State v. Candelaria

28 N.M. 573
CourtNew Mexico Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 15, 1923
DocketNo. 2841
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 28 N.M. 573 (State v. Candelaria) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Mexico Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Candelaria, 28 N.M. 573 (N.M. 1923).

Opinion

OPINION OF THE COURT.

PARKER, C. J.

The appellee was indicted by a grand jury on April 4, 1923, for buying, receiving, and aiding in the concealment of certain stolen goods. He interposed a plea in abatement to the indictment upon the ground that the act, House Bill No. 239, Session Laws 1923, c. 131, under the provisions of which the grand jury finding the indictment had been selected and impaneled, was unconstitutional. A demurrer was interposed to the plea and was overruled and the indictment quashed, and the state has brought the case here by appeal.

Tbe ground upon which the claim that tbe act is unconstitutional is founded is that it violates tbe provisions of section 16 of article 4 of the Constitution, wbicb is as follows:

“The subject of every bill shall be clearly expressed in its title, and no bill embracing more than one subject shall be passed except general appropriation bills and bills for the codification or revision of the laws; but if any subject is embraced in any act which is not expressed in its title, only so much of the act as it not so expressed shall be void.”

. The provisions of tbe Constitution above quoted, prohibiting laws embracing more than one subject, is not involved in this consideration. Tbe act in question is devoted wholly to the subject of tbe selection of jurors. Tbe sole proposition presented is one wbicb involves the question as to whether the title of tbe act clearly expresses tbe subject of tbe act in accordance with tbe above requirement of the constitutional provision. Tbe title of tbe act is as follows:

“An act to amend section 3 of chapter 3, Session Laws of 1921; section 4 of chapter 93, Session Laws of 1917; section 25 of chapter 93, Session Laws of 1917, and to repeal sections 2 and 3 of chapter 3, Session Laws of 1921; sections 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 19 and 29 of chapter 93, Session Laws of 1917, and providing that the names of all male voters shall be placed in the jury box within thirty days after each general election.”

The first provision of tbe title announced the intention to amend section 3, of chapter 3, Session Laws 1921. An examination of that section of that act discloses that it is nothing more than a validating section, and provides that all proceedings theretofore had in the preparation' of the list of names by a jury commission, in making up the list of jurors, filling the jury box or wheel, and drawing the names therefrom, shall be valid, if the number of names selected for jury service comprised at least 10 per cent of the voting population of the county. It undertakes to make no provision for making up the list, selection of names, filling the jury box or wheel, and drawing the names therefrom, but provides that all such things theretofore done should be valid, if the names comprised at least 10 per cent of the voting population. Section 1 of the act now in question, however, purports to amend section 3 of the act of 1921 “so as to read as follows.” The section then provides that within 30 days after the passage of the act, the clerk of the district court is to prepare a complete list of all male voters who voted at the last election in his county from the pollbooks used at such election, and thereafter within 30 days after each general election to prepare a like list. This section makes provisions clearly inconsistent with section 3 of chapter 3 of the Laws of 1921, and which are in no sense germane to the objects and purposes of the earlier section.

The second provision of the title of the present act gives notice of the intention to amend section 4 of chapter 93 of the Session Laws of 1917. Section 4 of the 1917 act required that the district court provide itself with a wheel or box, while section 2 of the present act required the district court to provide itself with two wheels or boxes. We see no objection to this section 2 of the present act, in so far as the title of the act is concerned.

The next provision of the title of the present act provides for the amendment of section 25 of chapter 93 of the Session Laws of 1917. That section provides for the right to inspect the jury book (a book required to be kept and to contain the names of all persons whose names bad been placed in the jury box), and for the comparison by any person interested of the list of names in the jury book with the names found to be in the jury box, and for the correction of any discrepancy between the list in the jury book and the names in the jury box. Section 7 of the present act is practically in the same language as section 25 of chapter 93, Session Laws of 1917, above mentioned, and we see no objection to the same so far as the title of the present act is concerned.

Tbe fourth provision of tbe title of tbe present act gives notice of tbe repeal of certain specified sections of tbe two prior acts, heretofore mentioned, and in section 8 of tbe present act they are repealed by number. We see no objection to this section in so far as tbe title is concerned.

The last provision of the title of the present act gives notice of provisions that tbe names of all male voters shall be placed in the jury box within 30 days after each general election. Section 3 of tbe present act makes provision for tbe preparation of tbe jury list by tbe clerks, the preparation by the clerk of slips of uniform size containing said names, the placing by tbe clerk of said slips in the jury box, and tbe filing of bis original list in bis office, subject to public inspection. It provides that tbe names in tbe jury box must at all times correspond with tbe names on such list, and that tbe slips in the jury box must at all times show that they are carbon copies from such certified list. It further provides that tbe clerk shall fold said slips in a uniform way in such manner that no part of tbe name written upon any of said slips can be seen without unfolding tbe same, and that be shall in tbe presence of tbe district judge and sheriff, and in tbe presence of such other citizens as may desire to be present, or in cases of tbe absence of the district judge, in the presence of tbe sheriff and at least two other citizens as may desire to be present, after showing that such box is empty, to insert tbe slips in tbe original jury box provided by tbe act, and to seal and lock said box, and deliver or transmit tbe key thereof to tbe judge of tbe district. We see no objection to tbis section as not being witbin the scope of tbe title of tbe act.

Section 4 of the present act, however, provides ¿hat said clerk shall so prepare said list and so place said names in said jury box witbin 30 days after the approval of tbis act, and, thereafter, shall do likewise within 30 days after every general election. It further provides that no new names thereafter shall be placed in said box and none taken out, except as otherwise therein provided, until after the next general election, and that the names so placed in such jury box shall furnish the only available means of obtaining jurors for service in the district courts until after ■ the next general election. This section is clearly without the scope of the title. The title gives notice that the names of all male voters are to be placed in the jury box within 30 days after each general election. The body of the act in section 4 provides that they shall be placed in the jury box within 30 days after the approval of the act.

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Bluebook (online)
28 N.M. 573, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-candelaria-nm-1923.