State v. Pierce

58 N.W. 891, 90 Iowa 506
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedMay 8, 1894
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 58 N.W. 891 (State v. Pierce) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Pierce, 58 N.W. 891, 90 Iowa 506 (iowa 1894).

Opinion

Rotheook, J.

I. There is no controversy as to the fact that E. H. Wishard is dead, and that he was-killed by-the defendant. The defendant was arrested, and a preliminary hearing was had before a magistrate, and he was held to abide the action of the grand jury at the next term of the district court. When the grand jury was called, the defendant interposed the following challenge to the panel: “Mr. Haskins: The defendant challenges the array of the panel for the-reason that section 236 of the Code, provides that a county auditor shall, on the first Monday in September in each year, apportion the number of grand and trial jurors to be selected from each election precinct, a® nearly as practicable according to the number of votes polled therein at the last general election, and deliver a statement thereof to the sheriff, for the reason the-election precincts at the election prior to the selection of the present grand jury and trial jury were different — not less than two townships in the county entirely abolished in the meantime — and the grand jury now before the-court, and now in the box, were selected from the changed precincts, wherein no election had ever been held prior to that election. That is all I care to do.” The testimony of the auditor of the county was taken as to the manner in which the names of electors were selected from which to draw the grand and petit jurorsfor the year 1891. So far as we have been able to discover from the record in this case, no other challenge to the-grand jury was interposed by the defendant, or in his-behalf, except that above set out. What was done in [508]*508the way of objection or challenge to the grand jury is set out in the argument of appellant’s counsel, as follows: “The first serious objection of which we complain is as to the legality of the grand jury which found the indictment. When summoned before the grand jury to show cause why they should not return an indictment against him, the defendant challenged the panel of the grand jury because of the fact that the grand jury for the year 1891, for Polk county, had been drawn from election precincts in the city of Des Moines, and in country townships which were not in existence at the annual election in 1889, when the names of the grand jurors for 1891 were returned by the judges of election. The same objection to the grand jury, and to all of the proceedings subsequent to the indictment, were again raised at every stage of the proceedings, to wit, by motion to quash the indictment, by objection to the testimony, by motion at the close of the evidence, the instructions to the trial jury to return the verdict for the defendant, and by the motion in arrest of judgment and for a new trial, all of which objections will be argued at this time.” We have set out all that we can find in the record pertaining to the •challenging of the grand jury, because an elaborate argument is presented by counsel upon the alleged unconstitutionality of certain acts of the legislature enlarging the corporate limits of the city of Des Moines, and providing for changing the voting precincts therein. It will be observed that there is neither an express nor implied claim in the record that the law under which the voting precincts were changed was unconstitutional, or that the changes in the precincts were not lawfully made. The challenge to the panel was because the jurors were selected from the precincts, as changed, in which no election had been held prior to the time fixed for selecting names of persons to be drawn as jurors for the year in which the indictment was found. The statute [509]*509explicitly provides that a person held to answer for an ofíense can not be allowed to challenge the grand jury, or any individual juror, after they are sworn. Code, section 4266. This court has repeatedly held that a defendant held to answer has an opportunity to challenge the grand jury before it is sworn, and that, if he fail to do so then, he can not afterward make objection. State v. Ingalls, 17 Iowa, 8; State v. Hinkle, 6 Iowa, 380; State v. Howard, 10 Iowa, 101; State v. Hart, 29 Iowa, 268; State v. Gibbs, 39 Iowa, 318. It is wholly immaterial what questions were presented to the court touching the illegality of the changes in the extent or number of the election precincts. No such question was presented by the record, and it would be manifestly improper to allow the defendant to make such objection now. The law imperatively requires that all objections to the grand jury must be made when it is impaneled and sworn. It would be absurd to hold that a person held to answer could present part of his objections, and withhold others, to be used in motions to quash the indictment and in arrest of judgment.

II. We will now consider the question presented as to the manner in which the names of the persons were selected from which to draw the grand jury. Section 234 of the Codeis as follows: “Two jury lists, one consisting of seventy-five persons to serve as grand jurors, and one consisting of one hundred and fifty persons, or, in counties containing more than twenty thousand inhabitants, of two hundred and fifty persons, to serve as trial jurors, and composed of persons competent and liable to serve as jurors, shall annually be made in each county from which to select jurors for the year commencing on the first day of January.’’ Section 236: “On or before the first Monday in September in each year the county auditor shall apportion the number to be selected from each election precinct as nearly as practicable in proportion to the number of [510]*510votes polled therein at the last general election and shall deliver a statement thereof to the sheriff.” The last general election held previous to September 1, 1890, was the annual election for 1889. The boundaries were changed in 1890, and before the first day of September of that year. The auditor of the county was required to make the apportionment to the precincts as they were on the first day of September. There had been no general election in the precincts, as changed. He made the apportionment from such information and ■data as was attainable; and the judges of the precincts, as changed at the general election in 1890, certified to “the auditor the proper number of names of persons, as •shown by the apportionment. Now, it may be conceded that the apportionment was not entirely accurate. But entire accuracy is not required. It is provided that it must be “as nearly as practicable in proportion to the number of votes polled” in each precinct. The ■change of the boundary lines of precincts rendered an .accurate apportionment impracticable, if not impossible. 'The auditor was required to act, but was not called upon to perform miracles; and, because the above cited provisions of the law, and others, pertaining to procuring jury lists, are not always strictly followed, this court has uniformly held that the law is directory. It was said in the case of State v. Ansaleme, 15 Iowa, 44, where the judges of the election failed to make a certificate to the list of persons returned: “Where there has been a* substantial compliance with the law, the indictment should not be set aside. To set it aside because of some slight departure from the directory statute, which has to be administered, as a rule, by “those but little conversant with legal and technical forms, would be contrary to the spirit and policy of our Criminal Code.” See, also, State v. Knight, 19 Iowa, 94; State v. Carney, 20 Iowa, 82; State v. Brandt, 41 Iowa, 593; State v. Becky, 79 Iowa, 368, 44 N. W. Rep. [511]*511•679.

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Bluebook (online)
58 N.W. 891, 90 Iowa 506, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-pierce-iowa-1894.