Sealy v. State

1 Ga. 213
CourtSupreme Court of Georgia
DecidedJuly 15, 1846
DocketNo. 29
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 1 Ga. 213 (Sealy v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sealy v. State, 1 Ga. 213 (Ga. 1846).

Opinion

By the Court

Lumpkin, Judge.

The prisoner was convicted of murder in the Superior Court of Talbot Comity, in March, 1846 ; and from the judgment then rendered against him he has appealed to this court. He complains of certain irregularities in the proceeding, and assigns for error, first, that the court refused to continue the case. It appears from the record, that after the arraignment, counsel for the prisoner moved a postponement of the trial, upon the ground that William Hammock, a material witness for him, was absent without his consent or procurement, and he rendered as an excuse why he had not been subpoenaed, that the witness was confined in jail, and his presence, therefore, expected.

The court declines expressing any opinion upon this exception, for the reason that the point cannot again arise on the new trial, which we feel constrained to award, on other grounds ; and we dismiss this branch of the case with a single observation. The refusal of the court below to continue the indictment, could not be assigned as error but for the statute creating this court. — 6 Cranch's Rep. 206. There is great danger of doing mischief by revising matters of this kind, which should properly be confided to the discretion of the court below, to be regulated by the circumstances of each particular case. No precise rule can be laid down, and a most arbitrary and oppressive exercise of this discretion must be made apparent to this court, before it will interfere.

Another error complained of by the prisoner, is, that Pulaski Posey, the seventh man on the jury list, being called, the court allowed the solicitor for the State to pass him by, until the remainder of the panel was gone through; and the same practice was preserved respecting other jurors.

Anciently, by the common law, any number of jurors might have been peremptorily challenged by the crown, without alleging any other reason for the objection than “ quod non boni sunt pro rege,'’’’ that they were not good men for the king. But this power being found very liable to abuse, [216]*216and mischievous to the subject, tending to infinite delays and dangers, it was taken away by the 33 Edw. 1, statutes 4; commonly called ordinalio de inquisitionibus. By this it is enacted, quod de ccetero, licet pro domino rege dicatur, quod juratores, &c., non sunt boni pro rege ; non propter hoc remaneant inquisitiones, &c. ; sed assignes, certain causam calumnien sute, &c.,whereby the king is now restrained,— Thomas’ Coke, 474,note n. This ordinance of inquests directs, that when a juror was challenged for the king, the inquisition should not, therefore, remain untaken ; but those who sued for the. king should show some cause of challenge, and the truth of such cause should be inquired of, according to the custom of the court; after which, the inquisition should be proceeded in or not, according as the challenge was established or not.

In the construction of this statute, it is clearly settled, and is now the established practice of the courts, that if the king challenge a juror before the panel is perused, he need not show any cause of his challenge till the whole panel be gone through, and it appears that there will not be a full jury without the person so challenged ; and if the defendant, in order to oblige the king to show cause presently, challenge touts paravaile, yet it hath been adjudged that the defendant shall be first put, to show all his causes of challenge, before the king need to show any. — Lord Raymond, 473; Skinner, 82 ; 2 Hale’s His. P. C. 271.

Challenges, in England, on behalf of the defendant, were either peremptory or for cause. The number which, in all cases of felony, the prisoner was allowed by the common law thus peremptorily to challenge, amounted to thirty-five, or one under the number of three full juries.— Com. Dig. Challenge, c. 1 ; 2 Woodd. 493, Barnes on Juries, 4. This number has been restricted to twenty of the jurors, in murder, by 32 Hen. 8, ch. 14, sec. 7. — 4 Black. Com. 353.

The history of challenges, then, is briefly this: that originally, in Britain, the crown might challenge peremptorily any number of jurors; that by the 33d Edward 1st, the king could not challenge any juror, without cause ; but that he was not bound to show cause, till all the panel was called over, and not then, unless, from challenge or otherwise, the jury, is incomplete; that the prisoner was entitled, at common law, to thirty-five capricious challenges, which number is reduced and limited by the 32d Hen. 8th, to twenty, in murder and other felonies. And now the important question for our consideration is, how have the rights of the State and its citizens been effected by the penal code of 1833 ?

By the 15th section and 14th divisions of that code, it is provided, “that every person indicted for a crime or ofience, which may subject him or her, on conviction, to death, or four years imprisonment or longer in the penitentiary, may peremptorily challenge twenty of the jurors empaneled to try him or her. And the State shall be allowed one half the number of peremptory challenges allowed the prisoner.” — Prince, 660. Now, it will be perceived that under our code, the rights of the defendant are precisely the same as they were before ; while ten peremptory challenges are given to the State. Can it be believed that a code, professedly adopted to mitigate the rigor of the old law, intended to give this advantage to the State, in addition to the privilege which it already enjoyedj of setting aside any number of jurors, until the whole panel was exhausted ? The coteroporaneous interpretations of the statutes, by [217]*217almost, all the circuits in the State, from the period of its passage, would negative this idea. The very language of the code, proves that the authors of it designed that the prisoners should enjoy double the advantage of the people in the trial. The State is entitled to one half the challenges allowed the accused. But this, with the privilege previously practised, in passing by jurors, is decidedly better than the twenty peremptory challenges allowed the defendant. The code itself professes “ to reform, amend, and consolidatb the penal laws of the State of Georgia.” Nor are we at liberty to go out of it, or beyond or back of it, to ascertain the mode of trial or the relative rights of the parties. It dictates the question to be propounded to a juror on his voire dire, to test his competency, allowing to the State or the prisoner, if his answer is not satisfactory, the right to put such juror on his trial, in the manner pointed out by law, the code adopting the procedure at common law in this particular, and thus making it a part of itself. The State vs. Benton, (2 Dev. and Battle, N. C. 200,) is certainly an authority in support of the doctrines contended for in behalf of the prosecution: for by the act of the Legislature of that State, passed in 1827, four, instead of ten, peremptory challenges are given to the State. There is nothing, however, in this statute which indicates the intentions of the Legislature to adjust and fix the relative rights of the State and the prisoner. Nor does the act profess to reform, amend, and consolidate the penal laws of that State, in criminal cases.

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1 Ga. 213, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sealy-v-state-ga-1846.