Cabaniss v. State

68 S.E. 849, 8 Ga. App. 129, 1910 Ga. App. LEXIS 76
CourtCourt of Appeals of Georgia
DecidedJune 14, 1910
Docket2252
StatusPublished
Cited by32 cases

This text of 68 S.E. 849 (Cabaniss v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cabaniss v. State, 68 S.E. 849, 8 Ga. App. 129, 1910 Ga. App. LEXIS 76 (Ga. Ct. App. 1910).

Opinions

Powell, J.

It will be necessary to extend this opinion to an unusual length, in order to cover the ease as presented in this court. The record contains about 400 pages of typewritten matter. Nevertheless, we will attempt to deal with the case as briefly as is possible with due regard to the number of points presented and their importance. The indictment (omitting the formal parts) charges: “ On the thirty-first day of December in the year nineteen hundred and six, in the county aforesaid, -[the defendant] did then and there unlawfully, being president of the Exchange Bank of Macon and a director of said bank and a member of the board of directors thereof, said bank being a banking corporation existing under and by virtue of the laws of the State of Georgia and having its principal office and place of business located in the city of Macon in said county, declare, in connection and conjunction with the board of directors of said Exchange Bank of Macon and a majority of said board of directors, a dividend of three per centum upon the capital stock of said Exchange Bank of Macon, and did then and there, in pursuance of said declaration of said dividend of three per centum as aforesaid, pay over said dividend to the stockholders of said Exchange Bank of Macon, said payment of said dividend as aforesaid being then and there made from the capital stock of said Exchange Bank of Macon and from other [132]*132funds of said bank and not from.the net profits arising from the business of said Exchange Bank of Macon, said declaration of said dividend and said payment thereof not being then and there authorized by the net profits' arising from the business of said corporation. And the grand jurors aforesaid, upon their oaths aforesaid, do further say that the aforesaid offense herein alleged was unknown until the sixth day of July in the year nineteen hundred and seven.”

To this indictment the defendant filed a demurrer, presenting in substance the following grounds: that the indictment fails to allege that the Exchange Bank of Macon was a bank of issue; that it does -not allege the names of the jicrsons with whom this defendant acted in connection or conjunction, or show that they were unknown to the grand jurors, the offense being one which under the public law of this State could not be committed by one person alone, and therefore being a joint offense; that the indictment fails to allege any offense under the laws of this State. While the demurrer contains other grounds, the above statement practically covers them all.

The defendant filed also a plea in abatement. The first ground sets up that nine of the grand jurors impaneled at the term of the court at which the presentment was returned were not legally qualified to act as grand jurors in the investigation of the case, because they were drawn by Judge W. H. Felton (judge of the superior court of the county in which the prosecution was pending), together with Robert A. Nisbet, clerk of said court, and George W. Robertson, the sheriff; and these persons were disqualified to act in the drawing of the grand jurors .by reason of their being depositors in the Exchange Bank, and for other disqualifying causes. The second ground of the plea in abatement sets up that the precept containing the names of the grand jurors objected to was turned over by Judge Felton to Mr. Nisbet, the clerk, and that the latter was disqualified to handle the precept. The third ground sets up that Mr. Robertson, the sheriff, was disqualified to serve the grand jurors. The fourth ground sets up that Judge Felton was disqualified in causing these jurors to be. impaneled to act as grand jurors. This ground also contains a subdivision setting up that ten other persons were held to be qualified jurors by Judge Felton, but we are unable to ascertain exactly what is meant by this [133]*133objection, as these persons do not appear in the list of grand jurors which is set out in the bill of indictment in the case. The fifth ground of the plea in abatement sets up that one of the grand jurors who participated in the return of the bill of indictment was related within the prohibited degrees to a stockholder in a corporation which was a depositor in the Exchange Bank, and was •for that reason disqualified. The sixth ground sets up that one of the grand jurors was a stockholder in the Union Savings Bank & Trust Company, which was a depositor in the Exchange Bank, and for that reason was disqualified. The seventh ground sets up that nine of the grand jurors who participated in the return of the bill of indictment were disqualified to act as grand jurors in the investigation of the case, for the reason that they were drawn after the opening of the term by Judge Whipple, who presided in this case in lieu of Judge Eelton, and were drawn by him in connection with Mr. Nisbet, the clerk, and Mr. Robertson, the sheriff, the latter two being disqualified from participating in the drawing of the grand jurors. The eighth and ninth grounds set up the disqualification of Mr. Nisbet,' the clerk, to issue summons for the grand jurors, and of Mr. Robertson, the sheriff, to serve the precept. The tenth ground of this plea complains that the grand jurors were not properly purged by Judge Whipple, because none of them were asked as to their relationship to' depositors in the Exchange Bank at the time of the failure, and that as a result of his failure to ask this question, two were either depositors or related to depositors served upon the grand jury.returning the bill of indictment. The eleventh ground makes substantially the same complaint. If we understand the twelfth ground, the point is that when Judge Whipple purged the original grand jury so as to remove disqualified persons, for the purpose of taking up for consideration the present case, and as a result caused a number of tales jurors to be placed upon the grand jury, he caused the oath to be administered to the tales jurors only, and did not require the remaining members of the body to be resworn. The thirteenth ground complains that one of the grand jurors, after being impaneled, was excused from service improperly, for the alleged-reason that no legal cause for his discharge as a grand juror was shown by the minutes of the court or known to the defendant. The fourteenth ground sets up that the present bill of indictment [134]*134should be quashed because there was already pending against the deféndant in court another special presentment for the same offense. The fifteenth ground sets up that the defendant had not been given sufficient time to investigate or challenge the qualifications of the grand jurors impaneled for the purpose of considering the special presentment against him — the defendant having been given one hour after the impaneling of the grand jurors in which to ascertain whether the grand jurors were qualified or not.

While the special presentment denominated the crime as “a felony,” the jury recommended that the defendant be punished as for a misdemeanor, and the judge approved the recommendation and imposed sentence accordingly. After the conviction, the defendant filed a motion for new trial and a motion in arrest of judgment. The grounds of the motion for new trial will not be stated here, but the facts upon which they depend will be discussed in the course of the opinion. The motion in arrest of judgment was based upon substantially the same grounds as those set out in the demurrer and upon the further ground that the law upon which the special presentment was returned had been repealed and was not existing at the time of the alleged offense.

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Bluebook (online)
68 S.E. 849, 8 Ga. App. 129, 1910 Ga. App. LEXIS 76, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cabaniss-v-state-gactapp-1910.