A true bill for “gaming” was found against the defendant by the grand jury at April Term, 1902, of the Superior Court of Mecklenburg County, and at the same term he was tried and convicted of the offence found against him. Judgment was pronounced that the defendant be imprisoned in the county jail for six weeks, to be assigned to work on the public roads of the county, and the defendant has appealed from the judgment to this Court. On his arraignment for trial, and before plea and before the jury were empanneled, he moved, through his counsel, to quash the bill of indictment for the reasons substantially stated as follows:
2. Because the officers whose, duty it was to revise the jury list and to draw the panels to be summoned by the Sheriff, from which the grand and petit juries were drawn, had revised, selected and summoned the thirty-six jurors for the term of the Court for said county, from which the grand jurors were drawn that found the true bill against the defendant, with the unlawful a.nd avowed purpose of discriminating against persons of the negro race, who, of right, being competent, should not have been excluded from the jury lists on account of their race or color, to the prejudice of the defendant.
3. Because such unjust and unlawful discrimination against the defendant deprived him of a fair and impartial trial in that Court, as is guaranteed to him under the Constitution and laws of North Carolina, and the Thirteenth and Fourteenth Amendments to the Constitution of the United States, and the acts of Congress thereunder.
4. Because, in the defendant’s belief, he could not get an impartial trial, as guaranteed him by the laws of the land, under such unjust discrimination against him, on account of his race and color, there being about fifty-five thousand popul
The defendant prayed that a subpoena duces tecum be issued from the Court to the Chairman of the Board of Commissioners of Mecklenburg County, to the Register of Deeds, to the Clerk of said Board, and to the Sheriff of said county, requiring them to bring their several records pertaining to the drawing and summoning of jurors for that term of Court, and also the jury box and boxes, and to give such information to the Court respecting the selecting and summoning of jurors that might be asked of them, and of which they might have knowledge.
The prayer embraced also a number of other witnesses. 2. That the motion to quash the bill of indictment be granted, that the list of jurors selected and summoned for this term of the Court be set aside, because the officers who selected and summoned the jurors had corruptly and avowedly discriminated against the rights of the defendant, so as to prevent a fair and impartial trial under the law of the land, by excluding from the jury list competent persons of the colored race. The motion was followed by an affidavit of the defendant, as follows: "That he is informed and believes, and doth so aver, that the cause 'set forth in affiant’s motion to quash the bill is true and well founded in fact and in law, to the best of affiant’s own knowledge and belief. Affiant further states that ho is informed and believes, and doth ever aver, that it is the well conceived and avowed purpose of the County Commissioners and Sheriff of said county and State to so manage the soliciting and summoning of the several jurors to sit as jurors in this Court, either as grand or petit jurors or both, so as to wrongfully and unjustly discriminate against defendant’s
The Court overruled the motion, and refused the prayer for subpoena, duces tecum on the grounds “That the Court had not the power to quash the bill of indictment on the grounds set out in the defendant’s motion and affidavit, and could not investigate the matters alleged in the motion and affidavit under a motion to quash.” The defendant excepted, entered his plea of not guilty, and proceeded to trial. He then challenged a panel of the petit jury on the grounds heretofore set out. The Court overruled the challenge, and the defendant excepted.
It was argued here for the State that the individuals who composed the grand and petit juries were possessed of the requisite qualifications for jurors, as prescribed by law; that no harm was shown to have been done to the defendant because of a failure to have negroes on the jury, and, therefore, that he had no grievance. But is not that an erroneous and
The right of trial by jury is guaranteed to every citizen of the State. It is ordained by section 13 of Article I of the Constitution of North Carolina that, “No person shall be convicted of any crime but by the unanimous verdict of a jury of good and lawful men in open Court. The Legislature may, however, provide other means of trial for petit misdemeanors, with the right of appeal.” And it goes for the saying that the makeup, constitution and selection of juries is an extremely important part of the protection and benefits intended to be secured by jury trial. The most primitive as well as the most advanced idea of a jury is that it is a body of men selected and drawn to determine the rights of parties under indictment and in other judicial proceedings, and composed of the neighbors, associates and persons having tile same legal status in the community as the litigants or the accused. We know of common knowledge that prejudices sometimes exist in communities against certain classes which control the judgment of juries in their deliberations, and therefore operate to deny such classes such privileges as -others enjoy; and race antipathy is as old as historic time, however much some philanthropists and independent thinkers have done or may be doing to eradicate it. It is difficult to understand how the conduct of the officers, whose duty it
What.was the defendant’s remedy ? The very one he sought to have applied. By section 1741 of The Code, it is provided that “all exceptions to grand jurors for and on account of their disqualifications shall be taken before the jury is sworn and empanneled to try the issue by motion to quash the indictment, and if not so taken the same shall be deemed to- be waived.” It was urged in this Court for the State that a plea in abatement was the only course of procedure which the defendant could follow in this case. But in State v. Haywood, 94 N. C., 847, this Court said that “The regular and appropriate method of making objection to a grand juror, under the general practice, when the fact upon which it depended did not appear in the record, and had to be established by proof, is by plea and abatement, and if it does so
There was error in the judgment of the Court, and error in the refusal of his Honor to grant the motion and have the matter set out in the motion and affidavit properly considered and tried. The case is remanded to that end.
Error.