State v. . Benton

19 N.C. 196
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedDecember 5, 1836
StatusPublished
Cited by23 cases

This text of 19 N.C. 196 (State v. . Benton) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of North Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. . Benton, 19 N.C. 196 (N.C. 1836).

Opinion

Gaston, Judge.

The prisoner was convicted of murder in the Superior Court of Sampson; and from the judgment there rendered against him, has appealed to this court. He assigns for error, certain irregularities of proceeding, in regard to the forming of a jury; the overruling of valid challenges, taken by him to jurors; and the misdirection of the presiding judge, in his charge to the jury. It was our duty to consider of these alleged errors, with the attention due to the immense stake which the prisoner has in the result of our deliberations, and to the importance of all questions affecting the regularity and purity of the trial by jury. This duty has been performed; and lam directed by my brethren to declare the opinion to which our deliberations have conducted us. The first irregularity objected by the prisoner, is as to the mode pursued in the drawing of the jury. It appears upon the record, that when the jury was about to be formed, there were in attendance seventeen jurymen of the original venire, and thirty talesmen. The prisoner required that the names of all the jurors, as well the tales as the original, should be deposited in the box together ; but the court directed that those of the original venire should be first deposited and drawn ; and that the tales should not be resorted to, unless a full jury could not be constituted without them. The prisoner’s counsel has submitted this objection to us without argument. We have not, however, regarded it as waived, but have attentively examined it, and are satisfied that it cannot be supported. The mode of proceeding, observed in this case, we are warranted by our own expe *201 rience and observation in saying, is that which has been generally, if not universally observed in this state many years back, in the trial of capital offences. It certainly was pursued in the case of The State v. Lamon, 3 Hawks, 175, where after the jurors of the original panel were either challenged or accepted, the prisoner tendered his challenge to the array of the tales. It is not necessary to inquire whether a departure from it would be error, but we are convinced that its observance is not only not liable to objection, but is most in accordance with our statutory provisions on the subject of juries. Our laws provide, that the justices of each county court shall appoint a number of freeholders, not less than thirty, nor more than thirty-six, to serve as jurors at the ensuing term of the Superior Court of the county; that these freeholders, so appointed, shall be summoned by the sheriff; that of those returned as summoned, the first eighteen who may be drawn, shall constitute the grand jury, and “ the residue of the names in the box, shall be the names of those who shall serve as petit jurors for the said court.” They further provide, “ that if any of the county courts shall fail or neglect to nominate freeholders, to serve as jurors, as aforesaid, or the persons so nominated shall fail to attend, it shall be lawful for such Superior Court to order the sheriff to summon other freeholders of the bystanders, to serve as jurors; and the persons so summoned shall be held and deemed lawful jurors; provided that such bystanders who shall be so summoned, shall and may be every day discharged ; and the succeeding day, and so from day to day, during the continuance of the court, the sheriff shall summon of the bystanders so many as may he necessary.” It is apparent, then, that upon the petit jurors of the original venire, is imposed the general duty of trying all the issues, as well in criminal, as in civil causes, that may be submitted for trial during the term; and that the bystanders are to be called in to the performance of this duty, only upon a deficiency of the original panel, or where a necessity for resorting to bystanders shall occur.

Although the case before us does not demand an opinion, whether the same mode of proceeding should be fol-’ *202 lowed, when a special writ of venire facias should have been issued, as provided by the act of 1830, c. 27, yet as it as a matter of great public expediency, that an uniform practice should be observed throughout the state; and,, as in the investigation of the present case, our attention has been drawn to the provisions of that act, we shall avail ourselves of the opportunity, to make known our views upon this question also. We consider the act of 1830, as owing its existence to the case of Lamon, already referred to. In that case, from an apprehension of great difficulties in procuring a sufficient number of jurors, free from exception, the presiding judge had issued an order to the sheriff of the county, antecedently to the day of trial, commanding him to summon seventy-fiveadditionaljurors. Theseattend-ed, and after the original panel had been exhausted, were called, and appeared as talesmen, when the prisoner challenged the array of talesmen — 1st. because the order issued was not to summon bystanders; 2dly, because the order was issued on a day antecedently to that of the trial, and 3dly, because it was issued for an excessive number of jurors. The challenge was disallowed, the prisoner was convicted, and then he appealed to this court. It was here held that the challenge was rightfully overruled. Among other reasons for this( decision, the court stated, that as the persons summoned by the sheriff attended, the calling of them into court when so attending, was a sufficient summons of them as bystanders — but that “ whether the court could have' compelled their attendance under the special venire, was another consideration.” The preamble to this act, recites the very doubt so expressed, and the expediency and necessity that the Superior Courts should have power by special writs of venire facias to compel the attendance of a sufficient number of jurors on the trial of a person charged with a capital offence, and for that purpose the act proceeds to enact that whenever a judge of the Superior Court, shall deem it necessary to a fair and impartial trial of any person charged with a capital ' offence, he may issue to the sheriff of the county in which such court may be held, a special writ of venire facias, commanding him to summon such number of the free *203 holders of said county, as the judge may deem sufficient to appear on a specified day of the term as jurors of said court; and that the jurors so summoned shall attend from day to day, until discharged by the court, under the same rules, regulations, and penalties, as are prescribed by law for other jurors. There, is nothing in the act which removes or interferes with the general duty incumbent on the jurors of the original venire. The object of the special venire is to provide auxiliaries in the performance of this duty, in a case of anticipated necessity; and it seems to us it will be construed most consistently with its object, by making use of the jurors thus specially summoned only in the event that their aid shall be actually needed. Though designated as “jurors of said court,” and bound to attend throughout the term, unless sooner discharged, they are so far in the nature of tales jurors as being provided to supply a deficiency of the original panel.

' Another alleged irregularity in the forming of the jury is insisted on by the counsel for the prisoner.

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Bluebook (online)
19 N.C. 196, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-benton-nc-1836.