Ganaway v. State

22 Ala. 772
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedJune 15, 1853
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 22 Ala. 772 (Ganaway v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ganaway v. State, 22 Ala. 772 (Ala. 1853).

Opinions

PHELAN, J.

The court below allowed an indictment, which has been lost or destroyed, to be substituted by satisfactory proof of a copy.

The right of a court to supply or substitute any part of the record, which has been lost or destroyed, in a civil case, is acknowledged, and the reason for it is satisfactory. Wilkerson v. Branham, 5 Ala. 608.

It may be said, there is no good reason for the right to substitute a part of the record in a civil case, which will not apply with equal or nearly equal force in a criminal proceeding. In respect to other parts of the record or proceedings, even in a criminal case, we are not now called upon to decide that, in fact, the same rule does not apply. But the question here is, can an indictment be substituted before trial ?

No authority, strictly in point, as we conceive, either English or American, has been shown, going to this extent; and they have been examined with some care.

An indictment in a criminal proceeding, it is argued, stands in place of a declaration in a civil suit, and is regulated, to a great extent, by the rules which govern declarations; and where is the reason for admitting the former to be supplied by copy, if lost, which does not hold good as respects the latter ? It is not the mere paper that constitutes the accusation, but the contents of that paper. The paper may be destroyed ; but the thing — the accusation lawfully preferred— will remain as before. This is not conceded to the full extent.

In criminal proceedings, we are, in many cases, bound by settled principles of law and practice, to consider not only that which abstractly exists, but a certain visible, external form as essential to the legal existence and sufficiency of the thing itself. Eor instance, what authority in law will protect an officer in arresting my person on a criminal charge, or require of me to submit to the arrest ? Will a copy of a warrant do ? Not at all. It must be the original, lawful warrant itself, which I have a right to call for and inspect. This rule, we are inclined to think, has been commonly applied to indictments. The prisoner has been supposed to have a right to [775]*775have an inspection of the indictment found, and to be arraigned on that only.

But conceding that a declaration and an indictment are alike in many respects, in some other respects there is a very marked difference between them. In their origin this is strikingly so. A declaration is a statement of his canse of action, made by the party himself, or his counsel, not under oath. An indictment is a statement of the facts which constitute the alleged offence against the public, on the part of the accused, made under oath by a grand jury, and which, to be good in law, must have certain formalities; and, by the constitution of this State, even certain words are essential. The one is good, even though it be not signed by counsel. The other is nothing, if it does not bear the name of the foreman of the grand jury, and the words “a true bill.” These are indispensable marks of an indictment. The one may be changed at pleasure, by leave of the court. The other cannot be altered or changed in .the slightest degree, by any power, after it has been returned into court, and the grand jury is discharged. The statutes of jeo/ails, which, in general terms, authorize corrections and amendments in process and pleadings, have never been held to apply to indictments.

The power of substitution is claimed, as a power inherent in every court, to supply such papers, or parts of the record, as may have been lost by accident or destroyed, which constitute a necessary part of the proceedings.

It may be granted, that a court has, and ought to have, power to supply copies or duplicates of all parts of the record or proceedings which emanated from it, or under its authority in the first instance; because the power which could make the original, ought to be, at all times, able to supply a copy, if that be lost or destroyed. This power will cover every part of a civil proceeding, from the summons or writ to the judgment and execution.

But this power does not embrace an indictment. The court has no power to make an indictment, or to direct one to be made. That power resides exclusively with the grand jury. Admitting, then, that a court may supply or substitute whatever part of the proceedings it has power to issue or create in the first instance, yet the principle will not embrace an in[776]*776dictment, because the court has no power to make that, or to direct it to be made. In the matter of preferring indictments, the grand jury are the sole judges, under their oath, of the propriety of their own action.

In a civil proceeding the defendant must be in court, before a declaration can be filed; but in a criminal proceeding, the indictment is very often found and filed, before the defendant is arrested.

Now we have decided, that a declaration may be substituted without notice to the defendant, on proof satisfactory to the court, upon the ground, that the lost declaration was a paper of the court. 5 Ala. 688. If we hold the same doctrine to apply to an indictment, one may be lost and substituted before the defendant is arrested, and he may be required to plead to a copy the contents of which he did not have an opportunity to contest.

In these considerations, or some of them, may be found, as we conceive, the reason for the rule of practice, which prevails generally throughout this State, which forbids the substitution of an indictment. The Mobile circuit has not uniformly followed this rule, as we learn from our brother Gibbons ; but that circuit is believed to form the only exception.

By this rule of practice, the right is conceded to the prisoner to be arraigned on the indictment found by the grand jury; to have an inspection of that identical paper, in order to make his objections to its form or substance, if any exist. The rule is one which tends to make solicitor’s careful in drawing indictments, and clerks extremely careful of their safe custody. We doubt whether, on the whole, any good would be accomplished by overthrowing a rule which is productive of these consequences. When an indictment is lost or destroyed, it can generally be supplied by having a new one found by the grand jury,

We prefer, at all events, if evil is likely to result from the established rule of practice, to leave the legislature to provide a remedy.

It is not necessary to notice the other assignments of error.

The judgment is reversed, and the cause remanded.

CHILTON, 0. J.'

I have looked through the books, and [777]*777have been unable to find a single case where an indictment has been substituted, and a prisoner put upon his trial on a copy. It is manifest, that in many cases of this kind, the very important preliminary inquiry would arise, what the original indictment contained; whether that which was set up as a copy, was, in fact, true; and since certainty in the ascertainment of such fact, is not attainable, it may, and doubtless would sometimes happen, that a party might be put upon trial even for his life, when in truth the grand jury had never found a bill of indictment for the offence.

In my view, the law, while it attaches no importance to the mere paper on which the indictment is written, nevertheless makes the original indictment as returned by the grand jury, the only evidence of the charge against the prisoner.

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Bluebook (online)
22 Ala. 772, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ganaway-v-state-ala-1853.