State v. Hunter

92 N.W. 872, 118 Iowa 686
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedDecember 20, 1902
StatusPublished
Cited by24 cases

This text of 92 N.W. 872 (State v. Hunter) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Hunter, 92 N.W. 872, 118 Iowa 686 (iowa 1902).

Opinion

Deemek, J.

i. peremplenges:^ right. When the trial jury was being impaneled, -and after the state had exercised eight peremptory challenges and the defendant seven, the following proceedings were had: “The court: The defendant’s eighth peremptory challenge. Judge Henry: The defendant waives one more challenge. Mr. .Spence: So do we. The Court: The jury may rise and be sworn. Judge Henry: We have another challenge. We only waived one. We are not through with our challenges. The Court: When you waive, you waive. The • court holds that the defendant waived one challenge, and, the state having waived, that concludes the challenges. ••{The defendant excepts to the ruling of the court.) The Court: The jury may rise and be sworn.” The jury was rfchen sworn. .Complaint is made of the court’s denial of [688]*688defendant’s request to exercise the further right of peremptory challenge. The material parts of the statute involved in this complaint are as follows: “A challenge to an individual juror is * * * for cause or peremptory.” Code, section 5359. “The parties shall challenge alternately commencing with plaintiff, and the challenges for cause being first exhausted or waived, the-parties shall then in turn in the same order exercise the right of peremptory challenge, in such manner as the parties may agree upon or the court order.” Code, section 3686. “If the offense charged * * * is or may be punishable with death or imprisonment for life the ■ state and the defendant are each entitled to ten peremptory challenges.” Code, section 5365. “After each challenge which is allowed the vacancy occasioned thereby shall be filled before any further challenge is made, or-any new juror thus introduced may be challenged for-cause as well as peremptorily, if the challenges are not exhausted.” Code, section 5366. “The challenges of either party need not be all taken at once but separately, in the-following order: to the panel; to an individual juror for cause; to an individual juror peremptorily.” Code, section 5367. “When twelve jurors are accepted they shall be sworn to try the issues.” Code, section. 5369. Under-substantially similar provisions it was held in Fountain v. West, 23 Iowa, 9, that a peremptory challenge simply counted as one of the number to which a party was entitled, and that, after a challenge by the other party, he may use any remaining right of challenge, even as to a. juror in the box, when the waiver was made.

In Spencer v. De France, 3 G. Greene, 216, it appeared', that a jury had been selected and accepted by the parties,, and then dismissed until the next day, without being-sworn. At the opening of the next session of court the-following day, and before the jury was sworn, plaintiff challenged one of the jurors peremptorily. The court-[689]*689denied the right, and plaintiff appealed. This court, as then constituted, held the trial court was in error in denying the challenge, and in the course of its opinion said, among other things “We think counsel have a right to an unrestrained exercise of their challenges up to the very moment the jury are required to take the oath.” This language is somewhat qualified by other parts of the opinion, but these qualifications seem to have no reference to the facts now before us. These are our only previous pronouncements which in any way affect the question here presented. They establish two propositions. (1) That waiver of a peremptory challenge does not amount, to an acceptance of a juror already in the box; (2) that, after a waiver of all challenges, but before a jury is. sworn, there may be cases where a party who has not exhausted the number to which he is entitled may exercise a further one peremptorily. Of course, one entitled to. peremptory challenges may waive the right, but the waiver, in order to be conclusive, must, as it seems to us, be a waiver as to all to which the party is entitled. If the waiver is of the right to exercise a single challenge, as in this case, we know of no reason for holding that the. party is concluded thereby. The practice generally is to. waive all when any waiver is made, and, where both parties waive, and there has been no change in the personnel of the jury or of. environment, such waiver may-well be held conclusive, although even in such a case we think the court might very well permit a party to exercise, his right at any time before the jury is actually sworn,, provided such party is acting in good faith, and not with, intent to gain advantage, or to delay the trial of the cause.. The order of challenge is fixed by statute, and, in any event, this order should be preserved. If that is done,, we do not see how one may gain an advantage over the-other by permitting him to interpose a peremptory chal[690]*690lenge at any time before the jury is sworn. But we need not elaborate this point. It is enough to say that the statute gave the defendant ten peremptory challenges, and the jury should not have been sworn until these challenges were either waived or exercised, and the jurors accepted, as provided in section 5369 of the Code, hitherto quoted.

a. same. The question narrows itself down, then, to the one issue: did the defendant waive his right to exercise the remaining peremptory challenges given him by the statute? The language used by his counsel clearly in- . ^jca^.0g jje n0"fc. The remark was, “The defendant waives one more challenge.” Should this be construed to mean that he waived the two more given him by statute, and that, instead of waiving one, he waived three? Certainly not, unless there be some technical rule of construction which requires us to so hold. We have looked in vain for any such rule, and, in view of the character of the charge made in this case, it should be a very plain and conclusive one to receive our acceptance. As the defendant had an absolute right to exercise ten peremptory challenges unless he waived them, and as we have found he waived but one of the three of those remaining to him when he was called upon to act,'it is clear that he was deprived of a right which the statute gave him, and that the court was in error in depriving him of that right.

3 right of deuilh'prejudice. The attorney general contends that no prejudice resulted, for the reason that defendant made no excuse for his waiver, and gave no reason why he should be permitted ' exercise a further peremptory challenge, This position is unsound, for two reasons: First. Because a party entitled to exercise : the right need, not give any reason for doing so. This .is the fundamental notion on which peremptory challenges are based. Second. The statute gives the right [691]*691absolutely, and, if denied prejudice is conclusively presumed. The authorities very generally hold that the right to exercise a peremptory challenge is not lost until the jury is sworn. State v. Prichard, 15 Nev. 74; Johns v. People, 25 Mich. 499; Munly v. State, 7 Blackf. 593; Beauchamp v. State, 6 Blackf. 308; Lamb v. State, 36 Wis. 427; People v. Kohle, 4 Cal. 198; State v. Peel (Mont.) 59 Pac. Rep. 169; Hendrick v. Com., 5 Leigh, 707; Hooker v. State 4 Ohio, 348; Appeal of Hamper, 51 Mich. 71 (16 N. W. Rep. 236); People v. Carrier, 46 Mich. 442 (9 N. W. Rep. 487); State v. Spaulding, 60 Vt. 228 (14 Atl. Rep. 769); Lindsey v. People, 6 Parker, Cr. R. 233; U. S. v. Davis, (C. C.) 103 Fed. Rep. 457; Drake v. State, 51 Ala. 30. There is no case to the contrary, unless it be Vance v. Richardson, 110 Cal. 415 (42 Pac. Rep. 909).

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Bluebook (online)
92 N.W. 872, 118 Iowa 686, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-hunter-iowa-1902.