State v. Fidler
State v. Fidler
Opinion of the Court
The defendant James Thurman has filed a plea in abatement to the indictment in this case, on the ground that the grand jury which found said indictment was not legally selected. The illegality assigned is that two of the jurors, namely, John J. Kenyon and John F. Fry, who were drawn from the town of Richmond, were not selected, from the list of jurors drawn from said town, in the order in which their names appeared on said list as required by statute ; and hence the plea alleges that the indictment is void and should be quashed.
The State has demurred to said plea, first, on the ground of duplicity; and, second, on the ground that the provision of the statute in relation to the selection of jurors from the list drawn is directory and not mandatory, and hence that a substantial compliance therewith is sufficient.
Chapter 22Y, section 21 of the General Laws provides that “From time to time, as occasion may require, any justice holding said common pleas division shall direct notice to be sent to the town clerks in the county that a certain number of grand jurors or petit jurors are required, and the time and place at which they are required to attend ; and every town clerk, on receiving such notice, shall select from the lists of jurors drawn as aforesaid, in the order in which said names appear thereon, so - many names as may be required, and shall issue notifications to the town sergeant or to any *43 constable of the town where such jurors reside, under, the seal of the town council and hand of the clerk, designating therein who are grand jurors and who are petit jurors, and the time and place at which such jurors, are required.to attend. ”
It is pertinent to observe, in this connection, that it appears' from the plea that in addition to the regular drawing of jurors, grand and petit, by the town council of said town, as required by section 15 of said chapter 227, another drawing had taken place during the year mentioned in the plea, by virtue of an order of a justice of this court in pursuance of the authority vested in him by section 18 of said chapter, which is as follows :
“ Other meetings of the town councils shall be held in all towns in any county in any year, for the purpose of drawing additional grand or petit jurors for. said division, whenever the clerk of the common pleas division shall., under the order of any justice thereof, notify the town clerks of the several towns in the county' that such meetings are required, and at such meetings there shall be drawn such additional number of persons as such justice shall prescribe, in such order.”
*45 This additional list, as we understand the statute, should follow and form a part of the list then remaining which had been previously drawn by the town council for the year, and the names remaining on the first list should properly have been exhausted before taking from the additional'list drawn by the special order of the cpurt. But it was not unnatural that the town clerk of said town should have made the mistake of supposing, as he probably did, that his selection or notification should be from the new list thus specially ordered by the court. But whether the mistake arose in this manner or not, it was evidently only a mistake at most, and .a mere technical one ; and hence, as already said, it ought not, in the circumstances, to render the indictment invalid.
Pleas in abatement, for mere technical defects in the makeup of the grand jury, are generally interposed for delay and are not favored by the courts. State v. Duggan, 15 R. I. 415.
We think an indictment ought not to be set aside for mere irregularities in the selection of the grand jury, except in those cases where there has been such a departure from the requirements of the statute as to affect the substantial rights of the defendant. In the State of Kansas the irregularity in the selection of the grand jury must, under the statute, amount to corruption in order to enable a plea or objection thereto to be received. State v. Skinner, 6 Am. Crim. Rep. 307.
The law bearing upon the general question involved is well stated in Van Hook v. The State, 12 Tex. 268, where the court, in speaking of the' rights of a person accused of crime, say.: “It is his right, in the first place, to have the accusation passed upon, before he can-be called upon to answer to the charge of crime by a grand jqry composed of good and lawful men. If the jury be not composed of such men as possess the requisite qualifications, he ought not to be put upon his trial upon a charge preferred by them; but should be permitted to plead their incompetency to prefer the charge, and put him upon his trial, in avoidance of the indictment. Otherwise he may be compelled to answer to a criminal charge preferred by men who are’ infamous or unworthy to *46 be his accusers. And it may be that he will not have had an opportunity afforded to question their competency before the finding of the indictment. For the accused is not supposed to be present when the grand jurors are impaneled; he may not have been the subject of complaint or of suspicion ; and if he could not plead to the indictment, in such a case, the in competency of his accusers, the right to have the accusation preferred by good and lawful men might be virtually denied him. It is for the purpose, therefore, of securing to the accused a substantial right affecting, it may be, his character and good name, if not his personal security, that he is allowed to plead, in abatement or in avoidance of, the charge, the incompetency of the persons by whom it was preferred. But if the jurors who preferred the charge are good and lawful men, unexceptionable as respects qualifications, it can be of no consequence to the accused in what manner they were selected or how impaneled ; while it may be of the utmost consequence to the public that the administration of j ustice be not delayed or defeated by mere technical objections to the regularity of the proceedings of those who are appointed for the purpose of properly distributing and equalizing the burdens of the jury service. It is in these considerations, which have respect to the rights of the citizen on the one hand and public convenience on the other, that the rules of the law on this subject are founded. And while they subserve the interests of the public, they can in no degree affect injuriously any rights of the accused.” To the same general effect are State v. Ansaleme, 15 Ia. 44; State v. Carney, 20 Ia. 82; State v. Cox, 52 Vt. 471; Com. v. Parker, 2 Pick. 561; Com. v. Brown, 147 Mass. 585, and many other cases which might be cited. Mr. Wharton, in his work on Criminal Pleading and Practice, 9th ed. in § 348, says : "For such irregularities in drawing and constituting the grand jury q,s do not prejudice the defendant, he has no cause of complaint, and can take no exception.” And in support of this proposition he cites State v. Mellor, 13 R. I. 666.
We are aware that the authorities are not entirely harmo *47 nious upon the question presented for decision, but we think the position we have taken is sustained by better reasons than' are those cases which hold that any defect, however trivial, in the make-up of a grand jury renders their action nugatory and void. In the previous decisions of this court, the general view, as hereinbefore stated, has been taken, and we see no reason for departing therefrom in the case at bar. If the defendant is innocent, he can as easily defend himself under this indictment, as pertinently remarked by Durfee, C. J., in State v. Duggan, supra, “as under another for the same offence.”
The demurrer is sustained, and case remitted for further • proceedings.
Reference
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- State vs. Welcome Fidler Et Al.
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