Gladden v. State

RANDALL, O. J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

The appollaxxt assigned for error that the court ovex-ruled his “ motion to quash the regular venire” and his challenge to the ax-ray of petit jurors. It was shown upon the challenge and the motion to quash, that the county commissioners had furnished to the clerk a list of three hundred and two (302) names of persons qualified to serve as jurors, from which list the jury was drawn, whose xxames were insex-ted . in the venire issued to and served by the sheriff for the term at which the -px-isoxxer was tx-ied.

The act of 1869 relating to jurors provides that the board ©f county commissioners shall select from the list of registered voters ixi their respective couxxties and make out a list of three hundred persons px-operly qualified to serve as jurors, and furnish this list to the clex-k. It is urged that the list furnished, being in excess of the legal number, is unauthorized and illegal. However unimportant the discrepancy may seem to be, we consider that the appellant had a right to demand a strict compliance with the law in the drawing *627and empaneling of a jury. Irregularities, however slight, when they show a departure from the provisions of law in respect to the selection, summoning, and empaneling of' jurors, are proper grounds of objection to the jury, and form grounds of challenge to the array. Wharton’s Am. Grim. Law, 3d ed., 915, and 1,011, and authorities cited.

The 2d error assigned is, that the court erred in overruling the motion of the prisoner’s counsel to quash the special venire for the term.

The record shows that there was a failure to summon the whole number of petit jurors named in the venire, and that a special venire was issued to the sheriff requiring him to summon twenty good and lawful j urors” * * to serve,

as petit jurors at the present term of this court.” Section 32 of the act of 1868, relating to jurors, provides that “ if for any cause the whole number of any grand or petit jury should fail to be summoned according to the provisions of this chapter, the judge of the court may direct the cleric to draw, in the manner provided in this act, grand and petit jurors, and issue a venire to the sheriff, or other officer, directing him forthwith to summon a sufficient number for such grand and petit juries.” The “ manner” of drawing jurors to supply the deficiency is prescribed by section 5 of said act, which was not the mode pursued in the case at bar. The motion to quash this special venire should have been granted.

The third error assigned is, that the court overruled the prisoner’s motion to quash the special venire for talesmen summoned for this cause and from which the jury to try this case was selected. We do not think any error was committed in this matter; a venire for two hundred and fifty persons competent to serve as jurors, was issued for the purpose of selecting a jury for the trial of this case.

It is objected that they should have been selected from the list furnished by the county commissioners, but by section 21 of the before mentioned act, relating to jurors, the *628court is required to cause jurors to be summoned from the bystanders or from the county at large to complete the panel whenever a sufficient number of the jurors duly drawn and summoned cannot be obtained for the trial of any cause. From the fact that the court directed the summoning of the two hundred and fifty, we infer (though the record does not clearly disclose the fact,) that the regular panel had been exhausted, and if so, the proceeding was in accordance with the requirements of law.

The 4th ground of error is, that the court refused the prisoner a continuance upon his affidavit filed.

The affidavit shows that three of the required witnesses were absent from the State and resided in Alabama, some fifty miles from the place of trial. That he has used every effort to procure their attendance; that they have assured him they would be present at this term of the court; that he had sent them messages and written them letters urging them to be here, and they are not absent by his consent or procurement.”

The affidavit sets out the substance of what he expects to-prove by them, and states that the application is not made for delay.

This was the second application for continuance since the finding of the present indictment.

It has been held in a great variety of cases.that a continuance will not be granted upon such an application, where the absent testimony or witness is beyond the process of the court, unless the prisoner has had no time to prepare his defence. Foster C. L., p. 2 ; State vs. Lewis, 1 Bay, 1; State vs. Fyles, 3 Brevard, 304; Mulls’ case, 8 Gratt., 695 ; Wharton’s Am. Cr. Law, 940, 3d ed.

Another witness, Head, is stated to have been subpoenaed, who resides in Jackson county where the trial was had, but the testimony of this witness is shown by the affidavit to be quite immaterial, showing simply that an altercation had taken place between the prisoner and the deceased over three *629months prior to the homicide. The circuit judge could well judge of the expediency of granting the continuance upon the case made by the affidavit, and it is not such a case as will warrant this court in controlling his discretion. See Gladden vs. The State, 12 Fla., 562.

The seventh error alleged is that the court charged the jury at the request of the attorney for the State that “ if the State proved a deliberate killing, not the mere fact of killing, then it was for the prisoner to prove that it was not murder, and it he has failed to do so you will find the prisoner guilty.”

It was held in the case of Holland vs. The State, 12 Fla., 117, that the implication of malice arises in every instance of homicide, and in every charge of murder, the fact of killing being first proved, the law will imply that it was done with malice, and all the circumstances of accident, necessity or infirmity, are to be satisfactorily proved by the prisoner, unless they arise out of the evidence produced against him.

This has also been held by this court in the case of Dixon vs. The State, decided at the present term, and see McDaniel vs. The State, 8 S. & M., 401. The circuit judge, in giving this charge, at the request of the prosecution and after the whole ground had been gone over upon this point, erred in omitting the essential qualification, a unless the circumstances showing that it was not murder have been proved by the evidence produced against him.” In a former portion of the charge this qualification was substantially given, but because the instruction asked for was the last given to the jury on the subject, it may have tended to mislead them.

There are several other errors assigned, but we do not think they are substantial or that the prisoner’s case was prejudiced by the proceedings therein alleged.

We have treated a paper found incorporated into tin's record as the charge and instructions of the judge to the jury, because it has been so treated by counsel on both sides. It may be improper to consider every paper found copied *630into a record by the clerk as properly a part of the record merely because it is so copied. Serious inconvenience is sometimes occasioned by the want of proper care in this respect. We desire to call attention to the provisions of chapter 140, laws of 1847—8, “ An act to amend the several acts regulating judical proceedings,” which indicates the method of preparing the charges and instructions given to juries upon the trial of all common law causes, and to remark that unless the provisions of this law are observed, unnecessary expense and delay may follow the omission for which neither party may be responsible.

There is another feature in this ease not embraced in the assignment of errors, upon which we desire to make a suggestion. In the body of the record we find that the counsel for the prisoner challenged the array of grand jurors, and asked that the venire be quashed after pleading in bar, upon the ground that the grand jury was drawn from the list of 302 names instead of 300 names of persons qualified to he jurors. We have already said that an. irregularity existed itf this particular, which was an error of which the accused might avail himself.

In Massachusetts, New York and other States, it has been held that objections to the legality of the returns of grand jurors cannot affect an indictment found by them after it has been received by the court and filed; that such objection must be interposed before indictment found, and even before the grand jury is sworn. But it seems to be now settled that such objection may be made by plea in abatement to. the indictment at any time before pleading in bar. This is substantially the rule announced by the Supreme Court of this State in Ditrol vs. The State, 9 Fla., 9. The opinion of the Supreme Court of Mississippi in McQuillen vs. The State, 8 S. & M., 587, delivered by Chief Justice Sharkey, announces what we consider the true and correct practice in such a case. Such matters are reached by • plea in abatement only, (though in some States a challenge to- the array *631is treated, we do not say properly so, as a substitute for -a plea in abatement) and matters in abatement in criminal as well as in civil cases must be pleaded before pleading in bar.

The judgment of the Circuit Court is reversed and a new trial awarded.