Bennett v. State

20 S.E.2d 193, 67 Ga. App. 384, 1942 Ga. App. LEXIS 424
CourtCourt of Appeals of Georgia
DecidedMay 2, 1942
Docket29553.
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 20 S.E.2d 193 (Bennett v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bennett v. State, 20 S.E.2d 193, 67 Ga. App. 384, 1942 Ga. App. LEXIS 424 (Ga. Ct. App. 1942).

Opinion

Gardner, J.

We will deal, with the special grounds first, in their order.

Grounds 1, 2, and 3 will be treated together. They deal with errors assigned on drawing, summoning, and placing on the defendant, over his objections, tales jurors. These grounds are:

“First: Because the court erred [in] summoning 22 extra jurors when the panel to try the defendant was being made up, by not giving officers sufficient time for the officers to summons and get into court, before compelling defendant to complete the jury to try his case. Second: Because the court compelled defendant to complete the jury to try his case before all of said 22 jurors came into court. Third: Because the court erred by compelling defendant to complete his jury by striking from a panel made up of a few jurors who happened to live near town, and got into court before the first jurors drawn could be summoned and get to the courtroom.” We will deal with these grounds on their merits, assuming they are sufficient in law. In allowing these grounds of the amendment to the motion the judge ordered filed an explanation as a part of the record. From the grounds themselves we can not get a picture of what happened, but by reference to the certificate of explanation of the judge we get a very concise and clear picture. We quote his explanation:

“As to the first, second and third grounds of the amended motion, all of which relate to the same matter, when the panels of jurors regularly drawn and summoned for service at the November term, 1941, of Pierce County superior court were exhausted, *387 and it became necessary to summons more jurors for the trial of said case, the court called for the jury box and proceeded to draw from the box a number of additional jurors for the trial of said case. At that time it appeared to the court that the entire jury had been selected with the exception of one juror; that the State had exercised all of its strikes except one; that the defendant had exercised all of his strikes except one; and the court drew twenty-two additional jurors’ names from the jury box and ordered the bailiffs of the court to subpoena said jurors to court and have them in court if possible by two o’clock. It further appeared to the court that at two o’clock, or a few minutes thereafter, the list of jurors as drawn from the box was called by the clerk, and it further appeared that of the list of jurors—those drawn from the box —as called by the clerk in open court, five jurors who were drawn from the box out of the number drawn answered to their names, and the court required said jurors to come forward and be qualified, in the order in which they were drawn from the box, and put upon the defendant, it being the opinion of the court that the judge of said coutt can have a list of the jurors 'thus drawn made up in his discretion and called in the order in which they were drawn from the box, and the objection to the jurors as so drawn and put upon the defendant made by him was overruled. The last juror accepted by the State and by the defendant in said case, which made up the panel of twelve to try said case, was one of those drawn from the box in open court and summoned by the bailiffs, and was one of the first half of the total number of jurors so drawn and summoned. This last juror was accepted after both the State and the defendant had exhausted their strikes. M. D. Dickerson, Judge, Pierce superior court.”

Before the act of May 31, 1937 (Ga. Laws 1937, p. 466) the last clause in Code § 59-801 read as follows: “In making up said panel of 48 jurors, or successive panels of any number, the presiding judge may draw the tales jurors from the jury boxes of the county and order the sheriff to summon them, or he may order the sheriff to summon tales jurors from among persons' qualified by law to serve as jurors.” The act of 1937 amended this portion of this section to read as follows: “In making up said panel of 48 jurors, or successive panels of any number, the presiding judge shall draw the tales jurors from the jury boxes of the county and order the sheriff to summon them.”

*388 The only change made in this portion of the section above quoted by the act of 1937 is that, before the act, when it became necessary to make a panel of 48 jurors, or successive panels of any number of jurors, the judge had the discretion either to draw the jurors from the box or order the sheriff to summons tales jurors from among'those qualified to serve as jurors without the judge first drawing them from the box. The provisions of the act of 1937 require that in making up such panels the judge shall draw the names from the box. The act took away the discretion of the court as to having the sheriff summons such tales jurors without first-drawing them from the box as provided by the law for the drawing of jurors. No doubt the legislature was moved to pass this act to relieve the courts from the embarrassment and criticism that had become prevalent under the old system of oftentimes filling the panel with what are generally known as “professional jurors.” This act relieved the courts and the sheriffs of much embarrassment which had grown up under the old system. Oftentimes there were jurors who were always present, ready to serve and requesting to serve. Oftentimes the sheriff had no recourse but to summons them, except under great embarrassment. From the trial court’s standpoint it would appear to a large number of the people that for the court to draw tales jurors from the box, many of whom might not be very easily summoned, it was unnecessary delay and expense to adjourn court in order to-draw jurors from the box and serve them, when the law provided that all the judge would have to do was to order the sheriff to summons such number as the court thought necessary to complete the panel. Whether or not these were the reasons which prompted the legislature in the passage of the act of 1937, it was never intended to interfere with the discretion as to what number the court thought necessary to draw or impanel, or to require the judge to delay the trial for the purpose of having summoned and present any particular number drawn or summoned. From experience the writer knows that it would be unreasonable to construe the law of this State to mean that, in making up the original panel of 48 jurors in a felony case, or in making up a successive panel of any number in the selection of a jury, the judge should delay the proceedings until a report had been received from the sheriff as to whether or not all of the jurors thus drawn had been summoned. Under the facts of this *389 case the learned and experienced judge correctly interpreted the statute. He committed no error in denying a new trial on this ground.

Ground 4 complains that the court erred in failing to give a timely written request to charge.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
20 S.E.2d 193, 67 Ga. App. 384, 1942 Ga. App. LEXIS 424, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bennett-v-state-gactapp-1942.