Mitchell v. State

26 S.E.2d 663, 69 Ga. App. 771, 1943 Ga. App. LEXIS 184
CourtCourt of Appeals of Georgia
DecidedMay 22, 1943
Docket30005.
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 26 S.E.2d 663 (Mitchell v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Mitchell v. State, 26 S.E.2d 663, 69 Ga. App. 771, 1943 Ga. App. LEXIS 184 (Ga. Ct. App. 1943).

Opinions

MacIntyre, J.

The pressure in the case is on the question whether the defendant broke and entered the front door of the house alleged to have been burglarized. The evidence authorized the jury to find that the front door was closed when the alleged victim arrived at her home at about eleven o’clock p. m., and that she thereupon entered, closed and latched the front door. And, when discovered in the house_about 1:00 a. m. the defendant hurriedly left through the front door which was standing wide open end that the screen door was propped open, so that if necessary he would have an unimpeded way of exit and could leave hurriedly. There is no suggestion from the evidence or the defendant’s statement, he having pleaded an alibi, that any other person living in said house left or entered the house after the alleged victim had returned to her home, latched the front door, and gone to bed, or that the defendant had gone into the house through an open door or window, and later opened the front door in order to facilitate his escape if necessary. We think the facts proved authorize a legitimate inference that the door in question was closed and fastened and that the defendant broke and entered. And the mere possibility or conjecture that the defendant entered through an open aperture and broke out of the house rather than.that he broke in, does not overcome or destroy the legitimate inference that he broke and entered. Humphries v. State, 149 Ga. 480 (100 S. E. 637); Hicks v. State, 66 Ga. App. 577 (18 S. E. 2d, 637); State v. Warford, 106 Mo. 55 (16 S. W. 886, 27 Am. St. R. 322); Willis v. State, 33 Tex. Cr. 168 (25 S. W. 1119).

The verdict finding the defendant guilty of burglary under an indictment charging him with that offense in that the accused “did break and enter the dwelling house of [a named person], where valuable goods were contained, with intent to commit a felony, to wit, with intent to commit sodomy upon the person of” [a named female], was authorized by the evidence.

The exceptions in special grounds 1 and 2 are to-excerpts from the charge. When these are considered in the light of their context and the charge as a whole the exceptions are not meritorious.

*776 Challenges are, generally speaking, of two sorts; challenges to the array and challenges to the poll. Challenges to the array go to the form and manner of making np the entire panel of jurors without regard to the objection to the individual jurors who compose it, while challenges to the poll are directed solely to the objection which is inherent in the individual juror. A challenge to the poll may be either 1, peremptory, or 2, for cause. The challenge for cause is in one or two forms: 1, for principal cause, or 2, to the favor. Turner v. State, 114 Ga. 421, 423 (40 S. E. 308). Thompson and Merriam on Juries, 135, § 153, says: “Lord Coke’s classification of challenges to the polls is as follows. Primarily he divided them into four classes: 1. Peremptory; 2. Principal; 3. Which induce favor; 4. Eor default of hundredors. He subdivided the principal challenge as follows: 1. Propter honoris respectum; 2. Propter defectum; 3. Propter affectum; 4. Propter delictum. . . At this point we must note a defect of classification not uncommon in the writings of this learned commentator. Challenges propter defectum he subdivides into challenges for defect of country, freedom, freehold and hundredors. This last will be recognized as one of the main divisions of challenges to the polls. The climas of confusion is reached when the challenge propter affectum is subdivided into principal challenges and those, to the favor. This unhappy arrangement is a matter of historical interest only. It causes no confusion in practice at the present time, since the divisions previously indicated [italics ours] have long since become recognized as sufficiently definite for purposes of practice.” The italicized words, “divisions previously indicated,” in so far as they related to a challenge for cause to the poll, the matter here under consideration, referred to challenges for cause which are divided into two classes by Thompson and Merriam on Juries: challenges for principal cause and challenges to favor. It might be noted that Judge Simmons, speaking for the court in Turner v. State, supra, states that this was the common-law classification, as does Thompson On Trials, 44, § 40, which states: “By a common-law classification, challenges for cause were divided into challenges for principal cause, and challenges to the favor. The chief importance of this distinction lay in the fact that the former were tried by the court, whose decision was reviewable on error, while the latter were tried before triors whose decision was conclusive.” In this State the triors are the judges themselves.

*777 Cyclopedic Law Dictionary (2d ed.), 154, states: “Challenge for cause was anciently divided into challenges; (i) For principal cause, — being for such cause as, if substantiated, was sufficient to show bias or disqualification. The grounds of principal challenge were propter defectum, for disability, as infancy or mental unsoundness ; propter affectum, for partiality, as where -the juror was of kin to the party, or bore some confidential relation to him; propter delictum, on account of crime committed by the juror whereby he was disqualified. 3. Bl. Com. 361. To these was sometimes added propter honoris respectum, from respect to a party’s rank or nobility, (ii) To the favor, — those which are founded on reasonable ground to suspect that the jury is partial, though the cause be not so evident as to warrant a principal challenge.”

A principal challenge to the poll is based on alleged facts from which, if proved to be true, the juror is conclusively presumed to be incapacitated to serve. Thus, the question principally raised, is one of law and is to be decided by the court. Such decision is subject to review. A challenge to favor is based on circumstances raising a suspicion of the existence of actual bias in the mind of the juror for or against the party, as for undue influence, or prejudice, which essentially raised a question of fact that under the common law was decided by triors (not the court), whose decision was final and conclusive; but under our system the court is substituted for the triors and the court’s decision on a challenge to favor is likewise final and conclusive “as to the credibility of the proof.” Costley v. State, 19 Ga. 614 (2). See, in this connection, Cobb v. Atlanta Coach Co., 46 Ga. App. 633 (168 S. E. 126); Turner v. State, supra.

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Bluebook (online)
26 S.E.2d 663, 69 Ga. App. 771, 1943 Ga. App. LEXIS 184, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mitchell-v-state-gactapp-1943.