Dickens v. State

73 S.E. 826, 137 Ga. 523, 1912 Ga. LEXIS 72
CourtSupreme Court of Georgia
DecidedFebruary 13, 1912
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 73 S.E. 826 (Dickens v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Dickens v. State, 73 S.E. 826, 137 Ga. 523, 1912 Ga. LEXIS 72 (Ga. 1912).

Opinion

Hill, J.

At Dickens was tried and convicted of murder and sentenced to life imprisonment in the penitentiary. A motion for a new trial being overruled, he excepted.

[524]*5241. Before arraignment the defendant filed a plea in. abatement to the indictment returned against him, and challenged the array, on the ground that the grand jury as first called consisted of twenty-three men, who were instructed by the court to retire from the court-room and elect a foreman. They did retire and elected W. H. Nunnally foreman, and returned to the court-room. The court then stated that since the jury had retired one of the absent jurors, Pleas Stanton, had come in; “wherefore W. H. Nunnally was stricken from the grand jury as foreman, and this juror was added to. the list; and the grand jury was again, for the second time ordered to return to their room and elect another foreman, and therefore they returned to their room and elected John T. Bobertson foreman of the grand jury, and when they returned to the court-room the jury was sworn by the solicitor-general, according to law.” In a note appended to this ground of the motion for a new trial, the presiding judge says: “W. H. Nunnally was never sworn in as a grand juror at said term of the court. 'He was not sworn in as foreman of said grand jury. He was not selected by the judge or court as such foreman. He did not take the oath of office in either capacity. When the twenty-three jurors being present answered, the judge instructed them to go to the jury-room and select a foreman. As they returned from the jury-room, being in there only a minute or two, and before the jury had taken their seats and before any announcement was made that any one had been selected foreman, the sheriff publicly called the court’s attention to the fact that Mr. Stanton, who did not at first respond to his name and who was on the venire of the grand jury, had just come into court. The court thereupon asked Mr. Stanton if he had any excuse to render why he should not serve on the grand jury at that term of court. He said he had none. His name having been drawn and it appearing on the said list before said Nunnally’s name, and the regular time of opening the court, according to custom on Monday morning, not having arrived by a few minutes, Mr. Stanton was instructed to take his place on the grand jury, he making twenty-three, thus excluding Nunnally, who made the twenty-third juror present before said Stanton came into court. The court then told the grand jury, with Nunnally off and Stanton on, to retire to the room and select a foreman, which they did, selecting said Bobertson, as aforesaid, which selection was approved [525]*525by the court. All this occurred without any information on the judge’s part from any grand juror or any source whatever that said Nunnally had been selected to act as foreman. Said Stanton’s name was No. 6 on said list. Said Nunnally’s name was No. 28 on said list. If said Stanton had been present and responded to his name when it was first called, the grand jury would have been impaneled and qualified exactly as it was subsequently impaneled and qualified, because it would have been thus completed before Nunnally’s name was ever reached. Anything in said evidence above referred to, in conflict with this statement, is not true. Under these facts and circumstances the said plea in abatement was decided against the defendant.” It is insisted that the indictment is illegal, for the following reasons: (1) Because it was found by an illegal grand jury not chosen according to law. (2) Be-. cause John T. Bobertson was not the legal foreman of the grand jury, but W. H. Nunnally was the legal foreman duly elected by that body. (3) Because the court did not have authority to withdraw from the jury a duly elected foreman, "W. H. Nunnally, without cause, and substitute another grand juror who had -come in late, and trouble the body to elect another man. (4) Because the court should have put a fine upon the absent juror, if he had no legal excuse. (5) Because the jury commissioners arbitrarily excluded from the grand jury and the petit jury all lawyers, ministers of the Gospel, doctors, dentists, railroad engineers and firemen, there being ten or other large number of each class in.the county, who were citizens and residents and possessed the qualifications required by law for grand jurors and petit .jurors. “Defendant contends that the arbitrary exclusion of this class, without reference to their qualifications, was in violation of the statute and constitution of the State of Georgia, and especially that provision of the constitution which guarantees due process of law, and that it was violation of the 14th amendment of the constitution of the United States, as well as other provisions of that instrument, and had the- effect of denying to the prisoner due process of law and the loyal protection of the law and alledged [abridged ?] his privileges and immunities as citizens of the United States. The arbitrary exclusion of the class of citizens from the grand and petit jury is contrary to the constitution and laws of the land.”

[526]*526There was no error in deciding the plea in abatement against the defendant’s contention on all the grounds stated therein. So far as the record discloses, the grand jury was legally organized. The jury had not been organized when Nunnally was withdrawn, and Stanton, who was regularly drawn as a grand juror, was substituted in his stead. The presiding judge did not know who had been selected as foreman when the juror Stanton was substituted for Nunnally. The oath had not been administered when the substitution was made. Ridling v. State, 56 Ga. 601 (1). This case is different from that of Williams v. State, 60 Ga. 88, cited by counsel for the plaintiff in error. There some of the jurors who found an indictment, regular on its face, were not regularly summoned and impaneled; and it was held a matter for plea and not for demurrer. But here the juror was regularly drawn, appeared in court in answer to the summons served upon him before the grand jury was organized, and took the oath as prescribed by law with the rest of the jurors. The presiding judge approved the selection of the new foreman; and we think that the jury was a legally organized grand jury, and that the indictment found by the grand jury, so organized, was a legal and valid indictment/ so far as this ground of exception is concerned. The only other ground of the plea in abatement which needs to be considered is the 5th and last, the other grounds being without merit. The 5th ground of the plea in abatement alleges that the indictment is illegal, because the jury commissioners arbitrarily excluded from the grand jury and the petit jury “all lawyers, ministers of the Gospel, doctors, dentists, railroad engineers and firemen.” It is insisted by the plaintiff in error that the exclusion of these classes of citizens from the jury box, without reference to their qualifications, was in violation of the statute and the constitution of the State, “which guarantees due process of law, and that it was also violation of the 14th amendment of the constitution of the United States, as well as other provisions of that instrument, and had the effect of denying to the prisoner due process of law and the loyal [equal] protection of the law,” etc. We think this assignment is without merit. In the case of Thomas v. State, 67 Ga. 460, it was held: “The jury commissioners are the proper judges of the qualifications of citizens to be placed on the jury lists of the county.

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Bluebook (online)
73 S.E. 826, 137 Ga. 523, 1912 Ga. LEXIS 72, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dickens-v-state-ga-1912.