Hays v. State
Decision Date | 14 June 1909 |
Docket Number | 13,796 |
Citation | 96 Miss. 153,50 So. 557 |
Court | Mississippi Supreme Court |
Parties | SANDY HAYS v. STATE OF MISSISSIPPI |
FROM the circuit court of Simpson county, HON. ROBERT L. BULLARD Judge.
Hays appellant, was tried and convicted of murder. After conviction he moved in arrest of judgment on the ground that the record failed to show that the grand jury, which found the indictment, was sworn and acted under oath. The court below overruled the motion and sentenced defendant to the penitentiary for life. The defendant appealed to the supreme court. The facts pertinent to the question decided are fully stated in the opinions of the court.
The first opinion announced a reversal of the judgment appealed from; but, on suggestion of error, it was vacated and the second and controlling opinion delivered.
The code sections, Code 1906, §§ 1413, 1426 and 1427 adjudged to be controlling are as follows:
Judgment affirmed.
Robert N. & Hugh B. Miller, and Albert H. Whitfield, Jr., for appellant.
The record in this case does not show that the grand jury, which found the bill of indictment in this case, was sworn. It shows that the foreman was sworn, but does not show that the balance of the grand jury were sworn.
A grand jury is an illegal body, wholly incomplete and possessing no powers of a legal grand jury until it is sworn; and this swearing must affirmatively appear by the record.
The constitution requires, as a foundation of this prosecution that an indictment shall be returned by a grand jury, which means as a matter of course a grand jury, not only impaneled and selected but sworn as required by the laws of the state.
Therefore, the indictment in this case is void, because the grand jury that returned it was not a legal body. It is such a fatal defect that it is not waived by plea to the merits, and cannot be waived, and the motion in arrest of judgment is the proper remedy. Being a defect which could not be waived, it is not cured by the statute of jeofails or any other statute of our state.
"Grand juries are not complete and organized for business until sworn in accordance with the law or as prescribed by statute." 20 Cyc. 1319--citing in note 23; State v. Furco, 50 La. Ann. 1082, 20 So. 851; United States v. Gale, 109 U.S. 65; Cody v. State, 3 How. (Miss.) 27; Abram's case, 25 Miss. 589; Foster's case, 31 Miss. 421; Mulligan's case, 47 Miss. 304.
These Mississippi cases hold that the indictment is void, because the grand jury was not sworn, which must affirmatively appear by the record, and that the recitation of the fact that they were sworn in the caption of the indictment will not be sufficient.
We find in each of these cases that a motion in arrest of judgment was not made, but the question arose on a motion for new trial. This cuts no figure in the case, however, because if the defect is one which if it could be waived, would have been waived on a motion for new trial as well as in arrest of judgment, and was waived by a trial on the merits.
In the case of Newcomb v. State, 37 Miss. it is held that the statute of jeofails, the only statute that could cure this defect. only extends to those defects which might be waived. Now, the question is, is this such a defect as could be waived? If it could be waived by a trial on the merits, then it would have been so held in all the foregoing Mississippi cases. It will be readily seen that on motion for new trial the court would on this point have simply said that it was a defect, which could be waived and was waived, because the defendants in all the cases were tried and convicted on the merits and then made a motion for a new trial.
The court will thus readily see that the question whether this defect is cured by the statute of jeofails is clearly closed out by the above Mississippi cases.
George Butler, assistant attorney-general, for appellee.
After the defendant had entered his plea of "not guilty" and had been tried and convicted by the jury he made a motion in arrest of judgment wherein he alleged that the indictment was void because the minutes of the special January term of the court did not show affirmatively that the grand jury which returned the indictment was "sworn" as was required by law and because the record shows affirmatively that the grand jury was not so "sworn" and in support of the allegations of that motion he offered in evidence the minutes of the special term wherein it is recited that "the following named persons taken from the body of the county of Simpson and from the list were duly selected and impaneled as grand jurors for the state of Mississippi in open court, to wit: (here follow the names of those so impaneled) and the court having examined them touching their qualifications as such found them qualified in every respect and they were thereupon impaneled and from their number Robert L. Mangum was appointed foreman of said grand jury, who in open court and in the presence and hearing of the rest of the grand jurors took the oath required by law and having heard the charge of the court touching their duties retired to consider of indictments and presentments in charge of I. K. Brown, who was sworn as bailiff."
The record contains the further recital that, "the grand jurors for the state of Mississippi appeared in open court, there being more than twelve of their number present and through their foreman presented bills of indictments numbered respectively, * * * (including this one) which were received by the court and marked filed by the clerk." The indictment recites, "The grand jurors for the state of Mississippi, elected, impaneled, sworn, and charged in and for Simpson county, etc., present:"
Of course the motion in arrest reached only such defects as appeared in the face of the record, and if it be true that the record fails to show that the grand jury was sworn it is equally true that the record does not show that the grand jury was not sworn.
We are not unmindful of the holding of this court in Cody v. State, 3 How. (Miss.) 27; Abrams' case, 25 Miss. 589; Mulligan's case, 47 Miss. 304, and other cases to the same effect, but those decisions are unsound and opposed to the great weight of authority and are in conflict with numerous holdings of this court. Bird v. State, 1 How. (Miss.) 163; Woodsides v. State, 2 How. (Miss.) 665; Thompson & Merriam on Juries, sections 689, 690, 691, 692, 694, and 695; Friar v. State, 3 How. (Miss.) 422; Seal v. State, 13 Smed. & M. 286; Green v. State, 28 Miss. 287; Chase v. State, 46 Miss. 283; State v. Kimbrough, 2 Dev. (N. C.) 431; State v. Watson, 31 La. Ann. 379; Bird v. State, 53 Ga. 602; Holloway v. State, 53 Ind. 555; Commonwealth v. Pullan, 3 Bush (Ky.), 47.
The recitals in the record are sufficient to show that the jury was sworn. It is expressly recited that they were "impaneled" and the swearing is simply one step in the process of impaneling the jury.
Again, whether the grand jurors were sworn or not they were de facto grand jurors and as such at most their acts were only voidable and not void. State ex rel. v. Dun, 27 L. R. A. 776 and note.
A plea of "not guilty" was a waiver of the defect and the objection could not be raised for the first time after the verdict, and this is true irrespective of Code 1906 §§ 1426, 1413, and 1427. Thompson & Merriam, supra; 1 Bish. Crim. Proc., 886; monographic note, 12 Am. St. Rep. 910; United States v. Gale, 109 U.S. 65; State v. Watson, 31 La. 379; O'Brien v. State, 9 L. R. A. 332; State v. Carver, 49 Me. 588; State v. Lamon, 3 Hawks, 175; State v. Seaborn, 4 Dev. (N. C.) 305; Bird v. State, 53 Ga. 602; Young v. State, 23 Ohio State, 577; Barron v. People, 73 Ill. 256; State v. Jackson, 36 La. Ann. 96; Holloway v. State, 53 Ind. 554; Floyd v. State, 30 Ala. 511; State v. Pile, 5 Ala. 72; Commonwealth v. Pullan, 3 Bush, 47; Friar v. State, 3 Howard, 422; Seal v. State...
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