State v. Bunger

14 La. Ann. 461
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedMay 15, 1859
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 14 La. Ann. 461 (State v. Bunger) 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. Bunger, 14 La. Ann. 461 (La. 1859).

Opinions

Voorhies, J.

The defendant was indicted, in the year 1856, for the murder of his wife, found guilty and sentenced to death. Having appealed to the Supreme Court, in session at Munroe, he succeeded in obtaining a reversal of this judgment; and the case was remanded for a new trial. 11 An. 607.

A new indictment for the same offence was preferred against him in the District Court. He then obtained a change of venue, was tried, again found guilty, and was sentenced to death.

We will now consider the questions of law presented by the numerous bills of exception, which the prisoner has taken to the rulings of the court below:

I. There is a complaint with regard to the service of the venire ; tho bill of exception states, “ that no list of the jury, who were to pass on his trial, had been delivered to the accused two entire days before that time.”

The record does not show that this party ever complained that an informal and irregular list of jurors were ever served upon him, nor does the District Attorney, in his brief, concede this point.

The Sheriff, in his return, states, that “ he served on the prisoner a certified list of the jury for the first week of the venire facias, who were liable to service as petit jurors.” It is true, the same bill of exception sets up as a matter of grievance, that the District Judge admitted the introduction of parol evidence, “ to prove that the list of jurors served on the accused, was made out after certain jurors had been excused.” Apart from the manifest inconsistency that wo find in this bill of exceptions, with regard to the fact of the service of the venire, [462]*462we must confess our inability to see the practical effect of the second objection. There would be some meaning in it, had the prisoner rested his complaint upon the ground, that the list of jurors served upon him, was not such a one as the law contemplates. As he has not done this, we must overrule this bill of exception.

II. A juror by the name of G. W. Waugh was challenged for cause by the accused, on the ground that he had formed and expressed an opinion as to the guilt of the accused. The objection was overruled ; but it appears that the juror did not sit on the trial of this case.

This juror, being sworn on his voir dire, states : That he has formed and expressed an opinion as to the guilt or innocence of the prisoner ; that he has heard a good deal said about this case, the evidence of which, however, he has not heard; that, after hearing the evidence, he can give a fair and impartial verdict ; that he has heard the accused himself speak of the case; that he is of opinion that the accused is guilty ; and, finally, that he has no prejudice or opinion which will prevent him from doing impartial justice after having heard the testimony.

We will not disturb this ruling of the District Judge in this instance, for several reasons. Was the opinion of the juror based wholly upon rumor ? Or wholly upon the narrative of the accused himself? Or partly on both ? Now an opinion predicated upon rumor, when there is no bias or prejudice in the mind of the juror, is not a disqualification. On the other hand, if this opinion is based on the statement of the prisoner, the objection would seem to come more properly from the District Attorney.

The apparent hardship, in this case, consists in the fact, that the juror stated that he believed the prisoner guilty; but then, he does not say that his opinion is based on the declarations of the prisoner, nor on rumor. And, although from his answers, one or the orther, or perhaps both of these elements, must have presided in the formation of his opinion, there was clearly presented for adjudica^ tion, a question of fact, which the inferior court alone could decide. Was that opinion based upon rumor ? Was it based on the declarations of the prisoner ? Or was it the result of both ?

This was a matter of fact, which had to be weighed; and it is not made apparent by bill of exceptions, that in so doing, the District Judge violated any known rule of law applicable to the instance, or applied in its solution a ruling of doubtful applicability.

The jurisdiction of this court being limited to questions of law in criminal cases, it is obvious that we cannot review the action of the court below in this matter, without trespassing on the facts; and that is another reason why the ruling of the District Judge in refusing the challenge for cause of the juror, G. W. Waugh, should not be disturbed. 13 An. 491.

We may add that, as this juror did not sit in the case, and as it does not appear that the defendant thereby exhausted his peremptory challenges, we are unable to perceive the nature of the injury, which claims redress at our hands.

With regard to the other jurors challenged for cause, to wit, J. S. Bugg, Henry Maddox and B. S. Simms, it appears that their opinion was based wholly upon rumor, and that they were open to conviction. It is true that J. S. Bugg stated, in answer to the question: “ Would circumstantial evidence, different from what you have heard, change your opinion of the case”? “I think not.” But at the same time, he made the statement that “ he could judge of this case as of a case about which he had heard nothing, and formed no opinion.” The [463]*463juror evidently misapprehended the purport of the question propounded to him relative to circumstantial evidence, the nature of which was probably unfamiliar to him.

It was, however, peculiarly within the province of the court below, to determine whether the facts elicited from the juror, on his voir dire, were such as to warrant the conclusion that the juror was or was not open to conviction ; and, if the accused was under the impression, that in so doing, an error or mistake of law had been committed to his detriment, it was incumbent upon him to present his grievance in a tangible form. As this bill of exception does not point out the error of law complained of, (and this remark applies to the challenge for cause of the other jurors,) we are exposed, in sustaining it, to review an opinion of the District Judge, which possibly may have been the solution of a mere question of fact, conceding the law to be as stated by the defendant’s counsel. Let us add that of these four jurors, the only one who sat in the case was Henry Maddox, who was clearly qualified to do so.

It is the duty of parties, in a criminal prosecution, to set up their grievances on appeal to this court, so that it can safely exercise its jurisdiction, without being exposed to violate the constitutional provision upon this subject. See the case of State v. Brunetto, 13 An. 45, and the authorities there quoted. See opinion of O. J. Merrick, in case of State v. Henderson, 13 An. 491.

III. The accused made a motion, in the court below, that the District Attorney be ordered to elect on which of the two indictments for the same offence, he would prosecute. No bill of exception was taken to the ruling of the District Judge, upon the rejection of this application.

Besides, the motion to elect can be exercised only with reference to the improper insertion of different counts in the same indictment. Wharton’s Criminal Law, p. 190, ed. 1852.

IV.

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Bluebook (online)
14 La. Ann. 461, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-bunger-la-1859.