State v. Sharp

83 So. 181, 145 La. 891, 1919 La. LEXIS 1799
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedJune 30, 1919
DocketNo. 23541
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 83 So. 181 (State v. Sharp) 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. Sharp, 83 So. 181, 145 La. 891, 1919 La. LEXIS 1799 (La. 1919).

Opinion

MONROE, C. J.

Defendants, Mrs. J. S. Sharp and her daughter, Mrs. Lena Lockwood, prosecute this appeal from a conviction without capital punishment and sentence, upon a charge of having murdered J. S. Sharp, the husband of the one and stepfather of the other. A number of bills of exception appear in the record, but counsel for defendant say, in their brief:

“We find that only three of them are serious, and we will not take up the time of the court in discussing the other eleven, except where necessary to substantiate some fact in the case.”

The first bill discussed bears the number 14 and reads as follows:

“Be it remembered that, on the trial of a motion for new trial, the juror G. W. Ward having been called by the state, in answer to question by the state, testified that he had not known the defendants prior to this trial, and that he had no bias or prejudice for or against them when sworn on his voir dire, and what he knew about their connection with the death of John Redden he had learned during the trial, and he was then asked by the counsel for the defendant,-the defendants being absent, if the only testimony on this matter he had heard during the trial of the case proper was not from the defendant Mrs. Lockwood, and which was in reply to a question from the state, when she answered that she and her mother were present when one John Redden, had died, and the juror answered affirmatively; and whereupon counsel for defendant asked him if he had not stated to the other jurors, during their deliberations and before a verdict was reached, that Sharp was not the first man Mrs. Sharp bad killed, that she had killed John Redden, with whom she was living in a state of concubinage, for his money, and by poison, and that the doctors had said so, or words to that effect; and whereupon the state objected that the juror could not be heard to impeach his own verdict; and, the court having sustained said objection, the counsel for defendant excepted,” etc.

[1] In bis statement, made part of bill 14, the trial judge says that the foregoing is not “an accurate statement in full,” and that the correct statement of the matter is that made by the district attorney and attached to bill 7, which he (the judge) adopts. Bill 7 contains the recital that, on the hearing of the motion for new trial, defendant [893]*893bad called all the jurors for the purpose of proving that Ward had sworn falsely on his voir dire in saying that he had no prejudice for or against the accused and was in a position to give them a fair trial, and that the court excluded the testimony.

The statement of the district attorney (attached to bill 7) and thus adopted by the judge (as his comment on bill 14) is to the effect that the jurors were sworn and asked by counsel for defendant if the juror Ward had not made statements and arguments in the deliberations of the jury concerning the connection of one of the defendants with the death of one John Redden, some years before, to which it was objected, by the district attorney, that such evidence was not admissible to discredit or impeach the verdict, which objection was sustained; that it was admitted that Ward had sworn, on his voir dire, that he knew nothing of the case and had no bias or prejudice for or against defendants ; that the district attorney called Ward to the stand (on the hearing of the motion for new trial), and he then testified that, when examined on his voir dire, he did not know - either of the defendants, and had never known them; and that he did not know that one of the defendants was the woman whose name was associated with the death of John Redden until there was testimony to that effect in the course of the trial.

The statement further recites that one of the jurors, called by defendants as a witness, on the hearing of the motion for new trial, testified (on cross-examination) that Ward did not, at any time, claim that he had an acquaintance with, or knowledge of, defendants and the relations of one of them with Redden, when he was examined and sworn as a juror; the court having admitted that negative testimony, but having refused to admit any testimony from any juror as to things said by Ward or arguments made by him during the deliberations of the jury.

We are of opinion that the ruling was correct, and that, in admitting testimony to the effect that the juror said nothing during the deliberations of the jury which would indicate that he had sworn falsely upon his examination on voir dire, the trial judge went as far as it was proper to go, and properly declined to impinge upon the rule that a juror will not be heard to discredit the verdict in which he has, participated. If the deliberations of juries are to be inquired into after every conviction, and if every unguarded remark, made by, or attributed to, a juror, during such deliberations, is to be a cause for annulling the verdict, the administration of criminal justice is likely to become very difficult indeed, and the time of the courts likely to be more devoted to inquiries into the sayings and doings of the jurors than of the persons on trial before them. In State v. Howard, 144 La. 97, 80 South. 213, this court had occasion to say, concerning an effort similar to that now under consideration, in which it- was argued that the purpose was, not to impeach the verdict, but to show that the juror, who had passed his examination on his voir dire, was nevertheless disqualified for bias:

“Clearly, the purpose was to prove, by witnesses who had served on the jury, that one of their number, while the case was under submission and consideration by them, had made a statement, in the presence of the other jurors, showing that he was incompetent, by reason of prejudice, to serve on the jury or participate in the verdict, and hence that the verdict which they and he agreed on * * * should be set aside; and to prove by other witnesses, nonjurors, that the same juror had made a similar statement, outside of the jury room and after the finding of the verdict, thereby, in effect, destroying the verdict in the finding of which he had just participated. The impeachment of the verdict therefore goes back to the statement of one of the jurors, in the jury room, before the finding of the verdict, and out of the jury room, after the finding; and, under settled jurisprudence, is not admissible.” (Citing many authorities.)

[895]*895The next bill which the counsel discuss (No. 3) shows that the state called to the stand a regular practicing physician and surgeon, who appears also to have been the acting coroner by whom the inquest was held, and offered to prove by him that, “from the location of the wound and direction of the same and location of the shots in the mantel, it was impossible for the deceased to have hilled himself, accidentally or intentionally, without the help of some mechanical contrivance, and that he had found none on the premises,” to which defendant’s counsel objected that it was not properly expert testimony, and that the question was within the exclusive province of the jury, which objection having been overruled, the bill was reserved.

[2] There was no error in the ruling.

“A nonexpert witness may describe the wounds which he saw on the body, and, a fortiori, a surgeon may give an opinion as to the probable cause of death, and may state, when, in his opinion, death occurred, and that it was not suicidal.” Underhill on Or. Ev. (Ed. 1898) 372; 12 A. & E. Enc. of Law, p. 144; 17 Cyc. 236; State v. Baptiste, 26 La. Ann.

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Bluebook (online)
83 So. 181, 145 La. 891, 1919 La. LEXIS 1799, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-sharp-la-1919.