’ as in larceny, and all accusations subjecting him to any species of mutilation or loss of limb, the same rule applies, without exception.” (1 Chitty’s C. L. 686.) In the case of the State v. France, 1 Overton, (Tenn.) 434, the court said: “ The prisoner must ■be at the bar; otherwise the jury could not be asked for their
The record shows no instructions — no evidence saved. We have examined the record carefully, and it is our opinion that the court below committed errors in the various particulars pointed out in this opinion. The judgment must therefore be reversed, and the cause remanded, to be proceeded with according to the principles laid down in this opinion ;