February 16, 1925. The opinion of the Court was delivered by This is a second appeal. The first case appears in120 S.E., 496, where a full statement of the case may be found. A short statement here will be sufficient.
Jacob Carter was found dead at his wood pile, near his house, shot through the back with buckshot, and the appellant has been convicted of manslaughter for the killing. From the sentence this appeal is taken. There are many *Page 68 exceptions. The appellant in his argument states four assignments of error.
I. "That a fair and impartial jury was not secured to try the case." It certainly was not a lawful jury.
(a) Two members of the grand jury that brought in a true bill upon the indictment were allowed to sit on the petit jury that tried the case. This is forbidden by the statute. Section 86, Code of Criminal Procedure, reads:
"No member of the grand jury which has found an indictment shall be put upon the jury for the trial thereof."
(b) Jurors were required to "stand aside." This is also forbidden by the statute. Section 88 provides:
"But no right to stand aside jurors shall be allowed to the State in any case whatsoever."
The record is not clear as to what did occur at the trial. The appellant's attorney asked that one juror be required to "stand aside." To stand aside a juror has a definite meaning, which seems not to have been observed in this case, and that leads to confusion as to what did occur.
The prosecuting attorney, under the old practice, exercised the right to stand aside a juror. The juror was not then presented. After the panel was exhausted, without filling the jury, and the defense had exhausted its peremptory challenge, then the juror who had been "stood aside" was presented and the defense was at the mercy of the prosecution. This right to stand aside a juror was considered a right that might be abused, and the statute was passed to destroy the right to "stand aside."
II. The Court erred to the prejudice of the defendant by admitting much testimony.
(a) The Court did err in allowing Miss Ella Goodwin to say that Mrs. E.L. Goodwin, the wife of the appellant, came to the house of the deceased, and, in consequence of what Mrs. Goodwin said, the deceased carried his gun for his protection. *Page 69
It is frequently heard in the trial of causes that an officer got certain information, and in consequence of that information the officer went to a certain place and found certain evidence. It is wholly immaterial whether the officer received the information or not, and the admission of those words is not prejudicial. Here, however, the statement made by the wife of the accused was the important evidence, and the statement that in consequence of what the wife said the deceased armed himself, left to the jury only one inference, and that was that the husband intended to inflict personal injury on the deceased. It would have been better for the witness to have told just what was said and then the jury could have drawn their own conclusion. This point must be sustained.
III. Was there any evidence? The competent evidence before and now are practically the same, and it has already been decided that there was sufficient evidence to carry the case to the jury.
The judgment is reversed and a new trial ordered.
MR. JUSTICE WATTS and MR. ACTING JUSTICE W.C. COTHRAN concur.
MR. JUSTICE MARION concurs in result.
MR. CHIEF JUSTICE GARY and MR. JUSTICE T.P. COTHRAN did not participate.