State v. . Dalton

174 S.E. 422, 206 N.C. 507, 1934 N.C. LEXIS 228
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedMay 2, 1934
StatusPublished
Cited by29 cases

This text of 174 S.E. 422 (State v. . Dalton) 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. . Dalton, 174 S.E. 422, 206 N.C. 507, 1934 N.C. LEXIS 228 (N.C. 1934).

Opinion

*510 Adams, J.

Upon bis arraignment tbe prisoner moved to quash the indictment on the ground of illegality in the organization of the grand jury, and excepted to the court’s denial of his motion.

By an act ratified on 18 March, 1931, section 2334 of the Consolidated Statutes was made applicable to Henderson County. Public Laws, 1931, chap. 131. It was thereby provided that at the first fall and spring-terms of the criminal courts grand juries should be drawn to serve respectively during the remaining fall and spring terms — that is, for a term of six months. A panel was to be drawn from the jury box at least twenty days before each regular or special term of the Superior Court and a grand jury was to be drawn except at terms which were special or confined to the trial of civil cases. C. S., 2314, 2333. In compliance with section 2314 a jury was drawn to serve at a term commencing on 9 October, 1933, and from these jurors was chosen a grand jury by whom the indictment in the present case was found and returned.

At the session of 1933 the General Assembly repealed chapter 131, Public Laws, 1931, and amended section 2334 by providing that a grand jury should be drawn at the spring term of the criminal court of Henderson to serve for twelve months. Public Laws, 1933, chap. 92. The phrase “spring term of the criminal court” obviously refers to the first spring term. The first spring term of 1933 for the trial of civil and criminal actions in Henderson County convened on 16 January. C. S., 1443. Chapter 92, supra, went into effect 2 March, 1933, and did not in any respect affect the organization of the grand jury that had previously been chosen. Nor did it have any relation to the grand jury which was constituted in the fall. Section 2334 provides that grand jurors chosen to serve for twelve months shall be drawn “at the spring term of the criminal court,” the first spring term succeeding the enactment of chapter ninety-two. The prisoner’s construction of these acts would result in the abolition of all courts held in Henderson County in the fall of 1933, and this evidently was not the intention of the General Assembly. In the denial of the motion to quash there was no error.

The second, third, and twenty-ninth exceptions are addressed to the selection of an “alternate” juror. The statute empowers the judge presiding in the Superior Court, when it appears that the trial is likely to be protracted, to direct, after the jury is impaneled, that an additional or alternate juror be selected, sworn, and seated near the jury and given equal opportunity to see and hear the proceedings. The alternate juror must be kept with the jury, must at all times attend upon the trial, and must obey all orders and admonitions given by the court to the jury; and if before submission of the case to the jury a juror dies or becomes incapacitated or disqualified, the alternate juror *511 by order of the judge shall become one of the jury and shall serve as if selected as an original juror. Public Laws, 1931, chap. 103. *

After the jury had been impaneled, G-. D. Davis under an order of the court was drawn as alternate juror and was sworn and impaneled in like manner with the other jurors to serve, however, only in case of necessity. At the conclusion of the charge and before the jury had retired for deliberation, the court made the following entry: “It having-been made to appear to the court that the juror Thomas Mabry is sick and incapacitated, the alternate juror, G. D. Davis, is placed in his stead.”

Upon exceptions duly noted the prisoner assails this proceeding as unconstitutional and as unsupported by sufficient findings of fact. The latter assignment, we presume, has reference to the omission of a preliminary finding that the trial would likely be protracted. There was cause to believe that the trial would be protracted. It began on Wednesday and continued until the following Sunday, and as no request for such finding was made by the prisoner we must assume upon authoritative decisions that the order was based upon such facts as are essential to its support. Commissioner of Revenue v. Realty Co., 204 N. C., 123; S. v. Harris, ibid., 422; Holcomb v. Holcomb, 192 N. C., 504.

*512 It is argued tbat the proceeding is unconstitutional because the act of 1931, which provides for an alternate juror, is forbidden by the Declaration of Rights: “No person shall be convicted of any crime but by the unanimous verdict of a jury of good and lawful men in open court.” Constitution, Art. I, sec. 13.

It is not questioned either that trial by jury is deeply rooted in our institutions or that the term “jury” as understood at common law and as used in the Constitution imports a body of twelve men duly summoned, sworn, and impaneled for the trial of issues joined between litigants, in a civil action or for the determination of facts adduced for and against the accused in a criminal case. Whitehurst v. Davis, 3 N. C., 113; S. v. Scruggs, 115 N. C., 805; S. v. Rogers, 162 N. C., 656; S. v. Berry, 190 N. C., 363. The trial proceeds in the presence and under the supervision of a judge authorized to instruct the jury in matters of law; and the word “convicted” as used in section 13 of the Declaration of Rights is qualified by the phrase “but by the unanimous verdict of a jury ... in open court.” Construing this section in S. v. Alexander, 76 N. C., 231, the Court said, “Nothing can be a conviction but the verdict of the jury.” Cf. Smith v. Thomas, 149 N. C., 100; S. v. Branner, ibid., 559; S. v. Brinkley, 193 N. C., 747. We are therefore confronted with the question whether the verdict establishing the prisoner’s guilt was returned by a jury composed of twelve “good (or free) and lawful men” — liberos et legales homines; and in this inquiry the functions of the alternate juror are necessarily involved.

Under the former practice if a juror in a capital felony became incapacitated it was customary to discharge the entire panel and to try the case de novo. The act of 1931, supra, was designed to cure this evil, and if it preserves the essential attributes of trial by jury, number, impartiality, and unanimity (16 R. O. L., 181, sec. 2), it cannot be said to impair the common-law right as guaranteed by the Constitution.

As to the first element, the jury is composed of twelve men. The alternate technically becomes a juror only when upon an order made by the judge before final submission of the case to the jury he takes the place of a member of the original panel who has died, or who, having become disqualified or incapacitated, has been discharged from further service. From the beginning to the end of the trial the number never varies, and, by a jury of twelve men the verdict is declared.

It is not easy to perceive how the presence of the alternate could influence the reasoning of any juror to the prejudice of the accused. The twelve men by whom the verdict is returned have equal opportunities to hear and appraise the evidence and to receive instructions as to the law.

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Bluebook (online)
174 S.E. 422, 206 N.C. 507, 1934 N.C. LEXIS 228, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-dalton-nc-1934.