State v. Carriere

74 So. 792, 141 La. 136, 1917 La. LEXIS 1474
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedFebruary 12, 1917
DocketNo. 22283
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 74 So. 792 (State v. Carriere) 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. Carriere, 74 So. 792, 141 La. 136, 1917 La. LEXIS 1474 (La. 1917).

Opinions

SOMMERVILLE, J.

Defendant appeals from a verdict finding him guilty of the murder of Marion L. Swords, the shex-iff of the parish of St. Landry, and a judgment condemning him to death.

There are 13 bills of exceptions found in the record, and several unsigned bills.

The first bill has reference to a ruling of the court on the trial of a motion for a change of venue. The motion was subsequently abandoned.

The second bill was taken to a ruling of the court on defendant’s objection to going to trial on the ground that:

“The jury commissioners of the parish of St. Landry had failed and neglected to prepare the tales jury box, or box of 100 tales jury men, in accordance with law by placing therein the names of one hundx-ed men,” etc.

The trial judge states that the objection was overruled “for the reason that the defendant has not established by any method that the list of tales jurors was not regularly drawn, or to show how said list in any manner is irregular.” It appears from the record that 60 names were drawn from the box at one time, and subsequently 40 other names. It was therefore clear that the number of names in 'the box was 100 when the objection to going to trial was made.

[1] Bills Nos. 3, 4, 5, and 6 were taken to rulings declaring four jurors named to have been competent and qualified to sit on the jury. The record contains the examination of these several jurors, in part. It appears that they had answered that they had read or heard of the crime charged against defendant, and that they had formed opinions as to the guilt of the accused. They had answered counsel for the defendant that they would require defendant to prove his innocence. But, on examination by the judge, they testified that they did not understand the questions px-opounded by counsel for the defendant, and answered the following question by the court in the negative:

“Q. Mr. Cannon, if the court instructed you that the defendant is px-esumed to be innocent, and is not required to prove his innocence, but, on the contrary, that the state is required to prove his guilt beyond a reasonable doubt, then you would require him to px’ove himself innocent?”

And in answer to a further question by defendant’s counsel, the juror stated:

“I didn’t understand what you were saying. If I did (that I would requii’e the accused party to prove his innocence before I would acquit him) I will take it back.”

Juror Guidry answered to the same effect. He said that the opinion which he had formed would depend upon the evidence, and that it would yield to that evidence; his opinion was not fixed, and that, if the evidence produced upon the trial was different from what he had heard, his opinion would be changed.

Juror Dupre answered the same; that, while he had formed an opinion, it would yield to the evidence, and that he would go into the jury box and decide the case exclusively on the evidence given by the witnesses and the law as given by the court.

Juror Cormier testified that his opinion was fixed from what he had heard, but that it could be changed by the evidence. When asked:

“Q. Do you feel that, notwithstanding what you have heard or x-ead about the ease and the opinion that you have expx-essed, you could go into the jury box here and under your oath as a juror decide the case according to the law and the evidence?”

—and he answered that he could; and that Ms opinion “would yield to the evidence.”

[139]*139It is well settled that a citizen does not disqualify himself from jury service because he reads the newspaper accounts of the crimes committed in the community and forms his opinion with reference to the guilt or innocence of the accused parties; provided, . that opinion will yield to the evidence produced on the trial of the cause, and that the prospective juror is not biased, and will decide the cause on the evidence adduced on the trial. It appears that 180 jurors were examined on their voir dire before the jury was selected in this case; and it will be assumed that no jury could have been selected in the parish if every inhabitant disqualified himself by having read or talked over the murder of the sheriff of that parish. It will be assumed that no intelligent person in the parish had not read or heard of the occurrence, and that some kind of opinion had been formed by each one as to the guilt or innocence of the accused. But inclination and opinion on the part of the prospective juror should not disqualify him, when it is shown by the examination on his voir dire that he is not prejudiced, and that the opinion which he had formed is not fixed, and would yield to evidence introduced on the trial of the cause, and that he would be guided as to the law of the case by instructions from the trial judge. It would indeed be hard to find, we suppose, 12 jurors who had not read or heard of the murder of the sheriff of their parish; the intelligence of such would be of such a low order that they could hardly be expected to serve as competent jurors in any case. The rulings of the district judge were correct.

[2] The seventh bill of exceptions is taken to the ruling of the court in refusing to permit the defendant to peremptorily challenge a juror who had been accepted by both state and defendant and sworn, which juror was unnamed in the motion to challenge by counsel. It was too late to peremptorily challenge the juror after he had been accepted and sworn. He might have been challenged by the defense before he had been accepted by him. Or, if defendant wished to purge the jury, he should have proceeded in a different manner, and the disqualification of the juror be shown in a legal way.

The eighth bill of exceptions was taken to confessions or admissions made by the defendant to the sheriff of Calcasieu parish, and were testified to by that sheriff as a witness. The ground of objection was that the defendant had been shot on the day before, and that he was not in a physical condition to have made any binding statement, and that he was not responsible for any statement that he made at that time. The objection was overruled by the district judge for the reason that:

“In the opinion of the court the evidence shows that the statement testified to by sheriff Reid was made to him by the defendant, free and voluntary.”

The evidence of the' witness was that the defendant had said that he was sorry that he had killed Sheriff Swords, and that he would not have done it if he had not had certain negroes with him. The witness further testified that the statements made by defendant were made freely and voluntarily, and that, while the defendant was suffering, he was conscious of what he was saying. The admissions of the defendant were properly admitted.

The ninth bill of exceptions is taken to the ruling of the court in permitting Sheriff Reid to testify that a certain rifle and belt had been picked up at the place of the killing and handed to him at the time of the arrest of the defendant, for the reason that it had not been shown that this rifle was the same one that Mr. Fontenot, the sheriff of the parish of St. Landry, had received. Mr. Fontenot did not take the stand to identify the rifle.

Mr. Reid appears to have testified, accord[141]*141ing to the statement of the trial judge, that the rifle was the same rifle which he, Reid, had taken from

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State v. Clark
76 So. 714 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1917)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
74 So. 792, 141 La. 136, 1917 La. LEXIS 1474, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-carriere-la-1917.