State v. Hargrave

Decision Date16 April 1888
Citation6 S.E. 185,100 N.C. 484
PartiesSTATE v. HARGRAVE.
CourtNorth Carolina Supreme Court

Appeal from superior court, Rowan county; PHILIPS, Judge.

The Attorney General, for the State.

MERRIMON J.

In selecting the jury the defendant challenged a tales juror tendered, for cause, who, upon his examination, stated "that he had paid his taxes for the year 1886, but had not paid them for the year 1887." That he had not paid his taxes for the last-mentioned year was assigned as cause of challenge. The court refused to allow it, and the defendant excepted. The defendant then challenged this juror peremptorily, and challenged a fifth one without assigning any cause of challenge, and the court disallowed this challenge, and the defendant again excepted. On the trial there was a verdict of guilty, and judgment accordingly against the defendant, from which he appealed to this court.

It is settled that a person selected and summoned as a juror, as provided by the statute, (Code, § 1722,) is not eligible to be such, if objected to, unless he shall have paid taxes for the fiscal year next preceding the time he was selected --that is, the fiscal year next preceding the first Monday of September next preceding the time such juror shall be called to serve, -- because the statute cited provides that jurors shall regularly be selected on the Monday mentioned in each year. State v. Carland, 90 N.C. 668; State v Haywood, 94 N.C. 847; Sellers v. Sellers, 98 N.C. 13, 3 S.E. Rep. 917. And it has been repeatedly decided that a tales juror is not eligible, if objection be raised if he has not paid taxes in like manner as jurors regularly selected. He is required to have the same qualifications as a regular juror, and, in addition to them, he must be a freeholder. He is eligible in that respect when he has paid such taxes as the regular juror is required to have paid to render him eligible, and free from objection. Lee v Lee, 71 N.C. 139; State v. Whitley, 88 N.C. 691; State v. Carland, supra. Now, the regular juror of the panel that tried the defendant must regularly have been selected on the first Monday in September, 1887; and hence, to be free from objection, must have paid taxes for the fiscal year next preceding that time which was the fiscal year 1886. Sellers v. Sellers, supra. The juror challenged was on a like footing, as to the payment of taxes, with regular jurors. He had paid taxes for the fiscal year 1886...

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