State v. Langford
State v. Langford
Opinion of the Court
The opinion of the Court was delivered by
The defendant was tried in Edge-field County, August Term, 1901, and convicted of grand larceny. A new trial was gianted by the Circuit Court at said term. In September, 1901, he escaped from jail. He was recaptured and again brought to trial, October Term, 1905, convicted and sentenced.
It appears that on the night of July 4, 1901, some one entered the dwelling of J. E. Smith, in Edgefield County, and stole therefrom' his pants containing $63. The theft was discovered early next morning and the pants were found in a field near the house without the money, and tracks were discovered leading from' near the house to1 the place where the pants were found, thence on to within thirty or forty yards of defendant’s house. The tracking party, on going to defendant’s house, found him absent, but secured a pair of his shoes. Testimony was offered that the shoe fit the track exactly and that one of the party put the shoe on and made a track with it which corresponded with the discovered track, one circumstance being that the number and position *462 of certain tacks on the shoe corresponded exactly with the indentations in the track.
It is objected that the first and second portions of the above charge which we have italicized was a charge in respect to matters of fact, in-violation of the Constitution. We do not so regard the charge. The case was manifestly one in which the State relied upon circumstantial evidence for conviction. The defendant offered no testimony and there was no- dispute as to the facts testified concerning the tracks, the arrest of the defendant the day of the discovery of the theft while gambling with1 other negroes, and his escape from jail. The Court made no allusion to the issuable facts. The inference h> be drawn from these undisputed facts was the real matter in issue, and as to this the Judge gave no intimation of his opinion to the jury. The Court merely mentioned the State’s contention in argument as. a basis for instructing the jury as to the rules which should govern them in. passing upon circumstantial evidence. In Turner v. Lyles, 68 S. C., 392, 401, 48 S.E., 301, approved in Pickett v. *464 Railway, 69 S. C., 451, 48 S. E., 466, the rule is thus stated: “Since the Constitution of 1895, Judges are not permitted to state the testimony to the jury, but it is not every statement of the testimony that will entitle the appellant to a new trial. The statement must be of testimony upon a fact in issue, and there must be reasonable ground for supposing that the jury may have been influenced by such statement in a manner prejudicial to' the rights of the appellant.”
It is true that in the case of Garrett v. Weinberg, 54 S. C., 127, 35 S. E., 390, this Court held that a new trial should be granted if a disqualified juror sat on the case, if neither the party nor his counsel knew1 of the disqualification until after the verdict; but in the subsequent cases of State v. Robertson, 54 S. C., 152, 31 S. E., 868, and Mew v. Railway Co., 55 S. C., 95, 32 S. E., 828, the Court states the rule that where the disqualification relied on might have been discovered by the exercise of ordinary care, it affords no excuse for failing to make the objection in due season, since a party should not be permitted to take advantage of his own negligence. In State v. Robertson, supra, the Court sustained a refusal of the motion for a new trial based upon the ground that one of the jurors w’hoi last tried the defendant therein sat upon the jury in the same case at the preceding term which resulted in a mistrial; and in the case of Mew v. Railway, supra, this Court refused to suspend appeal to allow motion for a new- trial on Circuit on the ground that one of the jurors was not a qualified elector for want of registration and; therefore, not a legal juror.
In the present case, the fact that a juror sat on the former trial and so had formed and expressed an opinion as to defendant’s guilt, was a fact of wdiich defendant and his counsel, of course, once had full knowledge; and conceding that they had forgotten the fact on the last trial, it was one spread upon the record of the trial of the case and falls within the rule stated in the Robertson case and in the Mew case. This is soi conclusive that it is unnecessary to> mention the fact that the juror Dunovant had also forgotten that he had served upon the former jury until after the verdict, and so could not have been influenced by such fact.
The judgment of the Circuit Court is affirmed.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- State v. Langford.
- Cited By
- 21 cases
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- Syllabus
- 1. Evidence- — Tracks.—It is competent for a witness in describing a track to describe the peculiarities of the track by reference to the shoe. 2. Instruction that State relies on circumstantial evidence for conviction, stating circumstances as stated in the argument and using such statement as basis of explanation of the rule applicable to circumstantial evidence, defense offering no evidence, is not a charge on the facts. 3. Circumstantial Evidence. — Instruction that it is not safe to convict on circumstantial evidence unless the circumstances admit of no other conclusion than the guilt of the accused, is equivalent to saying you must acquit under like circumstances. 4. Jury. — New Trial should not be granted because a juror sat on a former trial at which defendant was convicted, on ground that neither defendant nor his counsel knew the fact.