Barnett v. State, 6 Div. 192.
Decision Date | 07 June 1938 |
Docket Number | 6 Div. 192. |
Citation | 28 Ala.App. 293,184 So. 702 |
Parties | BARNETT v. STATE. |
Court | Alabama Court of Appeals |
Rehearing Denied Oct. 4, 1938.
Appeal from Circuit Court, Jefferson County; J. Q. Smith, Judge.
R. J Barnett was convicted of manslaughter in the second degree and he appeals.
Reversed and remanded.
Certiorari denied by Supreme Court in Barnett v. State, 6 Div. 420, 184 So. 709.
F. D. McArthur, of Birmingham, for appellant.
A. A. Carmichael, Atty. Gen., Effie Crittenden, Asst. Atty. Gen., and Geo, Lewis Bailes, Sol., and J. Edward Thomton, Deputy Sol., Both of Birmingham, for the State.
The indictment upon which this appellant was tried and convicted reads as follows:
As will be noted, the foregoing indictment charged the defendant with murder in the first degree, a capital felony.
The record shows that, over the protest, objection and exception of the defendant, the court forced him to go to trial without having complied with the mandatory provisions of Section 8644, Code 1923, which section reads as follows:
"Whenever any person or persons stand indicted for a capital felony, the court must, on the first day of the term, or as soon as practicable thereafter, make an order commanding the sheriff to summon not less than fifty nor more than one hundred persons, including those drawn on the regular juries for the week set for the trial of the case, and shall then in open court draw from the jury box the number of names required, with the regular jurors drawn for the week, set for the trial, to make the number named in the order, and shall cause an order to be issued to the sheriff to summon all persons therein named to appear in court on the day set for the trial of the defendant, and must cause a list of the names of all the jurors drawn for the week in which the trial is set, and those drawn as provided in this section, together with a copy of the indictment, to be forthwith served on the defendant, by the sheriff."
It affirmatively appears from the record that the trial court not only failed, but refused, to do the things required by said section, and entered no order as therein required, but forced the defendant to trial without a special venire, etc., and that the case was tried by a jury selected from the regular venire in attendance upon the court.
As stated, the indictment charged this defendant with a capital felony, hence the action of the court complained of in this connection was error to a reversal. There are innumerable decisions of the appellate courts of this State to this effect. The fact, if it be a fact, that the defendant was tried before upon this indictment, which trial resulted in his conviction of a lower offense comprehended and included therein, did not relieve the court of the necessity of entering the orders prescribed and designated in the Code section, supra, as no order or judgment of the court had been entered in this case showing such fact, and no plea of autre fois acquit had been interposed by the defendant, and the defendant had taken no steps to avail himself of this right, which the law conferred upon him. The oral statement of the court, shown by the record, in this connection will not suffice, and any such oral statement cannot be substituted for the mandatory requirements and provisions of the statute.
In the case of Burton v. State, 115 Ala. 1, 22 So. 585, Chief Justice Brickell for the Court said (page 587):
In Linnehan v. State, 116 Ala. 471, 22 So. 662, the court said (page 664):
See, also, the case of Ex parte Williams, In re Williams v. State, 213 Ala. 121, 122, 104 So. 282.
Numerous other decisions could be cited, but the foregoing authorities are conclusive of the question, and we deem it unnecessary to prolong the opinion by further citations.
Other insistences of error are presented, but as this case must be reversed we refrain from further discussion, except to say that the evidence adduced upon the trial of this case is in its entirety circumstantial, and as a whole very vague and uncertain. While not passing upon the question of the sufficiency of the evidence to make a jury question we do assert, as stated in the case of Lay v. State, 26 Ala.App. 458, 162 So. 319,
Reversed and remanded.
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...case, the truth of the plea being admitted, no order shall be made for a special venire for the trial of the case.' In Barnett v. State, 28 Ala.App. 293, 184 So. 702, 703, certiorari denied 236 Ala. 666, 184 So. 709, virtually the same point was presented as is now under consideration, exce......
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