State v. Rombolo

99 A. 434, 89 N.J.L. 565, 4 Gummere 565, 1916 N.J. LEXIS 342
CourtSupreme Court of New Jersey
DecidedNovember 20, 1916
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 99 A. 434 (State v. Rombolo) 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. Rombolo, 99 A. 434, 89 N.J.L. 565, 4 Gummere 565, 1916 N.J. LEXIS 342 (N.J. 1916).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Gummere, Chief Justice.

The defendant below having been convicted of the crime of murder in the first degree now seeks to have that conviction set aside for alleged errors occurring during the course of the trial.

[566]*566The first reason for reversal urged before us is that the jury which tried him was impaneled in violation of the statutory provisions regulating the matter, and in disregard of his objection. The undisputed facts relating to the drawing of the jury are as follows: A special panel of forty-eight jurors had been drawn from the general panel, pursuant to the requirement of section 82 of the Criminal Procedure act (Comp. Stat., p. 1847), for the purpose of trying the indict■ment against the defendant. When the case was moved the assistant to the sheriff, who was charged with the duty of drawing the jury, placed in the box the names of only thirty-one members of the special panel, and proceeded to draw the twelve names from this number, leaving the names of the other seventeen out of the box, because—as he happened to know—they were then engaged in jury service in other of the county courts. He did this upon his own responsibility, and without notifj'ing either the court or counsel of the situation, until all of the thirty-one names had been drawn from the box. At that time only seven jurors had been selected for service. The court thereupon adjourned until two o’clock in the afternoon, and upon reconvening was informed by the sheriff’s assistant that nine of the seventeen jurors whose names had been left out of the box were then present. Upon this information being received the court directed the names of these nine to be placed in the box, and the drawing of the jury to be proceeded with. Three more jurors were obtained from this new drawing, and then—this second division of the special panel having also been exhausted—the court directed the names of the remaining members of the general panel to be placed in the box, and the last two jurors were selected therefrom. Tlie defendant’s peremptory challenges were all used before the jury box was filled.

The method provided by the legislature for drawing a jury, either from a general or special panel, is to write or print the name of each member thereof on a separate slip of .paper, place all the slips in the box, shake the box so as to intermix the papers, and then draw such papers from the box, one at a time, until twelve persons whose names are writ[567]*567ten thereon (and who have not been excused, or successfully challenged) shall appear. Comp. Stat., p. 2975, § 27.

When, in drawing a jury from a special panel in a criminal case, the panel is exhausted, from any cause, before a jury for the trial of the indictment is obtained, the law requires that talesmen be taken from the general panel, and that the empty seats in the jury box be filled from them by a drawing in the manner already indicated. Comp. Stat., p. 1817, § 83.

Strictly speaking, the names of all members of the panel who have not previously been excused from service should be placed in the sheriffs box, even those who are not present in court when the jury is ordered to be drawn, for some or all of the absentees may appear before their names come out of the box. It may be conceded that a failure in this regard is a harmless irregularity, provided that the names of all of the members of the panel, who answer the roll call, or come into court while the jury is being selected, are pul In the box before the drawing of the jury is begun; but we do not doubt the right of a defendant to insist npon this proviso. The statute gives it to him by necessary Implication, when it declares that if the special panel “shall he exhausted from any cause” before a jury shall be obtained, talesmen shall be taken from the general panel. The importance to the defendant of having the names of all the persons from whom the jury will be selected placed together in ihe box is not merely imaginary. The value of his right to challenge, as was said by Ihe Supreme Court in State v. Lapp, 84 N. J. L. 19, 21, depends to a considerable degree upon the order in which the names are drawn from the box, and may be radically affected by placing therein less than two-thirds of the whole number of names on the panel, and then, after exhausting those names, place the remainder (or a portion thereof) of the names upon the panel in the box, and fill up the jury from this second installment.

The method adopted in the drawing of the jury in the present case was a clear violation of the statute, and worked [568]*568to the manifest injury of the defendant. The conviction under review must, therefore, be reversed for this reason.

As the case must go back for a new trial, we deem it advisable to refer to certain other causes of reversal which were argued before us.

The defendant, on his cross-examination, was asked if he had not been convicted of the crime of burglary in one of the criminal courts of the State of Pennsylvania. His answer was' in the negative. The state then produced a copy of the record of the conviction of the defendant for burglary in the Court of Quarter Sessions for Westmoreland county, in the State of Pennsylvania, duly certified in accordance with the provisions of the act of congress, and offered it in evidence for the purpose of impeaching the defendant’s credit as a witness. Its admission was objected, to, and the overruling of the objection is set up as a ground of reversal.

Section 1 of our Evidence act (Comp. Stat., p. 2217) provides that the state may prove the prior conviction of a defendant who offers himsejf as a witness, either on his cross-examination, or by the production of the record thereof, for the purpose of affecting his credit. Counsel does not deny the state’s right to do this, but insists that, notwithstanding the statute, the paper offered was not evidential, because it contained many matters which have no place in a formal record, including the preliminary complaint made before a justice of the peace, and a letter written by the district attorney to one of the court officers with relation to the subpoenaing of witnesses for the trial. It is true, as counsel contends, that these matters form no part of a judgment record in a criminal case made up in accordance with the rules and regulations of the common law. But that fact is immaterial. Each of our sister states is sovereign, so far as the determination of what shall constitute a proper record in a judicial proceeding had before its courts is concerned. Section 1, article 4, of the federal constitution requires that full faith and credit shall be given in each state to the public records and judicial proceedings of every other state. By force 'of this provision the .courts of this state are bound to accept [569]*569tlie records of tlie superior courts of our sister states, when properly certified to us in accordance with the act of congress, as being just wliat they purport to be, and have no power to reject them, when offered in evidence, because they are not made up in the manner prescribed by our own rules and regulations, and contain matters, which according to our ideas of legal rules, would seem to have no proper place therein. It may be that some parts of the record which has been subjected to criticism are not evidential against the defendant; but this we áre not called upon to determine.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
99 A. 434, 89 N.J.L. 565, 4 Gummere 565, 1916 N.J. LEXIS 342, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-rombolo-nj-1916.