Kitts v. Superior Court

90 P. 977, 5 Cal. App. 462, 1907 Cal. App. LEXIS 299
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedApril 29, 1907
DocketCrim. No. 324.
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 90 P. 977 (Kitts v. Superior Court) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kitts v. Superior Court, 90 P. 977, 5 Cal. App. 462, 1907 Cal. App. LEXIS 299 (Cal. Ct. App. 1907).

Opinion

HART, J.

The grand jury of Nevada county, on the twenty-fourth day of November, 1906, returned and caused to be filed in the superior court of that county an indictment against the petitioner for the crime of assault by means and force likely to produce great bodily injury upon the person of one Martin Shoebridge. Thereafter petitioner moved the respondents to set aside said indictment upon the grounds that certain members of said grand jury were disqualified under the law from acting as such .and at the time of the presentation of said motion evidence was offered which it is claimed supported the charge of the disqualification of such jurors. The motion was denied by respondents, and thereupon the petitioner was required to answer the indictment.

It is claimed that by reason of the alleged disqualification of said jurors the indictment was not found, presented and filed according to the requirements of law, and that the same does not therefore confer upon respondents jurisdiction to try petitioner for the offense charged against him in said alleged indictment.

The petitioner asks that respondent be prohibited from trying him upon said alleged indictment, and commanded to desist and refrain from taking further proceedings in the case. The jurors who are alleged to have been disqualified from serving as members of said grand jury are J. H. Nile, W. H. Hughes, and E. G. Sukeforth. It is claimed that said Sukeforth was disqualified because he “had served in and been discharged as a juror by a court of record of. this state, to wit: the Superior Court of the County of Nevada, State of California, within a year of the time that he was summoned and impaneled to act as such grand juror, and within a year of the finding and filing of the said alleged indictment,” and *464 that said Nile and Hughes were not competent to act as grand jurors for the reason that they were not assessed on “the last assessment-roll of said Nevada County for the year 1906, on property owned by them, standing in their names, or at all. ” It is alleged that the juror Hughes is not thus assessed “except there is an assessment on said last assessment-roll to ‘Hughes Bros.,’ which may or may not be property belonging to said William H. Hughes.” It is also averred that “said alleged indictment fails to state any public offense against your petitioner. ’ ’

As to the first proposition, that the juror Sukeforth was not competent to act as a grand juror because of having served as a juror and having been discharged as such within a year of the time that “he was summoned and impaneled to act as such grand juror, and within a year of the finding and filing of said alleged indictment,” it is only necessary to say that the supreme court has recently, in the case of Ex parte Ruef, on habeas corpus, 150 Cal. 665, [89 Pac. 605], ruled adversely to petitioner’s contention.

In that case the court says, speaking of the same objection as is made here: “We are of the opinion that this does not affect the validity of an indictment found by the grand jury. The Penal Code enumerates the grounds upon which an indictment may be set aside. (Pen. Code. sec. 995.) One of these grounds is ‘any ground which would have been good ground for challenge to any individual juror.’ Penal Code, section 896, provides for a challenge to an individual grand juror for six specific grounds only. ■ The particular incompetency here relied on is not included. We think that the legislature, in declaring that persons who had been discharged as jurors within a year should not be competent, and at the same time denying to a defendant indicted by a grand jury including one or more such persons any remedy by way of motion or challenge, in effect provided that if the statutory rule prohibiting the service of such persons were not obeyed, the departure should not invalidate any indictment found.”

The point that the grand jury was not a legally constituted body because jurors Nile and Hughes were not assessed upon the last assessment-roll of the county on property belonging to them, and therefore could not return a valid indictment, cannot, we think, be maintained. The law provides that the *465 grand jury shall he composed of nineteen members (Code Civ. Proc., sec. 192), twelve of whom may find an indictment. (Pen. Code, sec. 940.) One of the prescribed qualifications of a grand juror is that he shall be “assessed on the last assessment-roll of the county ... on property belonging to him.” (Code Civ. Proc., sec. 198.) Of course, it is true that a person not possessing the general qualifications for a juror required by section 198, Code of Civil Procedure, is not competent to act either as a grand or petit juror in any case. Under the system in vogue in California prior to the adoption of our present constitution the only mode authorized for the inauguration of a prosecution of an ordinary felony charge was by indictment by a grand juror, a necessary prerequisite to which was a preliminary hearing of the charge by a magistrate and an order holding the accused to answer before said body. By that method of proceeding, the accused, having been held to answer, was expressly given by the law the right, and thus afforded an opportunity of interposing in open court a challenge to the panel of grand jurors or of examining them individually for the purpose of exercising any challenge of their - right upon any ground prescribed by the statute to inquire into or act upon his case. Since the adoption of the present constitution, however, the procedure with regard to the initiation of prosecutions for felony is essentially different from the former manner of proceeding. Under our present system, as established by the constitution of 1879, and which it is safe to say is familiar to people generally, all offenses theretofore prosecuted by indictment may be prosecuted by information after an examination and commitment by a magistrate, or by indictment with or without such examination and commitment, as may be prescribed by law. (Const., art. I, sec. 8.) The effect of this provision of the constitution is, as may readily be seen, that an indictment by a grand jury may be found for a felony without a preliminary examination of the charge by a magistrate, and the accused, therefore, deprived of an opportunity, as formerly accorded to him, of examining the inquisitors as to their general and special qualifications to act as such before they proceed to the examination of his case. The result is, in such a case, that the accused has but one remedy, which is exercisable only *466 after the indictment is found and filed, and is in the nature of a motion to set it aside for certain specified reasons prescribed by section 995 of the Penal Code. Among the grounds enumerated by that section as requiring the setting aside of an indictment is “any ground which would have been good ground for challenge, either to the panel or to any individual grand juror.” The grounds of challenge to the panel are set forth in section 995 and the cause of challenge to an individual grand juror prescribed in section 896 of the Penal Code. The incompetency of the grand juror for not possessing the qualification mentioned in subdivision 4 of section 198 of the Code of Civil Procedure is not embraced within the grounds prescribed in either section 995 or 896 of the Penal Code.

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Bluebook (online)
90 P. 977, 5 Cal. App. 462, 1907 Cal. App. LEXIS 299, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kitts-v-superior-court-calctapp-1907.