State v. Leatherwood

194 P. 600, 26 N.M. 506
CourtNew Mexico Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 29, 1920
DocketNo. 2433
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 194 P. 600 (State v. Leatherwood) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Mexico Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Leatherwood, 194 P. 600, 26 N.M. 506 (N.M. 1920).

Opinion

OPINION OP THE COURT.

ROBERTS, J.

Appellant was convicted of the crime of murder in the second degree, and appeals.

The first two errors assigned relate to the petit jury. There had been a murder case tried immediately preceding the impaneling of the jury in the present case, which resulted in a verdict of acquittal. Five of the regular panel of the jury for the term sat in the trial of the case referred to. The court, after excluding all members of the regular panel from the courtroom, except the five who sat in the trial of that case, .excused the five jurors from further service during the term, giving as a reason that the jurors either deliberately or willfully disregarded their oaths as jurors in the trial of the case referred to, or that they were too dense to serve as jurors. Five other jurors to take the places of the ones so discharged were selected pursuant to the provisions of chapter 93, Laws 1917.

The selection of the jurors for the trial of cases in the district courts is governed by the provisions of this act. By section 12 it is provided that the list of names drawn for the term ‘ ‘ shall constitute the names for the regular venires for grand and petit juries,” and that if there are extra names the list must be made up in the order in which the names are drawn, except as to such persons as are excused “for good cause shown to the court.” Section 18 provides that no person shall be excused from service by the judge “except for good and sufficient reasons.” Because of these provisions appellant contended that the court was without power to discharge the five jurors mentioned, or any jurors, except “for good and sufficient reasons,” and that the reasons set forth were not sufficient to justify this action of the court.

[1] Statutory provisions for the selection of jurors are usually construed by the courts to be directory, unless a contrary intent is clearly manifest by the statute, and, being directory, an immaterial departure from the method prescribed does not vitiate the trial or invalidate the jury. The present act authorizes the judge of the district court to excuse jurors from service for good and sufficient reasons, but the court necessarily determines the sufficiency of the reasons justifying the discharge. But the authorities generally hold that, where a competent and impartial jury is secured in a criminal case, a conviction .will not be reversed because of some inadvertent failure to comply with every directory provision of the jury law, in the absence of a showing of prejudice against the accused. 16 It: C. L. p. 290. And this rule was followed by this court in the case of State v. Rodriguez, 23 N. M. 156, 167 Pae. 426, L. R. A. 1918A, 1016. In that case the rule is stated as follows :

“No party can acquire a vested right to have a particular member of the panel sit upon the trial of his cause until he has been accepted and sworn. It is enough that it appear that his cause has been tried by an impartial jury. It is no ground of exception that, and against his objection, a juror was rejected by the court upon insufficient grounds, unless, through rejecting qualified persons, the necessity of accepting others not qualified has been purposely created.”

[2] While the five'jurors in question were excused, assuming for the sake of argument that they were competent and' qualified, their places were taken upon the jury by five others equally as honest, competent, and qualified, and no prejudice could have resulted to the appellant. He had no vested right to be tried by those five jurors or to have them sit upon his panel. He did have the right to be tried by a fair and impartial jury, and this right was accorded to him and no claim is made that the jury as finally selected was not composed of competent, qualified, fair, and impartial jurors. In- fact, appellant had five peremptory challenges remaining when he accepted the jurors, and it is to be presumed that if objectionable jurors were at that time upon the panel he would have exercised his peremptory challenges.

Appellant cites and relies upon the case of Hildredth v. City of Troy, 101 N. Y. 234, 4 N. E. 559, 54 Am. Rep. 686, in which case the court erroneously excused 12 of the regular jury panel from the trial jury on the ground that as residents of the city of Troy they were disqualified. The appellate court held this to constitute reversible error. The contrary is held by the Supreme Court of Maine in the ease of Snow v. Weeks, 75 Me. 105. The court said: .

“At plaintiff’s request, the presiding- judge excluded from the panel several jurors from the city of Rockland, upon the assumption that the city might have some interest, or the jurors some bias, in the result of the suit. It is denied by the defendant that such' bias or interest existed. But it matters not whether it existed or not. It was a matter for the exercise of the discretion of the judge. To his ruling upon such a question exceptions do not lie. He may put off a juror when there is no real and substantial cause for it. That cannot legally injure an objecting party as long as an unexceptionable jury is finally obtained. It is quite a different question where a judge puts a juror upon the panel who cannot sit. He may put a legal juror off. He cannot allow an illegal juror to go on. Ware v. Ware, 8 Me. 29; Shea v. Lawrence, 1 Allen, 167.”

In the case of People v. Searcey, 121 Cal. 3, 53 Pac. 360, 41 L. R. A. 157, the court said:

“The further fact that the judge excused certain of the venire for cause is not a matter for complaint on the part of the defendant. As to such matters the court’s discretion is of the broadest. Defendant in this regard must be satisfied if he is tried by twelve qualified, competent jurors.”

See, also, People v. Harris. (Cal. App.) 188 Pac. 65.

Many other cases might be cited on the proposition sustaining one view or the other. The Rodriguez Case committed this court to the doctrine that the defendant could not complain of departures from a directory statute in the matter of selecting a jury so long as he was tried by a fair and impartial jury. We see no reason for departing from this view. Much that will be said under the next proposition is equally applicable to this question.

[3] After twelve jurors had been accepted by both the state and the defendant, and just before the jury was to be sworn to try the case, the state asked leave of court to interpose a peremptory challenge to one .of the jurors theretofore accepted." The defendant objected to the allowance of the challenge and over his objection the state was permitted to exercise the challenge. Both parties at that time had unexhausted peremptory challenges, the defendant having five remaining.

The exercise of peremptory challenges is regulated by section 30, c. 93, Laws 1917. ' In'criminal cases it provides that no defendant shall be required to exercise a peremptory challenge as to any particular juror until the state shall have finally passed upon and accepted such juror. It will be observed that the court permitted the state to challenge the juror contrary to the provisions of this act. Just how the appellant was injured by the allowance of the challenge is not apparent, because^a competent, qualified, and acceptable juror was procured in the place of the juror excused.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
194 P. 600, 26 N.M. 506, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-leatherwood-nm-1920.