37 Haw. 40 | Haw. | 1944
This case is before us on defendant's bill of exceptions.
The defendant has abandoned exceptions 1, 3 and 4 and relies upon exceptions 2, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10 and 11, under which he specifies error, as follows:
1. The court erred in sustaining the prosecution's challenge to juror David Pokini Ellis for cause (Ex. 2);
2. The court erred in requiring defendant to give secondary evidence as to his conviction of heedless driving without proof of unavailability of court record or that it could not be produced (Ex. 5);
3. The court erred in denying defendant's motion for a new trial (Exs. 6, 7, 8 and 9);
4. The court erred in denying defendant's motion to set aside the verdict, judgment and sentence, and for a new trial on account of the misconduct of the jury (Exs. 10 and 11).
The alleged errors will be considered in their order.
The prosecution challenged the juror for cause, basing his challenge on the relationship of the parties disclosed by the juror. The court sustained the challenge over the objection of the defendant and the defendant duly excepted.
The defendant relies upon The King v. Kuheleaumoku,
Section 84 of our Organic Act provides that no person shall sit as a juror in any case in which his relative by affinity or by consanguinity within the third degree is interested, either as a plaintiff or defendant. Sections 3710 and 3711, Revised Laws of Hawaii 1935, add other disqualifications, none of which is pertinent to this case. If the juror and the defendant are related, it is by affinity. Bouvier's Law Dictionary defines affinity as "The connection existing, in consequence of marriage, between each of the married persons and the kindred of the other." In applying the above definition, Bouvier says that "the relations of my wife, her brothers, her sisters, her uncles, are allied to me by affinity, and my brothers, sisters, etc. are allied in the same way to my wife. But my brother and the sister of my wife are not allied by the ties of affinity." *43
Unless the fact that the juror and the defendant are each an uncle of the son of the defendant's sister and the juror's brother, coupled with the fact that the son lives with the juror creates an affinity between the defendant and the juror, it is clear that no affinity was shown. There is no showing that the juror had adopted or otherwise obtained legal custody of his nephew. The evidence is merely that the nephew "lives with" the juror, his uncle.
Cases in which the challenge of a juror by the appealing party is overruled have no application to a case where the juror is rejected upon being challenged by the successful party. This court, in Rep. Haw. v. Kapea,
In the Kapea case the court also cited with approval Sutton
v. Fox,
In the case at bar there is no showing that the jury by whom the defendant was tried was not composed of impartial persons possessing all of the legal qualifications prescribed by the statute.
Assuming that the excluded juror was not legally disqualified to serve as a juror to try the defendant, certainly his intimate connection with the nephew of the defendant (he was a person inloco parentis to his and the defendant's nephew) justified the action of the court in excluding the juror.
From the foregoing it will be seen that the only details of the former conviction of the defendant brought out by the examination, against which defendant's objection was leveled, were that as a result of said conviction defendant's driving license was suspended for a period of one year and that his license to drive had been renewed. The attempt of the prosecution to delve further into the details was halted by the court by sustaining defendant's objection thereto. The sole objection to the reception of the evidence complained of, both here and below, is that it is secondary evidence and was admitted without proof that the record of the Waimea court could not be produced. The materiality of the evidence was not raised by the objection of the defendant. The defendant had testified without objection that he had been driving an automobile for seventeen years. That evidence justified the prosecution in cross-examining him as to his past experience as a driver. The facts testified to were peculiarly within the knowledge of the defendant and the admission of his evidence as to them did not violate the rule which requires that the best obtainable evidence be produced. (10 R.C.L. § 54, p. 903.) *46
The verdict of the jury finding the defendant guilty was returned May 29, 1941. On June 6, 1941, which was within the time allowed by law for filing a motion for a new trial, the defendant filed two motions. In one the defendant moved the court to set aside the verdict, arrest judgment, and discharge the defendant. In the other he moved the court to set aside the verdict and grant the defendant a new trial. The grounds of the first mentioned motion was the insufficiency of the evidence to support the verdict and bias and prejudice on the part of the jury. The last mentioned motion repeated the grounds of the other and added as an additional ground the refusal of the court to give the jury his requested instructions H and N. These two motions were heard together on June 18, 1941, and were overruled. Thereupon, on the same day, the defendant was adjudged guilty and sentenced.
In overruling the two motions the court correctly stated in substance that the credibility of the witnesses and the weight of the evidence are solely within the province of the jury; that there was sufficient evidence to support the verdict and that there were no facts or circumstances tending to show that there was bias or prejudice on the part of the jury.
The defendant's requested instruction H, which the court refused to give, dealt with what is and what is not a reasonable doubt, and his requested instruction N dealt with the presumption of innocence until guilt is established by such evidence as will exclude every reasonable doubt. Other instructions given, some at the request of the prosecution and others at the request of the defendant, taken together, contain every element of instructions H and N *47
requested by the defendant. The refusal to give them was therefore not error. (Ter. v. Marks,
These grounds of the motion are contained in the affidavits of the defendant and Paul Feliciano, one of the jurors, attached to and forming a part of the motion. The substance of Feliciano's affidavit is that on May 29, 1941, at lunch time the day the verdict was returned and before submission of the case to the jury, Daniel McCabe, one of the jurors, approached affiant and said: "Well, Paul, until this morning I believed the defendant George K. Wright was `not guilty'. Now, I think the man (meaning the defendant) is `guilty'"; that after the jury retired to consider its verdict one of the jurors, whose name he does not recall, remarked: "Now, fellows, let's not take too much time on this case. I want to get home as soon as possible. Let's get it off our chest"; that affiant retorted: "Wait a minute, my friend, we did not come here to rush this case. It is our duty to discuss this matter thoroughly before we call for a final ballot"; that said juror "became peeved and stayed peeved" during the rest of the deliberations; that when the jury had deliberated for more than four hours and the ballot stood eleven to one for conviction, the affiant being for acquittal, and while affiant was setting forth his views, the same juror who desired to rush the decision said: "Watch, how I am going to fight this guy." Affiant further stated that, realizing the full import of this remark made by said juror and in order to *48 avoid a scandal and a breach of the peace, he decided to cast his ballot for a verdict of guilty, involuntarily.
Defendant's affidavit is to the effect that he knew nothing of the facts relating to the misconduct of the jury as detailed in the affidavit of Paul Feliciano prior to the verdict; that knowledge of the alleged misconduct came to his attention after he was sentenced on June 18, 1941. There was no showing as to when the alleged misconduct of the jury came to the knowledge of defendant's counsel.
The prosecution moved that the foregoing motion be stricken on the ground that the court is without power to entertain said motion for the reasons, among others, as follow:
1. That a juror is not competent as an affiant, deponent or witness, to establish misconduct of the jury, whether such misconduct be his own, that of other members of the jury, or that of the jury as a whole;
2. That said motion is without merit because it presents no facts or circumstances to justify a departure from the general rule which is cited above.
In sustaining the prosecution's motion to strike defendant's motion, the court relied upon Carpenter v. Hon. R.T. Co.,
The question of the insufficiency of the showing of earlier knowledge of the alleged misconduct of the jury, by reason of a failure to negative the fact of such knowledge by counsel for the defendant, was not called to the attention of the court and was not passed upon. (See Medeiros v. Udell,
These matters not having been called to the attention of either the trial court or this court, we have considered *49 defendant's motion on its merits and find it to be without merit.
The exceptions are therefore overruled.