State v. Martin

132 A. 93, 102 N.J.L. 388, 1926 N.J. LEXIS 174
CourtSupreme Court of New Jersey
DecidedFebruary 1, 1926
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 132 A. 93 (State v. Martin) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of New Jersey primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Martin, 132 A. 93, 102 N.J.L. 388, 1926 N.J. LEXIS 174 (N.J. 1926).

Opinions

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Katzenbach, J.

This case is before us upon a writ of error directed to the Essex County Court of Oyer and Terminer. The writ has brought to this court for review the conviction of Frank Martin of murder in the first degree. The cas'e is before us on strict writ of error as well as under the one hundred and thirty-sixth section of the Criminal Procedure act. On May 23d, 1925, at about three-thirty p. m., Frank Martin came to his home in Bloomfield, Mew Jersey, lie lived with his wife, his daughter Violet Smith, wife of A. G. Smith; a daughter Helen and a son, Frank, Jr. His son-in-law was also a member of the family. Upon arriving at his home there he had a dispute with his wife and daughter, Mrs. Smith. Two police officers were summoned. Mrs. Smith, whose collie dog was said to have been the cause of the argument, refused to make a complaint against her father. The officers left. About fifteen minutes after they left they were again called to the house by Mrs. Martin. On the floor of the living room the officers found the body of Mrs. Smith. She was dead. There were a number of cuts on the body, apparently made by a hatchet. A hatchet was found on the premises. Martin was found slipping on a shirt. He was taken into custody. Later in the day Martin made a statement to the effect that his daughter Mrs. Smith brought the collie dog into the room. The dog made a rush for him. He grabbed a chair and made a rush at the dog. Mrs. Smith called to the dog and the dog came to her. The dog then came at him again. He then wont into a pantry, got a hatchet, and threw the hatchet at the dog. • Tt missed the dog but- hit Mrs. Smith on the head. She fell to the floor. He spoke to her but she did not answer him. He then waited for his wife to come in. She did not come, so he finished the job by hitting Mrs. Smith on each leg with the *390 hatchet. He gave as the reason for finishing the job that his daughter and son-in-law had given him a rotten deal when he was sentenced to a term in the New Jersey State Prison at Trenton, some two 3rears before the death of Mrs. Smith.

The assignments of error are forty-four in number. The specifications of causes for reversal number thirty-three. The brief submitted for the plaintiff in error argues such of these which are not abandoned under sixteen points. The points argued fall into four groups, namely, the questions which arose (a) in selecting the jury, (b) in the admission and rejection of testimony, '(c) in the ruling of the trial court refusing to direct a mistrial, and (d) in the charge of the trial judge.

Pursuant to section 82 of the Criminal Procedure act a special panel of forty-eight jurors were drawn from the general panel and summoned. The defendant at the trial challenged the array. The first ground for this challenge was that one, Edgar Blackledge, named on the list had not been summoned. To prove that Blackledge had not been summoned the under-sheriff of Essex county was sworn as a witness. He had no personal knowledge of the facts but was allowed to read into the record a memorandum which had been made to the effect that the summons for Blackledge had been served on the housekeeper, June 5th; that it had been served by Peter Flanagan, June 20th, 1925. The memorandum also contained the words “In Chicago, Illinois, A. Walker.” A. Walker was also a deputy sheriff. He was sworn, and testified that he had no personal knowledge of the facts but had been .informed by the jury commissioner that Blackledge was in Chicago. The memorandum referred to was not a public record. It was not evidential. Assuming it to be evidential it did not prove that Blackledge had not been summoned. It, apparently, showed that the summons for Blackledge was served on his housekeeper, then served personally, and then Blackledge went to Chicago. The law is that jurors may be summoned by notice served personally or left at the juror’s dwelling house. 3 Comp. Stat., p. 2966, § 8. There was a failure of proof that Blackledge had not *391 been summoned. On this ground the trial judge properly overruled the challenge to the array. It Blackledge had not been summoned in accordance ■with the provisions of the statute, this would not have been a sufficient ground to uphold the challenge to the array. Eailure to serve a member of a panel does not vitiate the entire proceeding.

The second ground advanced for a reversal of the ruling of the trial judge on the challenge to the array is that between the service of the special panel upon the defendant and the day of trial ten jurors drawn on the special panel had been excused by the court. This point has been heretofore raised, considered, and held to be without merit. Patterson v. State, 48 N. J. L. 381. In Aaronson v. State, 56 Id. 9, the precise point raised in the present case was decided in an opinion by Chief Justice Beasley. The court in that case held that for reasonable cause a juror whose name is on a list of forty-eight names, served upon the prisoner may be discharged by the court. The opinion says: “If one or more of the persons on the general list can be discharged from service, why not one or more be similarly discharged from the special list?” In State v. Martin, 94 Id. 139, it was held that the absence of sixteen jurors of the special panel of forty-eight was not a ground for reversal. If this were not the law it would be difficult, to bring a defendant to trial. "While the defendant has no legal right to complain of the court’s exercising its right to excuse jurors from service for reasonable cause, it is, however, a right which, in justice to the defendant, should be sparingly exercised.

The plaintiff in error next contends that the trial judge erred in disallowing challenges to the polls for cause. There were four jurors who were examined and were challenged by the defendant below. Assuming for argument that the challenges were made and wrongfully disallowed, the record discloses no harm or prejudice to the defendant by these rulings. The jurors mentioned were not members of the jury which tried the defendant. They must have been, therefore, challenged peremptorily. The defendant was allowed twenty *392 peremptory challenges. He challenged peremptorily sixteen jurors. His peremptory challenges were not exhausted when the drawing of the jury was completed. He was therefore not harmed by the rulings of the trial judge, of which he now complains. Such rulings constitute no ground for reversal. Drake v. State, 53 N. J. L. 23.

The next point argued deals with the refusal of the trial judge to permit the defendant’s counsel to ask a juror-what his opinion was as to the guilt or innocence of the defendant. The juror had not been challenged. There was no issue before the court. The ruling of the trial judge was correct. It is supported by the cases of Clifford v. State, 61 N. J. L. 217, and State v. Palmieri, 93 Id. 195, both cases being decisions of this court. The juror to whom the question mentioned was directed did not sit as a member of the jury which tried the defendant.

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Bluebook (online)
132 A. 93, 102 N.J.L. 388, 1926 N.J. LEXIS 174, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-martin-nj-1926.