Nealon v. People

39 Ill. App. 481, 1890 Ill. App. LEXIS 495
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedJanuary 24, 1891
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 39 Ill. App. 481 (Nealon v. People) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Court of Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Nealon v. People, 39 Ill. App. 481, 1890 Ill. App. LEXIS 495 (Ill. Ct. App. 1891).

Opinion

Conger, P. J.

Plaintiffs in error were indicted, tried and convicted for selling intoxicating liquor to minors. They bring the record to this court and assign numerous errors.

It appears that upon the convening of court but’seventeen grand jurors answered, whereupon the court ordered the sheriff to summon from the body of the county six persons having the qualifications of grand jurors. That the sheriff summoned six persons from the bystanders, four of whom resided in the township of Decatur, and these six, with the seventeen originally summoned, constituted the grand jury that found the indictment upon which plaintiffs in error were tried.

Plaintiffs in error before pleading to the indictment filed a written motion, supported by affidavits, to correct the record, so as to show that the verbal order made by the court to the sheriff was to summon from the bystanders a sufficient number to complete the panel of grand jurors; and also to show that of the six selected, four were from Decatur township. This motion was by the court overruled, and we think properly.

“ Mo indictment shall be quashed * * * by reason of the disqualification of any grand juror.” Sec. 411, Criminal Code. Mone of the grounds mentioned in the motion would have justified the court in quashing the indictment, and hence it was not important that the record should have been corrected. Fletcher v. The People, 81 Ill. 116.

The second error assigned is that the court erred in not quashing the indictment.

It is urged that the court should have sustained the motion to quash, first, for the reasons set forth in the first assignment of error, and also for the further reason, that after the grand jury had been impaneled and commenced its work, there was an adjournment of the court for a few days, during which the judge was absent in another county holding court, and this fact, it is claimed by plaintiffs in error, suspended the functions of the grand jury, while the judge was so absent, and all their proceedings during such absence were void. It will be observed that the adjournment was not for the term, but only temporary, such as occurs at the close of each day that the court may be in session, or for the Sabbath day, or any other occasion requiring an adjournment for some temporary purpose.

The grand jury when properly organized meets and adjourns upon its own motion, without reference to the temporary adjournment of the court, and it may lawfully proceed in the performance of its duties whether the court is in session or not.

This right to remain in session would not, of course, extend beyond the final adjournment of the court for the term, but within such limits it would be governed by its own wishes, subject to the control that the court at all times has over it.

It is next insisted that the court erred in overruling the challenge to the array of the petit jury.

In support of this motion affidavits were read showing the following state of facts in reference to the methods uséd for procuring the jury : At the meeting of the county board in July, 1889, the jury list was made up by each of the members presenting a list of names supposed to represent ten per cent of all the legal voters in the township or precinct represented by such member, all the names together numbering 957; that all these names were by the county clerk copied into a book kept for that purpose; that all of these names were then copied upon cards, one name on each card, and all said cards placed in a box, from which box the panel of thirty jurors required for the term was drawn. In thus proceeding, the board wholly omitted and disregarded the provisions of Sec. 2, of Chap. 78, entitled, “ Jurors.” This chapter provides in the first section that a list shall be made of not less than ten per cent of the legal voters, as seems to have been done in the present case.

The second section provides that the board shall from such list so prepared make a second list, by selecting from the first a number of names equal to one hundred for each trial term of the Circuit Court and other courts of record, except the County Court, and in making this second or sub-list the board must take into consideration the following four qualifications, not required in making out the first or ten per cent list, viz., they must take 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 upward, and under sixty years ol d. _

Third. In the possession of their natural faculties, and not infirm or decrepit.

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

The third and fourth sections provide for the making of such list at other than the time fixed, and also for exemptions from jury duty.

The fifth section provides that the board shall check off from the ten per cent list the names of those selected to form the sub-list and the names upon such sub-list shall not be again selected as jurors until every person named upon the ten per cent list qualified to serve as a juror has been selected, or until the expiration of two years from the time of making the original or ten per cent list, when a new list shall be made.

At the expiration of two years all names undrawn in the box and also the names of those who have been drawn, but have not served upon a jury during the year for which they were selected, if qualified, should form part of the sub-list selected at that time for the ensuing year.

By the seventh section this snblist to be selected annually from the ten per cent list, furnishes the names to be written upon separate tickets and placed in a box, and from which juries are drawn as provided in section 8.

The Supreme Court has said, “that a mere irregularity in drawing the jury, where no positive injury is shown to have been done the accused, is not sufficient cause to sustain a challenge to the array.” Wilhelm v. The People, 72 Ill. 471; Mapes v. The People, 69 Ill. 523.

It therefore becomes necessary to determine whether the failure by the county board to obey or notice the section requiring a second or sub-list to be prepared is such a mere irregularity as could reasonably be said to work no positive injury to plaintiffs in error. If the language above quoted from the Supreme Court means that in all cases an accused person, who has unsuccessfully challenged the array of jurors, must, before he can successfully assign error upon the action of the court in overruling his challenge, show that some positive injury has been done him by the failure or irregularity, then any of the provisions of the jury law might be violated, and the accused could not be heard to complain.

If a jury had been selected by the sheriff to try plaintiffs in error, entirely without and against law, it might be that those selected had all the qualifications required by law, were good men, and had given plaintiffs in error a fair and impartial trial, and therefore they could not complain.

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Bluebook (online)
39 Ill. App. 481, 1890 Ill. App. LEXIS 495, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/nealon-v-people-illappct-1891.