Carpenter v. State
Carpenter v. State
Opinion of the Court
At the August term, in the year A.D., 1838, in the circuit court of Hancock county, Samuel A. Carpenter was indicted, tried and convicted of the crime of perjury ; and having received sentence, has by writ of error removed his cause to this court, and asks a reversal of the judgment against him for several errors and irregularities alleged to exist in the record of the proceedings and judgment of the court below.
It appears by the record, that the issue in the cause was submitted to eleven persons, who were empanelled and sworn as a jury ; and that as such they found the prisoner guilty as charged in the indictment.
In all prosecutions by indictment or information, the accused is entitled to “ a speedy public trial by a jury of his country.” This right, justly regarded as the palladium of the liberties of the citizen, is guaranteed by the fundamental law of the landv and is placed by express provision beyond the control of legislative authority. But neither by the Federal constitution nor by that of our own state, have the qualifications of a juror been defined; or the number necessary to constitute “ a jury” been fixed.
It is a general rule that where terms used in the common law are contained in a statute or the constitution, without an explanation of the sense in which they are there employed, they should receive that construction which has been affixed to them by the former. To ascertain then, in what the right of trial by jury consists, we must necessarily recur to the provisions of the common law defining the qualifications, and ascertaining the number of which the jury shall consist; as the standard to which, doubtless, the framers of our constitution referred. At common law, the number of the jury, tor the trial of all issues involving the personal rights and liberties of the subject, could never be less
The finding in the case before us, therefore, cannot be considered as the verdict of a jury, upon which the court was warranted in pronouncing judgment. For this cause the judgment of the circuit court should be reversed and a new trial awarded ; but it is insisted that other objections exist, which strike at the foundation of the indictment, and require not only a reversal of the judgment, but also the discharge of the prisoner. These objections apply to the caption of the indictment, as well as the subject matter charged. Ve do not deem it important to notice all of them in detail, but shall confine our examination to some of the most obvious.
1. It is insisted that the caption does not show a place at which the court was holden, the indictment found, or the prisoner tried.
To test the validity of this exception, we must refer to the caption of the indictment as it is presented in the record. It is set out in the following words, to wit: The State of Mississippi v. Samuel A. Carpenter; pleas in the circuit court of Hancock county; B. Harris, Judge, presiding; the term of August, in the year of our Lord, one thousand eight hundred and thirty-eight. Be it remembered that on the second day of the present term, being the 30th day of August, A. H., 1838, the grand’ jury of the State of Mississippi being duly empanelled, sworn, and charged, to-wit: (Asa Buss, foreman,) Antoine Field, etc., came into court and presented the following indictment to-wit
The fact that the court was holden for the county of Han
The omission of any material statement in the caption or record, cannot be supplied by the recital in the indictment, which becomes no part of the record until it is returned into court in the manner prescribed by law. The record in the case now under investigation, does not directly state that the grand jurors who returned the bill of indictment into court, were the grand jurors of the county where the court was holden; and this is the ground of the second objection which we deem necessary to notice.
The grand jurors for any county duly selected and empanelled, according to the directions of the law, may with strict legal propriety, be termed the grand jurors of the state ; as it is on behalf
No man can be held to answer for any criminal violation of the law, unless he shall be first charged by a grand jury of the county where the offense may have been committed. This fact must be shown by the caption of the indictment, or it will be presumed that the court has proceeded without authority. The forms of proceeding in prosecution for public offenses are designed to protect the life and liberty of the citizen, and are justly regarded as a valuable appendage to the right of trial by jury. Objections of a merely technical character may sometimes impede, instead of advance the cause of justice; and although courts of justice have very properly manifested a disposition to relax the rigor of ancient forms, where no injury could result to the accused, yet there must be some limit beyond which judicial innovations should not be permitted to advance. Upon the principle of this relaxation, this court in Byrd’s case, and subsequently in that of Wood sides, where the record showed the grand jurors were “sworn in and for the body of the county,” held that it was equivalent to a statement that they were grand jurors of the proper county. But it appears to me that it would be extending this principle too far, to hold that the description of the grand jury in the record before us necessarily evinces the fact, that they were selected from the county where the prisoner was charged with the offense.
The other objection which we shall notice is in effect this, that the act charged does not amount in law to the crime of willful and corrupt perjury.
The argument in support of this exception proceeded on the ground, that the affidavit of the prisoner set out in the indictment, charged no particular individual with the commission of an offense, and that therefore, although the affidavit may have been false, it did not constitute the crime of perjury.
It is not denied that the magistrate before whom the affidavit
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