Clemmons v. State

141 So. 2d 749
CourtDistrict Court of Appeal of Florida
DecidedApril 26, 1962
DocketC-490
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 141 So. 2d 749 (Clemmons v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court of Appeal of Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Clemmons v. State, 141 So. 2d 749 (Fla. Ct. App. 1962).

Opinion

141 So.2d 749 (1962)

IN THE MATTER OF ALEX CLEMMONS ET AL., MEMBERS OF THE EMPANELED GRAND JURY FOR THE 1961 SPRING TERM OF CIRCUIT COURT, IN AND FOR OKALOOSA COUNTY, FLORIDA, APPELLANTS,
v.
STATE OF FLORIDA AND THE FIRST JUDICIAL CIRCUIT COURT OF FLORIDA IN AND FOR OKALOOSA COUNTY, FLORIDA, APPELLEES.

No. C-490.

District Court of Appeal of Florida, First District.

April 26, 1962.
Rehearing Denied May 15, 1962.

*751 Gillis E. Powell, Crestview and A.G. Campbell, Jr., De Funiak Springs, for appellants.

Richard W. Ervin, Atty. Gen., and Reeves Bowen, Asst. Atty. Gen., for appellee.

RAWLS, Judge.

Appellants, as individual members of the Grand Jury duly empaneled for service at the 1961 Spring Term of the Circuit Court in and for Okaloosa County, Florida, have appealed from a judgment purging from the official records of the court a designated paragraph contained in an interim report filed by them, and adjudging each of the members of the Jury guilty of criminal contempt.

At the commencement of the Spring Term of the Circuit Court in Okaloosa County, Honorable Ernest E. Mason, one of the Circuit Judges of the First Judicial Circuit of Florida, duly empaneled a Grand Jury for service during that term. In his charge to the Jury Judge Mason said:

"You are not limited to investigations of supposed or real violations of our criminal laws. It is your privilege and duty to examine into the workings of your county and municipal officials, the conduct of the county's business and the business of municipalities, and the general conditions prevailing in the county and municipalities with regard to law enforcement and the orderly and efficient administration of the county and city governments."

After deliberation the Grand Jury filed an interim report which, among other things, contained the following paragraph:

"Inasmuch as one other matter was brought to our attention we feel that we must comment on same. Where suspicion is cast upon the impartiality of our Court system, whether it be founded or unfounded, the confidence of the public is lessened in some degree. So that our Courts remain above even the slightest hint of suspicion, and so that the public confidence in our Courts remain unshaken in the slightest degree, we recommend that attorneys and/or firms closely associated by blood or marriage to any member of the judiciary refrain from practicing before his kin, and thereby relieve any party so related from any hint of partiality in the judicial process.
"We respectfully request your Honor to allow us to recess until some future date."

While the Grand Jury was in recess subject to recall upon order of the assigned judge, the resident Circuit Judge of Okaloosa County, Honorable Charles A. Wade, caused to be issued a summons to each member of the Grand Jury requiring that they appear in open court at an hour and date fixed in the summons. Upon the reconvening of the Jury Judge Wade read to the members so assembled the above quoted paragraph of their interim report, and without further proceedings summarily pronounced judgment from the bench as follows:

"You and each of you are hereby held in contempt of the Court, but sentence *752 is withheld on grounds that the State Attorney was a new one, had he not been this paragraph would not have been entered. It is hereby ordered that Paragraph VI of the Grand Jury Report be purged from the records and purged from any further use as records in the future."

There is filed in the record before us a stipulation entered into by counsel representing the Grand Jury and the Attorney General of Florida, in which it is agreed that the Honorable Charles A. Wade is the resident Circuit Judge of Okaloosa County; that he is the nephew of Honorable Purl G. Adams, a member of a law firm located in Crestview, Okaloosa County, which attorney and members of his firm are counsel in cases pending in the circuit court of the county; that it is well known throughout the county that Attorney Adams is the uncle of Judge Wade.

Although not raised by either party in this proceeding, the critical query that immediately poses itself is the power of the court to cite an entire grand jury for contempt by reason of the contents of its report duly compiled during its deliberations. A determination of this question is not only essential to the disposition of this cause, but failure to do so may result in this opinion being cited as solemn authority for the proposition that courts have the power to hold a duly empaneled grand jury of law-abiding citizens of approved integrity and good character for contempt and jailing them for including in their report something that might strike a judge as tending toward an interference with the proper administration of justice or discrediting the authority or dignity of the court. The courts have no such power in this jurisdiction.

The grand jury is a common law institution.[1] In the reign of Edward III, the Sheriff returned a panel of twenty-four knights to inquire at large for the county, and this body was termed "le graunde inquest".[2] During this period, the grand jury was an arm of the crown, acting as a public prosecutor for the purpose of ferreting out all crimes, with the members of the inquest being at all times bound to inform the court either singly or collectively their reasons for arriving at their verdict and the evidence upon which it was based. "The seed, however, had been sown in Bracton's time, which was destined to change the grand jury from a mere instrument of the crown to a strong independent power which stood steadfast between the crown and the people in the defence of the liberty of the citizen."[3] (Emphasis supplied.) In 1681, upon the famous proceedings against the Earl of Shaftesbury, Lord Chief Justice Pemberton strove to influence a grand jury with this threat: "Let me tell you," said he, "if any of you shall be refractory, and will not find any bill where there is probably ground for an accusation, you do therein undertake to intercept justice and make yourselves criminals and guilty, and the fruit will lie at your door." This threat did not prevail. The conduct of the grand jury upon this occasion is one of the finest illustrations of fearless independence in history.[4] The finding was ignoramus.[5] Although the crown, through the courts, endeavored to compel grand juries to do their will on at least one occasion subsequent to the Earl of Shaftesbury case, by imposing fine or imprisonment,[6] there is no question that the common law as it existed at the time of the adoption of our Constitution, recognized that the grand jury was absolutely free from the control of the court in its findings.[7]

*753 In England when conflicts arose in defining the powers of the king and the rights of his subjects, the grand jury acted as a stopgap to prevent persecution of the subjects by the stooges of the king. Conflicts between the citizen and the government have been rare in this country, but the grand jury was integrated in our system of law for purposes not materially different from those for which it was employed in England.[8]

Proceeding then to the consideration of any change of the common law by this State, we find the grand jury, as recognized in two different sections of our Constitution,[9] is as much a part of the rights secured to the citizens of the state, as any other portion thereof, including the provisions for courts.

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Related

Herman v. State
396 So. 2d 222 (District Court of Appeal of Florida, 1981)
In Re the Report of the Washoe County Grand Jury
590 P.2d 622 (Nevada Supreme Court, 1979)
People v. SUPERIOR COURT (1973 GRAND JURY)
531 P.2d 761 (California Supreme Court, 1975)
State Ex Rel. Christian v. Rudd
302 So. 2d 821 (District Court of Appeal of Florida, 1974)
State ex rel. Gerstein v. Baker
243 So. 2d 464 (District Court of Appeal of Florida, 1971)
Ginsberg v. 1966 Spring Term Grand Jury ex rel. Dade County
211 So. 2d 570 (Supreme Court of Florida, 1968)
State v. Clemmons
150 So. 2d 231 (Supreme Court of Florida, 1963)

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Bluebook (online)
141 So. 2d 749, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/clemmons-v-state-fladistctapp-1962.