114 Ga. 421 | Ga. | 1901
In dealing with this exception we are first confronted by nu
A challenge should be so made as to show clearly whether it is a challenge to the favor or for principal cause. If the party elect to make a challenge to the favor, the decision therein is final, even though the evidence show facts which would have supported a principal challenge. Thomp. & Mer. Jur. § 205. And it is not error for the court to overrule a principal challenge when the facts shown constitute a good basis for a challenge to the favor but not for the challenge which the' party has elected to make, — a principal challenge. In the present case the jurors were not put upon the judge as a trior of a challenge to the favor, but he was asked to set them aside for cause, on the ground that their answers on their voir dire had shown that they were disqualified to try the case. Thus the accused followed the course prescribed by our code for making principal challenges, and he introduced no further evidence, but relied entirely upon the facts which had already been elicited from the jurors themselves. We must therefore treat the challenge as having been for principal cause. The decision of the court on such a challenge is, under what we think the great weight of authority, subject to review before this court on questions of law. See, in addition to the authorities cited above, Thomp. & Mer. Jur. § 232, and Ex parte Vermilyea, 6 Cow. 555.
Judgment affirmed.