State v. Garig

43 La. Ann. 365
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedMarch 15, 1891
DocketNo. 10,767
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 43 La. Ann. 365 (State v. Garig) 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. Garig, 43 La. Ann. 365 (La. 1891).

Opinions

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Watkins, J.

The three defendants were indicted for murder, convicted of manslaughter, and sentenced each to twenty years’ imprisonment at hard labor in the penitentiary, and from that judgment and sentence they have appealed.

I.

The first bill of exceptions to which our attention is attracted is taken by one of the three accused to the overruling of his objection to the competency of a juror. His objection was that the person tendered as a juror had, on his voir dire, confessed that he had formed and expressed an opinion, and that same was fixed and deliberate, and his contention is that such an opinion is a disqualifying one, and that the judge erred in not sustaining it.

But the bill discloses that after the judge ruled that he was a competent juror, this accused challenged him peremptorily, employing his last challenge.

There is nothing in the bill to show the stage of the proceedings at which this occurred, or that this accused suffered any injury from being necessitated to use his last challenge, or that he was compelled to accept on the panel persons inimical to his interest. On the contrary, it appears from the statement of the judge that “ there [367]*367were two other accused on trial'who had, at the time, over twelve challenges at their disposal.”

In the absence of any reason or cause being assigned why those •challenges were unavailable to this particular accused by their being employed by his co-defendants in perempting objectional persons, we can not' perceive in what way he was injured.

The three defendants were jointly indicted and tried for the same, identical crime, and, presumably, objections urged to a juror by one, would be-a common objection for all. If, on the contrary, the objection was specially applicable, to one only of the accused, that fact should have been stated in the bill.

But if these reasons be deemed insufficient in law to sustain the judges’ ruling, we think the juror was competent under repeated decisions of this court.

The bill recites the following, viz:

“ He (the juror) declared that he had formed a fixed opinion concerning the guilt of the accused; that it would not yield to circumstantial evidence; and that the effect of his opinion was to produce, to some extent, a bias and prejudice against the accused, but on being interrogated by the court, he said his opinion would yield readily to evidence, provided he believed the testimony offered to counteract such opinion.”

But the judge observed thqt “the juror did not intend to say that he had no prejudice against the accused, but had a prejudice against the crime which they were charged with having committed. I then questioned him, as stated in the bill, and he made the answers as stated.”

If, under the circumstances this accused can be heard to complain, we are of opinion that the complaint urged is not well founded. State vs. Farrar, 35 An. 315; State vs. Dorsey, 40 An. 470; State vs. Dent, 41 An. 1083.

II.

The second bill relates to the judge having allowed the District Attorney to make two arguments before the jury. It appears that the District Attorney made an opening argument, whereupon the defendant’s counsel proposed to submit the case to the jury under the charge of the court and without argument. The District Attorney claimed the right to present an additional argument and that right having been accorded him, counsel for the accused excepted.

[368]*368Bat the judge states: “I ruled in this case that the State had the opening and closing argument and the defense had the right to reply if they saw fit. They did reply in a lengthy argument, and the case was closed on the part of the State.”

It is quite impossible to conceive the grounds of the defendant’s complaint.

Whether the judge ruled correctly or. erred in permitting the District Attorney to make a second argument after the defendant’s counsel had proposed to submit the case without argument on their part is of no practical importance, because they accepted the situation and made an argument, to which the District Attorney replied.

Defendants had the full benefit of an argument, and nothing useful to them could be accomplished in this regard by remanding the cause.

III.

In the third bill, 'the defendants complain of e.ertain alleged misstatements of fact, made by the District Attorney in the course of his closing argument and which the judge declined to allow their counsel to correct.

The judge says: “ I ruled that the testimony of the witness was for the jury as they had heard it, and I, as judge, could not instruct the jury as to who was right.”

While the defendants may feel aggrieved at the course pursued by the District Attorney, and the statement complained of may have been to their disadvantage, it is not easily perceived how the judge could have permitted an explanatory statement by their counsel without placing the jury under the impression that one or the other was correct.

In State vs. Washington, 30 An. 49, a case was presented where the trial judge during the course of the argument “denied the assertion of counsel and prevented him from commenting on the disputed fact and the prisoner excepted and on that ground moved for a new trial,” and the court said “the interruption was unauthorized and irregular and, as it come from one who is justly presumed to stand indifferent and disinterested between the prisoner and the State; one in whom an impartial jury is justly inclined to believe and trust, it may have influenced their minds and verdict.”

So, in this case had the judge acceded to the wishes of the prisoner’s counsel and permitted him to have made an explanation to [369]*369the jury, in violation of the questioned statement of the District Attorney, they might have received the impression that the judge conceded its correctness, and allowed such impression to have influenced their verdict.

This was doubtless the theory on which the judge’s ruling was based.

In State vs. Duck, 35 An. 704, a similar question arose. In that case an exception, was taken by prisoner’s counsel, to the judge’s refusal “ to stop the District Attorney in the course of his argument * * * charging that the District Attorney was making an improper and unfair argument to the jury.” But we said: “ There is no force in the complaint. This court can not and will not interfere with District Judges in the manner of controlling their courts or of enforcing rules of propriety and decorum on the officers of the court.”

Mr. Bishop and other common law authors state the rule differently, but as our law is exceptional those authorities can not apply.

We observe that, so far as the record discloses, the defendant’s counsel requested of the judge no special charge, made no objection to the charge he gave the jury, and failed to make mention, in his application for a new trial, of the prejudicial effect of said ruling as a reason why a new trial should have been granted him.

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Bluebook (online)
43 La. Ann. 365, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-garig-la-1891.