Beckwith v. State

386 So. 2d 836
CourtDistrict Court of Appeal of Florida
DecidedAugust 7, 1980
DocketTT-431
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 386 So. 2d 836 (Beckwith v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court of Appeal of Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Beckwith v. State, 386 So. 2d 836 (Fla. Ct. App. 1980).

Opinion

386 So.2d 836 (1980)

Ann BECKWITH, Betty Beckwith, Charlie Brigham, Edward Brown, Melissa Day, John E. Fairchild, C.D. Faircloth, Norma N. Faircloth, Bradley Harvell, George Wesley Harvell, Vera Henderson, Bert Phillips, Geraldine Potter, W.L. Potter, and Robert Walden, Petitioners,
v.
STATE of Florida, Respondent.

No. TT-431.

District Court of Appeal of Florida, First District.

August 7, 1980.

*837 Joseph C. Jacobs and Lewis M. Killian, Jr., of Ervin, Varn, Jacobs, Odom & Kitchen, and M. Howard Williams, Tallahassee, for petitioners.

Jim Smith, Atty. Gen., and David P. Gauldin, Asst. Atty. Gen., Tallahassee, and Curtis A. Golden, State's Atty., Pensacola, for respondent.

ROBERT P. SMITH, Jr., Judge.

The 15 petitioners seek certiorari review of an order of the Circuit Court of Liberty County granting the State a change of venue for trial, to Leon County, on the ground that it is practically impossible to obtain an impartial jury in Liberty County, where the defendants reside and where they allegedly committed the felony of buying the votes of others. Section 104.061(2), Florida Statutes (1979).

The trial court has not made an exhaustive and unsuccessful effort to seat an impartial jury in Liberty County. For that omission we quash the order and remand the case for a more persevering effort to secure an impartial jury in Liberty County. Article I, Section 16, Florida Constitution; Ward v. State 328 So.2d 260 (Fla. 1st DCA 1976).

The trial court based its order changing venue on the testimony of several witnesses and on the court's own observations of the venire, the jurors, parties, witnesses, and spectators in two vote-buying trials held in Liberty County in December 1979. One of those trials resulted in a guilty verdict ("sheer luck," the trial judge said) and the other, disadvantaged by inadequate jury security and spectator control, was declared mistried when a juror spoke during recesses with the accused, petitioner Edward Brown, and then denied to the court that he had done so.

The trial court's order and the record on which it was entered make a formidable showing of conditions in Liberty County giving rise to doubts about the availability of an impartial jury: the complex relationship among families in this second-smallest Florida county; the familiarity most everyone has with most everyone else, and widespread conversation about vote-buying and these prosecutions; the alliances, allegiances, and antipathies which color the county's politics, public education system, and public employment; the feeling among some in the community that the buyers of votes should not be prosecuted if the sellers are not (it is not a violation of Section 104.061 to sell one's vote); the influences and pressures which threaten prospective witnesses and jurors; and the consequent lack of candor of some veniremen and some witnesses. If conventional methods of *838 proof were alone sufficient to show the impossibility of seating an impartial jury, or if the trial judge's earnestness of opinion and felicity in expressing it were sufficient grounds for sustaining his action, we should immediately affirm and, so doing, recede from Ward.

But with all deference to the contrary and well-spoken opinion of the trial judge, we cannot sustain this departure from the rather explicit holding of Ward and, vastly more important, from the historical and legal precedents which Ward sought to preserve. Over the defendant's objection, the State may not be granted a change of venue from the county where the State charges the defendant committed the crime, to a county where the State fancies it may find a jury that will do its duty less reluctantly, until the impossibility of seating an impartial jury where the offense was laid has been verified by an exhaustive attempt to seat such a jury.

We suggested in Ward that the defendant's right to jury trial in the county where the offense was committed is as old as the jury system itself, and is inseparable historically and doctrinally from that system. It is a right carefully included in the constitutions of the original states of this union, written there by colonists who rebeled at the idea of prosecutors carrying citizens away for trials in far places, where they were strangers. Florida's Constitution assures these Liberty Countians, as it has assured all our forebears since 1885, that they will be tried at home, by a jury of their own county, for crimes allegedly committed at home; that they will be tried abroad only for crimes committed abroad. There is but one constitutional exception to the rule, namely, "the impossibility of securing an impartial jury in that county." Hewitt v. State, 43 Fla. 194, 199, 30 So. 795, 796 (1901) imposed that constitutional restriction on a statute which seemingly authorized more liberal changes of venue; and Ward concluded that the Supreme Court would read that same constitutional restriction into Fla.R.Cr.P. 3.240, together with the test determining "impossibility" as prescribed by other Supreme Court decisions. Recently, citing Ward, the Supreme Court reemphasized the "doubtful validity" of changing the place of trial over the defendant's objection:

The defendant has the constitutional right to a trial where the offense occurred and a change of venue granted without an appropriate motion or the consent of the defendant is of doubtful validity. North v. State, 65 So.2d 77 (Fla. 1952), aff'd North v. Florida, 346 U.S. 932, 74 S.Ct. 376, 98 L.Ed. 423 (1954). See also Ward v. State, 328 So.2d 260 (Fla. 1st DCA 1976).

Stone v. State, 378 So.2d 765, 768 (Fla. 1980) (dictum).

The means by which the impossibility of securing an impartial jury is to be determined, when on that ground the State wishes to change the venue for trial, is implied from the very word impossible, which here means practically impossible, impossible as a practical matter. The term does not mean absolutely impossible, as would be implied by examining every resident of the county for jury service, only to find that six impartial persons cannot be found; but neither does the term impossible simply mean difficult, problematic, inconvenient, laborious, or frustrating. When the State urges that it is practically impossible to secure an impartial jury, what is required is a showing that such a jury cannot be secured by an exhaustive or persevering judicial effort. And the way for the trial judge to determine that possibility or impossibility is to summon a venire, swear them, join with counsel in asking them questions bearing on their qualifications, and excuse both the partial jurors and the evasive ones by exercising that skill of judgment which Justice Alderman described in Manning v. State, 378 So.2d 274, 279 (Fla. 1979) (dissenting opinion):

In some cases, it is not advisable for the trial judge to rule on a motion for change of venue until after the jury selection process actually begins. This is the "acid test" to determine if it is possible to obtain a fair and impartial jury. *839 During the jury selection process, the trial judge is in the best position to make the final decision as to whether a fair and impartial jury can be obtained. He has the opportunity to observe firsthand the prospective jurors during the voir dire examination, to weigh the credibility of their answers, and to judge the state of their minds as well as the general atmosphere in the courtroom and the community.
Judging of this type is an art, not a science.

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386 So. 2d 836, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/beckwith-v-state-fladistctapp-1980.