State v. Chandler

150 So. 386, 178 La. 7, 1933 La. LEXIS 1803
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedJuly 7, 1933
DocketNo. 32407.
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 150 So. 386 (State v. Chandler) 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. Chandler, 150 So. 386, 178 La. 7, 1933 La. LEXIS 1803 (La. 1933).

Opinion

ODOM, Justice.

Defendant was prosecuted for murder, convicted of manslaughter, and sentenced to hard labor for a term of not less than three nor more than four and a half years. This appeal followed.

The errors of which he complains are set out in eight bills of exception.

Bill No'. 1 was reserved to the refusal of the court to sustain defendant’s challenge of a juror on the ground of his relationship to deceased. Article 351 of the Code of Criminal Procedure provides that one of the causes for which a juror may be challenged is: “That the relations, whether by blood, marriage, employment, friendship or enmity, between the juror and the accused, or between the juror and the person injured, are such that it must be reasonably believed that they would influence the juror in coming to a verdict.”

The examination of the juror on his voir dire disclosed that his father-in-law was either a first or second cousin to the mother of deceased; he was not sure which. He said he had heard his father-in-law refer to deceased as “Cousin Jim Doles.” He was asked if “the families visited back and forth,” and he said, “No, Sir; the only time I have seen Mr. Doles at the place was when Mr. Reilly and I were up there on that coffee job.” He stated in answer to questions propounded to him that he would disregard the fact of this family connection and “exclude” even the knowledge of it in his deliberations.

The relationship or rather the family connection shown to exist in this case is entirely too remote to be considered as a disqualification on the juror. Furthermore, the question of the competency of the jurors is one which is left largely to the sound discretion of the trial judge. State v. Caron, 118 La. 349, 42 So. 960; State v. Dunn, 161 La. 532, 109 So. 56; State v. Scarborough, 152 La. 669, 94. So. 204.

2. Bill No. 2 was reserved to the refusal of the trial judge to grant .a continuance. The motion for continuance was based on the ground that two witnesses summoned by defendant were absent on'account of illness. In his motion for continuance defendant set out what he expected to prove by said witnesses, and that their testimony was relevant and material. But he did not state that the fac.ts to which the witnesses would testify could not be proved by any witness in attendance upon the court. That was necessary under article 322 of the Code of Criminal Procedure, which provides that:

“Every motion for a continuance based .upon the absence of witnesses must show:
“(1) By a disclosure of all the facts which the absent witnesses are expected to testify *11 to, tfie materiality of said testimony, and that said facts can be proved by no witness in attendance upon the court.”

The motion for continuance was defective. Aside from that, however, the granting or refusal to grant a continuance is largely within, the discretion of the trial court. Article 320 of the Code of Criminal. Procedure provides that:

“The granting or refusing of any continuance is within the sound discretion of the trial judge; provided, that any arbitrary or Unreasonable abuse of such discretion may be reviewed by the proper appellate tribunal on appeal.”

This was the rule long before the adoption of the Code. State v. Chevallier, 36 La. Ann. 81, 86; State v. Taylor, 167 La. 1113, 120 So. 875 State v. Dundas, 168 La. 95, 121 So. 586; State v. Flores, 169 La. 22, 124 So. 132; State v. Chevallier, 169 La. 135, 124 So. 670.

The trial judge does not seem to have abused his discretion in this case.

3. Bill No. 3. The state offered to prove by a certain witness that a 16-gauge gun had been recently discharged as evidence that it was the weapon with which the fatal wound was inflicted. On cross-examination counsel for defendant asked the witness if he had not stated at the preliminary trial that a 12-gauge gun had been fired. This question was asked for the purpose of laying a foundation for impeaching the testimony of the witness. The question was objected to on the ground that a proper foundation had not been laid. The objection was sustained and hill No. 3 was reserved.

Under article 493 of the Code of Criminal Procedure, and under the rule which prevailed here prior to its adoption, in Order to impeach the credibility of a witness by proof that he had on a former occasion made statements contrary to the testimony which he was then giving, it is necessary to first ask him if he made such statement, and his attention must first be called to the time, place, and circumstances, and to the person to whom the alleged statement was made, “in order that the witness may have an opportunity of explaining that which is prima facie contradictory.”

Without going through this formality, the proper foundation for impeaching the witness is not laid. In this case the witness was asked if he did not make a certain statement while a witness at the preliminary trial of the accused. That question sufficiently directed the attention of the witness to the time, place, and circumstance of his making the statement, and the person or persons to whom made.

The trial judge did not write a per curiam to the bill, and we are not informed as to his reasons for refusing to permit the impeachment of the witness. But as there is nothing in the bill to show the materiality of the testimony sought hy the state, we assume that the ruling of the judge was based on that ground.

“It is not competent to impeach a witness as to collateral facts or irrelevant matter.” Code Criminal Procedure, art. 494.

The relevancy of the question whether a 12 or 16 gauge gun had been recently discharged does not appear from the bill. There is nothing to show what kind of a gun defendant owned or whether he owned any kind of a shotgun, either a 12 or a 16 gauge; or that *13 accused used any shotgun on the occasion of the homicide, or whether deceased was killed with a shotgun.

The facts recited in the bill are entirely too meager for us to decide whether the testimony was relevant or whether the facts sought to be brought out were merely collateral. We cannot therefore say that the trial judge erred in his ruling.

Bill No. 4. From this bill and those which follow, it appears that one contention made by defendant was that the fatal wound was inflicted accidentally by the deceased himself. Apparently anticipating this defense, the state called a physician and asked him if in his opinion the deceased could have inflicted'the wound upon himself without being powder burned. This question was objected to by counsel for defendant on the ground that the physician had not been qualified as an expert in the use of firearms, and for that reason should not be allowed to express an opinion. The bill recites that the objection was first sustained, “Whereupon the District Attorney then asked the witness the same question, which question was objected to for the same reason as stated in the objection to the previous question. Whereupon the court overruled the objection and counsel then and there reserved a bill.”

It thus appears that the court first sustained defendant’s objection on the ground that the witness had not shown that he was an expert in the use of firearms, and that it later permitted him to testify.

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150 So. 386, 178 La. 7, 1933 La. LEXIS 1803, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-chandler-la-1933.