State v. Dale

8 Or. 229
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 15, 1880
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 8 Or. 229 (State v. Dale) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Oregon 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. Dale, 8 Or. 229 (Or. 1880).

Opinion

By the Court,

Boise, J.:

The appellant claims that the indictment in this case does not charge a crime. There was no demurrer filed to the indictment in the circuit court, and the appellant has, in the argument, failed to point out any defect in the indictment except this: It is claimed that it charges the defendant with converting the money and also with having failed to pay it over. Either of these acts would be a crime, and as he is charged with larceny by converting the money and failing to pay it over, we think a charge in this conjunctive form is good; if these acts had been charged in the disjunctive form, that he either converted or failed to pay over the money, the indictment would have been bad. In the case of The State v. Carr, 6 Or. 133, it is decided that “when a statute makes the commission of different acts a crime, and such acts are stated disjunctively in the statute, the indictment may, as a general rule, embrace the whole of such acts in a single count, but it must use the conjunctive and in the indictment when or occurs in the statute. The rule laid down in that case is applicable in this case, and tried by that rule this indictment is not bad for duplicity.

[232]*232The next point argued as error is that the jury was improperly drawn. It appears from the bill of exceptions that on the eighth day of October, 1879, the day the cause came on to be heard, the court made an order as follows:

“Order for thirty jurors, October 8, 1879.

“It appearing to the court that the number of jurors required by the code to attend the court have not attended, and that the panel is not full, it is ordered that the sheriff of this county summon forthwith, from the body of the county, thirty good and lawful men, having the qualifications of jurors, to serve during the term.”

It also appears that these thirty jurors were summoned pursuant to said order and their names placed in the jury box, ‘ ‘ there being in said box at the time, the n ames of twenty jurors of the required panel, who were in attendance to serve and who were serving as jurors. The defendant, by his attorneys, objected to a jury for the trial of said cause being drawn from said box, .and objected to each and every one of said jurors so drawn; but the court overruled the objection and the jury was drawn and impaneled from said box, to which ruling the defendant excepted.”

The jurors whose names were in the jury box constituted the panel. (Stat. p. 142, secs. 178, 179.) The objection was made to this panel as being illegally made, and the objection to each individual juror was made on the ground that he Avas drawn from this panel, and not on the ground that he was personally disqualified, or that he was biased. We think the objections made to the jurors Avere challenges to the panel and not to the individual jurors. If, when a juror was drawn, the counsel had objected to him for the reason that he Avas not one of the jurors on the regular panel, it Avould present a different question, and Ave might then be called on to decide whether the court had the authority to call jurors before those on the regular panel Avere exhausted. There is nothing in the record showing whether the persons who were drawer as jurors were of the regular jurors or of those summoned by the order of the court. We think that, in order to raise this question, the objection should have been made to the individual juror that he was improperly and [233]*233illegally drawn or summoned, for it may be that all the jurors who were drawn were of the regular panel..- It is claimed that these names being placed in the jury box made the whole panel illegal, and was such an irregularity as will vitiate the verdict.

By the statute, when, for any reason, there is not a full panel, the court may order the sheriff to summon forthwith, from the body of the county, persons having the qualifications of jurors, to serve during the term. It appears in this case that the number of jurors required by the code did not attend, for there were but twenty regular jurors on the panel. So the court had the power, in part, to makeup the panel. This power has, we think, generally been confined in the circuit courts to making orders to fill up the panel to twenty-four trial jurors, the number provided for in the code.

But the statute does not limit the order to that number in express words. Still, it would seem that the object of the statute wras to enable the court to supply the panel with the number of jurors provided in the code to make a full panel. When, however, this power is exercised by the court, it is for the purpose of making the panel of jurors and the jurors added by the order of the court as much a part of the panel as those who have been regularly drawn from the jury list, and if there be irregularity in making up this panel, still the panel is not the subject of challenge, for challenges to the panel have been abolished. (State v. Fitzhugh, 2 Or. 272.) If the order was void by reason of having directed the summoning of thirty instead of four jurymen, we think that matter could only be taken advantage of by an objection to the individual juror, that he was not summoned as a juror and had no authority to sit.

We think that under section 178 of the code, the court may direct the sheriff to summon any number of jurors from the body of the county for the trial of a particular case, to be used when the regular panel is exhausted, and though we think there was an irregularity in this case, still it does not appear that a substantial right of the defendant was [234]*234affected by it, for it does not appear but what he was tried by jurors from the regular panel drawn from the jury lists.

After the jury was impaneled the prosecution offered record evidence to show that the defendant was, at the time he converted the money, the sheriff of Yamhill county. This was objected to by the defendant’s counsel for the reason that it was incompetent. We think this evidence was competent to show in what capacity the defendant received and had the money. So, also, we think it was competent for the prosecution to prove the delinquent tax list filed by the sheriff, for this was an exhibit in his favor to show that he had not received all the taxes charged to him, and to charge him with the amounts which he by his entries thereon had charged himself with having collected. We think it was competent to prove, by any competent evidence, what sums the defendant had received at various times as sheriff, in order to show how much money belonging to the county came into his hands. He may have received sums with the intention to account for them and pay them over to the county treasurer. It was proper for the prosecution to show, by items received by him, the amount that came into his hands, and then show how much he paid over, to show the amount of his default; for if he returned a large sum of money belonging to the county, and refused to pay it over according to law, it was some evidence that he had converted it to his own use.

If an agent is accused of embezzling the funds of his employer, it would be competent to show that he received a sum from A. at one time and from B. at another, and that he had at another time converted both sums to his own use. The receipts would be lawful, and the crime consists in the unlawful commission, which may be one act. That is, an agent may be months in collecting the funds of his principle, and when he has a large amount collected, convert the aggregate to his own use at'once.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
8 Or. 229, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-dale-or-1880.