State v. McLean

30 So. 2d 187, 211 La. 413, 1947 La. LEXIS 770
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedMarch 17, 1947
DocketNo. 38398.
StatusPublished
Cited by27 cases

This text of 30 So. 2d 187 (State v. McLean) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. McLean, 30 So. 2d 187, 211 La. 413, 1947 La. LEXIS 770 (La. 1947).

Opinion

HAWTHORNE, Justice.

The defendant, Doug McLean, was indicted for the crime of manslaughter, tried, convicted of negligent homicide, and sentenced to serve three years in the penitentiary.

In this appeal defendant relies on numerous bills of exception reserved in the proceedings in the lower court, which we shall discuss in their numerical order.

Bill of Exception No. 1.

Bill of Exception No. 1 was taken to the ruling of the trial judge refusing to quash the petit and tales juries selected for the term of court in which defendant was tried. . This motion to quash is based on the grounds (1) that the district judge, of his own motion and without any cause or excuse, by order dated September 9, 1946, annulled, rescinded, and set aside a previous order entered by the court on July 20, 1946, in which previous order the jury commission for Jackson Parish was ordered to convene on August 7, 1946, to-select a grand jury panel from which a grand jury was to be drawn to convene on Monday, September 9, 1946, to draw a petit jury to serve the week beginning October 14, 1946, and to select 100 tales jurors whose names would be placed in the tales jury box, and (2) that the jury commissioners were not notified in the manner and by the method required by law of the meeting of said commission held on September 11, 1946, which jury commission selected and drew the grand jury, petit jury, and tales jury to serve for the term of court in which defendant was tried.

On the day the grand jury was to be impaneled and to convene, the court discovered for the first time that the jury commission, acting under the order of July 20, had failed to place slips containing the *420 names of those selected as the grand jury panel in a sealed envelope, as required by law.

The trial judge in his per curiam states the facts and circumstances connected with this bill and the reasons for his ruling, as follows:

“Back in July, 1946, an order was signed by both judges of this court convening the jury commission, on August 7th, 1946; the jury commission met on that date and it was thought until the day for empaneling of the grand jury that it discharged its duty in a regular and legal manner. However, on the date of the empaneling of the grand jury, September 9th, 1946, Judge E. C. McClendon, the other judge of this district was presiding, and when the General Venire Box was presented to the court, inspected, and opened and the envelope labeled 'List of Grand Jurors’ handed to the Sheriff, for opening and drawing therefrom a grand jury, it was discovered there was not a single name in said envelope. Other possible errors were found to exist in the entire proceedings of the jury commission of such serious nature in the opinion of the presiding judge and of the present judge who was called in, and conferred with Judge McClendon, that the entire proceedings of the jury commission on the meeting of August 7th, 1946 were irregular, null and void. The present judge was called in to confer with Judge McClendon in as much as he would have to preside at any subsequent grand jury and petit jury sessions due to the court schedules in the district and in Webster parish to which he had been assigned by the 'Supreme Court.

“In view of the irregularities committed by the jury commission and the widespread knowledge thereof due to the public announcement as to the defect in the proceedings, the judges were of the firm opinion that motions attacking the venire as then existing would be filed when the term of court arrived and the cases called for trial. In view of the discovery of the ii-regularities by the court at that time sufficient to warrant sustaining a motion quashing the same, the court took the only way out of a situation as then presented. The court decided to and did set aside the null and void venire as well as the entire proceedings of the jury commission on the previous meeting and ordered a new meeting of the jury commission so that it might select a grand jury, draw a venire and select a tales jury according to law, so that and to the end that the court would be relieved from quashing the venire and proceedings on the very day the cases were called for trial, which would then have resulted in the postponement of the cases for trial and an additional expense on the parish and State by virtue of having an illegal jury appear for the term of court.

“In so doing no harm or prejudice was done the defendant, and in fact, by this action he was assured of a jury selected from a venire and tales jury legally drawn *422 and presented to him as well as the State of Louisiana. The defendant was tried by a jury of his own selection, one in which he by his acceptance expressed his satisfaction; he was not obliged to take any obnoxious juror or jurors for the reason that the jury was selected without his exhaustion of his challenges prescribed by law.

“Defendant used only nine (9) of his twelve (12) challenges.

“No good purpose could be served by waiting for the motion to quash to be filed at the time the cases were called for trial instead of setting the venire aside by the court when the defects and irregularities were discovered by it. The trial court had a duty to perform in seeing that the venire was drawn according to law so that the defendant as well as the State for the trial of the case would be presented with a venire legally drawn and selected — that it endeavored to do.”

It is the contention of the defendant that the order of the district judge in quashing, ex proprio motu, the entire jury panel and reconvening the jury commission for the purposes of selecting and drawing grand and petit jurors is null and void, and that in the absence of fraud or error the district judge had no legal right or authority to cause such an order to issue.

In support of this contention counsel for defendant cites the case of State ex rel. Perez v. Livaudais, 201 La. 1083, 11 So.2d 1. We do not, however, think that the reasoning or the holding in that case is applicable here, for in that case, this court, after reviewing all the facts, was careful to point out that the reasons assigned by the trial judge for his action in executing an order quashing the grand and petit jury venires were neither legal nor sufficient to warrant his action.

In this state it is made the mandatory duty of the jury commission, after selecting from the general venire list the names of 20 citizens to compose the grand jury panel, and after the names of the persons so selected have been written on slips of paper by the clerk in the presence of the commissioners, to place the slips in an envelope, seal it, and endorse thereon the words “List of Grand Jurors”. From this list the judge shall select a suitable person to act as foreman of the grand jury, and the sheriff under the direction of the court shall draw by lot from the envelope endorsed “List of Grand Jurors” the names of 11 persons, who with the foreman shall constitute the grand jury.

The jury commission in this case having failed to perform its mandatory duty as provided by law, we think the order setting aside the jury panel in this case and ordering the jury commission to reconvene and to perform its duties with reference to the drawing of juries according to law was entirely proper, and in no way do we see how the defendant was prejudiced thereby.

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Bluebook (online)
30 So. 2d 187, 211 La. 413, 1947 La. LEXIS 770, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-mclean-la-1947.