State v. Salts

39 N.W. 167, 77 Iowa 193, 1889 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 98
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedSeptember 6, 1888
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 39 N.W. 167 (State v. Salts) 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. Salts, 39 N.W. 167, 77 Iowa 193, 1889 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 98 (iowa 1888).

Opinions

Reed, J.

1. indictment"i>y constitution-I. The indictment was found after the taking effect of chapter 42, Laws Twenty-first General Assembly. Adams county having a population of less than sixteen thousand, the grand ]ury therein, under the provisions of the act, is composed of five members, and the grand jury which found this indictment was composed of that number. Defendant demurred to the indictment, alleging that the statute under which the grand jury was organized is in conflict with section 11, article 1, of the constitution. The particular provision of the article which it is claimed the act infringes is the following : “ And no person shall be held to answer for any higher criminal offense, unless on presentment or indictment by a grand jury, except in the army or navy, or in the militia when in actual service in time of war or public danger.” Before the taking effect of the act the grand jury was composed of fifteen members ; that number being prescribed by the statutes then in force. But, before the adoption of the amendments to the constitution, which were adopted by the people of the state at the general election in 1884, it could not have been constituted with less than twelve members ; for at common law a grand jury must consist of that or some greater number, not exceeding twenty-three, and it is to a tribunal thus constituted that the provisions of the constitution then in force referred when they spoke of a grand jury. The words, “a grand jury,” as they [195]*195occurred in those provisions, were used in the sense and with the meaning given them by the common law. It was also a rule of the common law that, when a grand jury consisted of but twelve members, an indictment could not be found without the concurrence of all of the members; and, when composed of a greater number, that number at least must concur; and this rule requiring the concurrence of twelve grand jurors, before an indictment could be found, was preserved by our statutes. The amendment to the constitution, adopted in 1884,. provides that “the grand jury may consist of any number of members, not less than five nor more than fifteen, as the general assembly may by law provide, or the general assembly may provide for holding persons to answer without the intervention of a grand jury.” The act in question provides that, “in counties haying a population of sixteen thousand inhabitants or less, the grand jury shall be composed of five members; and, in counties having a population of more than sixteen thousand inhabitants, it shall consist of seven members. It is this latter provision which it is claimed is in violation of the provision of the bill of rights quoted above (section 11, article 1). The argument is that the inherent principle of the common law is that an indictment can only be found by the concurrence of at least the smallest number of which the grand jury can consist, and that this principle was necessarily included in the constitution when the system was adopted, and is neither abolished nor modified by the amendment; and hence, as the constitution now fixes five as the smallest number of which the tribunal can consist, the provision that an indictment may be found upon the concurrence of four jurors is in conflict with it. If counsel’s premises should be conceded, his conclusion would follow logically and necessarily. But we think the premises are not sound.

The reason of the rule that at least twelve grand jurors must concur in the finding of an indictment is not in the fact that'that was the smallest number of which the tribunal could be composed. If that were [196]*196true, it would. jiave followed that, if the general assembly, as it might have done, had designated thirteen or fourteen as the smallest number of which the grand jury should consist, all must have concurred. For the amendment of 1884 is a limitation only as to thé maximum and minimum numbers that may be adopted, and it empowers the general assembly to adopt any nnmber within the limits prescribed ; and, when any, number within those limits is prescribed by statute, it at once becomes the smallest number of which the body can be composed. But, further than this, it would have been competent for the general assembly, before the amendment, to fix any number between eleven and twenty-four as the smallest number °of which the grand jury should be composed ; for the rule, which by implication became a part of the constitution, fixed only the maximum and minimum numbers, and left with the general assembly the power to adopt any number within those limits. Now, if the argument is sound, it would have followed, if that course had been pursued, that all the members of the body must have concurred in the finding of an indictment; for the number prescribed would have been the smallest of which it could legally be composed. But the reason of the rule had relation to the number twelve, and not to the fact that that was the smallest number of which the grand jury could be composed. Under the common law, no man could be subjected to punishment for crime until twelve of his neighbors and peers had concurred in an accusation against him, and a like nnmber had by their verdict pronounced him guilty upon that accusation, and the rule is but the expression of that principle. But it is modified by the amendment of 1884. The rule that the accusation must be concurred in by twelve men is swept away, and it may be made by a grand jnry of such number, within the prescribed limits, as the general assembly may designate, or the party may be held to answer without the intervention of a grand jury. The idea that there must be unanimity in the presentment in [197]*197any case is nowhere expressed in the constitution ; and the rule which formerly required such unanimity, when the grand jury was composed of but twelve members, having been swept away, it cannot be ingrafted upon the instrument by implication or construction, but the whole subject of the manner of the presentment is left to the general assembly. But little light is thrown upon the subject by the adjudicated cases. Our conclusion, however, is supported by the reasoning in State v. Ostrander, 18 Iowa, 435.

2. indtctotüntofatumeIaca II. Another objection alleged by the demurrer is, the indictment does not allege that the offense was comm^e<^ the jurisdiction of the court. ^ie capfi°n of the indictment is as follows: “ The grand jury of the county of Adams, in the name and by the authority,” etc., “accuse A. J. Salts of the crime of keeping a nuisance, committed as follows.” This is followed by a statement of the facts constituting the offense. It is alleged that on the first of March, 1887, in the county aforesaid, the defendant did “then and there own, keep, control, use and manage,” etc.; but the place at which the offense was committed is not otherwise designated. It is provided by section 4305 of the Code that “the indictment is sufficient, if it can be understood therefrom (1) * * * (2) * * * (3) that the offense was committed within the jurisdiction of the court, or is triable therein ; (4) * * * (5) * * * (6) * * *.” The words, “did there and then own,” etc., as used'in the indictment, have reference to the time and place before spoken of. From these words, and what precedes them, it can be understood that the offense was committed in Adams county, at the time designated. While it would certainly be better practice to allege the venue by express averments in the body of the indictment than by reference to the, caption, under the provision quoted, the indictment cannot be held bad because of such omission.

[198]*1983.

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Bluebook (online)
39 N.W. 167, 77 Iowa 193, 1889 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 98, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-salts-iowa-1888.