State v. Derrick
State v. Derrick
Opinion of the Court
The opinion of the court was delivered by
The defendant was convicted of the crime of murder at the January, 1895, term of the Court of General Sessions for Abbeville County, and, after his honor, Judge Buchanan, as presiding judge, had pronounced the sentence of death upon him, an appeal was taken to this court. The solemn duty now awaits this court to dispose of the various propositions raised by the zealous and able counsel for the unfortunate man at the bar of this court in behalf of the appellant. Without reproducing the text of these grounds of appeal in every instance, we will, first, dispose of those relating to the grand jury that found the bill of indictment and to the petit jury that rendered the verdict of guilty.
The “Case” shows that said writ was duly issued under the hand and seal of the clerk of the Circuit Court of Abbeville County, on the 15th day of May, 1894, requiring the sheriff to serve the three jury commissioners, and requiring them to draw and annex to the panel of this writ eighteen good and lawful men, whom the said sheriff was required immediately thereafter to summons, to be and appear at the Court of General Sessions for Abbeville County, on the 4th day of June thereafter, to serve as grand jurors. The “Case” also shows that the three jury commissioners, on the 18th day of May, 1894, in obedience to the writ of venire facias, did draw and annex the names of eighteen good and true men as said grand jurors. The “Case” also shows that the sheriff of Abbeville County made his certificate that he did serve a summons upon each one of the eighteen good and true men as grand jurors. And, lastly, the “Case” shows that these eighteen men responded to said summons, and did act as said grand jury at the June term, 1894, and also at the October term, 1894, at which latter term the said grand jury found a true bill on the indictment preferred against the defendant for murder.
Will the failure to have the service upon the jury commissioners entered in the writ, when the record shows that the writ to them was duly issued, and that all three of them acted in obedience to said writ, render the indictment found by a grand jury drawn by such jury commissioners null and void? We do not think so. It is better practice that the sheriff should conform to the letter of the law. But in the case from Edge-field, State v. Toland, 36 S. C., 522, when the jury commissioners acccepted service on the back of the writ and made out their return, that in obedience to the writ they had drawn the eighteen names as grand jurors, we held that it was sufficient.
But again, the defendant insists that the bill of indictment should be quashed because it does not appear that the sheriff made his return of service upon the grand jurors under oath,
We will next notice the grounds of appeal relating to the petit jury. It appears from the “Case” that only one juror, J. W. Shaw, did not attend the court as required by law of jurors, and this juror was not served with a summons to attend, for the very good reason, as set out by the sheriff, that he had left the county. The same objections were raised in the challenge to the array of the petit jurors that was raised as the basis for the motion to quash the indictment, viz: no service upon the jury commissioners of the writ of venire facias, regularly issued under the seal of the clerk of the court on the 5th day of January, 1895, Requiring them to select thirty-six petit jurors, although it appeared that the said jury commissioners, in obedience to said writ, did draw the said thirty-six petit j urors whose names were entered on the panel attached to the
The ninth ground of appeal is in these words: “Because his honor erred in charging the jury that when confessions are corroborated by the circumstances, the jury should consider them as they consider other testimony.” When the confession was being considered by the court, it appeared in testimony that the defendant had borrowed a gun on the afternoon of the homicide; not only so, but that while with his gun in his hands he had met some women, to whom he declared his purpose of
It is the judgment of this court, that the judgment appealed from be affirmed, and that the cause be remitted to the Circuit Court, to the end that a new day be fixed and assigned for the execution of the sentence heretofore imposed upon the defendant.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- STATE v. DERRICK
- Cited By
- 6 cases
- Status
- Published
- Syllabus
- 1. Drawing and Service op Jurors. — Where the venire facias is duly issued and served, and the jury epmmissioners assemble thereunder and draw jurors, who are duly served and attend (except one returned as non est inventus and not shown at the trial to be within the State), the indictment found by such grand jury will not be quashed, nor a challenge to the array of petit jurors sustained, because of the failure to have the service upon the jury commissioners entered on the writ, and the failure of the sheriff to make return under oath of the service and manner of service upon the jurors. 2. Confessions — Corroboration.-—If the ruling of the Circuit Judge as to a confession being voluntary can be reviewed at all, in this case he was careful not to submit it to the jury for consideration until it was shown to have been free and voluntary, and supported by facts stated in the confession which were corroborated by other testimony. 3. Evidence in Reply.- — -Where a letter signed with deceased’s name is introduced in evidence by defendant, the State may prove in reply that the deceased could not write. 4. Circumstantial Evidence — Confessions.—-Where the testimony is circumstantial, and a confession is in part corroborated by facts disclosed, there was no error committed by the trial judge in charging the jury that “the evidence is circumstantial and corroborative circumstantial,” and that “when confessions are corroborated by the circumstances, the jury should consider them as they consider other testimony.” 5. Charging Juries — Confessions.—The jury were not misled nor the prisoner prejudiced by the charge that “if there be an element in the confession showing that it does not comport with the facts surrounding the confession, you are at liberty, and it is your bounden duty, to give them just as much credence as you believe, and just as you would other testimony.” 6. Ibid.' — Opinion of Judge as to Facts. — The opinion of the trial judge as to the guilt of the prisoner was not indicated to the jury by the charge that “the State does not ask for the blood of any man, but the common mother has a hand over us all; she asks not for revenge, but she asks that the law be complied with, and that security and protection hover over us all.” 7. An Exception alleging that “the verdict was contrary to the law and the evidence,” is too general for consideration.