Cooper v. State

22 N.E. 320, 120 Ind. 377, 1889 Ind. LEXIS 427
CourtIndiana Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 18, 1889
DocketNo. 14,586
StatusPublished
Cited by63 cases

This text of 22 N.E. 320 (Cooper v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Indiana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cooper v. State, 22 N.E. 320, 120 Ind. 377, 1889 Ind. LEXIS 427 (Ind. 1889).

Opinion

Mitchell, J.

An indictment was returned into the Switzerland Circuit Court charging the appellant, Cooper, with the crime of murder. After arraignment, and plea of not guilty, the defendant applied for, and procured, the venue of the cause to be changed to Jefferson county. After appearing in the circuit court of the latter county he withdrew his plea of not guilty and pleaded in abatement, assigning as reasons for abating the indictment: 1. That the grand jury was not drawn within a period not more than one week preceding the commencement of the term at which the indictment was found and returned. 2. That two of the persons •drawn as grand jurors were drawn by the names of C. H. Bascom and J. C. Ricketts respectively, their Christian names being otherwise omitted. 3. That only three of the persons drawn and summoned as grand jurors appeared in court; that the places of the three who failed to appear were filled by the sheriff from the bystanders, and that the record does not show that the persons thus called were examined touching their qualifications. 4. That the court appointed one of the persons thus called from the bystanders as foreman of the grand jury.

The court sustained a demurrer to the plea. In this there was no error.

The intervention of mere irregularities in drawing and organizing the grand jury, which involve no charge of fraud or corruption, and which in no way prejudice the substantial rights of the defendant, assuming, in the absence of anything appearing to the contrary, that the body as constituted was composed of persons duly examined and qualified, and not .subject to any of the statutory causes of challenge, is not .available as a plea to abate the indictment. Whart. Cr. PL and Pr. (9th ed.), section 350; State v. Mellor, 13 R. I. 666.

Section 1656, R. S. 1881, specifies certain causes for which a grand jury may be challenged, and confines the right of challenge to the causes specified. It may be that in case a [380]*380person accused of crime has no opportunity to make the challenge, the facts upon which a challenge might have been predicated could be pleaded in abatement at the proper time, but the grounds available as a basis for challenge can not be extended by plea in abatement. Besides, the right to file a plea in abatement was waived by pleading to the indictment, and applying for and obtaining a change of venue, which was equivalent to a general continuance.

An objection to the qualification of grand jurors, or to the mode of drawing or constituting the body, must be made before pleading to the indictment. If not made until after plea, the objection is waived. United States v. Gale, 109 U. S. 65 ; Cooper v. State, 64 Md. 40.

Though the demand upon the prisoner at the arraignment is to say whether he is guilty or not guilty, he may, instead of answering this question, * * * plead in abatement. * * And he must plead in abatement or demur now, or not at all; for his right to do either is waived by the plea of guilty or not guilty.” 1 Bishop Cr. Proc., section 730.

Without leave of court, which is granted only in very strong cases, the plea of not guilty can not be withdrawn to let in a plea in abatement, for on principle a plea of not guilty admits all that a plea in abatement contests, and after a plea of not guilty, a plea in abatement is too late. A plea in abatement, also, can not, it has been held, be filed after a general continuance.” Whart. Cr. PI. and Pr., section 426.

The pica was, as we have seen, intrinsically insufficient, and not having been filed until after the defendant pleaded not guilty, which plea does not appear to have been withdrawn by special leave of court, there was ample justification on either gi-ound for the ruling of the court in sustaining the demurrer.

It is objected that the court erred in defining the crime of manslaughter, in that it omitted the word voluntary.” In all other respects the definition follows the statute literally. It is not perceived how the defendant could have been prej[381]*381udicecl by the omission of this word. Besides, the omitted word was in effect supplied in an instruction subsequently given.

The rule is firmly established that if, upon considering all the instructions together, it fairly appears that the law was stated with substantial accuracy, so that the jury could not have been misled, no ground for reversal is presented, even though a particular instruction, or some detached portion thereof, may not be precisely accurate.

Other instructions given by the court are made the subjects of criticism. What has been said above is applicable to all those to which objection is made. Without setting out the instructions, or indulging in extended comment upon them, it is enough to say that certain expressions may be found in each of those pointed out as objectionable, relating to abstract principles of law, which when considered apart from the instructions as a whole, may not be strictly and technically accurate, but with the exception that they seem unnecessarily long and numerous, they are not justly subject to animadversion.

It may not be amiss to remark that, as a rule, whenever instructions extend beyond a clear and concise statement of the law applicable to the facts as admitted or claimed to be proven in the particular case, they become hindrances rather than aids to a jury of non-professional men, unacquainted with the abstract principles and technical language of the law. Thompson Trials, section 2333.

Moreover, while it appears that the court gave certain instructions, set out in a bill of exceptions, it does not affirmatively appear, either by implication or by a direct statement to that effect, that the instructions set out in the bill were all that were given. In the absence of such affirmative statement, or something from which the fact could be implied, we could not reverse a judgment unless an instruction complained of was so radically wrong as to be incurable. [382]*382Puett v. Beard, 86 Ind. 104; Garrett v. State, 109 Ind. 527 Grubb v. State, 117 Ind. 277.

The appellant predicated his defence wholly upon the theory that he had taken the life of a human being in what he believed to be the lawful and justifiable defence of his person. He went upon the stand as a witness in his own behalf, and gave an intelligent and detailed account of all the circumstances and inducements, as he claimed, that led up to- and culminated in the homicide. After a verdict finding him guilty of murder in the second degree, the defendant-assigned, as one of the grounds for a new trial, that since the return of the verdict- he had discovered new, competent, and material evidence, which is embodied in the affidavits of six or seven witnesses, whom it is alleged can be produced if a new trial should be granted. These persons all depose, in substance, that for several months prior to the homicide the accused indulged the habit of drinking intoxicating liquors to such an extent as that he either had, or was upon the verge of having, the delirium tremens about the time the* homicide occurred, and that in thejr opinion he had, by continual drinking to excess, so impaired his mental faculties as that he was of unsound mind, and not responsible for his-acts.

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Bluebook (online)
22 N.E. 320, 120 Ind. 377, 1889 Ind. LEXIS 427, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cooper-v-state-ind-1889.