State v. Brooks

9 Ala. 9
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedJanuary 15, 1846
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 9 Ala. 9 (State v. Brooks) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Brooks, 9 Ala. 9 (Ala. 1846).

Opinion

GOLDTHWAITE, J.

1. One object of the sixteenth chapter of the penal code is to provide a select class of indivi[13]*13duals to serve as grand and petit jurors, instead of permitting them to be constituted, as well as summoned, at the discretion of the sheriff, or other executive officer of the law, from the citizens of the county generally, and at large. The selection of this class of individuals is confided to a board composed of the clerk and officers of the county, and that is invested with large discretionary powers in regard to the selection and rejection of individuals who, of the free-holders and house-holders of the county first ascertained by the sheriff, are to discharge the responsible duties of jurors.

It does not admit of question, that a grand jury constituted in any other manner than is prescribed by this chapter, is without a legal warrant. [State v. Williams, 5 Porter, 135.] The board thus constituted is required to perform its .duties in a particular manner, but is entirely independent of any supervision or control; its action by the eighth paragraph of the ninth section is to be ascertained and made known by means of the certificate of the officers who compose it; when this certificate is made, its functions cease for the time, and there seems to be no mode by which its action upon tho matters confided to it can be collaterally called in’question or re-examined. The jurors then selécted, are ascertained from the certificate of the board, which, in effect, is the same as a commission emanating from a proper source.

It is not a question now to decide, whether fraud, mistakes, or irregularities, committed by this board, cannot be enquired into, and its action set aside by the Court previous to the organization of the grand jury, even though the proper certificate may be produced ; but we think no such enquiry can be made at the instance of one indicted, so as to affect the prosecution. The jurors when once selected and certified, seem to stand in the same condition as any other de facto functionaries, whose acts will not be vitiated, although they may afterwards be set aside as having had no right in the first instance to exercise the function.

2. It is urged, however, that this board is limited to the selection of individuals who are house-holders or free-holders, and of integrity for character and sound judgment, and that besides some grounds for positive exclusion, it cannot lawfully select any individual of the various professions, avoca[14]*14tions and callings, which arc exempted from the duties of jurors. It does not seem to bo a consequence of the selection of one or more of those exempted persons, that an indictment found by a grand jury, of which they arc members, should be abated, whether the exempts are placed on the jury list through accident, ignorance or design ; because, though the privilege of exemption is conferred upon the individual, he is not disqualified so as to be'incapable of discharging the duties required of a juror. • The sentence at the end of the fifth section, providing that such exempted persons shall be excluded from serving on juries, unless by the consent of both parties, evidently applies alone to petit jurors; for consent can be gi-' von only when parties are ascertained, and not before the trial.

It must be conceded, this sentence seems to conflict in some degree with the sense of what precedes it; but it cannot control the construction called for by the otherwise apparent object and. intention of the chapter. In point of fact, this sentence was not in the code as submitted to the Legislature, but Avas adopted afterwards, as an amendment. Its effect is to make the exemption matter of exclusion, if demanded by either party at the trial of a cause.

The 35th section, for which so much effect is claimed, refers to the qualifications of jurors, when summoned by the Court, as they may be, whenever it becomes necessary to constitute a grand or petit jury in consequence of the neglect of the board to select the materials to compose one; or when those selected are set aside from any cause. It speaks of a jury summoned, in contradistinction to one selected. It adds nothing to the force of the previous sections, but merely provides, as also does the 31st section, that juro'rs, whether summoned or selected, shall possess the same qualifications and bo free from the same objections.

3. It is further urged, that the 39th and 51st sections recognize and permit the challenge of the panel and array, both of the grand and petit juries; also, that a plea in abatement is proper, either to the array of the grand jury, or to the disqualification of any member of it. There is no question of this, but the challenge to the array, or a plea in abatement to the panel, involves the inquiry only, Avhether the jury has [15]*15boon selected in the manner directed by the several sections of this chapter. Upon such an issue, the certificate of the officers, as provided by the eighth paragraph of the ninth section is conclusive. This is the effect of the decisions in the cases of The State v. Allen, 1 Ala. Rep. N. S. 442, and The State v. Clarkson, 3 Ib. 370.

4. As one of the pleas seems to call in question the fact of this certificate, it is proper to refer to the paragraph. It provides, that a list of the names of the persons so drawn, with their places of residence, shall be made out, certified by the attending officers, and the Clerk of the County Court, who shall deliver the same to the Clerk of the Circuit Court. The direction to insert the places of the residence of the several jurors, is amere direction for the convenience of the sheriff in making the summons, and like a similar direction in the 10th section, for carrying it into the venire, is a matter which does not affect the essence of the certificate, as is evident from the 6th and 7th sections, when this is directed only in the event the residence is known. It is also said, the-certificate shall be signed by the attending officers and the Clerk of the County Court. We are inclined to .think this should be construed as or, for by the second section a majority of the officers named are competent to act, and therefore the Clerk of the County Court may not be present — a fact which certainly would not vitiate the proceeding, and which Avould render his certificate impossible. It is evidently a clerical misprision, and the object of the statute is fully-ansAvered by the certificate of the attending officers, or that of the Clerk of the County Court.

5. When the matter of the plea in abatement is the disqualification of a juror, Ave think that matters of exemption do not produce the same effect. Laying entirely out of view the inquiry, Avhether the direction in the first section, for the sheriff to prepare lists of the householders and freeholders, is to be considered as implying the disqualification of all who are not thus circumstanced — as to which Ave give no opinion —there is a class of persons Avho come within the purvieAV of the 51st section. ' Such are persons convicted of bribery, forgery, larceny, &c. &c. Avho, by the' act of 1827, (Dig. 169, § 2,) are disqualified from serving on juries in any suit. This [16]*16act having been passed to conform with the constitutional requisition, extends to exclusion from grand juries ; but independent of it, the common law most probably excluded them, as not being within the terms good and legal men, who alone could serve as jurors.

6.

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Bluebook (online)
9 Ala. 9, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-brooks-ala-1846.