Flowers v. State

41 So. 2d 352, 209 Miss. 86, 1949 Miss. LEXIS 473
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedJune 13, 1949
DocketNo. 37251.
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 41 So. 2d 352 (Flowers v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Mississippi Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Flowers v. State, 41 So. 2d 352, 209 Miss. 86, 1949 Miss. LEXIS 473 (Mich. 1949).

Opinion

McGehee, O. J.

The appellant, Hartness Flowers, was jointly indicted with his brother, James Flowers, for the crime of assault and battery upon one William Dickens by the use of a shotgun and a rifle with intent to kill and murder him. A severance requested by the appellant was granted. He was tried and convicted of the said crime, and was sentenced to serve a term of seven and one-half years in the State penitentiary.

The errors assigned as grounds for reversal are: (1) That the defendant was erroneously denied a change of venue. (2) That after the trial judge, upon motion of the defendant, had quashed the three panels of petit jurors summoned for the week of the trial, he should have also sustained the defendant’s motion to quash the three panels thereafter summoned in their stead by the sheriff under the order of the court. (3) That the trial court erred in overruling the defendant’s motion to quash the indictment which had been returned against him during the previous week of the court term, but which motion to quash was not filed until the list of petit jurors originally summoned for the second week had been quashed and not until after the defendant’s motion to quash the three panels of jurors which had been summoned in their stead by the sheriff under the order of the court had been overruled. And (4) that the trial *94 court erred in not granting a directed verdict in favor of the defendant, and in granting each of the instructions for the State, the ground of such assignment of error being that the evidence was insufficient to sustain a conviction of the crime charged.

The record discloses that the proof taken on the motion for a change of venue was such as to clearly show that there was no abuse by the trial judge of the judicial discretion vested in him when he denied the change of venue.

As to the second assignment of error, it appears that in filling the jury box for the year each member of the board of supervisors made up a list of the names of persons in their respective districts to serve as jurors, but failed to adjudicate on the minutes of the said board that these persons so selected were qualified electors as required by law, and made no record of their names on such minutes; that the chancery clerk, as clerk of the board of supervisors, failed to certify the lists of names to the circuit clerk in order that he could put the names on separate pieces of paper and place them in the jury box; that instead of following the procedure aforesaid, the members of the board had personally placed the names in the box; and that there was almost a total departure from the method prescribed by Section 1766, Code of 1942, for the filling of the jury box with names of persons to serve as jurors for the year 1948.

Therefore, the trial judge was of the opinion that he had no other alternative than to quash the three panels of petit jurors originally summoned for the week of the trial when the foregoing procedure was disclosed by the proof before him. He correctly held, after having quashed such panels as drawn from the -so-called jury box, that in truth and in fact the county at that time had no regular jury box out of which to draw the names of jurors to take the place of the three panels which had been quashed. Thereupon, the court acted pursuant to Section 1794, Code 1942, by directing the requisite num *95 her of persons, qualified as jurors, to be summoned by the sheriff to appear forthwith to serve as petit jurors the same as if they had been regularly drawn and summoned. The statute expressly provides for this procedure “if there be not a jury-box to be drawn from.” And the duty of the trial judge to follow this procedure is mandatory under the decision of J. W. Sanders Cotton Mills v. Moody, 191 Miss. 604, 2 So. (2d) 815.

The order of the court directed the sheriff to summon thirty-six men from the body of the county to serve as such jurors, and it appears that instead of going out into the several districts of the county and summoning these men, he summoned most of the men who had been originally empaneled on the three jury panels for the week, or at least such of them as were still present at court, and they were empaneled along with others to constitute the three petit juries. It does not appear that there was anything objectionable about these men for jury service, and no reason is shown why they should have been discriminated against by the sheriff in the selection of the thirty-six men to serve. They were already in attendance, and entitled to their per diem and mileage at least for that day, and it does not appear how the rights of the defendant could have been prejudiced by their being empaneled on the juries instead, of the sheriff being required to go to their respective communities and summon their neighbors in their place.

It further appears that in filling out the list of thirty-six men to serve under the order of the court, the sheriff included the names of the only two Negro qualified electors in the county. He served process upon one of them, and he was empaneled as a petit juror. The other was not found, and the return made by the sheriff on the process discloses that he was out of the county and in attendance at the Alcorn Agricultural & Mechanical College, a State institution maintained for the education of Negroes.

*96 It further appears, however, that a new registration of qualified electors of the county was ordered at the April 1948 meeting, prior to the commission of the alleged crime in July of 1948, and that prior thereto there were one hundred and twelve Negroes registered on the poll books of the county, but it does not appear as to how many of them would have been qualified jurors under Section 264 of the Constitution of Mississippi, and Section 1766 of the Code of 1942, if no new registration had been ordered, since persons, both white and black, are required to be qualified male electors in order to be eligible for jury service.

Section 3222, Code of 1942, provides as follows: “If at any time the registration books of the county be or become in such confusion that a new registration is necessary to determine correctly the names of the qualified electors and the election district of each, the board shall order a new registration of voters to be made in like manner as in case of the loss or destruction of the books.”

At the April 1948 meeting of the board, it was expressly adjudicated on the minutes thereof that the cause of ordering the new registration under said Section 3222, supra, then existed, and the registrar of the county was directed to give proper notice, visit the various voting precincts, and take such new registration. This was done, and only the two Negroes hereinbefore mentioned saw fit to reregister. There was, therefore, no discrimination against Negroes in the empaneling of jurors when the appellant was indicted and tried in November 1948. The white men who may have been qualified under the old registration, but who failed to reregister, where likewise ineligible for jury service, following the taking of such new registration. It is necessary that they be qualified electors at the time they are being empaneled on a grand or petit jury.

We have set forth the foregoing situation as to the qualifications of Negroes as jurors at the time of indict *97

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
41 So. 2d 352, 209 Miss. 86, 1949 Miss. LEXIS 473, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/flowers-v-state-miss-1949.