Romaine v. State

7 Ind. 63
CourtIndiana Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 27, 1855
StatusPublished
Cited by23 cases

This text of 7 Ind. 63 (Romaine v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Indiana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Romaine v. State, 7 Ind. 63 (Ind. 1855).

Opinion

Davison, J.

Madden, Keefer, and Romaine were, at the February term, 1855, indicted, in the Allen Circuit Court, [64]*64for murder. Verdict, that the defendants were g '■ charged, &c., and that each of them suffer deaf \ Court rendered judgment upon the verdict, and , . sentence. The time for the execution of Mad . Keefer was fixed on the 27th of April; that of Romaine on the 15th of June. The two former were executed on the day appointed; but Romaine, in view of this appeal, has been respited.

At an adjourned session of the same term, but after the above executions had occurred, Romaine moved to set aside the judgment against himself, and for a new trial. Under the latter motion, he filed these reasons: 1. That the verdict was contrary to law and evidence. 2. That the jury was not legal and impartial; that some of them, before they were impanneled, had formed and expressed an opinion as to the guilt of the defendant.

Romaine, in support of his motion, produced his own and the affidavits of two others. He deposed that Joseph Ringmaster was one of the jurors, each of whom was sworn to answer questions touching his qualifications, &c.; and that, being interrogated under oath, each one of them swore that he had not formed or expressed an opinion as to the guilt or innocence of either of the defendants; that the affiant had accepted the jury in good faith, and in the belief that they were impartial men, nor did he suspect any thing to the contrary, until long after he was sentenced; that within fifteen days prior to the making of this affidavit, and not before, he heard that Ringmaster, the aforesaid juror, before he was so sworn, had expressed opinions, to the effect “that the defendants were guilty of murder as charged, and should all be hung; and that if he was called to act as a juror in the ease, he would hang all of them;” that affiant would have challenged Ringmaster for cause, had he known or suspected that such expressions had been used; and that he also believes that his counsel was ignorant of any such opinion having been expressed. The affiant, therefore, believing that he has not been fairly tried, prays that the above sentence and verdict be set aside, and a new trial granted, &e.

[65]*65Two additional affidavits were filed with the motions. These show that Singmaster, about a week before the trial, stated “that the defendants, then imprisoned on the charge of murder, ought to be hung, and if he was put on the juiy, he would sit there three weeks before he would give up.” We are of opinion that the evidence given on the hearing of the motions, abundantly proved that the juror so expressed himself, and, further, that Romaine and his counsel were wholly unadvised of his statements until after the 27th of April, 1855, the day on which Madden and Keefer were executed. But the state resisted the motions mainly on the ground that the question, whether said juror “had formed or expressed an opinion of the guilt or innocence of the defendant,” was not propounded to him. In relation to this point, both parties introduced testimony. Two witnesses, who were present when the jury was impanneled, one of them as counsel in the cause and the other for the purpose of tailing down the evidence, testified affirmatively that Singmaster, in answer to an interrogatory by Romaine’s attorney, stated that he had not formed or expressed an opinion of the “ guilt or innocence of the prisoners;” but, on the other hand, three witnesses, two of whom were counsel for the state, testified that the jury was called, impanneled, and accepted in their presence, and that the question, whether the juror had formed or expressed such opinion, was neither asked nor answered. Many circumstances are referred to in the testimony on both sides, some of them tending to strengthen the evidence in favor of the motions, and others to weaken it. For instance, Withers, a witness for the defendant, stated, “that he was surprised at the time to hear a man living so near town, say he had not formed an opinion;” while Jacoby and Wilson, the counsel for the state, testified that in a conversation had between them relative to the jury, immediately after they were accepted, it was remarked by the former and conceded by the latter, that no inquiry had been propounded to Singmaster as to whether he had formed or expressed such opinion.

The state having closed her testimony, the defendant [66]*66offered to prove “that Henry McEwen, another of the jurors, after the alleged murder, and before the trial of the cause, upon reading a newspaper account of the crime charged against the defendants, said, ‘that they ought to be hung, and if he was on the jury he would hang them all;’ that when McEwen was placed in the jury box, he declared on oath that he had not formed or expressed an opinion as to the guilt or innocence of the defendants.”

To the introduction of this evidence the state objected, unless time was given her to procure certain witnesses by whom she expected to resist it; and in support of her objection, her attorney filed an affidavit alleging, in substance, that the defendant, after his motions were taken up for hearing, had amended his second reason for a new trial, thereby basing the same upon the alleged disqualification of more than one juror; and that in consequence of said amendment, the state was unprepared to counteract the proposed evidence, which the affiant verily believed she could do if allowed a reasonable time to procure the attendance of the said McEwen and others as witnesses; that the affiant was not advised of any one save McEwen himself by whom it could be proved that he, McEwen, had not formed or expressed an opinion as alleged, &c.; that he resided fifteen miles distant from that place, and affiant supposed his testimony could be procured within twenty-four hours. The Court, upon the filing of this affidavit, ruled that the defendant could then introduce the proposed evidence, on condition that time should be given the state to procure testimony as suggested by the affidavit; but the defendant having objected to any delay for that purpose, the Court rejected the evidence, and also refused to continue the original motions, and thereupon overruled them.

Was Singmaster, before he was impanneled as a juror, interrogated on the point, whether he had formed or expressed an opinion of the guilt or innocence of the prisoners? This is the first question to be considered. Under the code, either party may ask each juror that question, or he may waive it. 2 R. S. 372. If the inquiry is not [67]*67made, and the jurors are accepted and sworn, in the proper mode, to try the cause and render a verdict, they are, in contemplation of law, duly impanneled, and their qualifications as jurors can not be made the subject of contest, on a motion for a new trial. Where, however, upon examination on oath, a juror falsely declares that he has not so formed or expressed an opinion, the verdict, such motion being made at the proper time, will be set aside. Busick v. The State, 19 Ohio 198. On the hearing of these motions, there was, it will be seen, an obvious conflict between the testimony on the part of the defendant and that produced by the state. But the inquiry presented to the Court did not involve the guilt of the accused; it was in effect a mere incidental issue—one proper to be decided according to the weight of evidence.

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Bluebook (online)
7 Ind. 63, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/romaine-v-state-ind-1855.