273 S.W. 1098 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1925
We will take up the last proposition first, because it is the one most strenuously urged, and in fact the only one of merit as we see it. When the regular panel of jurors called for the trial of this case were being examined on their voir dire, counsel for defendant sought to elicit from certain members of the panel whether or not they were members of, associated with, or attended meetings of, an organization called the Ku Klux Klan. The trial judge, before requiring the jurors to make any answer to this question, asked certain jurors if they belonged to any organization which imposed an obligation on its members to keep secret their membership in such organization. Upon such question being answered in the affirmative, the court asked if such jurors refused to answer by reason of such fact, and stated that if any juror refused to answer because of the fact that he had taken an obligation not to reveal his membership, he would not be required to answer. Several members of the panel refused to answer the question, and the court sustained them in their refusal. Defendant's counsel then sought the information as to whether or not such jurors had attended meetings of the organization known as the Ku Klux Klan, and also asked further questions which indicated that counsel was seeking to ascertain something of the object and purposes of the organization. Was *159 the trial court's action in this respect error for which this case should be reversed?
This is, perhaps, the first time this identical question has reached the appellate courts of this State, although the extent of an accused's right to make an examination of jurors for the purpose of exercising his or her peremptory challenges has been discussed several times.
Perhaps the most exhaustive discussion of the question in this State is found in State v. Mann,
"One may not be incompetent as a juror, and yet may stand in such relations to the prosecutor, or the cause, as, if known to the accused, would be deemed a good reason for peremptorily challenging him. He is entitled to an impartial jury, and may make such inquiries as will enable him to secure that constitutional right. Must he exercise his right of peremptory challenge, without the privilege of making inquiries, except such as relate to the competency of the panel? . . . If such is the law, the right of peremptory challenge may prove a snare and, at best, is of no earthly value to the accused."
Many authorities are referred to as sustaining the proposition that the accused has a right to secure information of the character sought to enable him to make his peremptory challenges in a judicious and intelligent *160 way. And, in concluding its discussion of that question, the court said:
"Innumerable authorities might be cited to show that the ruling of the circuit court, refusing to permit the jurors to answer the questions propounded was erroneous, but we think that the above are sufficient."
The Mann case was cited with approval by our Supreme Court in State v. Miller, 207 S.W. 797, wherein it was held that counsel for defendant had a right to examine the panel on their voirdire as to whether or not such jurors, or any of them, attended a particular church where it appeared one of the important witnesses for the prosecution was the pastor of such church. The court held that such information was useful and proper for the defendant to have in making his peremptory challenges.
The question of whether or not counsel for accused has a right to inquire into a juror's affiliation with, or membership in, the Ku Klux Klan, has been before courts of last resort in several of our sister states. Illinois, Arkansas, Texas, and Oklahoma have had the question up for discussion. In each and every instance it was held that where there were any facts or circumstances in any way connected with the case, and which would in any way indicate that such membership might in any way influence the juror in passing upon the guilt or innocence of the accused, such information was proper, and it was error for the trial court to refuse to permit counsel for accused to elicit such information.
In Reich v. State (Tex. Cr. A.),
Perhaps the most exhaustive discussion of this identical question will be found in Johnson v. State (Okla.),
"Sound reason would indicate that in a case like this, where such an inquiry is made in good faith, predicated upon probable cause, within reasonable bounds, limited by a fair discretion of the court, permission should be granted to interrogate prospective jurors concerning specific lodge affiliations that may have a tendency to impair the rights of the accused, to the end that he may be tried before a jury that is in fact impartial. Counsel should be limited and restrained from pursuing such inquiry in a captious manner; he should not be permitted to unnecessarily prolong the trial by inquiries of a frivolous nature or concerning facts having only a remote or speculative bearing upon the qualifications of jurors. On the other hand, the court should be careful to refrain from arbitrarily depriving the accused of a fair opportunity to ascertain any bias, express or implied, that the juror may have or seem to have, in order that a challenge may be interposed for cause, or peremptorily, as the case may be."
The learned prosecutor, in his printed argument in this court, has, with commendable fairness, stated that, if he thought the question of membership in the Ku Klux *162 Klan had any real bearing upon this case, he would be the last person to seek to aid a juror in sustaining his right to refuse to answer such question. But the question of what the prosecuting attorney thinks about matters of this kind does not necessarily govern. An affirmative answer to the questions asked by defendant's counsel would not necessarily afford any grounds for challenge for cause. The statute prescribes these grounds, but the statute does not prescribe the questions to be asked jurors in determining their qualifications. The defendant has a right to a fair and impartial trial before a jury of her peers, and she should not be required to make her peremptory challenges without the privilege of making inquiry with respect to the question of membership in an organization that has in recent years been condemned and vindicated, exalted and abhorred, denounced and justified, despised and praised, in almost every forum where men are wont to meet and discuss questions of more or less public interest. The right of examination, of course, should be limited to proper and pertinent questions, and jurors should not be required to answer questions that are captious, impertinent, or irrelevant to the issues involved, nor should they be required to answer questions which would tend to their disgrace or infamy. But the questions asked in this case, and the information sought to be obtained, was proper if the right to trial by a fair and impartial jury is to remain inviolate. The information sought was within reasonable limits, and the trial court erred in refusing to permit counsel to examine the panel with respect to their affiliations with, or membership in, the Ku Klux Klan.
There is no merit to the point made by defendant that the information is insufficient. It follows the language of the statute so far as is necessary, and is not open to the objections urged by defendant. See State v. Stanley, decided by this court on May 5, 1925, and not yet published. It follows, however, from what has been said *163 that this judgment must be reversed, and the cause remanded.Daues, P.J., and Becker, J., concur.