Territory of Hawaii v. Wright

37 Haw. 40
CourtHawaii Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 18, 1944
DocketNo. 2498.
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 37 Haw. 40 (Territory of Hawaii v. Wright) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Hawaii Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Territory of Hawaii v. Wright, 37 Haw. 40 (haw 1944).

Opinion

*41 OPINION OF THE COURT BY

KEMP, C. J.

This case is before us on defendant’s bill of exceptions. The defendant has abandoned exceptions 1, 3 and 4 and relies upon exceptions 2, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10 and 11, under which he specifies error, as follows:

1. The court erred in sustaining the prosecution’s challenge to juror David Pokini Ellis for cause (Ex. 2) ;

2. The court erred in requiring defendant to give secondary evidence as to his conviction of heedless driving without proof of unavailability of court record or that it could not be produced (Ex. 5) ;

3. The court erred in denying defendant’s motion for a new trial (Exs. 6, 7, 8 and 9) ;

4. The court erred in denying defendant’s motion to set aside the verdict, judgment and sentence, and for a neiv trial on account of the misconduct of the jury (Exs. 10 and 11).

The alleged errors will be considered in their order.

SPECIFICATION OF ERROR NUMBER 1 (Ex. 2)

David Pokini Ellis, having been drawn as a juror, dis *42 closed in response to questions by the prosecution that defendant’s sister was the wife of the juror’s brother; that said couple had a son; that the child’s parents are divorced, and their son lives with the prospective juror. Counsel then asked the prospective juror the following question: “Do you still recognize that relationship formerly formed between you and the family of the defendant himself because of the union between your brother Willie and his sister?” to which he answered “I do.”

The prosecution challenged the juror for cause, basing his challenge on the relationship of the parties disclosed by the juror. The court sustained the challenge over the objection of the defendant and the defendant duly excepted.

The defendant relies upon The King v. Kuheleaumoku, 3 Haw. 381, which cited as its authority Chase v. Jennings, 38 Maine 44, in which it was held that although the brother of the juror was the husband of a sister of the defendant, the juror and the defendant were not related and the juror was not therefore disqualified.

Section 84 of our Organic Act provides that no person shall sit as a juror in any case in which his relative by affinity or by consanguinity within the third degree is interested, either as a plaintiff or defendant. Sections 3710 and 3711, Revised Laws of Hawaii 1935, add. other disqualifications, none of which is pertinent to this case. If the juror and the defendant are related, it is by affinity. Bouvier’s Law Dictionary defines affinity as “The connection existing, in consequence of marriage, between each of the married persons and the kindred of the other.” In applying the above definition, Bouvier says that “the relations of my wife, her brothers, her sisters, her uncles, are allied to me by affinity, and my brothers, sisters, etc. are allied in the same way to my wife. But my brother and the sister of my wife are not allied by the ties of affinity.”

*43 Unless the fact that the juror and the defendant are each an uncle of the son of the defendant’s sister and the juror’s brother, coupled with the fact that the son lives with the juror creates an affinity between the defendant and the juror, it is clear that no affinity was shown. There is no showing that the juror had adopted or otherwise obtained legal custody of his nephew. The evidence is merely that the nephew “lives with” the juror, his uncle.

Cases in which the challenge of a juror by the appealing party is overruled have no application to a case where the juror is rejected upon being challenged by the successful party. This court, in Rep. Haw. v. Kapea, 11 Haw. 293, quoted with approval from Thompson & Merriam on Juries, section 271, as follows: “Where a cause has been tried by an impartial jury, although the judge, on the application of one of the parties and against the consent of the other, may have rejected a juror for a cause of questionable sufficiency, such rejection does not afford a ground of complaint, if justice has been done in the premises. In other words, while the disallowance of a cause of challenge will work a reversal of the judgment, an improper allowance of a cause of challenge will not necessarily have this effect. A qualified juror may be rejected, and still a jury of lawful men, against whom there is no objection may be obtained.”

In the Kapea case the court also cited with approval Sutton v. Fox, 45 Wis. 531, which held that though the statutes expressly confer upon a tidal judge the power to exclude from a jury a person drawn, only upon the ground that he is related to one of the parties, or that he has formed or expressed an opinion as to the merits of the case, or has some bias or prejudice therein, jurors may nevertheless be set aside for other reasons and that the power to exclude jurors for other reasons is to be exercised in the discretion of the trial judge and in only a clear case *44 of the abuse of the power will his decision be disturbed. The opinion in Sutton v. Fox quoted from 10 Smith, Cond. Rep. 240 (Ala.), as follotvs: “Of all the discretionary powers of the court this would seem to be the least liable to abuse, as it is altogether conservative. Its exercise is confined to the exclusion of improper or unfit persons as jurors, and how this could prejudice the accused it is difficult to perceive. If in its exercise the court should reject a person qualified-to sit as a juror, how does that prejudice the accused? If a juror disqualified by law is put upon the prisoner the case would be different; but if he is tried by an impartial jury he has sustained no injury.”

In the case at bar there is no showing that the jury by whom the defendant was tried was not composed of impartial persons possessing all of the legal qualifications prescribed by the statute.

Assuming that the excluded juror was not legally disqualified to serve as a juror to try the defendant, certainly his intimate connection with the nephew of the defendant (he was a person in loco parentis to his and the defendant’s nephew) justified the action of the court in excluding the juror.

SPECIFICATION OP ERROR NUMBER 2 (Ex. 5)

The defendant on cross-examination testified without objection that in about 1934 he had been convicted of heedless driving on a plea of guilty in the district court of Waimea. The prosecuting attorney then asked, “That was in reference to Araso?” to which he answered “No.” Whereupon the following evidence, objections and rulings, appear in the transcript: “JUDGE ACHI: The record speaks for itself, we object. THE COURT: Objection is overruled. JUDGE ACHI: If counsel is attempting to pry into the record and the contents of what transpired before the Magistrate we object. THE COURT: He may be asked the details of that conviction. JUDGE ACHI: *45 He has already stated he was convicted of heedless driving —for counsel to pry into the details I object to that.

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Bluebook (online)
37 Haw. 40, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/territory-of-hawaii-v-wright-haw-1944.