Shinall v. State

187 So. 2d 840
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedJune 13, 1966
Docket43866
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 187 So. 2d 840 (Shinall v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Mississippi Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Shinall v. State, 187 So. 2d 840 (Mich. 1966).

Opinion

187 So.2d 840 (1966)

Cloudies SHINALL
v.
STATE of Mississippi.

No. 43866.

Supreme Court of Mississippi.

June 13, 1966.

*841 Jack H. Young, R. Jess Brown, Jackson, Robert L. Carter, Barbara A. Morris, New York City, for appellant.

Joe T. Patterson, Atty. Gen., by G. Garland Lyell, Jr., Asst. Atty. Gen., Jackson, for appellee.

JONES, Justice.

Appellant was convicted of murder in the Circuit Court of Forrest County, from which conviction and a sentence to death, he appeals here.

The evidence was ample to justify the verdict, but at the threshold we are met by the question which decisions of the Federal Courts within recent years have caused to be presented in practically every case of this nature, and more recently is being confronted by us in cases below the level of capital cases. This will continue and in many cases invalidate convictions until the situation is corrected, since we are required by our oaths to recognize such decisions.

Appellant is a Negro who shot and killed a constable, a white man. He filed motions to quash the indictment and the venire, alleging that Negroes were systematically *842 excluded from the jury list solely because of race.

Similar motions were before this Court in Kennard v. State, 242 Miss. 691, 128 So.2d 572 (1961), which also involved the jury list of Forrest County, and that case was affirmed. A reading of that decision, however, shows it was so decided because appellant failed to prove even a prima facie case. There, it was a lack of evidence.

Here, it was shown the county had a total population of 52,722, of which 37,970 were whites and 14,719 were Negroes.

This indictment was returned and the case tried at the July 1965 Term. According to the Circuit Clerk, Mr. Lynd, there were two Negroes on the grand jury at the July Term; at the March Term there was one. He could not remember any Negroes on the grand jury prior to these terms. Several served on petit juries in county and circuit court sometime in 1964 and 1965. Some were called but didn't serve. Mr. Lynd had been Circuit Clerk since February 1959, and did not remember a Negro serving on a jury in a criminal case since he had been clerk.

He also testified that at the time of the trial he was under an injunction as a result of a suit by the Federal government to enjoin him from discriminating in the registration of Negroes in Forrest County, but he could not state how many he had registered since the injunction was in force.

Clyde W. Easterling, Chancery Clerk since 1952, a native of Forrest County and Clerk of the Board of Supervisors, was unfamiliar with the way jury lists were drawn and prepared. He was present when two Negroes were sworn on the grand jury at the present term, but could remember no other instance where Negroes were on a grand jury, and knew of no instance where Negroes had served on a jury in a criminal case.

Mr. Milton Evans, Superintendent of Education of the County, had 39 or 40 Negro teachers under his supervision, all of whom had B.S. or Masters Degrees. These were in the county outside the city. He did not know the number of Negro teachers inside the city.

Mr. Will Sigler, Supervisor of District One since January 1964 and a native of the county, testified the Board took names for the jury lists from the voter registration books. He picked the names of people who were eligible — some he knew, some he didn't. When asked how many Negroes he picked for that term of court, he did not know. He did not know whether there were any Negroes. He said he made no distinction between races when making the list. He did not recall any instance as long as he had lived in the county of a Negro serving on a jury in a criminal case.

Mr. Woods, Supervisor of District Two, testified he put all the names on the "poll books" of his district on the jury list.

Mr. S.C. Bowling, Supervisor of District Three since January 7, 1952, and who had lived in Forrest County since 1927, said the supervisors in making jury lists took the registration books and from those selected the names to go on the jury list. He didn't know how many qualified male electors were in his district and had no idea of the ratio between Negroes and white. He knew some Negroes had voted in his district, but did not know how many he put on the list for the present term. He noticed two Negroes impaneled on the grand jury the first day of this term, and it seemed to him that he could recall once or twice before that some have been called — but they might have been excused for personal reasons. If any had been called before, he would probably have seen them, but he did not recall seeing any. He would not say whether Negroes had or had not served on a petit jury in a criminal case.

J.A.P. Carter, Supervisor of District Four since September 1949 and a native of the county, said the Board, in making the list for the jury, would take the voters' poll books and select the names therefrom. He *843 used all qualified males on his list. Later, he said he selected "just about all" of them because his was a small district and it required "just about" every one of them. He saw two Negroes on the grand jury this term, but did not know about the term before. He did not know whether he had ever seen or heard of a Negro serving on a petit jury in a criminal case.

Some members of the bar testified but threw no great light on the question at issue.

The district attorney was called, but could definitely recall very little about Negroes on the juries. He could recall no criminal case in which a Negro served on the petit jury. Two Negroes served on the grand jury at this term and he believed one served the term before. Prior to that time he could not remember. He remembered that at the last term of court some civil cases were tried where Negroes served on the jury. Out of a list of eighty jurors summoned to appear at the present term five or six were Negroes.

From the evidence, it appears:

1. There were 14,719 non-whites and 37,970 whites in Forrest County;
2. Two Negroes served on the grand jury when the indictment here involved was returned and one or two possibly the term before;
3. There was no evidence of any serving on the grand jury at prior terms;
4. No Negro had ever served on a petit jury in a criminal case;
5. The Board of Supervisors selected their names for the jury list from the qualified registered voters;
6. No attempt had been made to qualify resident freeholders as jurors under Chapter 327, Laws of 1964;
7. Negroes constituted about twenty-six percent of the population;
8. Negroes on the venire were not shown to constitute more than seven percent of the whole at any time;
9. The circuit clerk admitted he was under an injunction from the Federal Court involving discrimination by him in the registration of Negroes.

The reference to percentages is not to infer that the juries should be on a percentage basis but is simply made as illustrative of the disparities involved and shown.

The Fifth Circuit re-announced in Billingsley, Sr., et al. v. Clayton, et al., 359 F.2d 13, April 5, 1966, that:

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Bluebook (online)
187 So. 2d 840, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/shinall-v-state-miss-1966.