State v. Gregory

172 S.E. 692, 171 S.C. 535, 1934 S.C. LEXIS 23
CourtSupreme Court of South Carolina
DecidedJanuary 31, 1934
Docket13762
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 172 S.E. 692 (State v. Gregory) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of South Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Gregory, 172 S.E. 692, 171 S.C. 535, 1934 S.C. LEXIS 23 (S.C. 1934).

Opinion

The opinion of the Court was delivered by

Mr. Ci-iiee Justice BlEase.

The respondents, George W. Gregory and Thomas T. Gregory, charged with the murder of J. T. Nicholson, in the Court of General Sessions for Chesterfield County, were *537 found guilty of manslaughter by the jury at the September, 1932, term, and sentence was imposed upon them by the presiding Judge, Hon. W. IT. Townsend. Thereafter, on March 24, 1933, their motion for a new trial, made before Hon. P. H. Stoll, Circuit Judge, then presiding in the fourth judicial Circuit, in which Chesterfield County is included, was heard. On some later day, evidently, the date not appearing in the record, Judge Stoll passed an order, granting the motion of the respondents, and from that the State has appealed.

The grounds and reasons moving Judge Stoll in the conclusion he reached, were that certain members of the trial jury that convicted the respondents were not registered electors of the County of Chesterfield at the time o'f their service as petit jurors therefore, not being qualified as jurors under the constitutional provisions; that due diligence was exercised by the attorneys for the respondents before their trial to ascertain the status of the jurors; and that the conviction should be set aside under the authority of the case of State v. Elliott, 169 S. C., 208, 168 S. E., 546.

In the statement of facts, contained in the record, it is disclosed that all the prospective jurors, called in the trial, were examined on their voir dire, and that the respondents exercised their right of peremptory challenge to only eight men, although they were entitled, under the law, to twenty such challenges.

In his order, Judge Stoll said, “An affidavit, which is not contradicted as to number, shows that eight of the trial jurors were not qualified registered electors.”

At the hearing of the motion, there were submitted in its support an affidavit of the respondent George W. Gregory, and two affidavits of P. A. Murray, Jr., Esquire, who represented the respondents in their trial.

The substance of the affidavit of Gregory, the date of which does not appear, was to the effect “that it is a matter of common knowledge in Chesterfield County” that the *538 registration books of the county for 1928 were in the hands of Parnell Meehan, and some time during that year they were lost or disappeared, and had not been found; that Gregory, the affiant, was “at a loss to know how the jury commissioners could have prepared in December, 1931, a jury list for use during the year 1932 without the registration books”; that he was informed and believed that one of the jurors in his case was registered in Marlboro County in 1928, but did not register in Chesterfield County until September 29, 1932, according to the date on his certificate; that from information furnished to him by Dorman, the clerk of the board of registration, eight other named jurors, who tried the case, were not registered at the time of the trial.

The first affidavit of Mr. Murray, dated February 28, 1933, showed that, after the trial and conviction of the respondents, Mr. Murray, in conversation with the Clerk of Court of the county, who is one of the jury commissioners, asked that official the question how the jury commissioners made up the list of jurors in December, 1931, for service during 1932, when the registration books of the county had been misplaced or lost, and that the clerk laughingly said that the commissioners “simply had to do the best they# could.”

The second affidavit of Mr. Murray, dated March 24, 1933, was, in substance, to the following effect, that just before the September term of Court, at which his clients were tried, Mr. Murray, who lives in Cheraw, went to his county seat, Chesterfield, for the purpose of ascertaining definitely “as to whether the general rumor to the effect that the 1928 registration books had been lost was true”; his inquiry “around the court house” brought the information that the books could not be found; and that new books of registration, in the charge of Mr. Dorman, the clerk of the registration board, were opened about the time the September, 1932, term of the Court convened.

*539 The only showing made by the State was contained in the affidavit of J. Arthur Knight, Esquire, one of the attorneys assisting the solicitor in the prosecution. Mr. Knight swore that on February 12, 1930, L,. J. Dorman was duly commissioned a member of the board of registration, as successor to Parnell Meehan; that shortly thereafter books of registration were opened, and had been kept opened continuously, except at such times as they were closed in compliance with the law; that, on his information, the duplicate copies of the books were not made up and filed in the office of the Clerk of Court until 1932; but as a matter of fact, to the own knowledge of Mr. Knight, the books of registration were continuously open from 1930, and that for most of the time the books were in the office of the Judge of Probate for the county; and “the status of the condition in reference to registration has been common knowledge since 1929.”

At the outset, we are confronted with a question made by the respondents as to the exceptions of the appellant. Citing numerous decisions, among them the recent ones of White v. Railway Co., 121 S. C., 215, 114 S. E., 324; State v. Bigham, 123 S. C., 411, 117 S. E., 57, and State v. Wells, 162 S. C., 509, 161 S. E., 177, the respondents contend, and we think properly, that the question as to whether a new trial should be granted, for the reasons upon which the order of the Circuit Judge was based in this case, is addressed to the sound discretion of the Judge, and unless some rule of law is violated, or there has been an erroneous exercise, or abuse, of the discretion committed to him, his decision is not subject to appellate review. The respondents say the exceptions do not meet the requirements, in that they do not charge an abuse of discretion, or that the discretion exercised was based on an error of law. We must admit that the exceptions are rather general, and they do not, in plain language, charge an abuse of discretion, or a wrongful exercise of discretion based on *540 legal error. But this Court has always been very liberal, perhaps too much so, in the consideration of exceptions. In the first exception, the appellant charges error in the granting of the new trial, on the ground that several of the jurors were not registered electors, “when the circumstances causing such situation were known before the trial to the defendants and their attornies, and no question thereabout was raised until after an adverse verdict.” The second exception says that the Judge erred in granting the new trial “as set out in his order,” when it appeared that the jurors, although examined on their voir dire, were not questioned as to their registration as electors at the instance of the respondents.

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Bluebook (online)
172 S.E. 692, 171 S.C. 535, 1934 S.C. LEXIS 23, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-gregory-sc-1934.