Commonwealth v. Marion

81 A. 423, 232 Pa. 413, 1911 Pa. LEXIS 736
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedJuly 6, 1911
DocketAppeal, No. 88
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 81 A. 423 (Commonwealth v. Marion) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Commonwealth v. Marion, 81 A. 423, 232 Pa. 413, 1911 Pa. LEXIS 736 (Pa. 1911).

Opinion

Opinion by

Mr. Justice Elkin,

Appellant was indicted, tried and convicted on the charge of having committed a willful, deliberate and premeditated murder. The defense was insanity, which evidently did not impress the jury. There are thirty assignments of error, many of them without merit, and only a few need be considered to properly dispose of the case. The first assignment raises the question as to the right of [418]*418the prosecuting officer to peremptorily challenge a juror under the following circumstances. When the juror was called, the district attorney proceeded to examine him on his voir dire, but concluded his examination in the first instance without exercising his right to challenge either peremptorily or for cause. At the conclusion of his examination, he said to counsel for defendant, “Take the juror.” Counsel for defendant after cross-examination said, “Swear the juror,” to which the district attorney objected, saying, “Wait, I object. I ask the privilege of re-examining this juror. I did not understand he was opposed to capital punishment.” The trial judge granted the request and permitted the juror to be re-examined. The questions were intended to develop the fact that the juror was opposed to capital punishment. The answers did not convince the court that there was cause for challenge, which was not sustained. The answers of the juror indicated an adverse feeling on the question of capital punishment but that this would not influence him in arriving at a proper verdict under the evidence. When the challenge for cause was refused the district attorney peremptorily challenged the juror, and this challenge was sustained by the court. The right to challenge peremptorily was put upon the ground that the juror had been passed after the first examination under a misapprehension of his answers to the questions propounded by the district attorney on the subject of capital punishment. Counsel for appellant contended in the court below and contends here that it was too late to exercise the right of peremptory challenge after the juror had been passed by the commonwealth and accepted by the defense. In other words that when a juror is passed by the prosecuting officer, the right to challenge peremptorily is absolutely and finally waived, and no matter what may be subsequently developed upon cross-examination, or otherwise, indicating that the juror may not have an open' mind on all the questions involved, and yet not sufficient to sustain a challenge for cause, the'commonwealth and the [419]*419court are powerless to prevent such a juror being sworn, because he was not peremptorily challenged when first examined. This position denies to the trial judge any discretion whatever as to the time when the right of peremptory challenge must be exercised. Com. v. Evans, 212 Pa. 369, is relied on to support this contention. A superficial examination of that case gives some support to the argument pressed upon us by appellant here, but we are not convinced that the two cases are identical either in their facts or in the rules of - law which should govern. In that case this court held, where counsel for defendant in a criminal case, after having examined a juror turns him over to the commonwealth for cross-examination, and the commonwealth accepts the juror without cross-examination, the defendant will not then be allowed to challenge him peremptorily. Under the rules of court, or the practice in such cases, prevailing in the county from which that appeal was taken, the commonwealth examined the first juror on his voir dire, then turned him over to the defendant for cross-examination, the right to challenge peremptorily being exercised by the parties at the conclusion of their respective examinations. The second juror was first examined by the defendant, then turned over to the commonwealth for cross-examination, which was waived, and the juror ordered to be sworn, and thus the jurors were examined alternately by the commonwealth and defendant until the challenges were exhausted and the jury impaneled. The trial judge in that case ruled in substance, under the practice prevailing in the jurisdiction of his court, that the turning over of the juror by the defendant to the commonwealth for the purpose of cross-examination, was equivalent to an acceptance, and when the juror was accepted by the commonwealth without any cross-examination, it was too late for the defendant to peremptorily challenge. That ruling was affirmed here and there is no disposition to disturb it. It should be noted, however, in that case the learned trial judge followed what- wé must assume was the practice [420]*420prevailing in his court in the challenging of jurors in such cases. There was therefore no abuse of discretion in ruling that the defendant under the circumstances should be treated as having waived the right to peremptorily challenge the juror in question. Again, after the defendant had concluded the examination of the juror and indicated an acceptance by turning him over to the commonwealth for cross-examination, nothing occurred to indicate that either party was misled or misapprehended what the juror said on his first examination. There was no cross-examination, nor were any new facts developed, but the juror was accepted without cross-examination by the commonwealth and directed to be sworn. The trial judge very pertinently remarked in that case that to have permitted a peremptory challenge under the circumstances would have given defendant the advantage of speculating on the chance of saving a challenge. In other words, he would save his challenge with the expectation that the commonwealth might do so, and if the commonwealth did not challenge, he would then assert his right to exercise the privilege. Such a fast and loose course of procedure in the selection of jurors finds no warrant in law, or in practice, and this is the thought intended to be emphasized in Com. v. Evans, supra. The right to peremptorily challenge cannot be denied either party, but it must be exercised at a proper time and this in our state depends upon statutory requirements, supplemented by rules of practice. The Act of July 9, 1901, P. L. 629, fixes the number of peremptory challenges to which the commonwealth and defendant are entitled in criminal cases, and provides when they shall be made in the following language: “All of which challenges shall be made and assigned by the commonwealth and defendant respectively when the juror is called.” It will be observed that the act is silent as to the examination and cross-examination of the juror on his voir dire, and as to the order in which the examination shall be made by the respective parties. In many counties rules of court regu[421]*421lating these details of practice have been adopted, and frequently a method of procedure has been established by long continued custom, understood by all parties, which answers the same purpose. The practice is not uniform throughout the commonwealth and frequently varies as to details. In some counties the rules require the commonwealth to first examine and then exercise the right of peremptory challenge before passing the juror to defendant for cross-examination and challenge. In other counties the practice is for the commonwealth and defendant to examine and challenge, alternately, while in some jurisdictions the examination and cross-examination are both concluded before either party challenges the juror called, and then the right of challenge is exercised alternately by the commonwealth and defendant until the jury is impaneled. These details may be regulated by rules of court, or by customary practice, if the rules or the practice be not inconsistent with the statute.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
81 A. 423, 232 Pa. 413, 1911 Pa. LEXIS 736, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/commonwealth-v-marion-pa-1911.