State v. Dunn

109 So. 56, 161 La. 532, 1926 La. LEXIS 2093
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedJanuary 4, 1926
DocketNo. 27426.
StatusPublished
Cited by37 cases

This text of 109 So. 56 (State v. Dunn) 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. Dunn, 109 So. 56, 161 La. 532, 1926 La. LEXIS 2093 (La. 1926).

Opinions

OVEBTON, J.

Byron, W. Bobert, and Eustice Dunn were indicted by the grand jury of the parish of Calcasieu for the murder of Sam E. Duhon. The case was tried only as relates to Byron and W. B. Dunn, the state having elected not to bring Eustice Dunn to trial, when the ease was called. The jury found both Byron and W. B. Dunn guilty as charged, and, upon this verdict, they were sentenced to death. Both have appealed to .this court, and rely upon a number of bills of exception for a reversal of the verdict of the jury and the sentence pronounced against them.

Bills of Exception 1, 2, 3, 5, and 7.

These bills were reserved during the impaneling of the jury, and relate to five challenges, directed against jurors, for cause, and overruled by the court. As defendants exhausted their peremptory challenges in selecting the jury, they present these bills to us for our consideration.

It appears from the bills so reserved that two of the jurors against whom the challenges for cause were directed had made donations to a fund for the relief of the widow and children of the deceased; that three were members of the Ku Klux Klan, of which the deceased was also a member; that two of these three were members of the same church to which the deceased belonged, and of which he was an officer, attended the same Bible class that the deceased attended, anc[ contributed to the fund mentioned above; that two of those who were members of the Klan attended the funeral of the deceased; and that at leant one of them attended it in the regalia of that organization. It further appears that the fund to which some of the jurors mentioned above had contributed was one to which the public generally were asked by a local newspaper to contribute for the relief of the widow and children of the deceased; that those of the jurors who made contributions to the fund made them for the support of the widow and children of the deceased, though they attached no conditions to the donations; that counsel was employed to assist the state in the prosecution, though it does not appear that he was paid, or was to be paid, out of that fund, in whole or in part. It also appears that the jurors, who were Klansmen, answered on their voir dire that the fact that they were members of the Klan would not influence their verdict one way or another if they were accepted as jurors; that those who were members of the same church and Bible class, as was the deceased, answered that they would not be influenced by that fact in reaching a verdict; and those who made donations answered similarly.

Because a juror tendered an accused on trial for murder is a member of the Ku Klux Klan, of which the deceased was also a member, or of that organization and of the *547 same church'and Bible class of which the deceased was a member, and' of which church he was an officer, does not render the juror incompetent,- when it appears that, notwithstanding these affiliations, the juror has not become biased or prejudiced in the case, and is in position to decide it fairly and impartially. As relates to the Klan, it appears from the answers of one of the jurors that there is nothing in the rules, regulations, or ritual of that organization that would call upon a Klansman to convict a person charged with killing a member of the organization when the law and th§ evidence does not justify a conviction. As relates to the other organizations mentioned, it is obvious that there is nothing in them that would call for or sanction a verdict not warranted by the law. Hence, unless it appears that these affiliations caused the jurors mentioned to become biased or prejudiced against the defendants, there is no reason why it should be held that the trial judge; because of them, erred in refusing to sustain the challenges. Our review of the evidence fails to disclose that these affiliations had any such effect, and creates the impression that they did not. Nor do we think that the fact that a juror, tendered to an accused on trial for murder, has contributed to a fund, raised by public subscription, for the relief of the widow and children of the deceased, is a ground, of itself or in connection with the facts above stated, to challenge the juror for cause. If the juror had contributed to a fund for the prosecution of the accused, or of the case, his haring done so would bé a ground for challenge, and the reason why it would be is because the making of the contribution of itself would show bias, and to force the juror upon the accused would be to force upon him a juror who was aiding, or had aided, in the prosecution of the ease. State v. Moore, 48 La. Ann. 380, 19 So. 285. However, a contribution for the relief of the widow and children of the deceased is obviously made upon the supposition that the widow and children are in necessitous circumstances, and the contribution cannot be reasonably considered as made for the prosecution of' the case, although, when made, no conditions were attached to it. Such a contribution does not show bias in the case. It' is true that, as argued by defendants, one of the jurors tendered said on his voir dire that he had heard that the widow had employed counsel to assist the state, from which it is argued that the juror knew that counsel’ had been employed when he made the contribution, and hence is presumed to have madé it with the end in view of assisting the widow in prosecuting the case. It is sufficient, however, to say that the record does not disclose that the juror heard before the contribution was made that the widow had employed counsel, and we infer from the trend of the examination that the juror heard that the widow had done so after the contribution had been made. Nor does the fact that at least one of the jurors tendered the defendants went to the funeral of the deceased, and did so in the regalia of the organization to which the deceased belonged, render the juror incompetent, whether considered alone or in connection with the remaining facts stated above.

Viewing the facts before us as a whole, and considering that each juror stated, in substance, that he felt in position to render a fair and impartial verdict, we are not in position to say that the trial judge erred in refusing to sustain the challenges for cause. Hence, defendants have no just caus.e to complain because they exhausted five of their peremptory challenges in challenging these jurors.

It may be said as a matter of justice to the counsel employed, though we have, for obvious reasons, not considered the statement in reaching a conclusion as to the validity of these challenges, that counsel stated in open *549 Court, though not as a witness, that he was not receiving one penny, directly or indirectly, out of the fund above mentioned.

Bills 6 and 8.

These bills were reserved by defendants to two rulings of the court, in .each of which the court sustained a challenge of a juror for cause, made by the state, because the juror in each instance Said on his voir dire that he would not inflict the death penalty in a case where the evidence was purely circumstantial. The defendants objected to the challenge for cause on the ground that the state had not declared that the case was one wherein the evidence was purely circumstantial, and until it so declared it had no right to challenge for cause on that ground. During the course of the trial it developed that the state’s ease consisted purely of circumstantial evidence.

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Bluebook (online)
109 So. 56, 161 La. 532, 1926 La. LEXIS 2093, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-dunn-la-1926.