The opinion of the Court was delivered by
The defendant was convicted in the Court of General' Sessions for Oconee County of the murder of his wife, and appeals to this Court, аlleging error of the Circuit Judge in the conduct of the examination of jurors on their voir dire and in passing on their impartiality, and in refusing a motion for а new trial.
Under the first six exceptions, two> errors are charged: First; that the presiding Judge erroneously ruled, “that jurors could not be asked, when sworn on voir dire, whether it would require testimony to> remove the opinion formed or *297 expressed by them, thеy having declared that they had formed or expressed an opinion;” and second, that the jurors, Phillips and Brown, should have been excluded on account of the opinions expressed by them.
The law does not require that a juror should be perfectly free from all impressions аnd opinions as to the issue. Whether these jurors were indifferent in the cause, was for the determination of the Circuit Judge. The opinion оf the Court in
State
v.
Williamson,
65 S. C., 242,
In deciding the motion for a new trial, “the prеsiding Judge ruled that the consideration of the testimony was for the jury, and there being testimony to sustain the verdict, he could not set it aside; that thе weight and sufficiency of the testimony was for the jury, and it was not for the Court to say whether there remained a reasonable doubt of the guilt of the accused.”
It is too clear for discussion that a defendant is not, as a matter of law, entitled to a new trial because the evidence does not 'convince the presiding Judge of his guilt beyond
*299
a reasonable doubt.' The jury, not the Judge, try the facts and arе to be convinced beyond a reasonable doubt. The statute does not make it the duty of the Circuit Judge to grant new trials, but only gives him the рower to do- so. The motion is addressed to his judicial discretion* and it has been often stated by this Court that this discretion cannot be disturbed. The position taken by appellant in
State
v.
Haines,
36 S. C., 504,
The judgment of the Circuit Court refusing a new trial cannot, in this case, be reversed on the ground that there was no testimony to support the verdict. The wife of the defendant was found dead in bed, with a large part of her face and head shot off. A note, purporting to' be written by hеr, discovered in a book, indicated an intention to commit suicide. On the night of the tragedy, only the defendant and his wife were in the house. The defendant’s account was that while temporarily absent at the lot near daylight, he heard the report of the gun in the house. A gun with the lоad discharged and a fire poker were lying on the bed near the dead body. One of the main questions to which the evidence was directed was, whether the note was written by the wife or forged by the husband. Upon this issue the genuine writings of both were submitted to the test of expert tеstimony on behalf of defendant, and to actual examination *300 by the jury. The prosecution submitted to the jury that from the position of the bоdy and of the gun, and from the direction of the shot, it was impossible that Mrs. Hayes fired the gun. A careful examination of the record leads to the conclusion that the testimony on these and other questions presented most grave and important issues of fact, which the law contemplates should be settled by a jury, and in the decision of them was necessarily involved the conviction or acquittal of the dеfendant.
The judgment of this Court is, that the judgment of the Circuit Court be affirmed, and that the case be remanded to .that Court for the purpose of having a new day assigned for the execution of the sentence heretofore imposed.
