State v. Bedford

190 So. 347, 193 La. 104, 1939 La. LEXIS 1169
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedJune 26, 1939
DocketNo. 35378.
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 190 So. 347 (State v. Bedford) 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 v. Bedford, 190 So. 347, 193 La. 104, 1939 La. LEXIS 1169 (La. 1939).

Opinion

ROGERS, Justice.

Willie Ruth Bedford, a negro girl under seventeen years of age, was prosecuted for murder, found guilty as charged without capital punishment and sentenced to imprisonment for life in the state penitentiary. This appeal followed.

The errors of which appellant complains are embodied in sixteen bills of exception. We shall discuss only three of the bills.

Bill No. 3 was taken to the following remarks made by the district attorney in his closing argument to the jury:

“The law provides that a colored boy, guilty of a crime other than a capital crime, they send him out here on the road and punish him that way, but there is no provision for the colored girl, so far as I know. Anything less than a capital crime will fall under the supervision of a Juvenile Court, and a Juvenile Court may do nothing with a person of color, a girl under seventeen years of age, other than to turn her over to some responsible person who will care for her and look after her. * *

' Defendant objected to the remarks as constituting an attempt on the part of the district attorney “to prejudice the jury into returning a greater verdict, and as being a misstatement of the law.” Defendant’s objection was overruled. The trial judge says in his per curiam that the statement of the law made by the district attorney was substantially correct, but if the statement was not correct, the verdict should not be set aside on that account. The trial judge cites State v. Wren, 121 La. 55, 46 *109 So. 99, and State v. Bacon, 138 La. 654, 70 So. 572, in support of his ruling.

In addition to her objection, the defendant requested the trial judge to instruct the jury to disregard the statement of the district attorney, whereupon the trial judge instructed the jury as follows:

“Gentlemen, you will disregard the remarks of the District Attorney, on the question of there not being any prison or place of detention, or whatever remarks he made, with reference to what shall be done with delinquent colored girls, in the event they are not found guilty of murder, in this case.”

Defendant contends that the instructions given the jury by the trial judge were not sufficient to remove the prejudicial effect of the remarks of the district attorney. In support of her contention defendant refers to the testimony taken on her motion for a new trial, wherein it was shown that the jury, about twenty minutes after they had retired to the jury room for their deliberations, sent for' the sheriff and sought to find out from him what proceeding would be taken and what punishment could be inflicted in case defendant were declared to be a juvenile. The record does not disclose what, if any, answer the sheriff gave the jury in response to their inquiry. Later, the jury returned to the courtroom for the purpose of requesting the judge to advise them whether if defendant were not found guilty, there was a place or institution provided for the punishment of young delinquent negro girls. The trial judge refused to advise the jury as requested, coupling his refusal with the explanation that to do so might influence the jury in reaching a verdict they might not otherwise reach; that the matter of punishment was not the concern of the jury but was the concern of the court after the return of the verdict.

We do not think the instructions of the trial judge were such as to efface from the minds of the jurors the impression made by the prejudicial statements of the district attorney. The trial judge, in instructing the jurors to disregard these statements, did not at the same time advise them that the statements were erroneous. As a matter of fact, the trial judge could not do this because, as shown by his per curiam, his views were in accordance with those of the district .attorney. In these circumstances, the trial judge could not, and he did not, make any serious effort to disabuse the minds of the jurors of the harmful effect of the statement of the district attorney.

We do not think there is any question that the statement of the district attorney was highly prejudicial to the defendant. In the first place, the statement emphasized' the fact that the defendant was of the negro race, which was in itself an appeal to race prejudice; in the second place, the statement was in effect an appeal to the jury to convict defendant of murder because otherwise she could not be punished at all, since as charged by the trial judge, the jury could not return a verdict for manslaughter if the defendant was under seventeen years of age, which she was. The information which the jury sought to obtain, first from the sheriff, *111 and then from the trial judge, as to whether if the defendant were found not guilty of murder, she could be punished as a juvenile, clearly indicates that the jury considered the possibility of returning a verdict of manslaughter if they could be assured that defendant could be punished as a juvenile offender. We think this bill shows reversible error.

Bill No. 6 was also taken to a statement made by the district attorney in his argument to the jury. This statement was as follows:

“This court room is crowded with colored folks, — has been crowded all day. It is necessary for you, the Jury, to show them that if you go out wilfully, maliciously and take the life of a fellowman, that you are going to get the same thing that Willie Ruth Bedford got * * *.”

The statement was objected to by the defendant “as being an unfair attempt to prejudice the jury against this defendant who was of the colored race,” and defendant requested the trial judge to charge the jury “not to be prejudiced against the colored race.” The trial judge overruled the objection and declined to instruct the jury as requested. The bill sets forth that:

“It is common public knowledge that in October, 1938, a negro man was lynched within two miles of Ruston, where this trial was being conducted, as a result of criminal assaults on two white women, and brutal attacks on their white men companions, one of the white men being killed. Several jurors in this case were living within four or five miles of the scene of the lynching and within the scene of said criminal assaults.
“In the opinion of defense, said argument by the District Attorney was intended to, and did, prejudice the minds of the jurors against the defendant, who was of the colored race; and the refusal of the court to instruct the jury, as requested, was erroneous, and had the effect of further implanting said prejudice in the minds of the jurors.”

The trial judge in his per curiam referred to the general proposition that the prosecution for crime has two objects, namely, one to punish the perpetrator and the other as a deterrent for others. The judge states that the district attorney was referring to the last mentioned object of the law and not to any prior lynching; that, in fact, the lynching referred to in the bill was- not mentioned by any one during the entire trial. The trial judge concluded his per curiam with the statement that in his opinion the argument was legitimate and proper.

■ The statement of the district attorney clearly referred to matters other than those contained in the record.

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Bluebook (online)
190 So. 347, 193 La. 104, 1939 La. LEXIS 1169, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-bedford-la-1939.