In Re: M. Zachary Jex

CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedApril 17, 2025
Docket2024-CP-00291-SCT
StatusPublished

This text of In Re: M. Zachary Jex (In Re: M. Zachary Jex) 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
In Re: M. Zachary Jex, (Mich. 2025).

Opinion

IN THE SUPREME COURT OF MISSISSIPPI

NO. 2024-CP-00291-SCT

IN RE: M. ZACHARY JEX

DATE OF JUDGMENT: 09/15/2023 TRIAL JUDGE: HON. TOMIKA HARRIS IRVING TRIAL COURT ATTORNEYS: LARRY GUS BAKER PATRICK EARL BEASLEY PRICE DARBY HENLEY DANIELLA MARIE SHORTER MICHAEL ZACHARY JEX COURT FROM WHICH APPEALED: CLAIBORNE COUNTY CIRCUIT COURT ATTORNEY FOR APPELLANT: M. ZACHARY JEX (PRO SE) NATURE OF THE CASE: CIVIL - OTHER DISPOSITION: AFFIRMED - 04/17/2025 MOTION FOR REHEARING FILED:

EN BANC.

RANDOLPH, CHIEF JUSTICE, FOR THE COURT:

¶1. As part of negotiating a plea bargain for his client, Attorney Zachary Jex committed

to paying the jury costs associated with the trial in the Circuit Court of Claiborne County. On

appeal, Attorney Jex now seeks to retreat from his commitment. The circuit court was legally

authorized to impose these costs on Attorney Jex. The record confirms that he voluntarily

agreed to pay them. We affirm the circuit court’s Order Requiring Defendant’s Attorney to

Pay Costs of Jurors Appearing for Duty on September 12–13, 2023.

FACTS

¶2. Attorney Jex was hired by Jerrell Davis to defend him on charges of first-degree

murder and aggravated assault. Davis’s first trial was held in January 2022 and resulted in a mistrial. Davis’s second trial was set to be held in the Claiborne County Circuit Court on

September 12, 2023.

¶3. Prior to the first trial, Jex attempted to reach a plea agreement with the prosecution.

He suggested Davis would plead guilty to “2 charges of manslaughter to run concurrently,

15-year sentence, 22 months to serve (the length of time he’[d] been incarcerated) with credit

for time served, the remainder served on post-release supervision.” In exchange, the

prosecution would drop the aggravated assault charge. The prosecution rejected this plea

offer.

¶4. The second trial went forward, and on September 12, 2023, jury selection began.

Because the courtroom’s air conditioning failed that day, at the request of Attorney Jex, the

trial was continued until the following day at the Claiborne County Emergency Management

Facility.

¶5. The following morning, Attorney Noah Drake, also representing Davis with Attorney

Jex, approached the prosecution and suggested a plea bargain. Attorney Jex incorrectly

refers to this offer as “the same plea deal Counsel had offered since 2021.” Both agreements

included dropping the aggravated assault charge and pleading guilty to two counts of

manslaughter, but the December 2021 offer included only time served, whereas the 2023

offer “sought 15 years with 10 to serve[.]”

¶6. The prosecution countered the new offer and “sought 20 years with 15 to serve.”

Davis accepted this counteroffer.

2 ¶7. Davis, Attorney Jex, Attorney Drake, District Attorney Daniella Shorter, and Assistant

District Attorney Larry Baker then proceeded to an in-chambers plea hearing with Judge

Tomika Irving. At the beginning of the plea hearing, the following exchange occurred:

BY HONORABLE JUDGE IRVING: All right. So what is going on?

BY MR. JEX: Your Honor, this morning before trial we entered into a, sort of, informal settlement negotiation for a plea and I think we got to a number. Mr. Davis is willing to plea to two counts of manslaughter under the imperfect self-defense, carries the same as the normal manslaughter statute, drop the aggravated assault and five suspended, 15 to serve.

BY HONORABLE JUDGE IRVING: Is that correct, Ms. Shorter?

BY MS. SHORTER: Yes, ma’am.

BY HONORABLE JUDGE IRVING: Is this negotiations that -- I guess my question is, had this offer been made previously?

BY MR. JEX: No, Your Honor.

BY HONORABLE JUDGE IRVING: And this is the first time this offer has been made?

BY MR. JEX: Yes, Your Honor.

BY MS. SHORTER: Actually, defense attorney Mr. Jex, came and asked if we would consider it.

BY MR. JEX: I have offered around this number before, Your Honor.

BY MS. SHORTER: I forgot that the jury tax would be to the defendant, not to the State.

BY MR. JEX: What is that? How much is that? How much does that cost?

BY HONORABLE JUDGE IRVING: We are here for a jury trial and this is basically my policy that when we are here for a jury trial and we have a jury sitting out there, there is no plea with the exception that somebody has to pay for that.

3 BY MR. JEX: Right.

BY HONORABLY JUDGE IRVING: Because this could have been done beforehand.

BY MR. JEX: We were not offered a plea, Your Honor.

BY HONORABLE JUDGE IRVING: So I have no problem accepting a plea but we have the cost of the jury.

BY MR. JEX: Right. I mean, Your Honor, I can’t remember who I said it to but I suggested that we -- I think it was Mr. Larry here -- that we would do it before the trial. And I was told that wasn’t on the table. So then when we get -- we offer it again today, so I’m not sure how that would be taxed on the defendant. Although, I will do what ever Your Honor wants.

BY HONORABLE JUDGE IRVING: That’s the problem I have because –

BY MR. JEX: I think it should be taxed to the State of Mississippi.

BY HONORABLE JUDGE IRVING: -- we have been wasting time. If this wasn’t held, that could have been made.

BY MS. SHORTER: If that’s the case, then it’s off the table, because we aren’t going to pay for the jury cost.

BY MR. JEX: What is the jury cost, Your Honor?

BY HONORABLE JUDGE IRVING: I don’t know. I will have to ask the clerk. I mean, we’ve got 66 people.

BY MR. JEX: Are we talking about thousands of dollars or are we talking about 25 a person?

BY HONORABLE JUDGE IRVING: No, it’s 66 people. I don’t know how much it is per person but now they have been here for two days, so whatever that is. I would have to ask the clerk to give a cost. I don’t know what that number will be.

BY MR. JEX: Your Honor, I will pay whatever the jury costs if the deal is going to come off the table. I am just putting it on record that we were not offered this before today.

4 BY HONORABLE JUDGE IRVING: Ask Ms. West. She is probably going to do what I need.

BY MR. DRAKE: She’s calling.

BY COURT ADMINISTRATOR: She said that because they are not seated the price of it is 25 dollars a day. If they were seated, it would have been 30 dollars a day. So right now, it’s 25 dollars.

BY HONORABLE JUDGE IRVING: So it’s 25 dollars -

BY MR. JEX: Fifty times 66, 2800 bucks.

BY MS. SHORTER: It’s 3300.

BY HONORABLE JUDGE IRVING: That is the amount we are looking at.

BY MR. JEX: Your Honor, you tell me what to pay and I’ll pay it. I don’t think it’s fair but I will pay it.

BY HONORABLE JUDGE IRVING: So we are going to take the plea. Are we prepared to do that now?

Following this exchange, the plea hearing continued normally, and Judge Irving accepted

Davis’s guilty plea.

¶8. Two days after the plea hearing, on September 15, 2023, the trial court entered its

Order Requiring Defendant’s Attorney to Pay Costs of Jurors Appearing for Duty on

September 12–13, 2023. The order required Attorney Jex to

reimburse Claiborne County Board of Supervisors the amount of Four Thousand One Hundred Forty-One Dollars and 00/100 ($4,141.00), for the appearance of jurors for the trial of Jerrell Davis, being cause number CR2021-04, in the Circuit Court of Claiborne County, Mississippi, on September 12, 2023 and September 13, 2023, when said jurors did not perform their duty due to Defendant’s desire to plead guilty.

5 The amount owed by Attorney Jex was determined by calculating the jurors’ appearance cost

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In Re: M. Zachary Jex, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-m-zachary-jex-miss-2025.