Posey v. State

STONE, J.

— The fall term, 1883, of the Circuit Court of Jefferson County was commenced on the 19th day of November, that being the 12th Monday after the 4th Monday in August — the time appointed by the statute for the holding of that court. — -Sess. Acts of 1882-3, p. 42. • That court continues its sessions until the business is disposed of. At that term it remained in session four weeks, and until December 15th, as-shown by the certificate of the clerk. The indictment, on which the accused was tried, was filed in the clerk’s office, December 4th, which was Tuesday of the third week. The prisoner was arraigned and pleade-i not guilty, but the record does not inform ns on what day this took place. The affidavit for change of venue states the arraignment was on Wednesday, the 5th, and we suppose that is correct. Friday, the 7th, was set for the trial, and it came off on that day.

Our statutes — -Code of 1876, §§ from4732 to 4758 inclusive— relate to the selecting, drawing, summoning and empaneling of juries, grand and petit. Section 4759 enacts that the provisions of this article, with a single exception not material in this-*492cause, “in relation to the selection, drawing and summoning of jurors, are merely directory; and juries selected, drawn and summoned, whether at an earlier or later day, must be deemed legal.” Mark the language. To come within this healing statute, the duty or function provided for must relate to the “selection, drawing and summoning of jurors.” These functions are all preparatory, and none of them are. performed in the trial court. The presiding judge does not participate in them. The first two of the duties are performed by the probate judge, sheriff, and clerk of the circuit or city court, or any two,- or a majority of them. The sheriff alone performs the last. All are in their nature ministerial; and the special duties cast - on the probate judge in reference to this service are clerical. All these duties come under the influence of section 4759 of the Code. Put in the organization, in court, of a jury for the trial of causes — particularly for the trial of capital felonies — -many proceedings must he had, and orders made, which require the action of the court itself. Among these judicial duties, which can be performed alone by the court, is the order to summon jurors for the trial of capital felonies, the order to summon talesmen to complete a defective panel, and many others. The statutory commands which declare these judicial duties are not directory. They are mandatory on the court, and must be obeyed as they'are expressed. And we have many times ruled if they he not obeyed, this is an error for which we Will reverse a judgment of conviction. Finley v. The State, 61 Ala. 201; Cross v. The State, 63 Ala. 40; Scott v. The State, Ib. 59; Phillips v. The State, 68 Ala. 469; Oliver v. The State, 66 Ala. 8; Spicer v. The State, 69 Ala. 159.

Section 4874 of the Code of 1876 provides for the summoning of persons, from whom a jury must be elected, empaneled and sworn for the trial of a capital felony. It will be Observed this section is not-placed in-the article — Art. 1, Chap. 7, Title 3, Part 5 — certain provisions of which are declared directory. This section is mandatory, and imposes a duty on the court, not on any ministerial officer. Its language is, “The court must make an order, commanding the sheriff to summon not- less than fifty, nor more than one hundred persons, including those summoned on the regular juries for the week or term, when the term does not exceed one week.” The term of the Jefferson Circuit Court did exceed one week, and hence, the duty was, that the persons ordered to be summoned should- include “those summoned on the regular juries for the week.” This means those persons summoned on the regular juries for the week, in which the trial is ordered to- take place. . Under our statutes, when the term of the court continues longer than one *493week, a separate list of petit jurors is drawn and summoned' for eacli week of the term.

When the order sets a day for the trial, as it often does, which falls within the week in which the order is made, a difficulty is sometimes encountered. All the jurors summoned may not, and frequently do not attend, and of those who attend, some may be excused. The practice is to put on the list ordered to be.summoned, only the names of such of the drawn and summoned jurors for the week, as are, when the order is'made, in attendance on the court. This leaves off such as were summoned and do not attend, such as have been excused, and all talesmen summoned to supply their places. We hold this to be-the correct practice. — Shelton v. The State, [ante, p. 5]; Floyd v. The State, 55 Ala. 61. Of course, the sheriff is not prohibited to summon on the venire he is required to choose, talesmen'’ who may have been empaneled, to supply deficiencies.

The order made in this case was as follows: “The sheriff is ordered to summon one hundred jurors, including the regular venire, to serve as jurors in said trial.”

The word venire — Latin—the infinitive of venio, to come, is of not very well defined legal meaning. Its popular and practical signification is “a writ directed to the sheriff, commanding him to cause to come from the body of the county, before the court from which it issued, a certain number of qualified citizens who are to act as jurors in the said court.” — Bouv. Diet.; Worcester’s Diet. According to this definition, it is the writ, directed to the sheriff, and-not the body of names summoned thereunder, which constitutes the venire. It is sometimes popularly used in the latter sense. It is so used in § 4876 of the Code. There can be no doubt, however, that in the order copied above, the circuit court meant by the term venire the order the clerk was required to issue for the summoning of petit jurors, under §4744 of the Code. This venire contained, sáy, thirty-six names, and commanded the sheriff to summon them. We can not know they were all summoned by the sheriff: Our experience teaches us they scarcely ever are. But this is immaterial. Enough for us, that the statute allowed only those of the regular juries, who had been summoned, while the order of the court commanded the sheriff to place on his list the entire body of names set forth in the venire, whether summoned or not. Error is thus clearly shown, and it is nowhere shown it did no injury. Injury is presumed from error, unless the presumption is clearly repelled. And if, by the ruling of the court, a juror is put on the defendant the law does not authorize, this is a reversible error. — Finley v. The State, 61 Ala. 201.

*494The circumstances attending the trial and conviction of this defendant were of so public a character, that all men must be more or less cognizant of them. The offense charged, if perpetrated, is so harrowing and revolting, as to stir the blood of the coolest and most law-abiding. But the law should prevail, without any reference to the magnitude or brutality of the offense charged. No matter how revolting the accusation, how clear the proof, or how degraded, or even brutal the offender, the Constitution, the law, the very genius of Anglo-American liberty demand a fair and impartial trial. If guilty, let him suffer such penalty as an impartial jury, unawed by outside pressure, may, under the law, inflict upon him. He is a human being, and is entitled to this. Let not an outraged public, or one which deems itself outraged, stain its own hands — stamp on its soul the sin of a great crime — on the false plea, that it is but the avenger of the innocent. When the law punishes, even to the taking away of life, it can not be affirmed that any man did it. It is but the government’s method of protecting- itself. When man, however, usurps the functions of law and inflicts summary vengeance, he writes himself a criminal, and whether punished or not, he must bear the burden of a, conscious crime to his grave. Better, far better, that the greatest offender go unpunished, than that the multitude should itself defy the law, and commit a great crime. Moreover, there' is always danger, that an infuriated mob, resolved on blood, may commit fatal mistakes.

We intimate no opinion as to the guilt or innocence of the accused. Black as is the crime with wich he is charged, he may be guilty of it. The law, however, pronounces no one guilty, until, after fair trial according to its forms, he is found and pronounced guilty.

We have no jurisdiction of applications for changes of venue. They must depend on the enlightened- intelligence of the trial court. It is nevertheless a right, secured to defendants in criminal prosecutions, to have a fair and impartial trial, and, to this end, to set forth reasons why such trial can not be had, without a change of venue. Of the sufficiency of the reasons shown, the trial court must determine. If it be shown to the reasonable satisfaction of the court, that an impartial trial, and an unbiased verdict can not be reasonably expected, the venue ought to be changed. We find in the record the affidavit which was made in this case, and we fail to perceive wherein it was insufficient. The jury, with their then surroundings, were in no condition to deliberate calmly on the momentous issue they were trying. This we know from public history. — Ex parte Banks, 28 Ala. 28.

The judgment of the circuit court is reversed, and the cause *495remanded. Let the prisoner remain in custody, until discharged by due course of law.