State v. Reed
State v. Reed
Opinion of the Court
*177 “That, upon being summoned from the jury room by order of the court, 11 of the said jurors appeared with the deputy sheriff, Marius Fontenot, and took their seats; that, upon discovering the absence of one of the jurors, some few minutes after seating the other 11, he proceeded to the jury room, the door of which was closed, and in a short while thereafter emerged therefrom with the missing juror, who had neither asked for nor obtained the permission of the court to remain behind, nor was he accompanied by any deputy sheriff, but remained in the said jury room by himself and ■separated from the rest of the jurors composing the said jury by two closed doors.”
It is shown that the courtroom is in the second story of the court building, and that the jury room adjoins it, and has but the one door, being the door between the two rooms: that, when the juriors were called Into court, the deputy sheriff, in charge of thorn opened the door for them to come out, and stood by it until 11 of them had taken their seats in the jury box, when he noticed a vacant chair, whereupon he walked into the jury room and found the missing juror in the toilet which is within the room, and the door of which was closed; and we infer, though there is no specific evidence on the 'point, that he almost immediately escorted the gentleman into the courtroom. Neither the evidence nor the argument suggest that the deputy sheriff found any one else in the jury room save the missing juror, who testifies that there was no one else there, and, as the other jurors had but just left the room, and the deputy sheriff had remained standing by the only entrance, we regard it as conclusively shown that there was no ■one else, and hence that the juror was not ■ accessible, and that the separation, such as it was, affords no basis for any presumption of misconduct on his part. The conviction and sentence appealed from are therefore
Affirmed,
Reference
- Full Case Name
- STATE v. REED
- Cited By
- 1 case
- Status
- Published
- Syllabus
- (Syllabus by the Court.) 1. Case followed. Reasons assigned in State v. Guillory, 88 South. 780,i this day decided, for sustaining the trial court in overruling the challenge of array, are adopted and assigned in this case. 2. Criminal law 1144(15) — Temporary separation of one juror held insufficient to authorize presumption of misconduct. Temporary separation from his fellow jurymen of one juror, in the trial of a prosecution under indictment for murder, will not authorize presumption of misconduct, or of prejudice to accused, when it is conclusively shown that the one juror was not accessible to contact with outsiders, and that the others were in the jury box under the eye of the1 judge.