State v. McEntire
State v. McEntire
Opinion of the Court
delivered the judgment of the Court.
The act of Assembly specifies the number of jurors which shall be returned to the Superior Courts, and is directory to the County Courts in that respect; but is wholly silent as to the legal effect of returning a greater number. We must, therefore, have recourse to those principles of construction, and modes of proceeding, which have always been applicable to analogous cases ; and none can be more strictly so, than when there have been causes of challenge, either to the array or the polls, which the party indicted did not avail himself of upon his arraignment, but withheld to a subsequent stage of the proceeding. Such instances have often occurred in the practice of this State, and the decisions, as far as they are known or remembered, have uniformly overruled the objections, upon the principle that where the law has given the party a full opportunity of bringing forward his objections, and ascertained the period when they shall be disclosed, he ought not to be heard at a future time.
The extent of this principle, the justice and necessity of its observance, and the decisive application it has to many branches of the law, may be illustrated by various examples; as in challenges, he who has several must take them all at once—after one hath taken a challenge to the polls, he cannot challenge the array.-Co. Litt. 58. If a party has a cause of challenge which he knows of before trial, and does not take it, he shall not have a new trial.-11 Mod. 119. In pleading,
With respect to the qualification of jurors, the statute West. 2, C. 38, directs the sheriff not to summon men who are sick, aged, or not dwelling within the County. Yet, if they were summoned, and did appear, they could not be challenged by the party, nor could they excuse themselves from not serving, unless there were enough without them-2 Inst. 448—though certainly these were as unlawful jurors, as the number above thirty, in the present case.
But the statute of 11 H. 4. C. 9, after prescribing the qualification of jurors, and the manner of their return, expressly declares that indictments, found by persons disqualified in the, statute, shall be void. The strong expressions are, “ that the same, indictment so made, with all the dependance thereof, be revoked, annulled, void, and holden for none forever.” It has been observed by Lord Coke, that the safest way for the party indicted is, to plead, upon his arraignment, the special matter given him by this statute, for the overthrow of the indictment, with such averments as are by law required, and to plead over to the felony. For this he cites Brooke’s Abridg. Indict. 2. We have examined the passage referred to in Brooke, which, though written in the strange dialect of that day, is, if we rightly understand it, more explicit. His words are, which for the sake of authenticity, we extract in the original, q ou home est indite de fel’ p ceux dont pari sont indites ou ult’ de fel’ et ant acquite p pdn, issint q ils ne sont probi nec legales homenes, ideo fuit agard que les inditemts p eux present sera void, et les parties q sont indites
As to the third reason, it does not seem necessary to say more than that sufficient appeared upon the transcript to warrant the trial of the prisoner; the bill was found a true bill by the Grand Jury, and was pleaded to, and it cannot be
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