Aрpellant is under sentence of death imposed by the County Court of Essex County, New Jersey, pursuant to his conviction by a jury in that court of the murder of his four and one-half year old stepdaughter. The judgment was affirmed by the Supreme Court of New
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Jersey, and the Supreme Court of the United States denied certiorari. State v. Sturdivant, 1959,
The only substantial question is whether certain talesmen, one of whom served on thе trial jury, were selected in a manner inconsistent with the right to fair trial guaranteed by the Fourteenth Amendment.
There is no significant dispute as to what occurred in the selection of the trial jury. For such a trial as this New Jersey practice requires that fourteen jurors be selected and sworn. At the conclusion of the court’s charge, twelve of the fourteen who have heard the case are chosen by lot to render a verdict. In this ease the regularly summoned jury panel was exhausted after thirteen jurors had been duly selected from it. The cоurt then ordered the sheriff to “return a tales de circumstantibus forthwith”. That afternoon and the following morning thirty-five additional persons were obtained for jury service and listed on the sheriff’s return. After appropriate examination and qualification one of these individuals became Juror No. 14. He was not eliminated when the jury was reduced to twelve members and so participated in the vеrdict.
What appellant challenges is the method employed by the sheriff in procuring these additional talesmen. Here again the facts are not disputed. A duly designated under-sheriff tеlephoned officers of some ten large commercial companies, including the telephone company, and requested that several employees be sеnt to his office for jury service in a murder trial. Juror No. 14 was one of four telephone company employees who reported for jury service that afternoon. On arrival he gave his name to the clerk in the courtroom. The clerk informed the sheriff and the sheriff in turn included the name with the others similarly procured in his formal return of additional tales-men to the сourt. Juror No. 14 was examined, qualified and seated on the jury the afternoon of his reporting. Therefore, the thirty-one additional employees of various companies who rеported the next morning were not needed.
The only exercise of judgment by the sheriff in this process of procuring additional jurors occurred when he decided that the work forces of the telephone company and the other large commercial concerns to which he telephoned were appropriate sources of talеsmen. New Jersey practice in such a situation as this is regulated by the following statutory provision:
“If more talesmen are required than the number of jurors remaining on the general panel, the sheriff or other proper officer shall forthwith summon, from among the bystanders or others, such additional number of persons qualified to serve as jurors as may be ordered by the court, and make return thereof immediately, and place the names of the jurors so returned in the box and draw therefrom until the jury is completed * * N.J.S. 2A:74-10, N.J.S.A.
Appellant argues that the quoted languаge requires that the sheriff or his deputy shall personally choose or select individuals who to him "seem proper tales-men and not delegate that function to some employer for the making of a choice among his employees. However, the New Jersey Supreme Court concluded that since it was in no way indicated that prejudice resulted in this case, the method of selection of talesmen was not in itself such a deviation from the statutory scheme as to constitute reversible error.
The question we have to decide is somewhat different. Was the method of selecting talesmen, whether or not technically in accord with prescribed New Jer *848 sey practice, so poorly adapted to the selection of an impartial group of persons, reasonably representative of the community in cross section, as to deprive the accused of something еssential to fairness in trial by jury? This limited requirement of the Fourteenth Amendment has been stated by the Supreme Court as follows:
“Our duty to protect the federal constitutional rights of all does not mean we must or should impose on states our conception of the proper source of jury lists, so long as the source reasonably reflects a cross-section of the population suitable in character and intelligence for that civic duty.” Brown v. Allen, 1953,344 U.S. 443 , 474,73 S.Ct. 397 , 416,97 L.Ed. 469 .
Thus, within tolerable limits, a state and its officers may be selective and restrictive in the sources utilizеd in compiling constitutionally acceptable jury lists. Jurors may be chosen exclusively from names appearing on the local tax rolls. Brown v. Allen, supra. A state may confine jury sеrvice “to freeholders, to citizens, to persons within certain ages, or to persons having educational qualifications”. Gibson v. State of Mississippi, 1896,
In the light of such decisions we think the procedure followed by the sheriff in obtaining talesmen here was clearly within constitutional bounds. It could not reasonably be required that the sheriff comb the entire county for a representative group from which one satisfactоry juror could be obtained. The work forces of the telephone company and several other large commercial enterprises would normally be a heterogeneous aggregation of persons representing a cross section of an urban community. Moreover, the fact that management rather than the sheriff himself made the initial selection of the particular employees who should present themselves for jury service could be constitutionally significant only if it should appear that in the process of sеlecting the members of some significant group or class in the population were excluded or specially treated. It is not even contended that any such discrimination occurred in this case.
We have considered appellant’s contention that his claim of unconstitutionality is supported by Glasser v. United States, 1942,
None of the other arguments of appellant, including his objection that talesmen appeared voluntarily on request rather than pursuant to a formal summons, raises a substantial constitutional question. We have examined the record and all of appellant’s contentions with the care appropriate when a petitioner alleges that he is about to be deprived of his life without due process of law. We are satisfied that the defendant’s guilt has been determined in a fair and proper jury trial.
The judgment will be affirmed.
