Shepherd v. State

36 Fla. 374
CourtSupreme Court of Florida
DecidedJune 15, 1895
StatusPublished
Cited by26 cases

This text of 36 Fla. 374 (Shepherd v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Shepherd v. State, 36 Fla. 374 (Fla. 1895).

Opinion

Taylor, J.:

The plaintiff in error, at the Fall term, 1894, of the Circuit Court of Orange county, was indicted, tried and convicted for the crime of murder in the first degree and sentenced to death, from which he takes writ of error here.

There are twenty-seven assignments of error. Commencing with the fifth amendment we will discuss them in the order in which they are stated, reserving the first, second, third and fourth assignments to be considered together.

The fifth assignment is, that “the court erred in overruling the motion of the defendant, prior to his arraignment, that the indictment be quashed.” We find no such motion in the record, but, in its stead, we find that the defendant before arraignment interposed a special plea in abatement that sets up, in substance, that the grand jury that found the indictment was not a legal grand jury, in that such jury was not drawn from the box containing the list of persons selected by the board of county commissioners to serve as jurors in said county; and because such jury was not drawn or selected as required by law; and because said jury was not taken from the box containing the names of thirty persons as required by law; and because such jury was not summoned fifteen days before the sitting of the pending term of said Circuit Court; and because the Circuit Judge has no power to order a grand jury, as such, by himself; and because the Circuit Judge in a county where there is a Criminal Court of Record, as [376]*376Orange county has, has no power to summon a grand jury pending the term of court then being held; and because there is no authority of law to summon a grand jury from the by-standers, or from the county at large; and because in the summoning and empanelling of the grand jury that found said indictment there was not thirty persons summoned to serve as jurors, and eighteen thereof drawn from the list of thirty; and because the names of thirty persons to serve as jurors were not drawn fifteen days before the sitting of said term of court at which such grand jury was empanelled; and because no venire for grand jurors was issued to the sheriff fifteen days before the sitting of said term at which said indictment was found; and because no advertisement of the drawing of the grand jurors was publicly made in the court house of said county ten days previous to the drawing thereof by written notice posted at three public places in said county; and because the sheriff did not proclaim the meeting to the Clerk of the Circuit Court and County Judge, or, in his absence, a justice of the peace, and the sheriff, or, in his absence, a deputy sheriff, and the purpose of said meeting to draw such grand j ury at the door of the court house in said county, just prior to the drawing of such jurors; and because the said grand jurors that found said indictment were selected by the sheriff of Orange county, and were summoned of his own volition and by his own selection, in violation of law; the said sheriff being without authority of law to select the number of the grand jury; and because the names of the grand jury so illegally summoned were not drawn by the Judge of the Circuit Court in open court from the box containing the names of the persons selected by the board of county commissioners to serve as jurors for the year 1894, as required by the [377]*377laws of the State of Florida. This plea was demurred to by the State, and the court, upon argument, sustained the demurrer. Treating this ruling as being the one intended to be assigned by the fifth assignment of error, we find no. error in it. A rigid strictness is exacted in pleas in abatement setting up mere irregularities in the selection of jurors. No ambiguity or uncertainty should exist therein, and they should be framed with the greatest accuracy and precision, and must be certain to every extent. Reeves vs. State, 29 Fla. 527, 10 South. Rep. 901; Woodward vs. State, 33 Fla. 508, 15 South. Rep. 252. The contention of the plea here, in substance, is that the grand jury that returned this verdict was not selected and drawn according to the provisions of the law as contained in Chapter 4122 laws, approved June 2nd, 1893. This act expressly repeals Chapter 4015, approved June 8th, 1891, but repeals no other provision of law that is not inconsistent with its provisions. At the time of its enactment, sections 1157 and 2803 of the Revised Statutes were in force, and there is nothing in their provisions that is at all inconsistent with the provisions of the act of 1893, and they were not repealed by the latter act, but were in full force at the time of the empanelling of the grand jury that found this indictment. Jenkins vs. State, 35 Fla. 737, 18 South. Rep. -. Those sections of the Revised Statutes, when considered together, provide, in substance, that when, for any cause no jurors (grand or petit) have been drawn or summoned as provided by law, the court shall issue a special venire directed to the sheriff commanding him to summon a sufficient number from the by-standers, or from the county at large, to complete the panel. Admitting everything set up by the plea in abatement to be true, it sets up nothing that can overthrow the [378]*378validity of the grand jury that found the indictment. For aught that is disclosed by the plea, a grand jury may have been drawn and summoned in accordance with the provisions of the act of 1893, as contended for by the plea, and because of sickness of the jurors se drawn and summoned they may not have been able to attend, in which event the draft from the by-standers or body of the county became proper under the provisions of sections 1158 and 2803 of the Revised Statutes. The sustenuation of the State’s demurrer to-the defendant’s plea in abatement was proper.

The sixth assignment of error is the denial by the court of the defendant’s motion for a change of venue. This motion was predicated upon, and supported only by an affidavit made by the attorney for the defendant, in which it is alleged that at the Fall term, 1893, of the Circuit Court for Orange county, one Gfeorge A. Walker was tried and acquitted of the charge of murder of one Lewis Marat. That after his acquittal he was re-arrested and lodged.in jail, and that subsequently two attempts were made by mobs in the town of Orlando to enter the jail and lynch him. That said mobs were composed of divers persons from various-parts of Orange county; and that subsequently mass-meetings were held at two points in said county at which resolutions were passed denouncing his acquittal of said charge of murder, and assailing, in denunciatory language, the Judge who presided at said trial, the jury that acquitted him, and the counsel who defended him. The affidavit sets out at length the resolutions passed at these meetings, that are unnecessary to be reproduced here. That said resolutions were published in an Orange county paper and circulated throughout the county and engendered such a state of feeling in the minds of the citizens of Orange county [379]*379with reghrd to homicidal crimes that affiant verily believes that it will be impossible to empanel a jury of twelve men who will be able to approach this case with minds perfectly free from the influence and sentiment that was so engendered as aforesaid, or will not in some degree be swayed by the intense public and general feeling or prejudice against persons charged with homicide, and that such jury, if empanelled in said county, will be unable to divest their minds of the knowledge that public sentiment was aroused and publicly expressed against a former jury who rendered a verdict of acquittal in the above-mentioned case of George A. Walker.

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Bluebook (online)
36 Fla. 374, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/shepherd-v-state-fla-1895.