Newton v. State

127 A. 123, 147 Md. 71, 1924 Md. LEXIS 1
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedDecember 4, 1924
StatusPublished
Cited by57 cases

This text of 127 A. 123 (Newton v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Newton v. State, 127 A. 123, 147 Md. 71, 1924 Md. LEXIS 1 (Md. 1924).

Opinion

Offutt, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

The appellant in this case was tried and convicted in the Criminal Court of Baltimore City of a criminal conspiracy, for which he had been indicted jointly with William A. Gillespie and Iiarokl R. Hickey, Jr., and from the judgment on the verdict in that case he has taken this appeal.

*75 Demurrers to the indictment filed by each defendant were overruled, and Gillespie and Dickey were tried before the court and convicted on June 23rd, 1923. On September 24th, 1923, Newton filed a suggestion and affidavit for removal, which was also overruled. He then pleaded not guilty and was tried by the jury, with the result stated above.

The record contains eighty-five exceptions, eighty-four of which relate to remarks made by the court and by the State’s Attorney during the progress of the trial, and to rulings of the court upon questions of evidence, and these rulings, together with the action of the court on the demurrer to the indictment, and its action upon the suggestion and affidavit for removal, we are now asked to review.

The facts material to a consideration of the questions before us 'are sufficiently set out in the cases of State v. Gillespie and State v. Dickey, decided at this term (147 Md. 45), and need not be restated here. Nor in view of what we said in those cases is it necessary to refer further to the court’s action on the demurrer to the indictment than to say that in our opinion it was properly overruled.

Of the other questions presented by the appeal the first in natural order is the propriety of the court’s action on the suggestion and affidavit for removal. That suggestion was based upon the theory that since Gillespie and Dickey had been tried and convicted by three judges of the Supreme Bench of Baltimore City of the same crime with which Newton is charged in this case, that any jury in Baltimore City would inevitably be affected by that fact and that no jury could be empanelled in that circuit “which would have the courage to override the conclusions reached by these judges and determine the law and the fact of this case as by the Constitution of this State they are empowered to do.” Evidence taken in connection with the suggestion showed that the opinion of the three judges who sat in the Gillespie and Dickey cases was published in the daily papers of Baltimore City. At the conclusion of that evidence the court overruled the suggestion for removal, and a judge who1 had not partid *76 pated at the trial of Gillespie and Dickey was assigned to- try the case.

That every one charged with a crime -against the laws of this State has the absolute and unqualified right to have his case heard by a fair and impartial jury is not to be- doubted, and that that right is o-ne of the most valuable privileges guaranteed to the citizen by the constitution of this State is not to be questioned. That it would be denied by requiring such a person to submit his case to a jury which felt constrained to- decide it in accordance with the judgment of some other tribunal or for any reason except what was found in the law and the facts of the case before them is just as clear.

Such a procedure would be ghastly mockery of the law, for obviously no jury could be regarded as fair or impartial which, "before it-’ had heard the evidence, felt bound by the deoi-si-o-n of some other tribunal to- convict the defendant.

But we find no such condition in this case. If the traverser’s contention is sound, then in nearly every, case in which two or more persons -are jointly indicted for the same joint offense, and where there is a severance for any reason, and one of the defendants has been tried and convicted, the untried case against the others must be removed as a matter of course, because all the judges -and all persons eligible for jury service in that jurisdiction would- be so much affected by -the conviction in the first case that they would be unable to fairly and impartially try the other cases. Such a contention in our opinion goes too far. We do no-t'think that the fact that two persons, jointly indicted with him for the same conspiracy, were eo-nvicted of that crime by three judges of the Supreme Bench of Baltimore 'City, compels the conclusion that the traverser in this case could not secure a fair and impartial jury in that city, and we could not, therefore, say that the trial court in overruling this suggestion abused ■the discretion reposed in it, for, aside from the fact that Gillespie and Dickey were so convicted by the three judges of the Supreme Bench of Baltimore City and such inference as might be drawn from that fact, there was no testimony *77 relating to the question at all. We cannot assume as a matter of law, as we are asked to do, that either judges or jurors will be influenced by considerations which under their official oaths they are bound to disregard. And the statements made by the jurors in this case tend tó confirm that view. Those statements were not, it is true, made in connection with the suggestion, but nevertheless they illustrate the danger of arbitrarily. approving such a proposition as that embodied in the defendant’s contention. Before he was sworn in this case every juror on the panel expressly denied that he would be influenced in rendering his verdict as to Newton by the verdict of the three judges, 'and stated affirmatively that his verdict would be based solely upon -the law and the evidence uninfluenced by the action of the three judges in the ease ■against Gillespie and Dickey. The suggestion was addressed 'to the sound judicial discretion of' the trial court, and, in the absence of anything in the record showing an abuse of that discretion, we would not be justified1 in reversing that court’s action upon it (Allers v. State, 144 Md. 75), and it is therefore affirmed.

This brings us to tbe questions presented in the exceptions relating to the court’s rulings on questions of evidence and to certain remarks made by tbe judge who presided' at the trial, and by the State’s Attorney in the presence of the jury during the trial.

Before considering these exceptions iu detail we will refer briefly to the issues in the ease material to the questions raised by thése exceptions. Gillespie and Dickey bad audited tbe books of tbe Union Finance Company, and as a result of tbeir examination a letter signed “William A. Gillespie Company” was addressed to the Union Finance Company, in which the writer stated: “We find your company to be solvent and capable of meeting all obligations and contracts entered into with your clients. We further certify that your company purchases and sells listed securities in large volume, and your inventory of securities at the market at thé close of *78 business August 15, 1922, shows a substantial surplus over and .above your obligations.”

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
127 A. 123, 147 Md. 71, 1924 Md. LEXIS 1, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/newton-v-state-md-1924.