State v. Rouner

64 S.W.2d 916, 333 Mo. 1236, 92 A.L.R. 1099, 1933 Mo. LEXIS 689
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedOctober 28, 1933
StatusPublished
Cited by31 cases

This text of 64 S.W.2d 916 (State v. Rouner) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Rouner, 64 S.W.2d 916, 333 Mo. 1236, 92 A.L.R. 1099, 1933 Mo. LEXIS 689 (Mo. 1933).

Opinions

Appellant was found guilty in the Circuit Court of Texas County of selling moonshine whiskey, and his punishment was assessed at four years' imprisonment in State prison. From the sentence and judgment he appeals. *Page 1238

Harry Kelly, sheriff of Texas County, was the sole witness for the State. He testified that on and prior to September 1, 1931, appellant Rouner operated an oil filling station and tourist camp called Piney Vu Lodge on Highway 17, about three miles west of Houston, the Texas county seat. After dark on the evening of September 1, 1931, Sheriff Kelly and Frank Jarrett and J.C. Finney stopped their automobile at Rouner's place. The auto was loaded with cooking utensils, bedding and other camping equipment to give color to the statements of Jarrett and Finney that they were campers Sheriff Kelly lay in the tonnean of the car, concealed by bed quilts. Jarrett called Rouner out to the car. After Rouner had inquired where they had been and what they had in the back of the car to which question Jarrett gave disarming and deceptive answers, Jarrett asked Rouner for a pint of whiskey. Rouner returned to the house and brought back to the car a pint containing liquid which Sheriff Kelly testified was moonshine whiskey, and which Rouner sold and delivered to Jarrett for $1.50. Kelly and his party then drove away, and Kelly appropriated the bottle of liquor which he kept until the day of the trial. No steps were taken to prosecute Rouner until January, 1932. Appellant's defense was that on September 1, 1931, and for a day before and after that date, he was acting as guide in charge of a fishing party on a float on the Piney River; that he was not at Piney Vu on the day on which the offense was laid, and that he did not sell liquor as charged. A new trial was sought on several grounds, most of which have to do with what appellant regards as the pernicious activity of Sheriff Kelly. But the most serious question raised concerns the selection of the regular petit jury panel for the June Term, 1932, of the Texas County Circuit Court. The jury which found appellant guilty and fixed his punishment was chosen from this panel.

I. Appellant, in his motion for a new trial, alleged that he and his counsel learned for the first time after the trial and verdict that the regular panel of jurors from which was chosen the jury before whom appellant was tried, had been selected by the judges of the county court in a private session in a secret, closed room, in the absence of the county clerk, who did not draw the names of jurors in public in the presence of the court and in open court as required by Section 8755, Revised Statutes 1929. Appellant's motion also charged that the county court in choosing the jury acted arbitrarily in the selection of the regular panel and received suggestions of names from Sheriff Kelly and Prosecuting Attorney Lay. The testimony taken at the hearing upon the motion did not support the charge of participation of the sheriff and prosecutor in the selection of the panel. *Page 1239

Appellant, to sustain his motion for a new trial upon the ground that the panel of jurors was not chosen according to law, called as witnesses Mrs. Rose Martin, county clerk of Texas County, Charles Gentry and Kirby Smith, deputy county clerks, Judge A.L. Coates and Presiding Judge John S. Stites, both of the Texas County Court. The testimony of all these witnesses was to the effect that, when it came time, on a certain afternoon appointed by Presiding Judge Stites to select the regular panel of jurors, Judges Stites and Coates retired from the county courtroom in the Texas County courthouse to a private room ten feet square in the same building just off the county clerk's office. Judge Williams, the third member of the county court, was excused to attend a funeral. Judges Stites and Coates closed the door of the private room and worked undisturbed at the task of selecting the panel. When they had finished they returned to the courtroom, and Judge Stites handed a list of names to Charles Gentry with the statement that it was the petit jury for the June Term of court. Gentry gave the list to Kirby Smith and he in turn gave it to Mrs. Martin, the county clerk.

The two county judges testified that each one of the three judges prepared a list of about 150 names, and that these lists were on hand when Judges Stites and Coates assembled in the private room to select the jury panel. They also testified that Judge Stites wrote on a separate slip of paper each name on the three lists. These slips were grouped by townships and were placed in a box, one township at a time, and the names of jurors and alternates to the number commonly allotted to each township were drawn out by Presiding Judge Stites and were written on the list of the panel. When the requisite number of jurors and alternates for a particular township had been thus selected, Judge Stites emptied the box of the remaining name slips, placed in the box the names from the next township in alphabetical order, drew the requisite number of jurors and alternates for that township, and he thus proceeded until the proper number of jurors and alternates from each of the seventeen townships had been chosen. Judge Stites testified that when the slips from each township had served their purpose, he placed them in his pocket. He also testified that he used as a jury box an empty carton or paper box in which books had been shipped and which he found lying in the corner of the private consultation room. In the process of picking slips Judge Stites kept the box on the floor beside him. He admitted that he could have looked into the box and could have seen the names on the slips, but he knew the law was that he should not see what he got out and so he did not know any name drawn until he had placed the slip on the table before him. Judge Stites explained that since the old courthouse had been burned and the new one built, the county court had been without a jury box. The county clerk's forces confirmed this, Mr. Smith testifying that two jury *Page 1240 boxes, formerly used in the old courthouse, were in the memorial building, some distance from the new courthouse. Mrs. Martin, the clerk, and Messrs. Smith and Gentry, her subordinates, all testified that they did not see a box of any kind in the consultation room either before or after the jury panel had been chosen and that after the panel had been prepared they did not see in that room a list of 400 eligible names nor any slips of paper on which these names had been written. All witnesses, namely the two county judges, the county clerk, and her two subordinates agreed that Mrs. Martin, the county clerk, was not present at the drawing and took no part in it. The statutes governing the selection of jury panels in Texas County at the time in question are Section 8754 and 8755, Revised Statutes 1929. These sections are as follows:

"Sec. 8754.

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Bluebook (online)
64 S.W.2d 916, 333 Mo. 1236, 92 A.L.R. 1099, 1933 Mo. LEXIS 689, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-rouner-mo-1933.