State v. Anderson

37 P. 1, 14 Mont. 541, 1894 Mont. LEXIS 71
CourtMontana Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 9, 1894
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 37 P. 1 (State v. Anderson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Montana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Anderson, 37 P. 1, 14 Mont. 541, 1894 Mont. LEXIS 71 (Mo. 1894).

Opinion

De Witt; J.

The defendant was convicted of murder in the first degree. He appeals from the judgment. His motion for a new trial was denied. He now asks us to review the alleged causes for a new trial which he set up on that motion. We will examine them in their order:

1. Misconduct by the juror Rich: It is set forth by the affidavit of S. M. Nye that he had a conversation with juror Rich after the trial, in which said Rich said to him substantially as follows: “When we went out, four of the jury were in favor of acquitting the defendant. I told them that if we were going to acquit the defendant, or have a hung jury, that we had better send up and have our Winchesters brought down to us, and nave them loaded to the muzzle; that, if we did not convict, we dare not face the people without our guns.” The affidavit of a juror as to his misconduct in the jury-room is not to be taken to impeach his verdict. (See cases cited in Gordon v. Trevarthan, 13 Mont. 387; 40 Am. St. Rep. 452.) If what a juror says on oath, by affidavit, is not to be taken to impeach [545]*545his verdict, it would seem, a fortiori, that what another person says that the juror said should not be taken for such purpose. But, if the Nye affidavit were to be considered, Rich denied by affidavit that he used such language, and six of his co-jurors, by affidavit, deny that he (Rich) had used any such language in the jury-room as was attributed to him by the Nye affidavit. (Territory v. Burgess, 8 Mont. 57.) The decision of the court, in denying a new trial on this ground, was unquestionably correct.

2. The defendant presented affidavits that recited that, since the trial, juror Rich had said: “If that man gets a new trial, and is turned loose, he shall never get out of this town alive. I will shoot him down with my own hand, like a dog.” Rich, in his affidavit used on the hearing, does not deny that he made use of these expressions, but he says that they were all made since the verdict was rendered, and that his opinion so expressed was formed by hearing the evidence adduced at the trial, and that when he was impaneled as a juror he had no bias or prejudice whatever. These expressions are urged as showing prejudice by the juror Rich. “Prejudice” means “prejudgment ”; “judgment beforehand.” Rich’s statements certainly show his opinion or judgment as to defendant’s guilt. His verdict also showed that, as it ought. But the expressions do not show his prejudgment or prejudice. The showing is uncontradicted that this was the juror’s after judgment—his opinion after the trial— and formed upon hearing the evidence. His opinion of the guilt of the defendant, after the trial, and after verdict of guilty, cannot be taken as proof that he held such opinion before the trial, in the absence of any showing that he did hold such opinion, and in the presence of the express showing that he did not hold any such opinion before the trial. This ground for new trial was also properly overruled by the court.

3. Disqualification of the juror Rife, by reason of expression of opinion, showing bias, made before the trial, is the next ground for new trial presented. Rife was a juror called on open venire after the regular panel was exhausted. W. Altimus makes affidavit that he was in the sheriff’s office one day after the killing of deceased, and before the trial; that Rife came in, and “ when informed that Field, the defendant, was [546]*546in jail, charged with the murder, he said, ‘You had better watch him pretty close, for he is a tough citizen,’ or words to that effect.” Rife has had no opportunity to deny the matter set up in this affidavit since it was made. He has been absent from the state, and, in the haste of making this motion for a new trial, he could not be reached. But Rife did testify under oath, on his voir dire examination, and subject to cross-examination as to details, that he had no bias or prejudice against defendant, nor had he formed or expressed any opinion as to the guilt of defendant. The district court had before it the oral examination of Rife, and the ex parte affidavit used against him. This expression alleged to be used by Rife does not tend to show bias or prejudice, or an opinion of the guilt or innocence of the defendant. (Territory v. Burgess, 8 Mont. 57.) Because a juror may have a general opinion that a defendant is a “tough citizen” is not evidence of the possession by such juror of the opinion that the defendant is guilty of the particular crime with which he stands charged; especially when the juror testifies, under examination and cross-examination, that he knows nothing about what purport to be the facts of the case, and has no opinion as to the guilt or innocence of defendant. Most bad men have a reputation in the community in which they live. A knowledge of such reputation, coupled with ignorance of all the alleged facts of the offense charged against defendant, and an absence of all opinion, bias, or prejudice, is not a. disqualification of a juror.

Again, as to juror Rife, we have the affidavit of H. H. Ash, m which he says “that he is personally acquainted with, and well knows, a certain Frank Rife, who was a juror on the trial of the above-entitled action, upon which trial defendant was on the eighteenth day of May, 1894, convicted of the killing of one Emanuel Fleming, at the city of Livingston, on the twentieth day of April, A. D. 1894, and a verdict of murder in the first degree brought in and rendered; that on or about the tenth day of May, 1894, and before said Rife was summoned as a juror in said cause, affiant had a conversation with said Rife, in which conversation said Rife made the unqualified assertion, ‘Field ought to be hung.’” Upon affidavits of this nature, Mr. Justice De Wolfe perti[547]*547nently remarked in Territory v. Burgess, 8 Mont. 57, as follows: “In this connection, it is not improper to say that the temptation is strong on the part of a defendant who has been convicted in a criminal case, and particularly on the grave charge of murder, to try and obtain a new trial on the two grounds alleged in this case—of misconduct of the jury, and incompetency of a juror by reason of having expressed an opinion in the case. These, when the facts clearly establish the misconduct in the one case, or the expression of an opinion by a juror in the other, are plainly sufficient grounds for granting a new trial. But in view of the temptation on the part of the defendant, and also on the part of his friends, to obtain a rehearing in the case of conviction, and in view, also, of the facility with which affidavits for this purpose can be obtained, courts should closely scan affidavits procured for that end, and, unless convinced of their correctness, should not be influenced by them in granting a new trial; and this, we think, has been the action of the district court in the present case.” As above noted, there was no opportunity to obtain Bife’s statement as to the truth of the Ash affidavit. The motion for new trial was necessarily hurriedly prepared, and heard less than twenty-four hours before the time set for the execution of the defendant. Bife was out of the state, and could not be reached. Under such circumstances there would be a great temptation to a friend of the defendant to make such an affidavit as the Ash affidavit. Both the affidavit and the circumstances should he closely scanned. They doubtless received such scrutiny from the learned district judge. He had heard Bife’s oral examination on his voir dire,

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
37 P. 1, 14 Mont. 541, 1894 Mont. LEXIS 71, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-anderson-mont-1894.