State ex rel. Leche v. Waggner

42 La. 54
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedJanuary 15, 1890
DocketNo. 10,455
StatusPublished

This text of 42 La. 54 (State ex rel. Leche v. Waggner) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State ex rel. Leche v. Waggner, 42 La. 54 (La. 1890).

Opinion

[57]*57The opinion of the court was delivered by

Watkins, J.

Under the authority of Articles 196, 200 and 201 of-the Constitution, the District Attorney of the Twenty-sixth Judicial District instituted this suit against the respondent as Sheriff of the-Parish of Jefferson, one of the parishes composing that district, for-his amotion or removal from office.

On the authority of Act 185 of 1880, the plaintiff prayed that a. special jury be ordered to try the case, and the jury selected returned a verdict in favor of the relator, and from a judgment of removal the respondent has appealed.

Preliminary to the discussion of the various charges that are preferred against the respondent, there are several alleged irregularities in the proceedings which must be considered.

I.

The respondent’s counsel excepted to and moved to quash the. venire on the grounds: (1) That the Jury Commissioners did not examine and revise the original venire list, and strike therefrom the. names as required by law, but that such revision was made by persons who are unauthorized by law; (2) that the venire was drawn within thirty days of the term at which the jurors were to serve, and was not advertised in the official journal as required by law; (8) that no list of the jury was made by the clerk and handed to the sheriff to be served; (4) that all of the officers appointed by law, and citizens appointed by the court did not.participate in drawing the venire.

This suit was filed on the 18th of June, 1889, and a regular non jury term of the court convened on the 24th of that month, and on that day the respondent’s motion to quash the venire was filed. The law provides that “in case either party prays for a jury during a term for which no jury has been drawn * * the court shall at once, order the Jury Commissioners to draw * í! a special jury * * to try the case, if either party require it. * * In all cases, where a special jury is ordered, the judge shall order the drawing of thirty qualified jurors, who shall be summoned by service of notice in the usual form.” Section 4, of Act 185 of 1880.

In exact compliance with that statute, the judge a quo made an order for the summoning of a special jury of thirty qualified jurors. This order was made on the day the' suit was filed, and the Jury [58]*58Commissioners assembled on the 18th of June following and revised the jury lists, and selected therefrom the requsite number of names and placed them upon separate slips of paper, and deposited them in a box, and thirty names were drawn therefrom and listed, and the list constituted the special venire in question. It is quite true that only twenty-six persons answered to their names when called on the day the court first convened, and that one was not summoned, but neither the validity or legality of the venire were effected thereby.

Under such circumstances the special jury is not required to be drawn more than thirty days before the term of court convenes, and no advertisement is required.

There was no irregularity or illegality in the drawing or the composition of the jury.

II.

The petition, taken in connection with the annexed documents, state the charges fully, and a cause of action is set out.

III.

Counsel make serious complaint of the judge’s ruling in regard to fixing the case for trial. We can discover no impropriety in the acts Df the judge in this particular, or any possible injury the respondent has suffered, on account of such alleged errors. The judge was fully authorized and empowered to enact rules of proceeding in his court. O. P. 145.

As our predecessors very justly observed in Green vs. Dakin, 15 La. 152, we may properly reiterate here:

“We have not the power, and still less the inclination, to interfere with the police and regulations of inferior courts unless they be manifestly contrary to law and lead to gross injustice.”

This is not the case in this instance.

IV.

Respondent made an application for a change of venue on the ground that he could not expect to obtain a fair trial in the parish of Jefferson, where the suit was pending, “because of prejudice existing in the public mind.” R. S. Sec. 8908.

Under the evidence in the record we do not feel justified in interfering with the judge’s discretion.

[59]*59v.

On the 5th of July, the respondent filed an affidavit stating that one Wilson, who was at that time in Ohieago, Illinois, was an important witness and that his testimony was material and indispensable to his defence; and that said Wilson left the parish of Jefferson prior to the institution of this suit. It further stated that the testimony of one Bates, who resided in the parish of Bast Baton Rouge, was material and indispensable for his defence. On this affidavit the respondent’s counsel requested the issuance of appropriate ■commissions to have the testimony of said witnesses taken, under the provisions of C, P. 436 and 437. This application was refused by the court because the motion and affidavit were not prepared as the law requires, nor within the delay fixed by law.

Article 436 of the Code of Practice provides that “when the witness intended to be examined lives out of the State, it shall be sufficient for the party wishing to take his. testimony to apply to the judge having jurisdiction of the cause, and swear to the materiality of the testimony.”

This article must be construed with the succeeding articles, one of which provides that “commissions must be accompanied with the interrogatories,” and must be notified to the adverse party. O. P. 438.

This was not done in this ease. But the circumstances under which this application was made were peculiar and exceptional, as will readily appear from what has already been said in this opinion, and many of them are set out by the judge a quo in his reasons for refusing it. Like the question of practice, in reference to the fixing of causes for trial, much discretion is vested in the judge who presides at the trial. Indeed, the Code of Practice provides that “when either the plaintiff or the defendant has witnesses whom he wishes to be heard in support of his claims, he must cause the testimony of such witnesses to be taken in writing, to be read in evidence on the trial of the cause, pursuant to the rules of. the respective courts.” ‘C. P. 424.

It is not pretended that the application was made in pursuance of C. P. 465; and it could not have been, because it is distinctly stated that one of the witnesses resided in Baton Rouge, and the other went to Chicago before the suit was filed; and it does not appear that either party had ever been summoned.

[60]*60The ruling of the judge was clearly correct.

The application having been refused, the defendant’s counsel prepared and tendered another application, in which the substance of' the testimony of those witnesses was given; and time was demanded to take the evidence. In the exercise of a legal right, the relator’s counsel made and filed an admission that if the witnesses named were present in open court they would swear to the facts enumerated ; and it was the duty of the court forthwith to proceed with the trial as if such witnesses had been examined. O. P. 466.

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Related

Green v. Dakin & Dakin
15 La. 152 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1840)

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Bluebook (online)
42 La. 54, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-leche-v-waggner-la-1890.