Cooley v. State

124 S.W.2d 250, 174 Tenn. 168, 10 Beeler 168, 1938 Tenn. LEXIS 77
CourtTennessee Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 4, 1939
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 124 S.W.2d 250 (Cooley v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Tennessee Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cooley v. State, 124 S.W.2d 250, 174 Tenn. 168, 10 Beeler 168, 1938 Tenn. LEXIS 77 (Tenn. 1939).

Opinion

Mb,. Justice Chambliss

delivered the opinion of the Court.

Cooley appeals from a conviction of assault with intent to commit murder in the second degree on one Mike Tarasan, with a prison sentence of not more than three years.

That he seriously cut the prosecutor is not denied, but self-defense is relied on. The difficulty occurred at the dance hall operated by Tarasan on a night when Cooley had visited the place. A dispute arose as to *170 Cooley’s payment for certain food, etc., and Tarasan ordered him away and sought to evict him. The cutting took place outside of the building either in the space in which Tarasan maintained gasoline pumps, or in the roadway adjacent. C'ooley contends and testifies that Tarasan was rough and abusive of him and was in the act of striking him with a rock or brickbat when he cut him in self-defense. The wounds were serious. Cooley was sustained to some extent by testimony he introduced, but this testimony was not altogether .consistent as to the details and his chief witness was evidently considerably intoxicated. On the other hand, the State supported Tarasan by several witnesses who had stopped to buy gas and were wholly disinterested. It is unnecessary to elaborate further. It is apparent that there was a conflict in the evidence which it was the province of the jury to settle, and, it having seen and heard the witnesses and passed on their credibility, and decided the issues in favor of the State’s contention, this Court cannot say that the evidence preponderates against its finding.

The assignments of error present two questions relating to the selection of the jury. The record touching these questions is not at all clear, leaving some doubt as to just what were the questions intended to be made in the trial Court and what disposition was made of them and why.

The first of these, and the one apparently most seriously pressed in this Court, is that the trial Judge refused upon demand to have the jury drawn from a jury box, as provided by Chapter 169, Private Acts of 1925, providing a jurylaw for Robertson County. The Court appears to have overruled this request and directed the sheriff to summon veniremen from the bystanders and the *171 body of tbe County. After tbe jury bad been selected and twelve jnrors were in tbe box, but before tbe jnry was sworn, an oral challenge was interposed to tbe array.

Tbe record shows that tbe Court refused to permit tbe jury to be drawn from tbe jury box, announcing that he “declared an emergency and ordered tbe jury summoned by tbe sheriff from tbe bystanders and tbe County at large.” It is insisted for plaintiff-in-error that tbe Judge gave no reason for bis bolding that an emergency existed, and that none did exist in fact, and that it was error for him to refuse tbe demand on this ground.

The Attorney-Greneral insists that this assignment can not be sustained because, in tbe first place, it is a well settled rule that a challenge to tbe array is tbe only manner in which this question as to the matter of selecting and summoning tbe panel can be made, and that (1) the challenge must be made before tbe jury has been selected, and (2) it must be in writing, setting forth specifically tbe grounds relied on. '35 C. J., page 377, is quoted for tbe proposition that tbe objection comes too late after tbe defendant has pleaded to tbe indictment and tbe trial has been entered upon, or after tbe jury has been completed, etc. And, upon tbe proposition that the challenge must be in writing, tbe bolding of this Court in Mahon v. State, 127 Tenn., 535, 542, 156 S. W., 458, is relied on. Tbe opinion in that case seems clearly to sustain this proposition, citing many authorities. It is apparent that tbe challenge in tbe present case did not conform to this rule.

And, for another reason, we tbinlc this assignment must be overruled. Tbe recital in tbe bill of exceptions touching this point and tbe record otherwise merely shows that the Court refused tbe request and did *172 so on the ground that lie had declared an emergency, as heretofore shown. The Private Act relied on expressly provides, in Section 7, that, “In case of emergency the presiding judge may, in his discretion, where the regular panel has been exhausted before the jury is completed, furnish the sheriff with additional names,” etc. Since the record in this case shows that the Court exercised his discretion and declared an emergency and thereupon proceeded to act, the rule of presumption in favor of judgments and decrees comes into play, and it must be here presumed that the Judge had before him such facts and circumstances as justified him in the action taken. In other words, since the record does not show that the condition prescribed by the statute did not exist, then this Court must assume that it did exist.

For both the reasons above indicated, this assignment must be overruled.

The second of the contentions made touching the selection of the jury is based upon a recital in the bill of exceptions to the effect that the defendant “demanded a panel of jurors, but none was furnished the defendant,” to which action the defendant excepted. Reliance is had upon what is insisted is thus shown to have been a violation of our statute, now Section 11745 of the Code, providing that “the defendant is entitled to a list of the jurors summoned, to be furnished bim a reasonable time before the formation of a jury is commenced.”

It is particularly with reference to this matter that we find the record confusing. The recital' hereinbefore quoted from appears on the first page of the bill of exceptions. It immediately follows the recital of the demand and refusal hereinbefore dealt with, that the jury be drawn from *173 the jury box. On the motion for a new trial the Clerk of the Court was introduced and examined at length. He is asked, among other things, if there was any request or demand made by the defendant or his attorneys “for any special panel or venire to try the case,” to which he replied, “Not that I remember.” He is asked a good many questions as to the furnishing of a list of the panel of jurors, but these inquiries seem to have been directed to the regular panel, as to which he testifies that he did, in accordance with his custom, make available a number of these lists to all the members of the bar. He is also asked a good many questions as to what took place with respect to the selection of the jury, but this Court is utterly unable to determine the relevancy of some of these questions and answers if the issue was that now made, namely, that the defendant was refused, upon his demand, a list of the jury panel from which the jurors which tried him were selected. It seems to us not at all unlikely that in point of fact the trial Judge did not understand that the demand made was directed to a request for this list, but viewed the demand being made by counsel as a demand touching the matter hereinbefore dealt with, that is, a demand for a jury to be drawn from the box, rather than from the bystanders and the body of the County.

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Bluebook (online)
124 S.W.2d 250, 174 Tenn. 168, 10 Beeler 168, 1938 Tenn. LEXIS 77, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cooley-v-state-tenn-1939.