The first questions arising in the present case are those which relate to the impanelling of the jury, for the trial of the defendants upon this indictment. The regular list of jurors having been exhausted by reason of challenges for cause, the sheriff returned certain individuals from the bystanders to complete the panel.' As to these persons, the defendants asked the court, that the questions prescribed by the Rev. .Sts. c. 95, § 27, might be put, for the purpose of ascertaining whether such jurors had formed or expressed an opinion upon the cause, or had any bias or prejudice therein. After these questions had been put, the counsel for the defendants insisted upon the right to have other questions put to the jurois, for the purpose of furnishing ground for their exclusion from the panel; and they further insisted, that they had the right personally to interrogate the jurors for this purpose.
This view of the course of proceeding is in our opinion erroneous. The whole matter, relative to the examination oí jurors, beyond the provisions of the statute, is one that must *178be left to the sound judgment and judicial discretion of the pre siding judge. .This applies not only to the propounding of further questions to the jurors, but also to the manner of putting them. The counsel of a party has no right personally to interrogate the jurors, with a view of showing their bias or prejudice by facts drawn out by a cross-examination, or something very like it. The orderly conducting of trials will be better promoted, bj adhering as a general rule to the usual practice of interrogating the jurors, by questions propounded by the court or by their order.
Another point suggested at the argument of this cause was, that it does not appear, that the persons thus returned by the sheriff were persons having the proper qualifications of jurors, as required by the Rev. Sts. c. 95, § 26. But this objection, as it seems to us, is not open to the defendants, upon their bill of exceptions. If this point had been intended to be raised, it should have been distinctly stated, and the objection taken, before the jurors were placed upon the panel.
It was then further objected to the regularity of the proceedings, that before propounding the statute questions to the jurors, the indictment at large should have been read to the persons returned to fill the panel. No authority was cited for this position, and the practice has uniformly been opposed to it. Even in capital trials, the mode of informing those returned as jurors of the nature of the case to be tried, preparatory to putting the statute questions, is merely to state very generally the offence charged, and the party to be tried therefor. This objection is in our view untenable. The result is therefore that all the proceedings, in the impanelling of the jury for the trial of this cause, were correct, and the exceptions taken thereto must be overruled.
The further exceptions taken relate to the ruling of the presiding judge in matters of law, as to the construction of the statute of 1849, c. 231, and the nature of the evidence requisite to support this indictment. The first count in the indictment charges the defendants “ with setting up and maintaining, without license therefor, a certain public amusement, namely, a certain dancing assembly, to which persons did *179obtain admission upon payment of money.” To support this count, the district attorney offered evidence tending to show, that the defendant had carried on and kept a dancing-school, for the purpose of giving instruction in dancing, and that each cerson admitted for such purpose paid fifty cents. The defendants asked the judge to rule, “ that a school for instruction in dancing was not a public amusement, within the meaning of the statute”; but the judge refused so to rule, and instructed the jury otherwise. Was this instruction to the jury correct? The whole scope and purpose of this statute would seem to have had reference to a different assembly from that disclosed in the facts above stated ; and upon consideration of the proper construction to be given to it, the court are of opinion, that it does not embrace the case of one setting up and maintaining a school for instruction in dancing. Such a case is not within the language of the statute, nor probably one of the evils sought to be remedied by it. It clearly is not that place of public show, public amusement, or exhibition, that is prohibited by the statute. This view of the statute will not protect a party setting up places of “ public amusement,” to which admission is granted upon payment of money, under the color or pretence of schools for teaching dancing. But a mere school for instruction in dancing, although admittance to such school is paid for on each evening, does not present a case within the statute.
To support the second count in this indictment, the attorney for the commonwealth offered in evidence certain acts of the defendants, that took place on the day after the commencement of the term of the court, at which the indictment was found. The defendants objected to the competency of the proposed evidence. The ground of the objection is, that the indictment purports to have been found by the grand jury, at a time anterior to the time of the acts offered to show the commission of the offence. The caption of this indictment is as of the term of the court holden on the third Monday of October, 1849, and the offence is alleged to have been committed on the 20th of August, 1849. There is no doubt but that the offence may be shown to have been committed on a *180different day from that alleged, either previous, or at any time subsequent to the same, up to the first day of the term at which the indictment is found. We are also equally clear, that an indictment may be returned for an offence committed at any time previous to the finding of the bill, although such offence is committed after the commencement of the term of the court at which such bill is returned. 2 Hale, P. C. 156; 1 Chit. Cr. Law, 315.
As to the form of the caption of the indictment, in regard to all cases of offences committed before the term, the caption may be general, and the time of finding the bill be properly stated as of the term. But where the offence was committed after the commencement of the term, it would seem to be the more regular and proper mode, to recite in the caption, that the indictment was found at a court begun and holden at, &c., and continued by adjournment to a day named, being after the time of the alleged offence. Such has been the practice in capital cases in Suffolk, and such seems to be the proper mode. Whether the omission to do so will require the rejection of all evidence of acts tending to show an offence committed after the commencement of the term, we have not thought necessary to decide, as we think this verdict should be set aside on other grounds.
In our view, this will be proper, inasmuch as the two counts are substantially alike; and under the ruling, it would have been competent for the jury to find a verdict against the defendants upon both counts, though the evidence proved nothing more than that the defendants kept and maintained a school, for instruction in dancing. It may be, that the evidence relied upon to sustain the second count was wholly of a different character. If it was so, then it would open the further question, whether a ball or dancing assembly was such a “ public amusement,” as would bring the case within the statute; a point upon which no opinion is expressed. If it should be deemed expedient by the public prosecutor to proceed further in the prosecution of this case, by presenting it in a new indictment, he may avoid the objection as to the caption of this indictment. Verdict set aside.