State v. Ussery

152 So. 302, 178 La. 593, 1934 La. LEXIS 1303
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedJanuary 2, 1934
DocketNo. 32573.
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 152 So. 302 (State v. Ussery) 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. Ussery, 152 So. 302, 178 La. 593, 1934 La. LEXIS 1303 (La. 1934).

Opinion

O’NIELL, Chief Justice.

The appellant was indicted and tried for murder and convicted of manslaughter. The record contains eleven bills of exception, two of which are abandoned.

The first bill was reserved to the overruling of a motion for a continuance, based upon the absence of an alleged important witness. The reason why the judge overruled the motion was that the district attorney admitted that the witness, if present, would testify as stated in the motion. Article 325 of the Code of Criminal Procedure provides that, when either the district attorney or the defendant makes such an admission to avoid a continuance, the judge shall not grant the continuance. It is argued that the continuance should have been granted in this instance, notwithstanding the district attorney’s admission, because the absent witness was the only witness to the homicide not related to either the defendant or the man who was killed. But the statute makes no exception in that respect, and we see no good reason for a departure from the rule. So long as a defendant is not denied his constitutional right to compulsory process to obtain the attendance of his witnesses, the judge is right in refusing to grant a continuance or postponement .of the trial because of the absence of a witness when the district attorney admits that,' if the witness were present, he would testify as stated in the defendant’s motion for a continuance. In this case a subpoena was issued for the witness, and the sheriff made two trips into that part of the parish where the witness was last seen, and, after a diligent inquiry in the neighborhood, the witness could not be located. There is no assurance or showing that the attendance of the witness could have been obtained if more time had been allowed.

The second bill has reference to the method of examination by the district attorney in the impaneling of the jury. The objection made by the defendant’s counsel, and overruled by the judge, was the same objection that was held to be not well founded in State v. Wells, 171 La. 795, 132 So. 349. The district attorney, having examined a prospective juror on his voir dire, tendered him to the defendant’s attorneys for examina *597 tion; whereupon they objected to being called upon to examine the prospective juror until the district attorney announced that he accepted the juror. The district attorney then announced that he accepted the juror tentatively, meaning that the acceptance was provisional, being subject to the provisions of articles 358 and 359 of the Code of Criminal Procedure. Article 358 provides that the jurors shall be tendered first to the prosecution for examination on their voir dire, and, if accepted, then tendered to the defense; and that, after a juror has been accepted by both sides, neither side shall have the right to challenge him peremptorily, but that it shall be then absolutely within the discretion’of the judge either to allow or to deny a peremptory challenge up to the time the jury is impaneled. And article 359 provides that, after a juror has been accepted by both sides, he may yet be challenged for cause, or be excused by consent of both sides, up to the beginning of the taking of evidence. It is plain, therefore, that the tendering of a juror to the defendant’s counsel, by the district attorney, after he has examined the juror on his voir dire, is in itself an acceptance of the juror by the district attorney, subject, of course, to the rights which are accorded to both sides under articles 358 and 359 of the Code of Criminal Procedure. The only way that a cause for complaint on the part of the defendant could arise in such a proceeding would be for the district attorney to attempt to withdraw his acceptance of the juror, or to proceed in a way not consistent with his acceptance of the juror, after tendering him to the defendant’s counsel for examination.

The third bill of exception makes the complaint that, after the district attorney had examined several jurors on their voir dire and had asked each one whether he had any conscientious or religious scruples against capital punishment, and after the district attorney had challenged successfully several jurors because of their being conscientiously or religiously opposed to capital punishment, the district attorney examined and accepted a juror without asking whether he had any scruples against capital punishment. The . defendant’s counsel asked the judge to require the district attorney to ask either every juror or none of them to state his attitude towards capital punishment, and asked the judge to so interrogate every juror whom the district attorney refused to interrogate on that subject, if the district attorney continued to interrogate any of them on the subject The judge refused the request. In a prosecution for a capital offense, if the district attorney does not intend to plead for an infliction of the death penalty, he ought to waive the right to exclude from the jury those who have conscientious or religious scruples against the infliction of the penalty of death; hence it is right, in such a case, for the district attorney to refrain from inquiring whether the jurors are opposed to capital punishment. It would be unfair, of course, for the district attorney to abuse his privilege in that respect, by using it as he wouid use a peremptory challenge, where he is not asking for the death penalty, and where, therefore, a juror’s being opposed to capital punishment is not a good reason for excluding him from the jury. But, where there is no such abuse or unfair practice on *599 the part of the district attorney, the defendant has no canse to complain of the district attorney’s failure to ask a juror whether he has any scruples against the infliction of the death penalty. State v. Davis, 154 La. 295, 97 So. 449; State v. Allen, 173 La. 482, 137 So. 860. It does not appear that there was any such unfairness in the district attorney’s method of examination of the jurors in this case.

The fourth bill of exceptions has been abandoned.

The fifth bill was reserved to the overruling of - an objection to a question which the district attorney asked a witness for the state, as to how much'liquor there was under the bed or on the defendant’s premises where the fatal difficulty occurred. The witness- answered: - “Had two half-gallon fruit jars full.” The objection to the evidence was that it was irrelevant and was apt to prejudice the jury against the defendant by showing that he had violated the prohibition law. The statement per curiam shows that the evidence was relevant, because there was a contradiction between the witnesses for the state and the witnesses for the defense as to whether the defendant and his brother, who took part in the fatal difficulty, were drunk at the time of the killing. The witnesses for the state testified that the defendant and his brother- were drinking very freely, and the witnesses for the defense denied it. - - ■

Bills No. 6 and No. 7 were reserved to the overruling of an objection to a question which the district attorney asked two state witnesses as to whether the defendant or his brother, who had a part- in the fatal difficulty, was in a bad humor because the sheriff had disarmed the defendant. The witnesses answered that the defendant and-his brother were in a very bad humor a short time before the arrival of the party of three men, one of whom the defendant killed. The objection to the testimony was, first, that it' was irrelevant, especially because the time was remote from the timd of the killing; second, that it called for an.

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Bluebook (online)
152 So. 302, 178 La. 593, 1934 La. LEXIS 1303, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-ussery-la-1934.