108 Ind. 415 | Ind. | 1886
Stoots, the appellant, was prosecuted in the court below, upon affidavit and information, under section 2098, R. S. 1881, for selling intoxicating liquor on Sunday to be drunk as a beverage. A jury found him guilty as charged, and a judgment of conviction was rendered upon the verdict.
The pertinency of the question so addressed to Bowman, and the materiality of his answer as affecting his competency as a juror, have been made questions for decision upon this appeal.
Our statute makes it a misdemeanor to sell intoxicating liquor on‘ Sunday to be drunk as a beverage, and imposes many other restrictions upon the sale of intoxicating liquor not imposed upon other branches of business. It has always been the policy of the law in this State to treat the business of selling intoxicating liquors as exceptional, and as one requiring regulation and restraint, and it is a matter within the common knowledge of all that the propriety of permitting the sale of intoxicating liquors as a beverage, under any cir
The answer of Bowman to the question addressed to him in this case did not indicate any leaning against, or ill will or aversion towards, the appellant personally, and hence did not present a condition of mind amounting to actual bias .against him, but did, as we believe, manifest an implied bias
The precise formula which may be adopted in the examination of a person called to serve as a juror,for the puz’poseof testing his competency, and the extent to which such an exaznination may be caz’ried, necessarily rest very largely in the discretion of the nisiprius court; but such an exaznination ought not to be permitted to take an indefinitely wide range, concerning merely collateral or incidental matters having some possible connection with the cause, and, in that connection, it is suggested that the question addressed to Bowman as above was to a znatter too collateral, as well as too remotej. to be material as affectizzg his competency as a juror, and that on that account his answer did not disclose aziy bias against the appellazit on the znerits of the cause.
There is sozne pertinency in this suggestion, but, upon full cozisideration, we are of the opinion that, in view of the appellant’s right to challenge pez’emptorily, as well as for cause,, and, as incident to that z’ight, the propriety of his first being able to ascertain the pz-oposed juror’s preconceived opinions on the subject of the liquor tz’affie, including his estimate of the character of persons engaged in it, the question was not an improper one; that, in fact, the inquiry, implied by the question, was one the appellant was entitled to make of all the persons called as jurors.
If the examination of Bowman had been further continued,, and his subseqizent answers had disclosed that, notwithstanding his apparent bias against those engaged in the sale of intoxicating liquor, he could have given the evidence at the trial all the weight to which it was entitled, and have tried the ■ cause impartially upon its merits, a different question.
The judgment is reversed, and the cause remanded for a new trial.