State v. Derrick

22 S.E. 337, 44 S.C. 344, 1895 S.C. LEXIS 78
CourtSupreme Court of South Carolina
DecidedJuly 5, 1895
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 22 S.E. 337 (State v. Derrick) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of South Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Derrick, 22 S.E. 337, 44 S.C. 344, 1895 S.C. LEXIS 78 (S.C. 1895).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Mr. Justice Pope.

The defendant was convicted of the crime of murder at the January, 1895, term of the Court of General Sessions for Abbeville County, and, after his honor, Judge Buchanan, as presiding judge, had pronounced the sentence of death upon him, an appeal was taken to this court. The solemn duty now awaits this court to dispose of the various propositions raised by the zealous and able counsel for the unfortunate man at the bar of this court in behalf of the appellant. Without reproducing the text of these grounds of appeal in every instance, we will, first, dispose of those relating to the grand jury that found the bill of indictment and to the petit jury that rendered the verdict of guilty.

[346]*3461 [345]*345As soon as the cause was called up, the defendant moved to quash the indictment: a, because it does not appear on the writ [346]*346of venire facias that the sheriff made service of said writ upon the jury commissioners, in obedience to the mandate of said writ; and, 5, because it does not appear that said jury commissioners were served with said writ.

The “Case” shows that said writ was duly issued under the hand and seal of the clerk of the Circuit Court of Abbeville County, on the 15th day of May, 1894, requiring the sheriff to serve the three jury commissioners, and requiring them to draw and annex to the panel of this writ eighteen good and lawful men, whom the said sheriff was required immediately thereafter to summons, to be and appear at the Court of General Sessions for Abbeville County, on the 4th day of June thereafter, to serve as grand jurors. The “Case” also shows that the three jury commissioners, on the 18th day of May, 1894, in obedience to the writ of venire facias, did draw and annex the names of eighteen good and true men as said grand jurors. The “Case” also shows that the sheriff of Abbeville County made his certificate that he did serve a summons upon each one of the eighteen good and true men as grand jurors. And, lastly, the “Case” shows that these eighteen men responded to said summons, and did act as said grand jury at the June term, 1894, and also at the October term, 1894, at which latter term the said grand jury found a true bill on the indictment preferred against the defendant for murder.

Will the failure to have the service upon the jury commissioners entered in the writ, when the record shows that the writ to them was duly issued, and that all three of them acted in obedience to said writ, render the indictment found by a grand jury drawn by such jury commissioners null and void? We do not think so. It is better practice that the sheriff should conform to the letter of the law. But in the case from Edge-field, State v. Toland, 36 S. C., 522, when the jury commissioners acccepted service on the back of the writ and made out their return, that in obedience to the writ they had drawn the eighteen names as grand jurors, we held that it was sufficient.

But again, the defendant insists that the bill of indictment should be quashed because it does not appear that the sheriff made his return of service upon the grand jurors under oath, [347]*347and also that it does not appear from the oath of the deputies of the sheriff how they served the summons upon such grand jurors who were served by them. At best, these are mere iregularities, and cannot have the effect to impeach the legality of the grand jury, who were legally drawn by the jury commissioners, and who actually attended in obedience to the summons they received. The remarks of Mr. Justice McGowan in the case of State v. Smith, 38 S. C., 271, are very appropriate just here. The learned justice was discussing some exceptions to the grand jury which had found the bill in that case, and said: “It is true, courts are particular in requiring care in the organization of juries, but there is a limit, and we cannot think that the direction in the act as to the number of days notice required to be given, was essential to the validity of the acts done by the jury for nearly a year. There is certainly nothing of substance in the objection, as the jurors summoned appeared and discharged their duty [italics oursj. The objections made to the organization of juries are numerous and various, and, therefore, we think the rule is properly stated in the 9th volume, page 3, of the Encyclopedia of Law, as follows: ‘Slight irregularities in selecting, drawing and summoning, and in the names of grand jurors, where none of the substantial rights of the accused are affected, do not affect the validity of the panel.’ Citing numerous cases.”

We will next notice the grounds of appeal relating to the petit jury. It appears from the “Case” that only one juror, J. W. Shaw, did not attend the court as required by law of jurors, and this juror was not served with a summons to attend, for the very good reason, as set out by the sheriff, that he had left the county. The same objections were raised in the challenge to the array of the petit jurors that was raised as the basis for the motion to quash the indictment, viz: no service upon the jury commissioners of the writ of venire facias, regularly issued under the seal of the clerk of the court on the 5th day of January, 1895, Requiring them to select thirty-six petit jurors, although it appeared that the said jury commissioners, in obedience to said writ, did draw the said thirty-six petit j urors whose names were entered on the panel attached to the [348]*348writ, and although it appeared that the sheriff certified that he had served the thirty-six persons so drawn except the j uror, J. W. Shaw, who was absent from the State. There was no shouting made at the trial that J. W. Shaw was in the State. It will be seen that the objections are the same as those we have previously disposed of in connection with the grand jury. Our conclusions there announced will dispose of those grounds of appeal here raised. Accordingly we overrule each of these.

2 The next group of exceptions are those pertaining to the competency of certain testimony: “5. Because it was error to admit the confession of the defendant, for the reason that the same was induced by fear improperly excited. 6. Because it was error to refuse to strike out the said confession at the close of the testimony.” We were struck with the care evinced by the Circuit Judge when the witness, J. S. Boiler, was about detailing the confession of the defendant, for he allowed the defendant’s counsel to interrogate him fully in regard to the way in which, and by which, the confession was made; and it was only after this witness had positively denied that any hope or fear operated upon the prisoner’s mind, or that anything was done or said to extort the confession, that the Circuit Judge admitted the testimony of the confession to be introduced. The law primarily imposes this duty upon the Circuit Judge. It is a heavy responsibility, but it has to be met. In this case, no doubt, the Circuit Judge was in a measure relieved by the number of corroborating circumstances brought to his view. From a careful study of these circuía stances, we cannot say that the Circuit Judge erred in admitting the confession originally, or in refusing to strike it from the testimony after all the facts were in evidence. We have been called upon so often to consider this subject, that we feel that we have fully covered the law on this subject in our decisions in State v. Howard, 35

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
22 S.E. 337, 44 S.C. 344, 1895 S.C. LEXIS 78, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-derrick-sc-1895.