Zimmerman v. State

51 S.W.2d 327
CourtCourt of Criminal Appeals of Texas
DecidedMarch 2, 1932
DocketNo. 14986
StatusPublished

This text of 51 S.W.2d 327 (Zimmerman v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Criminal Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Zimmerman v. State, 51 S.W.2d 327 (Tex. 1932).

Opinions

CHRISTIAN, J.

The offense is murder; the punishment, confinement in the penitentiary for nine years.

It was charged in the indictment, in substance, that appellant killed Mallie Nettles •by causing dynamite to explode upon and against the said Mallie Nettles. In support of the allegations in the indictment, the state offered proof as follows: The wife and stepdaughter of appellant had left appellant’s home and taken up their abode in the house of deceased. Appellant was aware that it was the custom of deceased to build a fire in his kitchen stove in the morning. Placing some slippers on his feet for the purpose of preventing identification of his tracks, appellant went to the home of deceased at night and placed some dynamite in the kitchen stove by letting it down through the flue. When deceased built a fire in the stove on the following morning, the dynamite exploded, and he was mortally wounded. Deceased- died within four or five days. Appellant’s written confession supported the .allegations embraced in the indictment.

Testifying in his own behalf, appellant admitted that he went to the home of deceased and placed the dynamite in the kitchen stove knowing that deceased would build a fire on the following morning. Appellant declared [328]*328that deceased had taken his wife away from him and had broken up his home. He testified that he had been informed that his wife was living in adultery with deceased. According to his version, one of his children was being shunned by other children on account of the relations existing between deceased and his wife. A witness for appellant testified that she had seen deceased and appellant’s wife having sexual intercourse, and had advised appellant of such fact. It appears, that, after appellant learned from this witness that deceased and his wife were having sexual intercourse, he (appellant) continued visiting his wife at deceased’s home, and maintained friendly relations with deceased.

■ Before the jury was impaneled the trial judge delivered a lecture to the jury for the week. The special venire drawn in appellant’s cause was present in the courtroom at the time. In his preliminary remarks to the jury for the week the trial judge advised them, in substance, that, if any errors were committed in the trial court, they would be corrected by the Court of Criminal Appeals. He admonished the jury that it would be improper for them, after returning verdicts, to sign affidavits impeaching such verdicts. He declared that it was not the inclination of the court to determine controversies between jurors as to improper conduct in the jury room. Further, he stated, in effect, that jurors and attorneys would be in contempt of court if they made any effort to impeach the verdict of the jury in a given case. The court further advised the jurors that skillful attorneys could draw affidavits in such a manner as to make the juror ashamed hé had placed his signature on such instruments. Again, the court advised the panel that the trial of cases cost the county money. Appellant’s counsel, as shown by bill of exception No. 1, objected to the remarks of the court at the time they were made. The court declined to withdraw the remarks. Thereafter, on the same day, the jury in the present case was impaneled. On asking twenty of the jurors if they had heard the court’s preliminary address to the jury for the week, all but three of the jurors answered in the affirmative. The seventeen jurors answering in the affirmative were challenged for cause. The challenge being overruled, appellant peremptorily challenged ten of the jurors. Out of these twenty jurors ten jurors were chosen, all save three having heard the preliminary remarks of the court. Thereafter the special venire list was exhausted and talesmen brought in. Among these talesmen were jurors who had been summoned for the week and who answered that they had heard the preliminary remarks of the court. Appellant challenged the tales-men for cause. Having exhausted his peremptory challenges, he was forced to take one juror who had heard the preliminary remarks of the court, and another juror whom he stated to the court was objectionable to him. Before taking these jurors, appellant’s counsel requested the court to permit him to exercise further peremptory challenges. This request was denied. At a time when appellant had not exhausted his peremptory challenges, he failed to challenge peremptorily five jurors who had heard the preliminary remarks of the court. However,- he had challenged these five jurors for cause. Appellant’s action in failing -to exercise his fifteen peremptory challenges on jurors who had' heard the preliminary remarks of the court would appear to minimize the importance he attached to the effect of the remarks of the court.

The .remarks of the trial judge were improper. Murphy v. State (Tex. Cr. App.) 57 S. W. 987; Chapman v. State, 42 Tex. Cr. R. 135, 57 S. W. 965. It was evidently the purpose of the learned trial judge, in addressing his remarks to the jury for the week, to impress upon them the importance of confining their discussion in a given case to the facts in evidence, and to prevent the jurors from filing self-stultifying affidavits which might bring about the annulment of verdicts. Further, the learned trial judge probably had in mind that it was improper for counsel to pry into the deliberations of the jury touching the arguments or reasons upon which their verdicts were based. However, the jury might have construed the remarks as a threat on the part of the trial judge to fine for contempt of court those guilty of attempting to set forth in a motion for a new trial misconduct of the jury when the subject of such misconduct became a proper matter of investigation under the statute. In article 763, C. O. P., the grounds upon which a new trial may -be demanded are set forth. Among the grounds is misconduct of the jury. It has long been the practice pursued and sanctioned by judicial interpretation and statutory declaration that, upon the hearing of the motion for new trial, alleged misconduct of the jury is a proper subject of investigation through affidavits or oral testimony heard by the presiding judge. From this principle it is implied that the law sanctions the right of one against whom a verdict has been rendered to pursue the methods pointed out, that is, by affidavits of the members of the jury, to bring to the attention of the trial court the evidence of misconduct. This being a right, it is not within the power of the trial court to annul or abridge it. Moreover, the constitutional provision guaranteeing the right of counsel for one accused of crime carries with it the duty, when the rights of the counsel’s' client have been transgressed by misconduct of the jury, to bring the matter by legal means before the trial court to the end that an investigation may be made and the rights of the accused, protected and preserved. The prohibition by1 the trial judge, under threat of contempt of court, against pursuing the means prescribed [329]*329by law and sanctioned by precedents and statute to bring to tbe attention of the court upon the hearing of the motion for new trial the facts upon which reliance is had to show that the verdict of the jury is tainted by misconduct or by the violation of some statutory provision prescribed by article 753, supra, might have the effect of destroying or annulling the rights of the accused guaranteed by the laws and Constitution to a fair trial and the effective representation by counsel.

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Related

Mitchell v. State
33 S.W. 367 (Court of Criminal Appeals of Texas, 1895)
Banks v. State
211 S.W. 217 (Court of Criminal Appeals of Texas, 1919)
Hendricks v. State
154 S.W. 1005 (Court of Criminal Appeals of Texas, 1913)
Redwine v. State
213 S.W. 636 (Court of Criminal Appeals of Texas, 1919)
Davis v. State
296 S.W. 605 (Court of Criminal Appeals of Texas, 1925)
Reed v. State
168 S.W. 541 (Court of Criminal Appeals of Texas, 1914)
Lagrone v. State
209 S.W. 411 (Court of Criminal Appeals of Texas, 1919)
Chapman v. State
57 S.W. 965 (Court of Criminal Appeals of Texas, 1900)

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Bluebook (online)
51 S.W.2d 327, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/zimmerman-v-state-texcrimapp-1932.