Manning v. State

292 S.W. 451, 155 Tenn. 266, 2 Smith & H. 266, 1926 Tenn. LEXIS 45
CourtTennessee Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 28, 1927
StatusPublished
Cited by63 cases

This text of 292 S.W. 451 (Manning 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
Manning v. State, 292 S.W. 451, 155 Tenn. 266, 2 Smith & H. 266, 1926 Tenn. LEXIS 45 (Tenn. 1927).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Coon,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

On the evening- of October 201, 1924, Dr. E. J. McDaniel was shot from an automobile and killed while walking on the street between his home and the Post Office at Tazewell. Por the homicide his brother-in-law, Bailey G-. Manning, was convicted, and from the judgment of conviction has appealed and assigned errors.

*269 Plaintiff in error, hereafter referred to as defendant, was arraigned and the trial proceeded’until all the evidence was introduced. Then Ellis Amos, one of the trial jurors, on the night of April 4, evaded the custody of the jury officer and remained at large until arrested at a point twenty-five miles from the court house and was brought into court on April 7. After investigation the trial judge punished the juror for contempt and dismissed him from the jury. Whereupon counsel for defendant moved the court to discharge the prisoner because once in jeopardy. The motion was overruled. Whereupon the defendant moved the court to discharge the jury and enter a mistrial. The motion was overruled, the trial judge saying that the conduct of Amos made it necessary to dismiss him and instead of entering a mistrial the vacancy would be supplied, and that each party would be allowed the unexhausted peremptory challenges in selecting a juror to supply the vacancy.

The defense insisted that the discharge of Amos restored the original challenges, but the court held against this insistence and defendant exhausted the remaining challenge, after which juror J. H. Lambert was presented, passed by the State and after examination by the defendant was peremptorily challenged. The court denied the right of additional challenges holding that defendant’s challenges must be limited to those unex-hausted on the original panel. Mr. Lambert was held competent, ordered to take his place on the jury, and was sworn.. The eleven jurors were not re-sworn. The trial judge announced that the vacancy on the jury had been supplied and the cause would proceed. The defendant then tendered a formal plea of former jeopardy which was stricken on motion of the State, and the cause was tried de novo.

*270 The first propositions presented by defendant’s assignments of error are that the trial judge; (1) should have discharged the jury and entered a mistrial. (2) that upon the proceeding to supply the vacancy on the jury defendant should have been allowed all his peremptory challenges which it is insisted were restored upon discharge of the juror for cause. (3) That, the discharge of the juror was unauthorized and that the trial judge should have sustained the plea of former jeopardy presented both before and after'the commencement of the trial de novo.

Juror Amos rendered himself unfit to remain on the jury and participate in the trial. Cartwright v. State, 12 Lea, 620. He had been at large in contact with outside influences for three days under circumstances that made it impossible to show that the defendant was not prejudiced by the separation. Harris v. State, 8 Humph., 597; Odel v. State, 6 Bax., 159; Riley v. State, 9 Humph., 649.

Two courses were open for the trial judge to pursue. To reseat the juror, resume the trial and trail through a formal procedure to a void verdict, or discharge the juror whose misconduct made it apparent that his further participation in the trial would vitiate the verdict. Originally a,t common law the court could not discharge a juror after he had been sworn, in a criminal case. 4 Blk. Comm., 360. Another archaism was that the jury once sworn in a case affecting life and member could not be discharged without giving a verdict. This rule was so strictly adhered to that drastic methods were used to compel a verdict, such as depriving jurors of refreshment, and in winter of warmth, and when they did not agree upon a verdict before adjournment they were car *271 ried in carts from court to court until they made a deliverance.

In Berry v. Wallace, 1 Overton, 241, our court naively suggested the impracticality of carting jurors around with the judge on the frontier circuit, and refused to follow the common-law practice, and held that the adjournment of the term without a verdict resulted in a mistrial. Rules like these thread hack to ancient customs, the reason for which has been forgotten and are abandoned, and now the trial court may, for legal cause, discharge the jury or a single juror after the accused has been put upon trial. State v. Curtis, 5 Humph., 601; Snowden v. State, 7 Bax., 484; Green v. State, 147 Tenn., 299.

In 16 R. C. L., page 319, par. 125, it is said:

‘‘It was at one time thought that, in criminal cases, a juror could not without giving a verdict be withdrawn, or a jury discharged, when sworn. But -this rule has given way to the more reasonable one now universally recognized that the court may discharge a jury whenever an absolute or compelling necessity for so doing exists; but, in criminal cases especially, only when such necessity exists.”

Left to pursue one of the two courses heretofore referred to, the trial judge dismissed the juror, and his action was grounded upon legal necessity and did not operate to discharge the defendant as having been in former jeopardy. Mahala v. State, 10 Yerg., 531; State v. Hansford, 14 L. R. A. (N. S.), 584; Re Ascher, 57 L. R. A., 807; Yarbrough v. State, 105 Ala., 43.

The authorities cited to sustain the assignments of error to the action of the court on defendant’s plea of former jeopardy relate to the unauthorized discharge of jurors. As for instance for disqualification propter de- *272 fectwn. The right of challenge propter defectum ends when the jurors are accepted and sworn. By waiver the jnror becomes a legal juror. Cartwright v. State, 12 Lea, 628; Walker v. State, 118 Tenn., 375. A juror so accepted, despite the right of challenge for cause, may. participate in the trial without vitiating the verdict. The discharge of a juror for cause propter defectum after sworn is the illegal discharge of a juror, it does not spring from necessity, hence cannot work acquittal for former jeopardy. Not so, however,, when the juror is discharged for sickness or other legal cause. 12 Enc. Pl. & Pr. 647; Boyd v. State, 14 Lea, 167; State v. Scarborough, 2 S. C., 439; State v. Hall, 9 N. J. L., 256; State v. Allen, 46 Conn., 535, State v. Price, 77 Iowa, 245.

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Bluebook (online)
292 S.W. 451, 155 Tenn. 266, 2 Smith & H. 266, 1926 Tenn. LEXIS 45, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/manning-v-state-tenn-1927.