Williams v. State

77 S.E. 189, 12 Ga. App. 337, 1913 Ga. App. LEXIS 557
CourtCourt of Appeals of Georgia
DecidedFebruary 18, 1913
Docket4266
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 77 S.E. 189 (Williams v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Williams v. State, 77 S.E. 189, 12 Ga. App. 337, 1913 Ga. App. LEXIS 557 (Ga. Ct. App. 1913).

Opinion

Bussell, J.

The defendant was convicted of voluntary manslaughter, and excepts to the overruling of his motion for new trial. [338]*338We-shall deal with only such of the assignments of error as control our judgment, or may be material upon another trial of the-case, which we feel constrained to grant.

It is not necessary to elaborate any of the questions presented by the assignments of error, save one: In the 8th ground of the motion for a new trial it is insisted that a new trial should have been granted because the jury which was empanelled to try, and did try, the said case was illegally constituted, in that one of its members was' Frank Hames, who on January 12, 1912, .in the city court of Madison, Georgia, pleaded guilty to the charge of simple larceny, and obeyed and endured the sentence imposed; that this fact disqualified the .said juror, and his presence on the. jury was illegal, and reduced the number of competent jurors to eleven, thereby depriving the defendant of a full jury and making his conviction illegal. In support of this ground of the motion the defendant put in proof the accusation of simple larceny against the juror Hames, the record of the plea of guilty by .Hames, dated January 12, 1912, arid the sentence thereon. He also submitted to the court affidavits showing that neither the accused nor his counsel knew or had ever heard until after the trial that Hames had pleaded guilty of larceny. We think that upon this ground of the motion alone the defendant was entitled to a new trial; that the verdict against him was void, and indeed the whole trial was void. There is no right to which Anglo-Saxons more tenaciously cling than the right of jury trial. There is certainly no right which should be considered more sacred, because upon the maintenance of this right depends the assertion or defense of every other right which the citizen enjoys. The -constitution of the State declares that the right of trial by jury “shall remain inviolate” (Civil Code, § 6545). This provision, in substantially the same form, is to be found in every constitution of this State. The statement of the constitution, that the right of trial by jury shall remain inviolate, refers to the right as it existed at common law at the time of the incorporation of this provision into our constitution; and, consequently, the expression means that the right of trial as it existed in England should be inviolate or unaltered. At common law, one who was found guilty of larceny was “'infamous,” and, by Teason of that infamy, he was disqualified from jury service. It "inust" follow, 'therefore, that in-the absence-of any provision in' [339]*339our organic law- affecting the right of jury trial, a jury trial in Georgia,- to be valid, must be governed by the same rules as prevailed in England at the time we adopted our constitution. And as at common law one accused of crime was entitled to a trial by twelve upright men, so likewise it is essential that one accused of crime shall in Georgia be accorded a trial before twelve men, upright and intelligent, if the right is to be preserved inviolate.

It is true that,the constitution does not provide for the method m which jurors ■.shall be selected from the body of citizenry, and expressly delegates that duty to the General Assembly, but it does expressly declare that it shall be the duty of the General Assembly, by appropriate legislation, to insure the selection" of upright and intelligent men as jurors, and upright, intelligent, and experienced men as grand jurors (Civil Code, § 6546). The legislature might have chosen different machinery for the selection of jurors than the medium of jury commissioners. It was within the power of the legislature to pass an act devolving upon the judge, or any other officer, in its discretion, the duty of selecting jurors, but it was not within the power of the legislature, under the constitution, to increase the number of those from whom jurors might be selected, by adding any who were not upright and intelligent. The legislature having imposed upon the jury commissioners the duty of designating from among the upright and intelligent citizens those whom they wished to select as suitable for jury dut}', there may be some question whether the decision of the jury commissioners as to the uprightness and intelligence of a particular citizen selected by it for jury service can, in the first instance, be inquired into. We do not now rule that the court can review the determination (whether it be a judgment or not) of the jury commission that those citizens whose names the jury commission places in the jury box are qualified within the terms of the constitution.

We .are not called upon to decide, and do not hold, that the jury commissioners of a county might not properly adjudge one upright and intelligent who had, at some time in his life, been guilty, .or had pleaded guilty, of an offense involving moral turpitude ; because it has sometimes happened that men who afterward became model: citizens had in their youth committed offenses which were fully expiated or atoned for by a subsequent course of exemplary rectitude. In such, a case it might be presumed [340]*340that the jury commissioners, with full knowledge of all the facts, adjudged the citizen then under their investigation to be qualified, notwithstanding his early indiscretion, because he had proved that he had become upright and was upright at the time his name was placed in the jury box. But that question is not raised in this ease; for, with due regard to the presumption that the jury commissioners did their duty, and conceding, for the purposes of this case, that the decision of the jury commissioners in the selection of jurors is final, still, though the jury commissioners may properly have placed the name of juror Hames in the jury box at the time they revised the list in August, 1911, as the juror did not plead guilty to larceny until January, 1912, it can not be said that holding that the juror bore a reputation of being upright in August (even if he was not) would qualify him as a juror in spite of the fact that in January he pleaded guilty to simple larceny. The fact that Hames was a qualified juror in August would no more establish as a fact his qualifications as a juror in January, if he had removed beyond the limits of the county or the State, than if he. had committed the offense of simple larceny. We think the two propositions are practically identical and show that the court could properly deal with any disqualification arising after the. action of the jury commission and the revision of the jury lists. If Hames was disqualified, then, under the ruling of the Supreme Court in Georgia Railroad v. Cole, 73 Ga. 713, as well as that of this court in Smith v. State, 2 Ga. App. 574 (59 S. E. 311), the trial was void. As was said in the case last cited: “ One reason why a new trial is demanded where there is no doubt as to disqualification of a juror (and where such disqualification is not waived by knowledge of the fact) is that the verdict is illegal and void.” The court then quoted from Georgia Railroad v. Cole, supra, as follows: “If the parties 'consent to the jurors, or have knowledge of their incompetency, then they will be held to waive the same. It can not be said that-the defendants in error have had their case tried; certainly not legally; and, although the verdict may be in accordance' with the facts, and such as a lawful jury should have rendered, yet it is no verdict, and the court did right to set it aside.”

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Bluebook (online)
77 S.E. 189, 12 Ga. App. 337, 1913 Ga. App. LEXIS 557, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/williams-v-state-gactapp-1913.