State v. Forgraves

141 N.W. 990, 32 S.D. 21, 1913 S.D. LEXIS 177
CourtSouth Dakota Supreme Court
DecidedJune 3, 1913
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 141 N.W. 990 (State v. Forgraves) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering South Dakota 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. Forgraves, 141 N.W. 990, 32 S.D. 21, 1913 S.D. LEXIS 177 (S.D. 1913).

Opinion

SMITH!, J.

Appellant was convicted in the circuit court of Gregory county, upon an indictment charging .him with the crime of keeping and maintaining a house of ill fame. The appeal is from the judgment and order overruling motion for a new trial. Upon his arraignment, the accused moved the court to set aside the indictment returned by a grand jury, on the grounds: -First, that the indictment was not found indorsed, presented, -and filed, as provided by law; second, that the grand jury was not regularly drawn, in that no notice of the drawing was given as provided by law.

Upon the hearing of this motion, the following facts were conclusively made to appear to the trial court: On the afternoon of April 8, 1911, the board of county commissioners of Gregory county being then in session, a resolution was adopted, on request of the state’s attorney, that a grand jury was necessary to investigate certain public offenses within the county; that the judge of the circuit court be requested to order the calling of a grand jury for said term of court; and that the county auditor be instructed- to forward a copy of said resolution to said judge at Oaeorna, S. D. Immediately upon the adoption of this resolution, a telegram- was [24]*24sent to the judge who was then at Oacoma, informing him of the adoption of the resolution referred to. Upon the receipt of - the telegram, the judge prepared and signed an order in writing, on April 8th, and mailed it at Oacoma, addressed to the clerk of the circuit court of Gregory county, at Fairfax. The order was received by the -clerk about noon -on April ioth, and was indorsed by him as filed in 'his office on the 8th day of April.. On the evening of April 8th, some time after 7 o’clock, after a notice in writing hereafter referred to, from the clerk -of the court, the clerk, sheriff, auditor, and treasurer assembled at the clerk’s office and drew a grand jury and a petit jury in the manner provided by law. The accused had not been held to answer before the grand jury.

Section 263 of the Code of Criminal Procedure provides: “The indictment or information must be set aside by the court in which the defendant is arraigned, and upon his motion, in either of -the following cases: * * * (4) AVhen the defendant has not been held to answer before the finding of the indictment, on any ground which would have been good ground for challenge, either t-o the panel or to any individual grand juror.”

Section 166, -Code of Criminal Procedure, provides: “A challenge to the panel may be interposed by either party for one or more of the following causes only: (1) That the requisite number of ballots was not drawn from the jury box of the county or subdivision. (2) That notice of the drawing of the grand jury was not given. (3) That the drawing was not had in the presence of the officers designated by law, or in the manner prescribed by law.”

[1] A motion to quash the indictment upon arraignment of the accused is authorized by the statute when the accused has not been held to answer and this motion is sufficient to present the supposed irregularity complained -of in the matter of impaneling the grand jury. If the irregularity was such that a challenge to the panel should have been sustained, the -trial court was in error in overruling the motion to quash-the indictment.

[2] Appellant’s specific contentions are that, -at the time the grand jury was drawn, no valid order existed authorizing the drawing, and that no sufficient notice of the drawing had been given.

Section 710 of the Political Code provides: “That a grand jury shall not hereafter be drawn, summoned or required to attend [25]*25at the sitting of any court in this state * * * unless the judge thereof shall so direct by writing under his hand and filed -with the clerk of the said court which order may be made by the court upon the petition of the state’s attorney in writing, setting forth that in his opinion a grand jury is necessary to investigate some special >and important case or cases, setting forth the facts upon which his opinion is founded,” or upon a resolution of the board of county commissioners, asking -the judge to “require the attendance of a grand jury, at any term of court to be held within said county.”

Section 162 of the Code of Criminal Procedure further provides : “No grand jury shall be drawn, summoned or required to attend at the sitting of any court within this state unless the judge thereof shall so direct by writing, under his hand and filed with the clerk of said court,” which order may be made upon the petition of the state’s attorney or upon resolution of -the board of county commissioners.

Section 716 of the Political Code also provides: “Within two days from the receipt of the order of the judge of the circuit court, directing a jury to be summoned, the clerk of the circuit court, .or his deputy in case such clerk of court does not act, and the county auditor, county treasurer, and sheriff, or a majority of them, shall meet together at the county seat. * * * The meeting of said officers shall be after notice in writing has been served the ■same day upon them, or their deputies. * * * Said notice must be served by the said clerk of the court, and must state therein the object to be to draw names for jurors for the next term of the circuit court, and the place and time of such meeting.”

The record in this case shows that a notice was served by the clerk, on the officers named in the statute, on the day on which the grand jury was drawn; but such notice referred only to the drawing of a petit jury, and did not include the drawing of a grand jury. Appellant therefore contends that no notice of the drawing of the grand jury was given as required by law, and that the indictment should have been quashed under subdivision 2, §166, Code of 'Criminal Procedure, which makes the failure to give this notice a specific ground of challenge to the panel.

Section 716, Political Code, supra, is the only section found in our Codes relating to notice of the drawing of jurors. It con[26]*26tains no provision specifically referring to grand jurors. It requires merely that the notice to be served “must state therein the object to be to draw jurors for the next term of the circuit court, and the place and time of such meeting.”

Section 717, Political Code, prescribes the procedure for drawing jurors from the box, and says: “And one of said county officers, other than the clerk of the court or his deputy, shall then proceed to draw enough of said tickets to equal the number 'of jurors directed to be summoned by the judge of the circuit court, and the clerk of the circuit court or his deputy shall record such names in .the order in which they are drawn, in a book to be kept for. that purpose. The jurors, first drawn, to the number required in the order, shall serve as grand jurors, if a grand jury shall be ordered to be summoned, and the remainder drawn in compliance with said order shall -be liable to serve as petit jurors.”

Under these provisions of our law, we are satisfied that a notice of the drawing of jurors to serve at a term of the circuit court sufficiently and substantially complies with the requirement as to notice of drawing grand jurors, even though the notice does not specifically recite that grand jurors as well as petit jurors are to be drawn at the time and place named in the notice.

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Related

State v. Poppenga
83 N.W.2d 518 (South Dakota Supreme Court, 1957)
State v. Pickus
257 N.W. 284 (South Dakota Supreme Court, 1934)
State v. Walla
224 N.W. 211 (North Dakota Supreme Court, 1929)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
141 N.W. 990, 32 S.D. 21, 1913 S.D. LEXIS 177, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-forgraves-sd-1913.