State v. Swim

Wood, J.,

(after stating the facts.) The grand jury was empaneled as the law directs. Sec. 4285, Sand. & H. Dig., is as follows : “If there shall not be-a sufficient number of competent grand jurors and alternates present and not. excused to form a grand jury, the court may compel the attendance of absentees, or-order bystanders to be summoned to complete the jury.”' When it was ascertained that four of the jurors selected, by the jury commissioners were not present, the court, might have compelled their attendance. It adopted the-other alternative, and ordered a bystander to be summoned to complete the jury. It is certainly essential to. the legality of a grand jury, and to the validity of their indictments, that they be summoned as the law directs. But the failure of the sheriff, from any cause, to summon a part of those who were selected by the jury commissioners could not vitiate the service properly had upon the residue, and render them incompetent jurors ; nor would the failure of the sheriff in toto to summon the-list selected by the jury commissioners vitiate the organization of a grand jury which had been formed exclusive of such lists, or composed in whole or in part of such lists, if summoned by prder pf court. For sec, 4291, Sand. & H. Dig., provides : “If, for any cause, the jury commissioners shall not be appointed, or shall fail to select a grand or petit jury, as provided in this chapter, or the panel selected shall be set aside, or the-jury lists returned'into court shall be lost or destroyed, the court shall order the sheriff to summon a grand orpetit jury of the proper number, who shall attend and. perform the duties thereof, respectively, as if they had. been regularly selected.”

The regular method prescribed by the statute for the selection of jurors by jury commissioners (sec. 4265 et seq.) is well calculated to secure greater competency and efficiency in the jury service than the method provided by sec. 4291, Sand. & H. Dig., supra. It cannot be disregarded, nor can any other mode be substituted for it, unless some one of the conditions arise provided for in sec. 4291, sufra. Therefore, circuit courts are and should be careful to see that the juries are formed, as far as practical and consistent with the administration of the law, from the very lists selected by the jury commissioners. In many instances, however, this would be impossible, or unwise and impracticable; so that the court must exercise its discretion in excusing those who are summoned and present, or in demanding the presence of, or excusing, those who are absent. Otherwise, public justice might be greatly obstructed. But when the jury has been thus organized by the court, composed of men who were summoned according to law, their indictments, otherwise good, cannot be set aside because of the failure of the sheriff to do what the law requires of him in reference to summoning the persons appearing on the lists selected by the jury commissioners.

This is quite a different case from Cantrell v. State, where the sheriff, without any order of court or warrant or authority of law, summoned one as a juror, who had not been named by the county court, to take the place and serve instead of one named on the list. This was the sheriff substituting one juror for another without any order of court. Certainly that could not be done, for that would enable the sheriff, if so disposed, to change the list and substitute one of his own in advance of the court’s order. Cantrell v. State, 21 Ark. 127. Here the court ordered the juror summoned from the bystanders, and the sheriff was only obeying the order of the court.

In this case, no prejudice whatever is shown to appellee by the selection of the juror from the bystanders. But on the contrary, the entire panel, save one, had been selected by the jury commissioners, and that one, it appears, was possessed of such excellent qualifications as to commend him especially to the court, for he was appointed foreman of the grand jury. The appellee was not entitled to have any particular juror on the grand jury, of the twenty-five who had been selected by the jury commissioners. Reversed and remanded, with directions to overrule motion to quash and to reinstate the indictment.