State v. King

155 S.E. 409, 158 S.C. 251, 1930 S.C. LEXIS 218
CourtSupreme Court of South Carolina
DecidedOctober 8, 1930
Docket12991
StatusPublished
Cited by69 cases

This text of 155 S.E. 409 (State v. King) 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. King, 155 S.E. 409, 158 S.C. 251, 1930 S.C. LEXIS 218 (S.C. 1930).

Opinion

The opinion of the Court was delivered by

Mr. Justice Brease.

The appellant, Rafe F. King, was indicted by the grand jury of York County for the murder of his wife, Mrs. Faye Wilson King, on January 25, 1929.

At the instance of the appellant, Hon. J. Henry Johnson, Circuit Judge, presiding in the Court of General Sessions of York County, granted a change of venue, because, in his opinion, a fair and impartial trial might not be had in *279 that County, and directed that the trial of the cause be heard in Chester County.

The case was tried at the summer, 1929, term of the Court of General Sessions of Chester County, before Hon. J. K. Henry, presiding Judge, and resulted in a verdict of guilty, and the sentence of the Court that the appellant be put to death by electrocution. The appellant’s motion for a new trial was denied, and the case has been brought to this Court.

The delay in the hearing of the case in this Court was due to the fact that it required a long time to get the record for the appeal in proper shape. It took about a week to try the case on circuit, and it required much time for the Court stenographer to make a transcript of the evidence. The transcript of record contains 946 pages. There are 81 exceptions.

The first and second exceptions will be considered together. The first relates to the refusal to quash the indictment. The instrument, omitting formal matters, and referring only to what is necessary to determine the attack made upon it, contained these allegations: “* * * And that the said Rafe P. King, her the said Paye Wilson King then and there feloniously, willfully and of his own malice aforethonght with his hands and arms, and with cords, wires, ropes and belts placed upon, about and around the neck and throat of her, said Faye Wilson King,, did choke, suffocate and strangle, of which choking, suffocation and strangling she, the said Faye Wilson King, did then and there die.

The appellant charges that the indictment “was multifarious and stated in conjunctive form that the deceased came to her death in six or eight different ways,” that the indictment was not definite; that it forced him to go to trial without knowing which one of the various instruments, means, or manners of death he was charged with having used; that the State should have been required to elect at *280 least one way in which it was charged that the deceased had come to her death; and, for these reasons, the indictment should have been quashed, as moved for.

Almost at the beginning of his charge to the jury, the presiding Judge used this language: “That makes the issue that you have to settle — that makes the issue for you to settle. Did he or did he not with hand, cord, and other means named in this — either one of them — kill his wife on that occasion ?”

The appellant says, in his second exception, that the instruction given permitted the jury “to pick out and elect” the instrumentality that caused the death of the deceased, and, since the indictment was “in conjunctive form,” this election on the part of the jury should not have been permitted.

We think the indictment was unobjectionable, even under the rules as to allegations in an indictment for murder before the passage of the Act of the Legislature simplifying indictments in such cases. State v. Jenkins, 14 Rich. (48 S. C. L.), 215, 94 Am. Dec., 132. There can be no doubt that the indictment complied with the provisions of Section 93 of the Code of Criminal Procedure 1922, originally enacted in 1887, which are as follows: “Every indictment for murder shall be deemed and adjudged sufficient and good in law which, in addition to setting forth the time and place, together with a plain statement, divested of all useless phraseology, of the manner in which the death of the deceased was caused, charges that the defendant did feloniously, willfully, and of his malice aforethought kill and murder the deceased.”

Neither do we think the indictment violated the provision of Section 18, Art. 1, of our Constitution, that “in all criminal prosecutions the accused shall enjoy the right * * * to be fully informed of the nature and cause of the accusation. * * *” See State v. Chiles, 44 S. C., 338, 22 S. E., 339; State v. Lark, 64 S. C., 350., 42 S. E., *281 175; State v. Roof, 106 S. C., 281, 91 S. E., 314. These exceptions are overruled.

During the impaneling of the jury, the name of Mr. Craig, one of the venire, was drawn from the box, and the trial Judge announced that this juror had been excused upon the payment to the Court of the sum of $25. The appellant’s demand that the juror be presented was refused and he complains of error in that regard in his third exception.

Section 584 of the Code of Civil Procedure 1922 gives the Court the right to fine, in an amount not exceeding $20, “a person duly drawn and summoned to attend as a juror,” who “neglects to attend, without sufficient excuse. * * *” We do not construe the provisions of that section to mean that a juror, properly drawn and summoned to attend a session of the Court, should be permitted to escape the duty required of him upon the payment of $20, or any other sum of money. The imposition of the fine is authorized for the purpose of aiding and securing the attendance of jurors. If citizens, who ought to render jury service, may be relieved therefrom by the payment of money, the tendency would be to encourage a disregard of one of the unpleasant duties of citizenship. One possessing the necessary money, with the desire not to perform a burden imposed upon him by the State, could always evade jury service. For these reasons, we cannot say that we approve of the conduct of the trial Judge in this instance. There might be, too, in some cases, where a number of jurors were excused from service upon payment of money, prejudicial error. We cannot hold, however, that there was error in the instance referred to here. The required number of jurors in this case was obtained without the necessity of the appellant exhausting the number of challenges allowed him under the law. He obtained twelve jurors satisfactory to himself without the presence of Juror Craig, State v. Burton, 111 S. C., 526, 98 S. E., 856; State v. Hyde, 90 S. C., 296, 73 S. E., 180.

*282 By the fourth, fifth and sixth exceptions, the appellant charges error in the ruling of the presiding Judge that his counsel could not examine jurors on their voir dire, and especially urges that he should not have been denied the right to inquire of the jurors if they had been approached by certain persons with the view of influencing them against the cause of the appellant. The rule in this State, as declared in many decisions, is that the examination of jurors, as to their fitness and competency to serve in a cause, is largely within the discretion of the Circuit Judge, and the better practice is for the Judge himself to make the examination. The Judge, of course, may permit counsel to interrogate the jurors.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
155 S.E. 409, 158 S.C. 251, 1930 S.C. LEXIS 218, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-king-sc-1930.