Knox v. State

135 So. 206, 160 Miss. 494, 1931 Miss. LEXIS 221
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedJune 8, 1931
DocketNo. 29513.
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 135 So. 206 (Knox 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
Knox v. State, 135 So. 206, 160 Miss. 494, 1931 Miss. LEXIS 221 (Mich. 1931).

Opinion

Griffith, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

Appellant was under indictment in the circuit court of Hinds county, and his case was set for trial in the judicial week beginning on the 18th day of December, 1929. Because of prior events, and because of rumors and reports which had been brought'to appellant, none of which are, necessary to mention here, appellant had become apprehensive, although unduly so, that in the bringing in of talesmen by the sheriff or his deputies men would be *498 brought who would not be impartial in the trial of the case, but who, on the contrary, would be predisposed against any defense which appellant might make. In 'this state of apprehension, appellant, on Sunday, December 17, 1929, by the use principally of the city directory and the book of telephone subscribers, made up a tentative list of sixty names of those thought to be in all respects well qualified as jurors, the names extending alphabetically from B to W. They were taken from the various respectable walks of life; there were insurance agents, automobile dealers, bankers, persons engaged in the mercantile business, barbers, printers, and men from many other trades and occupations.- They were all of worthy character, of good reputation, and none of them had been approached or were approachable. No influence of any kind had been brought to bear upon them; not a word had been spoken to one of them by axpoellant or by any person connected with axopellant, in respect to the case, and not one of them knew or had any reason to susxoect that his name had been placed on such a list until more than a year thereafter. More than forty of these names were either then already in the jury box or have subsequently been selected by the board of supervisors and placed therein. Appellant knew personally only a small minority of them and had no intimate or close acquaintance with any of them. There were no business ties which connected appellant with any of them, and no other connection which would be sufficient to induce them or any of them in his favor. No question is raised by the state touching the character of the men on said list, but it is. admitted that they are typical of those worthy in every way to sit in judgment on juries. • Indeed, none of the facts herein stated are disputed. On the contrary, all the facts are agreed upon in the record and in the briefs; so that what we state herein as the facts is an abstract from what is not in dispute but is admitted in the records and briefs.

*499 After this list had been prepared, and on the evening of said December 17th, appellant made an engagement with the sheriff, by which appellant went to the residence of the sheriff and there appellant handed the said list to the officer. The testimony of the sheriff as to the conversation which took place on that occasion would indicate that little was in fact said, but certain it is that appellant resorted to no threat, nor; intimidation, nor other lawless means- to' induce the sheriff to use said list. The sheriff does not say that he was even requested to use it, and so far as the testimony of the sheriff goes the request to use said list comes only by the inference arising out of the fact that the list was delivered, while the testimony of appellant is that his sole purpose in exhibiting the list was to indicate the type and character of men, who in the trial of appellant’s case or any other case would be intelligent and fair and impartial.

The sheriff took the list, made no promise, was not asked to make any, and on impaneling the jury the sheriff disregarded the said list. However, he reported the incident to the circuit judge, as a result of which proceedings in contempt were instituted, some time later, against appellant by the district attorney, and on the hearing thereof the court adjudged appellant' guilty and imposed sentence.

The most .complete and elaborate treatise now in existence on the subject of contempts is found in 13 C. J. This text states, on page 23 of that volume, that “all effort to influence the action of officers in the selection of the personnel of the jury is contempt”; and on page 8 the unqualified further statement is made that “the determination as to whether a contempt has been committed does not depend on the intention of the offending party but on the act done. ’ ’ If the above unqualified statements be exact statements of the law, then the action of the eminent jurists who presided in this case was correct and the judgment must be affirmed; for it is admitted that *500 appellant handed the list of names to the sheriff, and it is not denied that thereby there was an effort to influence the officer in the selection of the personnel of the jury, as indeed it could not be denied that the admitted act was an effort toward the stated effect.

The action and judicial decision of a trial judge, in so far as concerns his judgment upon a question of law, may be considered as justified when, in the absence of a decision by the Supreme Court of the state on the exact point, he follows the statement of the law on the point, as laid down in a standard text-book, such as the treatise above mentioned. But when a text-book statement comes before us here on appeal, it becomes our imperative duty, as the court of last resort, to carefully re-examine that text, and in the light of our own jurisprudence to lay it along-side the yard stick of sound, practical, judicial reason, and thereupon to determine and say whether, in our independent opinion, the said text measures out as a. correct), exact, and full statement of our law.

Looking then first to our own jurisprudence, we find that our court has defined a constructive contempt as any act calculated to impede, embarrass, obstruct, defeat, or corrupt the administration of courts of justice, when the act is done beyond the presence of the court. Durham v. State, 97 Miss. 549, 552, 52 So. 627; Grace v. State, 108 Miss. 767, 773, 67 So. 212; Aarons v. State, 105 Miss. 402, 405, 62 So. 419, Ann. Cas. 1916E, 263. We compare this with the text-book statement first above quoted, viz., “All effort to influence the action of officers in the selection of the personnel of the jury is contempt;” whence it will at once appear that, in order that the last-quoted statement shall stand as a correct, exact, and full statement of the law, it must be upon the conclusion that any effort to influence the action of officers in the selection of the personnel of the jury is an act calculated to impede, embarrass, obstruct, defeat, or corrupt the administration of courts of justice. But does the latter follow, ipso *501 facto, upon and as a consequence solely of the first? If so, then every lawyer was guilty of contempt, who on occasional has appealed to the sheriff or to a deputy sheriff not to call upon a jury any of that class of idle and untrustworthy persons who often hang* around the courtroom and in its environs with the purpose and hope of being called as talesman; and we doubt if there be today in this state any lawyer of large practice and long experience who has not at some time in the interest of justice been compelled to make such an appeal to the sheriff.

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Bluebook (online)
135 So. 206, 160 Miss. 494, 1931 Miss. LEXIS 221, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/knox-v-state-miss-1931.