Cody v. State

Trotter, J.:

This case stands upon a writ of error to the circuit court of the county of Perry. the record states that at the October term of that court, beld in the year 1837, a bill of indictment was found by the grand jury, charging the plaintiff in error witb the murder of one Henry Hodgers. that at the April term following, a special venire facias, for twenty jurors to try the prisoner, was awarded. That a jury at the same term was empanelled and sworn to try the issue made upon the plea of not guilty, which had been filed by Cody at the preceding term, and that said jury found a verdict of guilty against him at the same term. That the court thereupon proceeded and pronounced final judgment of death against him witb the usual order of execution.

The first error complained of in the proceedings of the court below in this cause is, that the grand jury who found the indictment were not good and lawful men of the county of Perry. The grand jurors in each county of this state are directed to be selected by lot from the whole number of jurors summoned and attending the court under the venire of the term. the statute points out the method by which the jurors who are to compose the venire shall be selected, and prescribes their qualifications. They are to be selected by the sheriff and clerk, under the direction and control of the court, from the return of the assessor and collector of taxes, and are to be freeholders or householders of the county in which they are required to serve. It is to be *109presumed that the court entrusted with the selection of the venire has done its duty by placing none upon it except such as are good and lawful men of the county, according to the directions of the act. It is competent for any party, whose rights are to be affected by the action of the jury, to destroy this presumption by challenge and proof tendered at the time. If he is silent, however, he cannot afterwards raise the objection in another court. All exceptions to the jurors must be taken at the time of the trial. To sustain this position, the court might refer to many adjudications of the highest courts in other states. 1 Chitty Cr. Law, 333.

We do not deem this assignment of error sufficient to affect the judgment.

It is insisted in the second place, that there is no evidence upon the record, that the grand jury were ever sworn by the court. The record, without any notice of the original venire, proceeds to state that fifteen persons, naming them, were drawn as a grand jury, and that A. E. Denham (one of the number) was sworn as foreman of the same. There is no statement that A. E. Denham was appointed foreman by the court, nor is there any statement that the remainder of the jurors took the oath required by law of grand jurors.

This we deem a fatal objection to the indictment. The constitution of this country provides that no man shall be held to answer for any capital or infamous offense until he shall have first been charged with the same by a grand jury of the proper county. Our laws have, with great precision, prescribed the method by which this body, entrusted with such high powers over the life and liberty of the citizens, shall be organized. They are required to be selected by lot, under the direction of the court, from the whole number of jurors summoned, and in attendance, by virtue of the venire facias, for the term. When thus selected, they shall take an oath, the form of which is particularly prescribed by law. In order to give system and certainty to their proceedings, the court is directed to appoint one of their number to act as foreman. This appointment constitutes him the organ through which their inquisitions and proceedings are reported to the court, and particular duties are de*110volved upon him distinct from those of the other members of the jury. He must report all bills which may be submitted to the jury and state, over his name to be endorsed on the same as foreman, whether they are true or not. His functions are, therefore, highly important, and it should clearly appear from the record that he has been designated by the court, and sworn to act in this capacity. It is his return as foreman, which places the bill of indictment in possession of the court, and apprises it that the grand jury have found it to be true. It is not deemed necessary for us to decide, whether, if the record or caption of the indictment should show that the grand jury in a body returned the bill of indictment into court with their findings endorsed upon it or specially entered of record, it would not be sufficient. In the absence of such a statement, it must appear of record that the foreman returned the bill, and of course that lie was authorized to act as such. And it is an inference which is deemed consistent with the record that he was appointed. His appointment is included in the fact of his taking the oath. This was the determination of this court in the case of Woodsides v. State, 2 How., 655, decided at the January term in 1837, and we do not feel inclined to disturb it. But there is no statement that the other members of the grand jury were sworn, and we do not feel authorized to infer it from anything on the record. The fact that A. E. Denham was sworn as foreman of the grand jury cannot by any rule of construction or inference known to us, include the other and distinct fact-that the residue of the panel took an oath also. The recital of this fact in the bill of indictment cannot supply the omission of it in the record. The record may aid the indictment, but not e converso. For the authority of the jury to find the indictment must be contained in the record, and the bill becomes no part of the record until it is acted upon and returned into court in the manner prescribed by law.

We will proceed to notice two of the other assignments of error relied on by the plaintiff. One is that the indictment is defective, because there has not been endorsed upon it the name of the prosecutor or prosecutors. The 69th section of the act “ for the punishment of crimes and misdemeanors,” Rev. Code, 809, *111makes it the duty of the attorney general to mark upon all bills of indictment the name of the prosecutor or prosecutors. This statute was designed to protect the state against the payment of costs for frivolous and malicious prosecutions by affording certain record evidence of the person who had perverted the criminal jurisprudence of the country from its true objects, and sought to make it a means to gratify his malice and revenge. It was manifestly designed to operate as auxiliary to a previous provision contained in the 67th section of the same act, by which it is provided that, if the state fail in the prosecution of any inferior offense, the court may, if the prosecution appear to be frivolous or malicious, order the prosecutor to pay costs, etc. This act had another most important and salutary object in view, and that was to enable a party against whom a malicious and vexatious prosecution is instituted, to ascertain, with certainty, the hand from whence the injury to his reputation has proceeded. 2 Bibb. R., 210 ; 1 ib., 355. But these objects may be defeated by a neglect on the part of the officers of the state to comply with the directions of the statute. We are of opinion, therefore, that this indictment is bad for that reason.

We are clearly of opinion that, on the other ground which it was proposed to examine by the court, the circuit court ought to have awarded a new trial to the defendant. The juror 11. J. Patrick was not competent to try the defendant. This is made manifest from the affidavit of William Snow, which is a part of the record. Jurors should be, in the language of the law, excep-tione mayores. That was not the condition of the juror in this instance. He had formed and expressed an opinion against the prisoner. It -will not do to say in answer to this objection that his opinion may have been a mere hypothetical one, founded on mere loose rumor. When examined on his voire dire, he should have stated the fact, and the court would have been enabled to determine upon the character of it, whether his mind was laboring under any undue bias, unfavorable to an impartial examination and decision of the case of the prisoner. But the record shows that he denied, when asked by the court, that he had formed or expressed any opinion of the prisoner’s guilt; yet, we are furnished by the same record with proof that he had formed *112an impression highly prejudicial to Cody. lie declared, and that too, after he was summoned by the officer to attend the court as the juror, that if he should be upon the jury, “he did not think he could clear him, but should be bound to find him guilty.” A due regard to the sanctity of the trial by jury, and the constitutional right which has been guaranteed to every man, to a trial, in all cases of the kind before the court, by an impartial jury of his country, demand, as we conceive, a new trial. McKinley v. Smith, Harding R., 167.

The judgment of the court below must, therefore, be reversed, and the cause remanded, and a new trial granted by the circuit court of Perry county.