State v. Wills
State v. Wills
Opinion of the Court
delivered the opinion of the court.
At the October Term 1848, of the circuit court of DeKalb, a presentment was made against the defendant in error, for selling spirituous liquors to a slave, contrary to the statute.
To this presentment he plead, in abatement, “ that Gilbert
The question upon this record is, not whether the replication is demurrable — for that perhaps. admits of no serious question ; but whether the plea in abatement be a good one : if not, the demurrer to the replication, which looks through all the previous pleadings, will reach its defects.
Pleas in abatement are not favored in law. They are construed with much strictness, and must possess the highest degree of certainty known to the law, in every particular. They must exclude, by proper allegations and averments, every legal intendment, or conclusion, that might otherwise have been made against them by the court. Testing the plea in question by these principles, it is wholly insufficient. The substance of the plea is, that one of the persons who signed the presentment was not a “ lawfully constituted grand juror.” This allegation imports nothing more than that he did not possess the qualifications required by law. But in what respect he was not qualified, is not stated. And we are bound tc presume, in favor of the regularity of the proceedings of the circuit court, that on trial, by the court, he was found legally qualified.
But in looking beyond the plea, to the allegations of the replication, and to other portions of the record, it appears that the foundation of the plea, is a supposed variance be
It follows that the judgment of the circuit court, in sustaining the demurrer, is erroneous and will be reversed.
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