State v. Bickham

107 So. 2d 458, 236 La. 244, 1958 La. LEXIS 1303
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedDecember 15, 1958
Docket44171
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 107 So. 2d 458 (State v. Bickham) 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. Bickham, 107 So. 2d 458, 236 La. 244, 1958 La. LEXIS 1303 (La. 1958).

Opinion

McCALEB, Justice.

Appellant was indicted for the murder of one Chester Johnson whom he stabbed fatally with a knife after Johnson struck him with his- fist following words between them in a Negro saloon. After hearing the evidence, the jury brought in a verdict of manslaughter and appellant was sentenced to serve 15 years at hard labor in the State Penitentiary, from which conviction and sentence he prosecuted this appeal. During the trial 28 bills of exceptions were reserved and appellant relies on 20 of these as grounds for reversal. 1 Some of the bills involve the same alleged error and have been grouped by appellant’s counsel in his brief to this Court. We shall consider them as thus presented.

Bill No. 1 was taken when the judge refused to permit defense counsel to interrogate several jurors as to whether they would sustain a plea of self-defense under an assumed state of facts which appellant evidently intended to establish on the trial.

The ruling was correct. It is improper for counsel to interrogate prospective jurors as to their reactions to evidence which might be received at the trial. State v. Henry, 197 La. 999, 3 So.2d 104; State v. Morris, 222 La. 480, 62 So.2d 649; State v. Washington, 225 La. 1021, 74 So.2d 200; State v. Peltier, 229 La. 745, 86 So.2d 693 and State v. Williams, 230 La. 1059, 89 So.2d 898.

Bills of Exceptions Nos. 2, 3, 4 and 5 relate to the judge’s allowance of questions regarding the law of self-defense propounded by the district attorney to prospective jurors on their voir dire examination. These questions, which were unsuccessfully opposed by appellant’s counsel, consisted of rather lengthy statements on the legal requirements for the maintenance of a plea of self-defense. The judge states in his per curiam that he fully explained to the jury the law of self-defense in his general charge and that he did not believe that appellant was prejudiced by his ruling.

Generally speaking, we do not approve of lengthy statements of particular phases of law being expounded to jurors- on their voir dire examination, as a preface for interrogation in which attempts are invariably made to commit the jurors’ vote. This sort of examination overreaches Article 357 of the Code of Criminal Procedure (R.S. 15:357) which declares that *250 the voir dire examination is to ascertain the qualifications of the jurors to try the case and it shall “be limited to that purpose.” However, this Court has consistently ruled that a trial judge has a wide discretion in matters pertaining to the voir dire examination, which will not be disturbed except in cases of clear abuse. See State v. Williams, supra, and authorities there cited. An examination of the statements of the district attorney in this case reveals that they define fairly accurately the law of self-defense and we think it certain that appellant suffered no prejudice as a result of the judge’s allowance of the questions in view of his general charge, in which the jurors were fully instructed on the law of self-defense as it applied to the state of facts developed by the testimony. The bills are therefore not well founded.

When the principal witness for the State, one Sims Presley, was testifying on redirect examination, he was asked whether he and appellant lived in the same neighborhood and how long they had been acquainted. The witness answered that he had known appellant eight years and lived just across the street from him. He was then asked whether they had been friends during the eight years of their acquaintance. Counsel for appellant objected to this question on the ground that it was an attempt by the State to impeach its own witness. The objection was overruled, counsel reserving Bill No. 12.

There is no merit in the bill. It is difficult to perceive that the question propounded was an attempt by the district attorney to impeach the witness1, in the absence of a showing that the testimony sought to be adduced was contrary to statements made by him during the cross-examination by defense counsel.

Bills Nos. 13, 14, 15, 16, 17 and 18 were reserved when the judge refused to permit appellant’s counsel to question two police officers on cross-examination concerning recent investigations made by them of “cuttings in colored bar rooms”.

Obviously, the testimony attempted to be elicited from the witnesses had no relevancy to the case on trial. Counsel at no time indicated to the judge the purpose of the questions directed to the officers under cross-examination. In his brief, counsel says that he was entitled to educe evidence of the officers’ experience in investigating other Negro cutting scrapes because these witnesses had inferred in their testimony that appellant fled the scene to avoid apprehension and prosecution. We fail to discern the connection.

During his argument to the jurymen, the district attorney stated that, since defense counsel would no doubt tell them *252 .not to send any man to the chair or the ■penitentiary on the testimony of Sims Presley, he wished to say that, if Sims Presley departed from the truth, he did it in the interest of appellant and not in the interest of justice. Defense counsel, seemingly regarding this statement as an attempt by the district attorney to impeach 'his own witness, objected to the argument ■as highly improper and, when overruled, reserved Bill No. 21.

The complaint is insubstantial. The ■statement of the district attorney was not ■objectionable. In effect, he informed the members of the jury that it was their function to judge the credibility of the State witness; he did not say that this witness departed from the truth; he said that, if he did not tell the truth, he did it in the interest of appellant.

Bill No. 22 was- taken to the alleged improper argument by the district attorney in stating that defense counsel, and all other defense attorneys who argue self-defense, usually confuse the jury. When counsel objected on the ground that the jury was not interested “in what other defense attorneys argued”, the judge remarked that the district attorney was aware of this and admonished counsel not to interrupt the' argument without first obtaining permission from the Court.

We consider the hill inconsequential. The remark of the district attorney as to the argument of other defense attorneys in cases involving self-defense, while clearly immaterial, could hardly have prejudiced appellant and the admonition of the judge, while founded on a faulty premise (the bill of exceptions showing that defense counsel’s objection was directed to the court), was not of such a nature, in our opinion, as to adversely affect appellant or to be regarded as a ground for reversal of the conviction. R.S. 15:557.

Bills Nos. 23, 24, 25 and 26 were taken to the denial of appellant’s requested special charges, Nos. 2, 3, 4 and 5. In his per curiam, the judge states that he refused these charges because he clearly explained the law of self-defense in his general charge to the jury and further for the reason that the requested charges, as drawn, contained many hypothetical statements of abstract legalisms which would have served only to confuse the jury.

Assuming for purposes of discussion that the special charges were wholly correct and wholly pertinent, which is required by Article 390 of the Code of Criminal Procedure (R.S.

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Bluebook (online)
107 So. 2d 458, 236 La. 244, 1958 La. LEXIS 1303, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-bickham-la-1958.