184 Ga. 846 | Ga. | 1937
Lead Opinion
Will Wright was convicted of the offense of rape and sentenced to electrocution. He filed a motion for a new trial, which the court overruled, and the judgment was affirmed by this court on March 10, 1937. Wright v. State, 184 Ga. 62 (190 S. E. 663). On June 10, 1937, he presented to the judge of the superior court an extraordinary motion for new trial, and on June 21 offered an amendment thereto, at which time the judge refused to allow either the motion or the amendment filed, and refused to grant a new trial as prayed. Thereafter, within due time, the movant presented a bill of exceptions complaining of the action of the court in reference to such proceedings. The judge having refused to certify the bill of exceptions, the movant filed in this court a petition for the writ of mandamus to compel him to
The grounds of the extraordinary motion for new trial relate to the alleged disqualification of one who served as a juror. The petition for the writ of mandamus and the exhibits attached thereto disclose the following facts: In the selection of a jury to try the accused a person answering to the name of J. B. Nabors was accepted both by the State and the accused, and served as a member of the jury which returned the verdict against the accused. There were two persons of this-name residing in the county where the trial was had, to wit, J. B. Nabors Sr., and J. B. Nabors Jr., being father and son. The name of the former is in the jury-box, and for aught that appears ho would have been a competent juror. Before the trial of the instant case, J. B. Nabors Jr. had been twice convicted of the offense of larceny of an automobile, and had served in the penitentiary for such offenses. His name was not in the jury-box; and for all of these reasons he was incompetent to serve as a juror. J. B. Nabors Sr., at the time of the trial, was an employee of the Southern Bailway Company, and had been for several years. He had received a summons to serve as a juror at this term of the court, but on the suggestion of his son he permitted the son to answer the summons and serve in his stead. When the name “J. B. Nabors” was called, the son responded, and in reply to inquiry then made in open court falsely replied “that he was employed by the Southern Bailway.” It appears that he was about 30 or 35 years of age. Before' the trial of this case, he told an acquaintance that he was serving on the ■jury on his father’s summons, and invited such acquaintance to “come to the court and see him.” The grounds of the extraordinary motion are summarized in the amendment thereto, as follows: “Movant avers that J. B. Nabors, who sat as a juror .at the trial of movant, perpetrated a fraud upon this court and upon movant by actually personating and posing as his father, J. ,B. Nabors Sr., an honest and upright citizen of Fulton County,'Georgia, and a qualified juror of said county, whereas said ' J. ■ B. Nabors who sat as a juror in movant’s trial was actually: J. B. Nabors-'-'Jr.^'ári ex-convict,' a, -inan who had previously .'.pleaded guilty-to two -indictments of'larceny: of an-automobile,-rehdured
The previous convictions of J. B. Nabors Jr., of the offense of larceny as alleged, were established by records of the superior court of Fulton County. Neither the movant nor any of his attorneys knew of the foregoing facts as to fraud and impersonation on the part of J. B. Nabors Jr., or as to his previous conviction of larceny, until some time in June, 1937, after the conviction of movant and the affirmance of the judgment overruling his original motion for a new trial; nor could any of such facts have been discovered sooner by the exercise of ordinary diligence on the part of movant or any of his attorneys. The bill of exceptions, which it is alleged the judge refused to certify, contained the following: “Be it further remembered, that on the 31th day of June, 1937, the defendant presented to the said trial judge, lion. James C. Davis, an extraordinary motion for a new trial, and on the 21st day of June, 1937, the defendant presented to said Hon. James 0. Davis an amendment to said extraordinary motion for a new trial, at which time the said trial judge refused to allow said extraordinary motion for a new trial and the amendment thereto, and refused to hear newly discovered evidence as set out in said extraordinary motion for a new trial and the amendment thereto, and refused to grant the defendant a new trial thereon. To this action of the said trial judge 'in refusing to allow defendant’s extraordinary motion for a new trial and the amendment thereto, and in refusing to allow the filing of same, and in refusing to hear testimony in the form of newly discovered evidence as set out in said extraordinary motion for a new trial and the amendment thereto, and in refusing to grant the defendant a new trial thereon, the defendant excepted then and there, and now
The following is a copy of the material portions of the response filed by the judge: “The extraordinary motion for a new trial in this case was presented to respondent on June 11, 1937, at 9 :00 o’clock, a. m., about one hour before the defendant was scheduled to be electrocuted in Milledgeville. A new trial could not have been granted on said motion without a hearing upon the question involved, nor could the motion have been denied at that time for the same reason. A denial of the motion at that time would have meant the electrocution of the prisoner, inasmuch as there was no time at that late moment for preparation of bills of exceptions, and a stay o£ execution by the Supreme Court. Desiring to preserve the status quo until the questions presented could be heard and determined, respondent therefore immediately telephoned the Governor’s office and requested a stay of execution, which stay was granted by the Governor. Despondent thereafter set the matter down for presentation on June 21, 1937. Despondent studied the legal question himself, and on June 21, 1937, heard legal arguments at considerable length from counsel representing the petitioner and from the solicitor-general representing the State. As a result of this study and legal argument, respondent reached the conclusion that the state of facts presented by the petitioner in his pleading's did not present such an extraordinary situation as the law contemplates should be ground for the grant of a new trial upon an extraordinary motion made long after the term of trial had expired and made after a first motion for new trial had been considered, overruled, and that judgment affirmed by the Supreme Court of Georgia. Despondent accordingly announced his decision refusing to grant the rule nisi upon the extraordinary motion. And on a subsequent day respondent fixed a new date for the imposition of the death penalty upon the said petitioner. With reference to the ‘amendment’ referred to in the petition for mandamus, respondent certifies that
Some question has been raised by the solicitor-general as to the sufficiency of the affidavits to show reasonable diligence; but on consideration of all of the facts as shown in the several affidavits and in other portions of the record, we are satisfied that the motion should not have been denied because of any lack of diligence on the part of the movant or his attorneys. Section 6-910 of the Code, relating to mandamus in cases of this kind, provides in effect that if the reasons given by the judge shall be insufficient, the appellate court shall issue a mandamus absolute. The answer filed by the judge in this case does not respond categorically to the several allegations contained in the petition, but seems to concede the truth of substantially every material allegation of fact.- As we construe the petition and the answer,-the only qúéstioh for determination is whether the reasons given by'thé judge
In the instant case we are of the opinion that the extraordinary motion for a new trial and the proffered amendment presented a state of facts which, standing without dispute, required as a matter of law that a new trial should be granted. It has been held many times that the fact that a juror’s name is not in the jury-box or on the jury-list is not cause for a new trial when the point is raised for the first time after verdict. Such a disqualification is ground only for a challenge propter defectum, which must be made before verdict; and unless a challenge is so made, the incompetency of the juror is not cause for a new trial, no matter when it is discovered. Jordan v. State, 119 Ga. 443 (3-6) (46 S. E. 679); Embry v. State, 138 Ga. 464 (75 S. E. 604); Taylor v. Warren, 175 Ga. 800 (3) (166 S. E. 225). Whether or not the same strict rule should be applied where a person whose name is not in the jury-box obtains a place on the jury by fraudulently impersonating another, is a question which apparently has never been decided by this court, and is one which need not now be decided. The record in the case at liar relates to a matter of far greater importance, and we should of course deal with the case according to the facts presented. J. B. Nabors Jr. was not a juror in any sense of the tprm, although for convenience we may refer to him as such, in this opinion. It appears from the record that he was not merely wanting in some statutory qualification, but that' he had been twice convicted of the offense of larceny of an automobile, and was thus fundamentally disqualified to serve as a juror. In Williams v. State, 12 Ga. App. 337 (77 S. E. 189), it was said: “There is no right to which Anglo-Saxons more tena
It is argued for the State that the defect in this juror could
Mandamus absolute granted.
Concurrence Opinion
concurring specially. While I think the trial judge was correct in construing the disqualification of the juror as being one propter defectum, and while under the ordinary rule such a disqualification would not be ground for the grant of a new trial, I agree with the conclusion arrived at by my associates, for the reason that I do not think the ordinary rule should apply where it is made to appear, as it does here, that the service of the juror was brought about, not merely by ignorance of the defendant and his counsel, but by the fraud of the juror perpetrated on the court and the defendant, unmixed with any negligence on the part of the defendant or of his attorneys^