Burns v. State
This text of 7 S.E. 88 (Burns v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
The juror’s name, fully expressed, was Charles William Foster, and not merely Charles Foster. There was a Charles Foster, a white man, upon the jury list, who was competent; and counsel or client, or both, thought that the Charles Foster on the jury was a white man, and not a colored man; and if the Charles Foster upon the'jury had been the one they thought he was, they would have had no cause of complaint. But this juror was one of the regular panel, we may assume, since it does not appear that he was a talesman., And we hold that counsel and parties must find out who are on the regular panel, if the jurors are there by their proper names. This juror was Charles Foster, and there is no law requiring that the middle initial, or middle name, shall be given. This man was there by his own name — his own right and proper name, but not as fully expressed ás is often done. It was not like the case of Stripling vs. The State, October term, [547]*5471886, where the juror was concealed, as it were, under another man’s name. Here there was no concealment of the juror in that way. He appeared openly by his own name. Counsel and client ought to have ascertained, before they accepted him, whether he was a competent juror or not. And we think the case falls within the general rule that causes of challenge propter defeeium, must be presented at an earlier stage of the case. While the accused and his counsel did not know all the facts, we hold that in the exercise of due diligence they might and ought to have known them.
There was no very great danger of an escape. The disturbance was in a railroad enclosure, with a police officer at the gate, guarding the gate, and the negro could not very well get through there without a pass, according to the regulations, especially as he had a dray. We think the officer was tolerably secure against any escape, without knocking the negro down with a policeman’s club. The negro was stricken twice; one blow felled him to the ground; the other, I believe, did not; but there were two wounds upon the head, one a laceration of the scalp, [548]*548drawing blood, and the other a contused wound. There was not much self-defence in it, and very little escape, and no apparent justification for the use of these violent means to make the arrest. The police force could have made the arrest and effectuated it apparently without resorting to such extreme violence; and the charge of the court on this subject went as far, on the whole, as the evidence did, and we think there was no impropriety in declining to give the request, and very little in making the remark complained of. Perhaps it would have been better not to make it; but it is not cause, we think, for a new trial, under the facts of the case.
We are satisfied with the verdict in this case, and affirm the judgment refusing a new trial.
Judgment affirmed.
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7 S.E. 88, 80 Ga. 544, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/burns-v-state-ga-1888.