Chase v. State

46 Miss. 683
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedApril 15, 1872
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 46 Miss. 683 (Chase v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Mississippi Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Chase v. State, 46 Miss. 683 (Mich. 1872).

Opinion

Takbehl, J. :

The plaintiff in error was indicted at the November term, 1867, of the Issaquena county circuit court, for the murder of Amos Estelin. He was tried and convicted of manslaughter at the July term, 1871, and sentenced to confinement in the penitentiary for twelve years, from July 18, 1871. The case having been brought to this court, numerous errors are assigned, as follows: 1st. Disposing of pleas in abatement without replications ; 2d. In disposing of said pleas without trial by jury ; 3d. Overruling the said pleas and holding the accused to answer; 4th. Overruling the objection of accused to the reading of the indictment and to the trial of accused .thereon ; 5th. In suspending the examination of a juror on the special venire in the midst of such examination, allowing other jurors to be examined during his suspension; and then concluding the examination of such juror; 6th, 7th, 8th. Giving the first, second and third instructions for the state; 9th, 10th. In refusing and modifying the first and second instructions asked for the accused; 11th. Defusing to permit the defendant to introduce testimony to show the character of the deceased for peace or violence. 12th. Overruling the motion for a new trial. With reference to the first alleged error, the record recites that the defendant “ filed MS' said two pleas in abatement upon which the district attorney joined issue, and the court tried the issues on the said pleas in abatement.” If, in fact, there was no replication to the pleas in abatement, the record fails to show that attention was called to the omission, or that any point was made thereon in the court below. The objection is heard here for the first time, and there being nothing in the record to contradict the foregoing extract therefrom, it may be fairly presumed that the record truthfully asserts, that the “district attorney joined issue” upon the “said pleas in abatement.”

To the trial of the issues joined upon the pleas in abatement, by the court, without a jury, no objection was made at the time, the course taken having been pursued without a [694]*694question of its propriety or legality, without a request for a jury and without even inviting attention thereto. In the case at bar, the defendant had waived all cause of abatement prior thereto by his plea of not guilty (8 Smedes & Marsh. 587), but he was permitted to withdraw the latter plea and to file his pleas in abatement, a favor resting in the discretion of the court. After a plea in bar it is too late to introduce a plea in abatement, except upon leave of the court to withdraw the one and substitute the other. Bish. Cr. Pr., § 440, and cases. We note this point as indicating an indulgence on the part of the court as well as for other puposes. In Smith v. the State, 28 Miss. 728, the defendant in the court below pleaded in abatement to the indictment, that the grand jury were not sworn according to law. Issue was taken on the plea, and it was tried by a jury. On error this issue was declared an immaterial one, and the whole proceeding “absurd.” The court say, “the record which shows the impaneling of the grand jury is the only evidence which can be introduced to prove or disprove this fact; and whether the proper oath was in fact administered or not, or administered in the proper manner, can never be made the subject of a plea in abatement, but must be ascertained by an inspection of the record, which, in this instance, shows that the grand jury were sworn according to law. The plea, therefore, presented an immaterial issue, and should have been disregarded by the court. After the jury returned their verdict, the defendant moved for leave to -file the plea of not guilty, which was refused by the court, and a final judgment was accordingly entered against the defendant. If the plea in abatement had presented a material issue, this action of the court would have been right. But as the plea was a nullity, and as the issue formed upon it could settle nothing, the application of the defendant to plead should have been treated as though there had been no other pleading in the cause.” Whether the indictment in the case cited was for a misdemeanor or a felony does not appear. As to the rule on finding an issue [695]*695upon a plea in abatement against tlie defendant, in cases of felony or misdemeanor respectively, see 1 Bish. Cr. Pr., §§ 438, 439, and cases cited.

With, regard to tlie various methods of presenting objections to the organization of the grand jury and its proceedings, see 1 Bish. Cr. Pr., §§ 742-754. It wonld seem that when tbe matter set forth in a plea of abatement is determinable by an inspection of tbe record, a jury is not proper. Ib., §§ 121-130; ib., §§ 416-418, note 3 to § 477, and cases therein cited; ib., §§ 748-750, 480, note 7 to § 750, and cases therein cited; ib., § 754. For the record is before the court, and the court and not the jury is the judge of it. 28 Miss. 728; 11 Humph. 222; 9 Ala. 9; 12 Tex. 283; 28 Miss. 687. In Stokes & Johnson v. the State, 24 Miss. 621, facts de hors the record were necessary to be found, and there was a jury on the plea in abatement therein, and the same was the case in 8 Smedes & Marsh. 599. In 23 Miss. 244, a demurrer to this plea was sustained, and the defendant was allowed to plead generally. The pleas in the case at bar present no issue of fact outside the record, although in form and other characteristics pleas in abatement, they submit, in substance and effect, only the sufficiency of the record, requiring merely its inspection and construction, without the aid of extrinsic facts. The court did not err, therefore, in not submitting the issue made by the pleas in abatement to a jury. Upon overruling the pleas, the court did right, also, in holding the accused to answer, as, in case of finding for the defendant, it would have been the duty of the court to have held the accused in custody to await the action of another grand jury. There is no error in this branch of the case.

The fourth and fifth assignments are designed to dispute the sufficiency of the record as to the legality of the grand jury, and the presentment of the indictment as required by the Code. These objections were taken by plea in abatement before trial, and upon the trial by an objection to a trial upon the indictment, as one not found by a legal [696]*696grand jury, and not duly presented in court. This part of the record is as follows : c< And of .the persons so summoned, the following named persons appeared in answer to their names, to wit, John Wheeler and fourteen others, and thereupon the following named persons, after being examined in open court, on oath, touching their qualifications as grand jurors, to the present term, and being found to be competent and suitable persons, over the age of twenty-one and under the age of sixty years, citizens of the United States, and householders and freeholders of the county of Issaquena, were selected to serve as grand jurors at. this term of this court, and appeared in answer to their names, and were elected, impaneled and sworn according to law to serve as such grand jurors, whereupon the court appointed Theodore Fitter foreman of said grand jury, who appeared in the presence of the other grand jurors and took the oath prescribed by the statute as foreman of said grand jury, and the other grand jurors, in the .presence of their foreman and in the presence of each other, in open court, and took the oath prescribed bylaw as such grand jurors.

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Bluebook (online)
46 Miss. 683, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/chase-v-state-miss-1872.