Grand Jury of Seminole County v. Dye

1977 OK 173, 571 P.2d 1200, 1977 Okla. LEXIS 695
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedSeptember 27, 1977
Docket49870
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 1977 OK 173 (Grand Jury of Seminole County v. Dye) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Grand Jury of Seminole County v. Dye, 1977 OK 173, 571 P.2d 1200, 1977 Okla. LEXIS 695 (Okla. 1977).

Opinion

BARNES, Justice:

Appellant, the Grand Jury of Seminole County, Oklahoma, represented by the Attorney General of the State of Oklahoma, brings this appeal from an adverse ruling of the Trial Court, which sustained a challenge to the validity of a Grand Jury in Seminole County and, accordingly, quashed accusations returned by that Grand Jury against the Appellees.

The pertinent facts are as hereinafter related. March 22, 1976, the Seminole County Court Clerk certified as sufficient a petition for the calling of a Grand Jury for the investigation of the office of District Attorney.

On March 23, 1976, District Judge Frank Seay issued an order directing that a panel of 60 names be drawn for a Grand Jury. Before the drawing began, at Judge Seay’s direction, all persons were removed from the courtroom except the Court Clerk, Sheriff, and Reporter, and the door was locked.

District Attorney Powell then notified Assistant Attorney General Robert McDonald as to what had occurred. After the Assistant Attorney General talked to Judge Seay, Powell was readmitted to the courtroom and the door was unlocked. At that time several Commissioners and a reporter from the newspaper also entered the courtroom.

The jury panel in question was then drawn. Apparently, the Trial Judge anticipated that he would not be able to qualify 12 jurors from the original panel of 60 jurors, and in order not to be delayed in the selection of the Grand Jury in the event that the original panel of 60 jurors was exhausted without qualifying 12 jurors, he then drew a second panel of 60 jurors. The two jury lists were drawn and handled prior to impanelment on April 12, 1976, in the following manner: The jury wheel was cranked and the Court Clerk unlocked the right side of the wheel and the Sheriff unlocked the left side. Sixty names were drawn alternatively by the Court Clerk and Sheriff, who then sealed the names in an envelope. Then 60 more names were drawn and sealed in a second envelope. Lists were compiled in the numerical order in which the names were drawn from the jury wheel, which were placed in their respective separate envelopes, sealed, and signed.

*1203 The Court Clerk then prepared a new list which was in alphabetical order, and the numerical order list was discarded.

On April 12, 1976, all 120 persons were notified to be present. The names of the 60 jurors on the first list were placed in a box. All 60 jurors from list one were exhausted before the names of the 60 jurors from list two were placed in the box. A Grand Jury of 12 persons was completed before exhausting list two. Only 8 unused names remained from list two. The District Judge thanked them for their service and excused them, since the necessary 12 grand jurors had been selected.

After the Grand Jury went into session, it was discovered that one juror was not qualified to serve due to a former felony conviction. Judge Seay then ordered 30 names to be drawn. On April 13,1976, a replacement juror was selected from list three in the same manner as before. The reconstituted Seminole County Grand Jury was reimpa-neled on April 13, 1976.

After receiving evidence, the Grand Jury issued four accusations on May 7, 1976, against Appellees. A Motion to Quash the Accusations for Removal from Office was heard and sustained June 10, 1976. That Motion resulted in this appeal.

Appellant contends that 38 O.S.1975 Supp., § 21, governing the selection and summoning of prospective grand jury members, and 22 O.S.1971, § 329, regulating the replacement of disqualified jurors, were correctly followed and the Trial Judge erred in ruling that the formation procedures employed in the instant case were violative of either aforementioned statute. Therefore, it is argued that the order sustaining the Motion to Quash the Accusations to Remove County Commissioners Dye, Ligón, and Whitt, and Seminole County Assessor Matthews from office should be reversed and the petitions reinstated.

Appellees allege the following basic errors occurred during the selection process: (1) The jurors were not called to the jury box for voir dire questioning in the same order their names were drawn for summoning from the jury wheel; (2) the drawing of 120 names for grand jury service violated the mandatory provisions of § 21, supra; (3) when the disqualification of a grand juror was discovered, the vacancy was not filled in the manner required by 22 O.S.1971, § 329; (4) the drawing of the grand jury panel was not held in open court as required by 38 O.S.1971, § 21; (5) all proceedings of the Grand Jury were vitiated by the presence of an unauthorized person (Assistant Attorney General) in the grand jury room during its proceedings; and (6) the order of the Trial Court was proper for the reason that the Grand Jury included three persons not authorized by law to serve as jurors.

Appellees argue that it was an unwarranted deviation from 38 O.S.1975 Supp., § 21, to discard the original order in which the jurors’ names were drawn from the jury wheel by compiling a second alphabetized list of names which were placed in a jury selection box on individual slips of paper, randomly drawn, and then recorded in the order they were chosen. Appellees contend this method created a new sequence of names which did not comport with the statutory requirements of 38 O.S.1975 Supp., § 21, and resulted in a fatal defect. It is their position that § 21, supra, requires that “the veniremen be called forth for consideration of their service in the same order that they were drawn from the jury wheel . . . ”

The pertinent portions of 38 O.S.1975 Supp., § 21, provide that the proper official:

“. . . shall draw from the wheel containing the names of jurors, after the same has been well turned so that the cards therein are thoroughly mixed, one by one until the number of jurors for grand or petit jury service as directed by said judge are procured and shall record such names as they are drawn upon as many separate sheets of paper as there are weeks for such term or terms for which jurors will be required. The officers attending such drawing shall not divulge the name of any person that may be drawn as a juror to any person. If a grand jury is ordered, the first names *1204 drawn to the number stated in the judge’s order, not to exceed sixty (60), shall be summoned as grand jurors, and the grand jury shall be empaneled from said persons . . . ” (Emphasis ours)

Although the statute requires that the names be recorded as they are drawn from the jury wheel and summoned from this list, there is no reference to the order in which they will actually be called to the jury box; the statute simply states that after the list is made and the jurors are summoned, the “grand jury shall be empaneled from said persons.” Therefore, the method employed in the instant case does not violate § 21, supra, but is compatible with the broad language therein. The statute does not require the jurors to be called in the order their names were originally drawn. The procedure used comports with the procedure used in choosing petit jurors (see 22 O.S.1971, §§ 593 and 595), and is eminently fair to all parties.

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Related

State v. Hall
2008 OK CR 15 (Court of Criminal Appeals of Oklahoma, 2008)
In Re Proc. of Multicounty Grand Jury
1993 OK CR 12 (Court of Criminal Appeals of Oklahoma, 1993)
State v. Gortmaker
655 P.2d 575 (Court of Appeals of Oregon, 1982)

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Bluebook (online)
1977 OK 173, 571 P.2d 1200, 1977 Okla. LEXIS 695, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/grand-jury-of-seminole-county-v-dye-okla-1977.