Silverman v. State

156 N.E. 549, 199 Ind. 225, 1927 Ind. LEXIS 30
CourtIndiana Supreme Court
DecidedMay 20, 1927
DocketNo. 24,706.
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 156 N.E. 549 (Silverman 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
Silverman v. State, 156 N.E. 549, 199 Ind. 225, 1927 Ind. LEXIS 30 (Ind. 1927).

Opinion

Travis, J.

Two questions are presented by this appeal: (1) May the judge in the procéedings in a criminal cause,- before trial, within his sound judicial discretion, order the sheriff to subpoena thirty citizens who are qualified to serve as jurors, outside the court-house, on the third day before the day on which such cause has been set for trial, such citizens so subpoenaed to be used *226 to fill vacancies in the regular panel of the traverse jury of the court, as such vacancies occur, when it is shown by the first part of the same entry, that the court overruled defendant’s verified motion, wherein and whereby he prayed the court to direct the clerk of the court to draw from the box of names of jurors, twenty-five (25) names of persons to serve as a special venire in this cause, and stated his reason for such request; and (2) the legal right of the court to permit the trial jury to separate upon adjournment of the court, during the ■progress of the trial of the cause, which was upon a charge of the commission of a felonious offense, after the court had overruled, the motion that “The defendant requests that the jury which is sworn to try this cause be not separated during the trial of this cause, and the defendant objects to any separation of the jury herein during the trial of this cause.”

The offense charged is, that defendant did, on July 17, 1923, unlawfully and feloniously transport intoxicating liquor in a certain vehicle, to wit: an automobile. (Acts 1923, ch. 34).

The error presented on appeal is based upon the action of the trial court, overruling defendant’s motion for a new trial. The motion presented the alleged irregularity and error of the court which involve the two questions hereinbefore stated.

Appellant, as defendant, on the fifth day before the date of the trial of the cause as ordered by the court, filed his verified motion, praying the court to direct the clerk of the court to draw from the box of names of jurors, twenty-five (25) names of persons to serve as a special venire in this cause, for the reasons that there would be numerous challenges of jurors because of the wide publicity of the case throughout the county, and because it had been the practice and custom of the sheriff to subpoena divers persons in the county to appear *227 in the court on the days when criminal causes were to be tried, for the purpose of creating and furnishing a selected class of bystanders, from which to call persons as needed to fill vacancies caused by challenges, or by excused jurors. This motion was overruled by the court, the third day before the day theretofore set for the cause to be tried, and at the same time, as appears by the same judicial entry, the court ordered the sheriff “to cause subpoenas to be issued for thirty (30) reliable and reputable citizens of” the county, who are “qualified to serve as jurors in” the trial of this “cause,” and to call such persons “outside the court-house, to be and appéar in this court at 9 o’clock, a. m., Wednesday, March 12, 1924, and to call such persons to fill vacancies in the regular panel of the traverse jury of this court, as such vacancies occur.”

Whenever the court shall be of the opinion that by reason of numerous challenges which are likely to be made to jurors, a special venire should issue for jurors and the names of persons to compose such special venire shall by the order -of the court be drawn by the clerk ■ from the box which contained the separate slips of paper upon which the names of persons are written to be drawn from such box to serve as jurors (§1825 Burns 1926). The exercise of power by the court by this statute requires that the court act within the confines of a sound judicial discretion. At this point in this case, the court is not confronted with the exercise of its power to order the impaneling of a special jury for the trial of this cause (§1826 Burns 1926); neither is it confronted with the necessity for impaneling a traverse jury from the bystanders because the proper officers have failed and refused to draw and impanel a traverse jury as provided by law (§1824 Burns 1926); neither is it confronted with the necessity to instruct the sheriff to fill a vacancy on the regular panel of the traverse jury caused by any such *228 juror being challenged peremptorily or for cause (§§579, 580, 2259 Burns 1926).

At this point, to wit: the third day prior to the day set for trial of this cause, in the proceedings hereof, the only matter before the court was to render its decision on defendant’s motion for a special venire; unless the court had the right to anticipate the needs of a special venire, which, in the court’s judicial discretion, it was deemed necessary to have to expedite the trial of the cause; which, as hereinbefore stated, it is unnecessary to determine here. The thing requested by the defendant and refused by the court, and the thing done by the court’s order in directing the sheriff to cause subpoenas to be issued for thirty persons who were to be summoned to act as jurors in this cause, bear the same, name in our law, to wit: a special venire, i. e., those who are to come. The appellation might as well, or better, be venire facias, those who have been ordered to come, and still better be the appellation of the common law, venire facias juralores, which was the name of the writ to direct the sheriff, commanding him to come from the body of the county before the court from whence it issued, on some day certain and therein specified, a certain number of qualified citizens’who are to act as jurors in the court. Stephen, Pleading (9th Am. ed.) *183; Stephens, Principles of Pleadings (Andrews) 171, §87; 3 Chitty, Pr. p. 796 [797].

In the case at bar the action of the court overruling defendant’s petition for special venire is the screen upon which is pictured the reasoning of the court leading to its order, which directed the sheriff to cause to be summoned thirty persons to be used as jurors in the trial of the cause. There is but one reasonable solution why the court, on its own motion, made the order in question, directed to the sheriff for thirty extra talesmen, after having denied the petition of ap *229 pellant for a special venire of twenty-five persons; which solution is, that the statutory right given the defendant by the law to petition for a special venire may be lightly regarded. Had the court sustained the petition for the special venire, the jury commissioners would have selected the names of the persons for the venire; by denying appellant’s petition and following that act by the order to the sheriff, the statute was forestalled, and the sheriff picked the persons for a special venire. • The action of the court by its order is conclusive that there was a necessity for the special venire. There are no exceptions in this statute where such request may be denied within the sound judicial discretion of the court, based upon the reason that the trial may be expedited by having jurors called in advance upon the motion of the judge, in the manner as was done here, rather than the court to avail itself of a special venire, selected as provided by law.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
156 N.E. 549, 199 Ind. 225, 1927 Ind. LEXIS 30, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/silverman-v-state-ind-1927.