Rabinowitz v. United States

366 F.2d 34
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedJuly 20, 1966
DocketNos. 21256, 21345
StatusPublished
Cited by152 cases

This text of 366 F.2d 34 (Rabinowitz v. United States) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Rabinowitz v. United States, 366 F.2d 34 (5th Cir. 1966).

Opinions

RIVES, Circuit Judge.

The appellants in both cases were indicted by the same grand jury, and were tried and convicted by petit juries drawn from the same box. In each case there was an attack on the grand jury by motion to dismiss the indictment, and an attack on the petit jury by motion to quash the petit jury panel or venire. Both cases present the question of whether the method by which the jury list was compiled resulted in the impermissible exclusion of Negroes.

No question is raised as to the standing of the appellants to raise that question.1 Joni Rabinowitz, the appellant in No. 21256, was a white Field Representative of the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee in Albany, Georgia, indicted and convicted of perjury before a federal Grand Jury. A group of demonstrators had picketed a store owned by a member of a federal petit jury which had returned a verdict-against a Negro,_and the Grand Jury was investigating this use of pressure tactics. The five appellants in No. 21345 were Negroes also indicted and convicted of perjury.

It is conceded that the clerk of the court, his deputy, and the jury commissioner appointed by the court,2 who compiled the jury list, were men of excellent character, and the charge is focused on the’ qualifications which they required of prospective jurors and on the method^ by which the jury list was compiled, .r.ather than on any affirmative evil.intent af. the jury commissioners.

The jury list from which the grand and petit jurors were drawn was compiled in 1959. A list compiled in 1953 was used as a starting point. Those who had died, moved out of the district, or become too old or feeble to serve were eliminated. After the 1953 list was pruned, names of [38]*38prospective jurors compiled separately by the clerk and the commissioner were added, and detailed questionnaires were sent to those on the combined list. One of the questions inquired as to race. The commissioner’s recollection was that some 4,000 questionnaires were sent out, and the clerk estimated that the number was either 4,000 or 5,000. Of this number 2,500 or 3,000 were returned.3 From the questionnaires which were returned, 1,985 names were finally selected for the jury list. From a study of the questionnaires returned by those 1,985 persons whose names appear on the jury list, it was stipulated in the district court that Negroes comprised.. 117_. or 5.9% of thosejm. .the list.

On appeal, the Government, with commendable candor, concedes the results of a later and more detailed analysis made of all of the questionnaires returned, as follows:

“Of the 1,985 persons on the 1959 list, 1,428 are carry-overs from the 1953 list and 557 are new names. Of the 117 Negroes on the list, 113 are carry-overs and 4 are new. Of the 1,868 persons on the list who are white or who did not designate their race on their questionnaires (there are 5 of the latter), 1,315 are carry-overs and 553 are new. Hence, of the new names added to the list in. 1959i__5.53__.are white or of unknown race. and. 4_are Negroes.

“A total of 2,338 persons returned questionnaires in 1959, and of these, 353 were not placed on the list for one reason or another. Of these 353, 297 were white, 53 were Negro and 3 did not indicate their race (although one of the 3 has been unofficially identified as a Negro). Of the 353, 196 had appeared on the 1953 list, and 157 were new names. Broken down by race, 150 whites were new names and 147 had appeared on the 1953 list, 7 Negroes were new names and 46 had appeared on the 1953 list, and all 3 unknowns had appeared on the 1953 list. Hence, Negroes comprised 7 of the 157 new names in this group.

“Of the 2,338 questionnaires returned, 1,624 were carry-overs from the 1953 list and 714 were new contacts. Of the 1,624 carry-overs, 1,465 were whites or of unknown race and 159 were Negroes (taking account of the person unofficially known to be Negro, the count would be 1,464 and 160). Of the 714 new contacts, 703 were white and 11 were Negro. Hence, a total of 170 Negroes returned questionnaires in 1959, or 7.3% of those returned (171 taking account of the person unofficially known to be Negro), 159 (or 160) being carry-overs and 11 being new contacts.

“The 353 persons not placed on the 1959 list were omitted for the following reasons:

White Negro Race Unknown
Questionnaires returned too late.................. 63 4
Business (i. e., teachers, school busdrivers, etc.)..... 26 9
Age or health................................... 188 24
Women having small children to care for........... 20 0
Other (felony conviction, illiteracy, civil service employment, etc.) ................................ _0_ 16
Total ...................................... 297 53 3”

[39]*39The eighteen counties comprising the Macon Division of the Middle District of Georgia had an adult population in 1960 of 211,306 of which 73,014, or_34.5 per cent, were_Negroes. As to each of the eighteen counties, the disparity between the proportion of Negroes whose names appear on the jury list and the proportion of Negroes aged 21 or over who reside in the county are shown on the following table:

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[40]*40The list of names placed in the jury-box was revised periodically as ordered by the Court. The first jury list was compiled in 1926. Revisions occurred in 1930, 1936, 1938, 1940, 1943, 1947, 1953, and 1959. Names of women were added in 1954. The 1940 ..list contained 2,114 names, of which 68, or 3.21 per cent, were Negroes. At that time the adult population of the division was 169,343, of which 76,399, or 45.11 per cent,, were Negroes. The 1953- list contained 1,837 names, of which the Clerk of the Court estimated that 137 were Negroes. That is approximately -ZJA percent. According to the 1950 census, the adult population of the division was 193,387, of which 74,443, or ¿8M9_per cent, were Negroes. The other jury lists contain namesTof Negroes in proportions similar to those in the 1940, 1953, and 1959 lists.

Mr. Simmons, the Jury Commissioner, Mr.

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Bluebook (online)
366 F.2d 34, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rabinowitz-v-united-states-ca5-1966.