Neal v. State

49 N.W. 174, 32 Neb. 120, 1891 Neb. LEXIS 238
CourtNebraska Supreme Court
DecidedJune 29, 1891
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 49 N.W. 174 (Neal v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Nebraska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Neal v. State, 49 N.W. 174, 32 Neb. 120, 1891 Neb. LEXIS 238 (Neb. 1891).

Opinion

Cobb, Ch. J.

The plaintiff in error, whose full Christian name does not appear in the record, was informed against as Ed. I). Neal, with a number of aliases, at the district court for Douglas county, at the February term, 1890, charged with the crime of murder in the first degree in the homicide of one Allen Jones, on the 4th day of February, 1890, in said county of Douglas. At the May term of said court in the said year he was put upon his trial under said information, was tried, convicted of murder in the first degree, and sentence of death passed upon him by the said court. The record and petition in error in said cause having been filed in this court, the execution of said sentence is stayed by foi’ce of the constitution.

The first assignment discussed by counsel in the brief is numbered 10 in the petition in error, and is as follows :

10. The court erred in overruling the motion to quash the regular panel of jurors.

Previous to March 30, 1889, the law in force providing. for the selection, drawing, and summoning of grand and petit jurors was as found in sections 658, 659, 660, and [123]*123665 of the Compiled Statutes of 1887, which sections are here copied:

“Sec. 658. In each of the counties in this state, wherein a district court is appointed or directed to be holden, the county commissioners .of the county shall, at least fifteen days before the first day of the session of the court, meet together, or any two of them may meet, and select sixty persons'possessing the qualifications prescribed in section'six hundred and fifty-seven, and as nearly as may be a proportionate number from each precinct in the county, and shall, within five days thereafter, furnish to the clerk of the district court of the county, or his deputy, a list of the names of the persons selected.
“Sec. 659. The clerk or deputy clerk receiving the names shall write the name of each person selected on a 'separate ticket, and place the whole number of tickets into-a box, or other suitable and safe receptacle, and shall preserve the list of names furnished by the commissioners, in the files of his office.
“Sec. 660. The clerk of the district court or his deputy, and the sheriff or his deputy, or, if there be no sheriff or deputy sheriff, the coroner of the county, shall, at least ten days before the first day of the session of the district court,meet together and draw by lot out of a box, a receptacle wherein shall be kept the tickets mentioned and referred to in section (659) six hundred and fifty-nine of said title, twenty-four names, and the persons whose names are drawn shall be the petit jurors. And when a grand jury is ordered, the clerk or deputy clerk, and sheriff or deputy sheriff, or coroner if there be no sheriff or deputy sheriff, shall then draw sixteen'(16) additional names, and'the persons whose names are drawn shall be the grand jury.
“Sec. 661. The-clerk shall, on the day of the drawing aforementioned, issue an order to the sheriff, deputy sheriff, or coroner, as the case may be, commanding him to summon the persons whose names are drawn as petit jurors to [124]*124appear before the district court at or before the hour of eleven o’clock on the morning of the first day of the term, stating in the order the day of the week and month, and the place of the sitting of the court, to serve as petit jurors, and a like order, commanding the sheriff, deputy sheriff, of coroner to summon the grand jury when a grand jury has been ordered and drawn.”

At the session of the legislature of 1889, there' was passed, and which provides upon its face to take effect on the 30th day of March of that year, an act, entitled “An act to provide for the manner of selecting, drawing, and summoning grand and petit jurors in counties having a population of seventy thousand (70,000) or more; to prescribe the qualifications of such jurors; to provide for the punishment of persons seeking to serve as jurors or seeking to have other persons selected as jurors, and to repeal sections six hundred and fifty-eight (658), six hundred and fifty-nine (659), six hundred and sixty (660), six hundred and sixty-one (661), and six hundred and sixty-five (665) of the Code of Civil Procedure, and all acts and parts of acts in conflict herewith.”

The purview of this act is too long to admit of being' copied here; I will state, therefore, its general features, which are to the effect that in all counties having a population of 70,000 or more, it was made the duty of the county board, instead of selecting the sixty persons as provided in section 658 above, to make a list of a sufficient number, not less than one-tenth of the legal voters of each town or precinct in the county, to be known as the jury list. Also, that at the meeting of the county board in the respective counties having a population of 70,000 or more, in January, 1889, and each year thereafter, said board should select from such list a number of persons equal to one hundred for each trial term of the district court and other courts of the district provided by law to beheld during the succeeding year;-that in making such selection, they should [125]*125choose a proportionate number from the residents of each town and precinct and should take the names of'.such only as are:

First — Inhabitants of the town or precinct not exempt from serving on juries.

Second — Of the age of twenty-one years or upwards and under sixty years old.

Third — In the possession of their natural faculties.

Fourth — Free from all legal exceptions, of fair character, of approved integrity, of sound judgment, well informed, and who understand the English language.

Section 6 of said act provides “That-a list of jurors so selected shall be kept in the office of the county clerk, who shall write the name' and residence of each person selected upon a separate ticket and put the whole into a box or wheel to be kept for that purpose.”

Section 7 provides for the drawing by the clerk of such court in the presence of the county clerk, from the said box or wheel, the names of a sufficient number of said persons, not less than thirty for each two weeks that such court will probably be in session for the trial of law cases, to constitute the petit jury for that term, and where there is an additional judge in such court, a like number for each additional judge requiring a jury, unless such "court shall otherwise order, with other provisions, and a proviso, that whenever there shall be pending for trial in any of said courts, any criminal cause wherein the defendant is charged with a felony, and the judge holding said court shall be convinced from the circumstances of the-case that a jury cannot be obtained from the regular panel to try said cause, such judge may, in his discretion, prior to the day fixed for the trial of said cause, direct the clerk to draw (in the manner as the regular panel is drawn) not exceeding one hundred names as a special panel from which the jury may be selected to try said cause.

[126]*126There are many other special provisions not deemed necessary to enumerate. Section 14 is here copied at length:

“ Sec. 14.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
49 N.W. 174, 32 Neb. 120, 1891 Neb. LEXIS 238, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/neal-v-state-neb-1891.