State v. Migues

184 So. 540, 191 La. 55, 1938 La. LEXIS 1346
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedJune 27, 1938
DocketNo. 34899.
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 184 So. 540 (State v. Migues) 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. Migues, 184 So. 540, 191 La. 55, 1938 La. LEXIS 1346 (La. 1938).

Opinion

ROGERS, Justice.

The defendant, Honoré Migues, was indicted, tried and convicted for the murder of Mrs. Evelyn Allen Crawford. His motion for a new trial was overruled and he was sentenced to death. His appeal presents five formal bills of exception.

Bills Nos. 1 and 2 cover the same subject matter. They were reserved to the overruling of defendant’s objection to the manner in which the names of the jurors were drawn from .the tales jury box.

When all but ten of the jurors on the regular venire had been called and no juror having been accepted, the trial judge realized that it would be impossible to obtain a jury from the regular venire. In this situation he asked counsel for the state and counsel for the defendant if they would waive the opening of the tales jury box. Counsel for the state agreed to the waiver, but counsel for the defendant refused to do so and demanded the opening of the tales jury box in his presence. The trial judge then ordered the clerk of court to produce the tales jury box in open court. When the clerk of court as directed produced the locked and sealed tales jury box in open court, the trial judge ordered him to open the box and draw therefrom in open court and in the presence of the defendant and his counsel fifty slips containing the names and addresses of the tales jurors. As each slip was drawn from the box by the clerk of court it was handed to *59 the chief deputy clerk. Both the clerk and his chief deputy announced the numerical order of the slips as they were drawn from the box until the full complement of fifty names had been drawn, when the box was relocked.

During the course of the drawing, counsel for defendant demanded that he be permitted to examine each slip as it was removed from the box. The trial judge refused to accede to counsel’s demand, informing him that immediately upon the completion of the drawing and the prepara^ tion of the list of the names drawn he, as well as counsel for the state, would be furnished with a copy of the list as prepared by the clerk, and that the court would allow him all the time he required to inspect the list and familiarize .himself with the names appearing thereon before the resumption of the impanelling the jury from the names remaining on the regular venire. To all of which counsel for defendant objected- and reserved a bill.

After the drawing of the fifty names had been completed, the court recessed in order to give the clerk of court an opportunity to prepare the list of tales jurors in his office. The list of the tales jurors was actually compiled and typed by the chief deputy clerk in the clerk’s office which is located just back of the court room. The list was prepared from the slips drawn from the tales jury box. After its completion the list was checked against the slips by the deputy clerk in the presence of the trial judge and it was also compared with the summonses for service. The list and the slips were then brought into open court, the slips being deposited by the trial judge in an envelope for future use, and copies of the list were handed to both counsel for defendant and counsel for the state. Counsel for defendant then objected to the list on the ground that it was prepared outside the court room and outside the presence of defendant and his counsel. The objection was overruled and a bill was reserved.

After a recess of about a half an hour, counsel for defendant announced he was ready to proceed, and the impanelling of the jury from the regular venire was resumed. When the regular venire was exhausted with only two jurors chosen, the court recessed for about two hours to give the tales jurors who had been summoned an opportunity to appear. Upon resuming the trial, the impanelling of the jury was proceeded with from the tales jurors whose names had been drawn from the tales jury box. When the tales jurors list was exhausted without completing the jury, the trial judge ordered the tales jury box reopened and that forty additional names be drawn therefrom. A list containing the names and addresses of these forty additional tales jurors was prepared and copies thereof were furnished to counsel for the state and counsel for the defendant respectively. All the time required was given counsel to examine the list and familiarize themselves with the names of the tales jurors appearing thereon.

The law governing the selection, drawing, summoning and qualifications of tales jurors is set forth in Article 186 of the *61 Code of Criminal Procedure. The pertinent provisions of the article are as follows :

“If on the trial of any criminal case, the regular venire is exhausted, or it appears that it will be exhausted, before the selection of a jury therein, the court at its discretion-may instruct the clerk to open such tales jury box and draw therefrom such number of tales jurors as in its judgment may be necessary to serve on said case, and it shall be the duty of the sheriff to forthwith summon such tales jurors so summoned to report immediately for jury service in said court in said case.”

Further on in the codal article is another provision reading as follows:

“All tales jurors shall possess the same qualifications as provided for regular jurors, but no publication of the tales jury list shall be necessary, but a copy of the same as drawn by the Clerk shall be furnished to the State and to the defense before the trial shall proceed.”

The procedure followed in the drawing of the tales jurors appears to be that provided by Article 186 of the Code of Criminal Procedure. The article expressly provides that: “The court at its discretion may instruct the clerk to open such tales jury box and draw therefrom such number of tales jurors as in his judgment may be necessary to serve on said case * * * but a copy of the same as drawn by the Clerk, shall be furnished to the State and to the defense before the trial shall proceed.” The codal article does not provide that the defendant or his counsel shall have the right to examine the slips drawn from the box by the clerk. All that it provides is that the clerk shall make a list of the tales jurors drawn from the box and that a copy of the list shall be furnished the state and the defense before the trial shall proceed. That is what was done in this case. The rights of the defendant were sufficiently protected. The tales jury box was brought into open court where it was unlocked and unsealed and the slips containing the names of the tales jurors were drawn therefrom by the clerk. This was done in the presence of the defendant and his counsel. The clerk prepared a list of the names of the jurors drawn from the box. The trial judge, although not required by the statute to do so, checked and read the names with the clerk in order to ascertain the correctness of the list. As soon as the list was completed copies thereof were furnished the state and the defendant.

The entire panel of tales jurors was exhausted before the completion of the jury. If there had been any variance between the names on the slips and the names on the list the variance would have appeared during the examination on their voir dire of the fifty talesmen composing the panel. But no such variance developed. No challenge to the array or to any tales juror was offered at any time. In fact, the defendant never objected to the correctness of the list of the tales jurors furnished him; nor did he exhaust the peremptory challenges allowed him by law.

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Related

State v. Turner
152 So. 2d 555 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1963)
State v. Davis
111 So. 2d 778 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1959)
State v. Migues
195 So. 545 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1940)

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Bluebook (online)
184 So. 540, 191 La. 55, 1938 La. LEXIS 1346, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-migues-la-1938.