State v. Mohr

122 A. 837, 99 N.J.L. 124, 14 Gummere 124, 1923 N.J. LEXIS 169
CourtSupreme Court of New Jersey
DecidedNovember 19, 1923
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 122 A. 837 (State v. Mohr) 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. Mohr, 122 A. 837, 99 N.J.L. 124, 14 Gummere 124, 1923 N.J. LEXIS 169 (N.J. 1923).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

GuMsmno. Chiej? Justice.

The plaintiff in error, one Doris Brunen and one Charles Powell, were jointly indicted lor the murder of John Brunen, who was shot and killed on the 10th of March, 1923. The shooting was done by Powell, at the instigation of Mohr, as the state claimed, who paid Powell a money consideration as an inducement to commit the crime. When the case was called for trial the prosecutor of the pleas moved a severance as to the defendant Powell, and. this motion being granted, the trial proceeded against Mohr and Doris Brunen. The result was the conviction of Mohr of murder in the first degree and the acquittal of Doris Brunen. The present writ of error is sued out by Mohr to review the conviction had against him.

The first ground of reversal urged before us is that the trial court improperly overruled a challenge to the array of jurors. The proofs showed that some time prior to the trial the sheriff drew a special panel of sixty jurors, pursuant to an order of the Court of Oyer and Terminer, and that a list of these jurors was properly served upon the defendants. About a week later the court made a supplemental order, directing the sheriff to draw an additional panel of one hundred and twenty jurors, and a list of this second panel was also duly served upon the defendants. The point of the contention seems io be that the making of this second order was beyond the jurisdiction of the court, in that it was a violation of section 82 of the Criminal Procedure act, which provides that “in (‘ases where the defendant is entitled to twenty peremptory challenge*” (as was the fact in the present case) “and to have a list of the jurors delivered to him, it shall be the duty of the sheriff to draw a list of forty-eight jurors, or such larger number as the court in which such indictment shall be pending, shall by special order direct.” The argument in support of the contention is that, by virtue of this *126 statutory enactment, when the court has made an order directing the sheriff to draw a list of more than forty-eight jurors its power is exhausted; and that the original panel cannot thereafter be added to, even if it be discovered subsequently that a larger number than that provided by the order is necessary for the protection of the rights of the defendant and of the state. We see nothing in the words of the statute to justify this contention. Its primary purpose is to protect the interests both of the defendant and of the state by providing a panel of jurors sufficient in number to afford each party the opportunity of exercising the right of challenge to its fullest extent, without being compelled to resort to talesmen by reason of the exhausting of the panel; and it should be so construed as to effectuate that purpose. This being the purpose of the enactment, we have no doubt that, when it is discovered that the number of jurors provided for by the original order is insufficient for the purpose for which they were drawn, the court has power under the act to make a subsequent order directing the adding to the number of jurors on the panel as many more as the situation of the case may justify.

The next assignment of error is that the court improperly permitted Charles Powell, one of the defendants named in the indictment, to be examined as a witness for the state, notwithstanding a challenge interposed on behalf of the plaintiff in error Mohr, based upon the assertion that he was incompetent because of unsound mind; and, further, that the court refused to permit Mohr to call witnesses to prove that allegation. We observe from an examination of the case that the fact is not correctly stated in the assignment of error; that is, the oiler was not made to prove Powell’s insanity at the time he was called to the witness-stand, but during his prior confinement in the county jail, and the challenge was apparently based upon the unsound theory that the alleged insanity existing at that time necessarily continued until the calling of Powell as a witness. But, assuming that the challenge was as broad as the assignment of error suggests, we think it was properly dealt with by the *127 trial court. "When it was interposed, tlie court proceeded to interrogate the offered witness for the purpose of ascertaining to what extent, if at all, he was mentally unbalanced, and, as a result of that examination, determined that he was competent to testify as a witness and refused to permit counsel for Mohr to introduce witnesses for the purpose of testifying on the question of the sanity of Powell. Although there is some contrariety of view upon the subject, we think the true rule was stated by Chief Justice Kirkpatrick, speaking for the Supreme Court, as early as the year 1819, in the case of Den v. Van Cleve, 5 N. J. L. 589. He states that the trial of the question of the incompetence of a witness by reason of insanity must always be by the judges, and by inspection only; and that this inspection consists in putting interrogatories to the alleged lunatic in order to discover not only tlie fact but also the degree, of intellectual deficiency, if it exists, and admit or reject the witness, according as it is found that he is or is not so mentally impaired as to render his statements, if examined as a witness, valueless. Id. *653. The doctrine of this case was applied by the Supreme Court of the United States in District of Columbia v. Armes, 107 U. S. 519, the court saying: “The general rule is that a lunatic, or a person affected with insanity, is admissible as a witness if he have sufficient understanding to apprehend the obligation of an oatli and be capable of giving a correct account of the matters which he has seen or heard in reference to the issue; and whether he has that understanding is a question to be determined by tlie court upon the examination of the party himself.” TTe consider, therefore, that the ground of reversal which we have been discussing is without merit.

It is next contended that the court erred in permitting the state, after the defense had rested, to recall one of the state’s witnesses to testify to a matter concerning which he properly should have been examined on the state’s opening case. The purpose sought to be accomplished in recalling this witness was to prove that a Ford coupe, driven at high speed, had been seen to leave the vicinity of the murder shortly *128 after .its occurrence; and then to identify this coupe as one owned and usually operated by Mohr. The identification was by proof of the license number upon the coupe, followed by further proof by another witness that this license number was the one that had been assigned to Mohr by the state authorities. This testimony was admitted by the court after some hesitation, the explanation of the failure on the part of the state to submit it in its opening case not being entirely satisfactory. Nevertheless, we do not consider that the ruling of the court in admitting the testimony affords any ground for reversal. Whether it should have been admitted or excluded was a matter resting in the sound discretion of the court, and we cannot say. that there was any abuse in the exercise of that discretion.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
122 A. 837, 99 N.J.L. 124, 14 Gummere 124, 1923 N.J. LEXIS 169, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-mohr-nj-1923.