State v. Golden

183 S.W.2d 109, 353 Mo. 585, 1944 Mo. LEXIS 469
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedSeptember 5, 1944
DocketNo. 38813.
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 183 S.W.2d 109 (State v. Golden) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Golden, 183 S.W.2d 109, 353 Mo. 585, 1944 Mo. LEXIS 469 (Mo. 1944).

Opinions

Orville Golden was convicted in the circuit court of the city of St. Louis, Missouri, on a charge of embezzlement and sentenced to serve three years' imprisonment in the penitentiary. He appealed. Golden, Ed Hill, Earl Jenkins and Paul Hulahan were jointly charged with the offense. A severance was asked for and granted. Hill was tried and convicted. His sentence was reversed and the cause remanded for retrial. See State v. Hill,352 Mo. 895, 179 S.W.2d 712.

[1] Appellant challenged the sufficiency of the indictment. We considered this question at length in the Hill case and held the indictment sufficient. We adhere to our former ruling and therefore need not review the question again. Appellant filed a motion to continue the case alleging that the inhabitants of the city of St. Louis were so prejudiced against him that it was impossible to obtain a jury that would fairly try the issues involved in the case. Evidence was offered by appellant in support of his motion. This evidence consisted in the main of newspaper articles concerning the trial of Earl Jenkins. We learned from these articles that Jenkins was tried on the same charge and acquitted. The acting circuit attorney, Henry Morris, seems to have been highly incensed at the verdict of the jury. This is evidenced by the articles introduced in evidence in which were quoted statements attributed to Morris to the effect that the system of selecting jurors in the city of St. Louis was such that many unqualified persons were placed on the jury panel. Morris *Page 592 also complained that too many men of union affiliation were on the jury. It was also found that two ex-convicts had been drawn for jury service. These were of course rejected and were not included on the Jenkins panel of qualified jurors. The newspapers made much out of Morris' complaint and the method of jury selection was severely criticized. Investigations were demanded. The outbursts of Morris and of the newspapers criticizing the jury system constituted for the most part "shooting in the dark". One rotten apple does not mean that all others in the barrel are also rotten. Nor does one miscarriage of justice by a jury justify an assertion that the whole jury system is unsound. No human institution is perfect. Many of the articles and editorials also criticized and severely condemned the practice in vogue in Missouri, under our present law, of compelling a severance when asked for by a defendant jointly charged with another. All this resulted in a number of investigations of the system of selecting juries. One investigation was by a grand jury, another by the circuit clerk's office, another by the circuit attorney and still another by an independent fact finding agency called the Governmental Research Institute. Under the law the circuit judges of the city of St. Louis constitute the Board of Jury Supervisors. This board met and called Mr. Morris to specify and substantiate his charges. Morris appeared before the board and stated that he was at that time making an investigation and was not prepared to comply with the board's request. A grand jury investigated the question and pronounced the system of jury selection as "excellent". The Governmental Research Institute, at the request of the circuit judges, made a thorough investigation. It compared the system in vogue in St. Louis with methods employed in other large cities. Representatives of the Research Institute were present and observed the manner of selecting jurors for various cases tried during the May term. Golden's trial was one of these cases. In its report a number of suggestions [112] for improvement were made. However, the report introduced in evidence by appellant revealed that nothing materially wrong was found. We quote from the report as follows:

"A study of the results of the analysis of the jury list leads to the conclusion that the jury list is fairly representative of the community."

. . .
"The central jury assembly room which was instituted in 1936 is an efficient and effective method of assigning veniremen by chance to the various courts in need of juries. In the course of this survey members of the staff of the Institute observed the procedure followed in jury assembly rooms in the various other cities included in the study. Nowhere was there to be found a more effectively arranged and operated central jury assembly room than in St. Louis."

Concerning the Jenkins jury the report had the following to say: *Page 593

"The Circuit Attorney stated that 21 of the 36 members of the Jenkins panel indicated union affiliation. If the jury list contains approximately 43% at present affiliated with unions and 57% with a present or past union affiliation, as would be indicated by the test, it does not appear surprising that 36 names drawn by chance from a wheel would contain twenty-one members of a union."

A number of these investigations were in progress prior to the trial of appellant. A grand jury had completed its investigation and the newspapers had published the result. One such report carried a headline: "City Jury System Is `Excellent', Grand Jury Says". Another read as follows: "Jury Paneling System Okay, Probers Say". These latter articles appeared in the press on April 3, 1942. Most of the articles and editorials concerning the jury system and condemning the verdict in the Jenkins case appeared in the newspapers during the month of March and the forepart of April, 1942. Golden was tried in the month of May. The trial judge, the Honorable Charles B. Williams, after hearing all the evidence on the motion, made the following comment which reflects the attitude of the court and its ruling:

"THE COURT: The ruling of the Court will be that the proper test of that, to determine if the state of the public mind is such, from the publicity, on account of the newspaper articles and editorials offered in evidence, that it would so prejudice public minds that the defendant could not get a fair trial, should be tested by the examination of the regular panel of jurors who should be brought here. We don't know what part of the public read these editorials or these newspaper articles, or what opinions they formed, if any, with reference to the matters suggested by you. There still may be a large part of the public who were not impressed with the publicity, and could give the defendant a fair and impartial trial, and that matter will be properly tested by bringing the regular jury panel here and examining them, and you can conduct the examination, putting to them these newspaper editorials and publicity, such as you desire to inquire of them, whether they had formed any opinion, or whether those matters would influence them in reaching a fair and impartial verdict on the evidence that will be heard in this case. So the application for a continuance will be denied at present."

Thereafter the examination of prospective jurors proceeded. The examination covers over four hundred pages of the bill of exceptions. We find that the trial judge was exceedingly liberal in his rulings. The attorneys were permitted to examine each juror extensively. The court was also liberal in sustaining challenges and in excusing veniremen who had formed any opinion concerning the case. On three occasions men were excused when the attorney for the defendant deemed them qualified for jury service. Appellant in his points and authorities *Page 594 has not raised any question as to the qualification of any juror selected.

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Bluebook (online)
183 S.W.2d 109, 353 Mo. 585, 1944 Mo. LEXIS 469, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-golden-mo-1944.