Heil v. State

Decision Date25 February 1887
PartiesHeil v. State.
CourtIndiana Supreme Court

OPINION TEXT STARTS HERE

Appeal from criminal court, Marion county.

J. W. Gordon, for appellant. The Attorney General, for the State.

MITCHELL, J.

The appellant was tried upon an information, and found guilty of the charge of grand larceny. He was sentenced to a fine, and five years' imprisonment in the state's prison. No regular panel of jurors having been drawn or returned for the term at which the trial took place, the bailiff, by the direction of the court, called from the by-standers 12 qualified persons as jurors. The appellant objected to being tried by a jury thus selected.

The first point insisted upon is that the court erred in requiring him to submit his cause to a special jury. That justice must use right means in attaining its ends, and that its ends when attained must be such as the law allows and approves, cannot be denied. The question is, did the court proceed, in the organization of a jury, in a manner which the law does not sanction? Section 1396, Rev. St. 1881, reads as follows: “In all cases when the proper officers have failed or refused to draw and impanel a traverse jury, or where, for any other cause whatsoever, no traverse jury shall be present at any term of the court, it shall be lawful, and is hereby made the duty of the circuit court, if the business thereof require it, to order the sheriff to summon a jury from the by-standers, or citizens of the county,” etc. Section 1790 provides that the trial jury used in civil cases shall act in criminal cases, and that the sheriff, in case a jury trial is demanded, shall call a jury in the manner prescribed by law, or as directed by the court. Section 522 provides that “the court shall have the power, when the business thereof requires it, to order the impaneling of a special jury for the trial of any cause.” These sections of the statute leave no room to doubt the power of the court to impanel a special jury under the circumstances disclosed in the record. The officers charged with the duty of drawing or selecting a jury may have neglected their duty. It may often happen that a panel regularly selected becomes disqualified. It cannot be permitted that circumstances such as we have mentioned should deprive the court of the necessary machinery for the transaction of its business. Hence the statutes to which we have referred make provision for any such emergency. No question is made but that the jurors impaneled possessed all the requisite statutory qualifications. Nor is there any claim that they did not, when impaneled, constitute “an impartial jury.” Having been selected and impaneled in a manner authorized by law, the constitutional rights of the appellant were not infringed. Pierce v. State, 67 Ind. 354;Evarts v. State, 48 Ind. 422;Winsett v. State, 57 Ind. 26.

The bill of exceptions states that no jury had been drawn for that term, so that, even if it had been necessary, as is contended, that the record should affirmatively show the necessity for, or authority to call, a special jury, it does so appear. Without that, however, the regularity of the proceedings would have been presumed, in obedience to the maxim that “all acts are presumed to have been rightly and legally done.”

In its seventh charge the court instructed the jury, in substance, that if they had a reasonable doubt as to any material fact going to the defense, or necessary to make the cause, the defendant was entitled to the benefit of such doubt. As to what constitutes a reasonable doubt, the jury were told, in substance, that not every possible or frivolous doubt that might be conjured up was a reasonable doubt, but that, if the evidence in the case failed to satisfy their minds of the truth of every material proposition necessary to establish the criminal liability of the defendant, with such certainty that a prudent man would feel safe in voluntarily acting in his own important affairs, there would in such a case be a reasonable doubt, and that in that event they must acquit the defendant. The fifteenth instruction asked by the defendant, and given by the court, is as follows: “A reasonable doubt exists whenever, as long as taking all the evidence in the case together, and fairly considering it, it does not so satisfy your minds of the truth of the proposition to be found that a reasonable and prudent man would feel safe to act upon it in matters involving his own most important affairs and dearest interests voluntarily, and under circumstances in which he was under no compulsion to act at all.” The argument of the appellant is that the instruction given by the court of its own motion, upon the subject of what constitutes a reasonable doubt, was erroneous, and that, although the court at his request subsequently instructed the jury correctly on the same subject, since the first charge was not withdrawn, the error was not cured by giving an inconsistent, although correct, instruction.

The rule that an erroneous...

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4 cases
  • Kallas v. State
    • United States
    • Indiana Supreme Court
    • 4 Febrero 1949
  • Weigand v. State
    • United States
    • Indiana Supreme Court
    • 29 Noviembre 1912
  • Preston v. Spalding
    • United States
    • Illinois Supreme Court
    • 22 Marzo 1887
    ... ... , in the disposition of his property, to prefer one or more creditors to the extent of the bona fide indebtedness, has been recognized in this state; but since the voluntary assignment act of 1877 all preferences by voluntary assignment have been void. Section 13 of that act reads: Every provision ... ...
  • Siberry v. The State
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    • Indiana Supreme Court
    • 21 Abril 1896

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