Childs v. State

COLEMAN, J.

— -The record of the pleadings and judgment entry in this case affirmatively shows, that the defendant was tried and convicted, as charged in the indictment, without having pleaded to the indictment;. and affirmatively shows that the plea of “not guilty” was not entered by the court for him, and that there was no issue joined. In Jackson v. The State, 91 Ala. 55, we held, “There can be no trial on the merits in a criminal case until the defendant has pleaded not guilty, or this plea has been entered for him by the court.” Fisher v. The State, 46 Ala. 723; Ib. 227; Fernandez v. The State, 7 Ala. 511; 1 Bishop Cr. Pro. § 468.

In this case the bill of exceptions states, that the defen*51clant pleaded “not guilty” in consequence of a statement of the court, that unless he pleaded to the indictment, the court would not permit him to cross-examine the State witnesses or introduce evidence in his own behalf. We can not conceive what principle of law, or criminal procedure, the trial court can invoke, to sustain its action in this respect. Without further reference1 to this question, it is sufficient to say, that the pleadings proper and judgment entries of the trial court constitute the records of the case, in that court, and are no proper part of a bill of exceptions. We can not therefore permit a statement in a bill of exceptions, which is not a proper part of it, to control the record of the trial court. The record is as we have stated it, and affirmatively shows that the defendant did not plead to the indictment, that the court did not enter for him, the plea of “not guilty,” and that there was no issue joined,' and submitted to the jury. This was error, for which the case must be reversed.

The defendant moved to quash the venire, for causes, which appear in the bill of exceptions. All the grounds of the motion may be disposed of by the determination of a single question.

The special acb to regulate' the trial of misdemeanors in Geneva county, Acts of 1890-91, p. 1288 in Sec. 24, provides that “the petit juries for each January and July Term shall consist of one panel of twelve men, and shall be selected as hereinbefore provided and impanelled as petit jurors are under the general jury law, as it now stands under the Code of 1886 ■ • ”. Section 25 is as follows: “Be it further enacted, that all the general jury law as it now stands in the Code of 1886, relating to petit juries and petit .jurors in the Circuit Courts, except as modified or repealed by this act, shall be in full force and applicable to petit juries and petit jurors in the County Court.”

The general jury law of the Code of 1885 referred to in this special act, has the following provision: “Sec. 4314. What provisions directory merely, — The provisions of this chapter 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, and possess the power to perform all the duties belonging to grand and petit juries respectively.”

It is contended that no part of the general jury law of the Code of 1886, could be adopted as a part of the special act by a mere reference to it, in the manner in which it is done in the statute, but that it was necessary to set out in the act *52itself, so much of the general jury, law as was intended to he made a part of the special act. The constitutional provision so far as it -bears on this question is that “no law shall be revived, amended or the provisions thereof extended, or conferred, by reference to its title only; but so much as is revived, amended, extended or conferred, shall be re-enacted and published at length.”

The general jury law of the Code applied to the county of Geneva and continued to apply after the enactment of the special statute except so far as is modified or repealed, expressly, or by necessary implication, by the special act, and nothing contained in sections 24 and 25 of the act, which we have cited, did or could affect the applications of this rule of law. Each and every cause, except two, upon which the motion to quash the venire is based, has been adjudged and declared insufficient, as grounds for quashing a venire. Gibson v. The State, 89 Ala. 126; Arp v. The State, 97 Ala. 5, s. c. 12 So. Rep. 301. The two remaining grounds are 1st. “That the sheriff of said county, did not on the first Monday of January • • obtain and prepare a list of all the householders who are freeholders” &o. 2nd. “That said jury was not selected from such list, as required' by section 28 of the Act” &c.

As to the second ground, no proof was offered to show any irregularity in this respect, and we presume there was none. On the first ground, that is that “the sheriff, did not on the first Mionday in January obtain and prepare a list of the householders who are freeholders” &g. On this point the sheriff was examined as a witness, and no other evidence was offered. He testified on examination “that he prepared the list on the 1st day or first Monday in January he did not recollect which, but that he prepared and drew the jury according to- law”. If section 4314 of the Code cited above, which is a part of the general jury law, applied to the special act for Geneva county, the time fixed, 1st. Monday in January, must be held as directory, by virtue of the express provision of the statute itself, and the failure to perform the duty on that day would not be sufficient ground to quash the venire. As was said in Bales v. The Stale, 63 Ala. 34, “The statutory provisions are expressly declared to be directory; and a departure from them, which works no injury to a party accused of a criminal offense, can not be made the ground of objection to the whole array.” Without reference to section 4314 of the Code, we are of opinion that in so far as the provision in section 22 of the special act requires that the sheriff shall obtain and prepare the list on *53tlie first Monday in January, it is merely directory. In Colt v. Evans, 12 Conn. 243, it is said “where a city charter required that a certain number of jurors should be chosen on the 1st Monday of July and they were not chosen until the 8th day of August, that this provision was directory, and a jury empannelled from the jurors so chosen was a legal jury.”

As sustaining the same principle see the following authorities: Johnson v. The State, 33 Miss. 363; Smith v. The State, 67 Me. 328; State v. Pitts, 58 Mo. 556; State v. Carnes, 20 Iowa.

The rule in this State is, that a “statute directing a public officer to do a thing in a certain time without negativing words, restraining from doing it subsequently, will be construed as directory, and not as limiting the exercise of the authority to the particular time.” Com’rs v. Rather 48 Ala. 433; Ex parte Holding, 56 Ala. 458 ; State Auditor v. Jackson County, 65 Ala. 142. But apart from these considerations, what is the effect of the evidence of the • sheriff as to the time when he performed the official duty, imposed by the statute ? The presumption of law is, that the sheriff correctly and as required by law performed his duty in this respect. The most that can be said of his testimony, is that, there is some doubt, whether the list was obtained and' prepared by him, on the first day of January or the first Monday in January. This of itself is not sufficient to overcome the presumption of the law that as a public officer, he discharged his duty and complied with the law. Considered altogether, his testimony tends rather to the conclusion that he did comply with the statute and acted on the first Monday in January. His entire testimony is to the effect that he did not recollect whether “the list was prepared on the first day or the first Monday of January, but that he prepared and drew the jury according to law.” We can very well understand how it was, that the witness could not 'remember, as an independent fact, whether the statute required the list to be obtained and prepared on the first day or the first Monday of January, and yet know that the duty was performed on the day designated by the statute

Independent of the question, as to whether the jury law of the Code of 1886 became a part of the special act for Geneva county, under which these proceedings were had; or the attempt to make it a part in the manner adoptéd, contravened the constitutional provision quoted, it is clear that there was no error, in overruling the motion to quash the venire, or in excluding the testimony offered in support of the motion.

*54We would not be understood as intimating tbe special act, in tbe matter considered, was unconstitutional or failed of the purposes intended. Yery many, if not uniformly so, of tbe acts of tbe legislature, establishing special and limited Courts, City Courts, having jurisdiction of legal and equitable rights, have adopted the rules of practice, and procedure of tbe Circuit and Chancery Courts, as provided by law, by a general reference and declaration to that effect without setting them out in full.

Eor tbe error in putting tbe defendant to bis trial, without a plea or issue before tbe jury, tbe case must be reversed.

Reversed and remanded.