Hardin v. State

22 Ind. 347
CourtIndiana Supreme Court
DecidedMay 15, 1864
StatusPublished
Cited by39 cases

This text of 22 Ind. 347 (Hardin 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
Hardin v. State, 22 Ind. 347 (Ind. 1864).

Opinion

Worden, J.

Hardin the appellant, was indicted in the Court below, for the murder of Peter Yesley, and upon trial, was convicted of the offense a#id sentenced to be hanged.

Before pleading in bar, the defendant pleaded in abatement five several pleas, as follows:

1. Comes now Henry Hardin in person, &c., and saith he is the defendant in a criminal prosecution now pending in this Court, wherein he is charged by indictment with the crime of murder, and that he ought not to be tried upon the same for the reason that before the indictment was found [348]*348against him, to-wit: at the October term of the Clark Circuit Court, 1863, he was indicted in that Court for the identical offence charged in the present indictment, and on his petition the venue in that behalf was changed to the Jackson Circuit Court: that the parties to this action aud the former prosecution are the same, and the former indictment and prosecution are still pending against him; wherefore, &e.

2. And the said defendant for further answer saith that he ought not to be tried upon said indictment for the reason that the persons by whom the indictment was found were not legal grand jurors; not having been selected according to law, in this: that the board of commissioners of the county of Clark, at its March term, 1864, that being the first regular session of said board for said year, did not select the names of sixty persons having the requisite qualifications for grand jurors, from the tax duplicate of the county of Clark for the pi'eceding year, or cause to be written their names upon separate ballots, and placed in a box pi-epared for that purpose; wherefore, &e. "

3. And said defendant for further answer saith that, he ought not to be tried upon said indictment, for the reason that the persons by whom the indictment was found, were not legal grand jurors, not having been selected according to law, in this: that they were not reputable freeholders or householders of the county of Clark, and taxable therein; wherefore, &c.

4. And said defendant for further answer to said indictment, saith he ought not to be tried upon the same, for the reason that the persons by whom the indictment was found were not legal grand jurors, not having been selected according to law, in this: that the Clerk of the Clark Circuit Court, did not, in the presence of the board of commissioners of Clark county, at its March term, 1864, that being the first regular session in said year, draw by lot from the names of [349]*349sixty persons having the requisite qualifications for grand jurors, who had been selected by the board of county commissioners, the names of the persons who found the said indictment, to act as grand jurors, for this term of this Court; wherefore, &c.

5. And said defendant for a further answer to said indictment, saith that, he ought not to be tried upon the same, for the reason that the persons by whom the same was found were not legal grand jurors, not having been selected according to law, in this: that said persons were not selected by the judge of this Court, to serve as grand jurors for this Court, at-this term; wherefore, &c.

These several pleas were verified. Demurrers were sustained to each of these pleas, and exception taken. The correctness of the ruling on these demurrers raises the only question in the record.

The first plea was clearly bad, and the demurrer was properly sustained. A defendant is not allowed'in criminal cases, as in civil actions, to plead in abatement that another indictment is pending against him for the same offense. 1st Arch. Crim. Plead., 'Watermaifis notes, 358; Commonwealth v. Drew, 8 Cush. 279; Dutton v. The State, 5 Ind. 533.

The second, fourth and fifth pleas, may be considered together. They go to the manner of the selection of the grand jury, and do not, in view of the provisions of our statute, set up any valid matter of abatement.

The act to limit the number of grand jurors, &c., 2 G.&E 431, provides the manner in which grand jurors shall be selected by the board of commissioners-, and Clerk of the Circuit Court, but those provisions need not here be set out in order to an understanding of the points here decided. The following sections, however, on which the questions arising in the case depend, may be set out in full:

“Sec. 1. Be it enacted, &c., that a grand jury shall con[350]*350sist of twelve members, all of whom shall be reputable freeholders or householders of the proper county, and taxable therein.

“Seo. 10. A panel of grand jurors may be filled in whole or in part, when necessary, by summoning the requisite number of freeholders or householders of the proper county, under the direction of the Court, who shall, in the discretion of the Court, be selected from persons residing in the several townships, unless in consequence of delay in filling the panel, or for other satisfactory reasons, the Court shall otherwise direct.

“Sec. 11. No challenge to the array of any grand jury shall be all-owed, unless such challenge shall be supported by affidavit setting forth the cause therefor.

“Sec. 12. No plea in abatement, or other objection shall be taken to any grand jury duly charged and sworn, for any alleged irregularity in their selection, unless such irregularity, 'in the opinion of the Court, amounts to corruption, in which case such plea or objection shall be received.”

Under the provisions of the section last above quoted, where a grand jury has been duly charged and sworn, as was done in the present case, it is not material in what manner they may have been selected to serve as such, unless the irregularity of their selection amounts to corruption.

Nothing charged in the several pleas now under consideration', amounts to corruption; and, indeed, no corruption is claimed to have existed.

But, aside from this, the pleas in question are each radically bad on other ground's. Each plea must be good by itself. Neither one of these pleas, taken by itself, shows that the grand jury was not selected strictly according to law. Neither the second, nor fourth shows but that it was selected under the direction of the Court, as provided for in the 10th section of the statute above quoted. The fifth does not show but [351]*351that it was duly selected by the board of commissioners and Clerk as provided for by law.

We come to the third plea. From the language of this plea, it is uncertain whether it should be treated as going to the manner of selecting the grand jury, or to the qualification of the jurors. It says that those who found the indictment, “were not legal grand jurors, not having been selected according to law, in this: that they were not reputable freeholders or householders of the county of Clark, and taxable therein.”

It alleges that they had not been selected according to law, and gives as the particular in which they had not been thus selected, the personal disqualification of the jurors; a thing that has nothing to do with the manner of their selection, but only with their capacity to serve. Picas in abatement should neither be uncertain, ambiguous nor repugnant.

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Bluebook (online)
22 Ind. 347, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hardin-v-state-ind-1864.