State v. Skinner

34 Kan. 256
CourtSupreme Court of Kansas
DecidedJuly 15, 1885
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 34 Kan. 256 (State v. Skinner) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Kansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Skinner, 34 Kan. 256 (kan 1885).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Horton, C. J.:

In all these cases the defendants were convicted of unlawfully selling intoxicating liquors without a permit, in violation of the prohibitory liquor law of 1881. They are so nearly similar, and have so many points in common, that they may be considered together.

I. We think the trial court very properly refused to receive any evidence in support of the pleas in abatement, charging that the members of the grand jury returning the indictments in these cases were not drawn and summoned in accordance with the provisions of the statute. A plea in abatement is a dilatory plea, and must be pleaded with strict exactness — it must be certain to every intent; consequently, we must construe the pleas as alleging that the grand jurors were incompetent simply because the trustees of Osage county for the year 1884 did not select for jury service the names of persons on the assessment rolls of 1883. It is nowhere alleged in the pleas that the grand jurors were minors, aliens, or insane persons ; therefore, while the grand jurors were not drawn or summoned from the class or list prescribed by the statute — and in that regard the essential provisions of the statute were disregarded — the pleas go merely to the selection and drawing of the jurors, and not to the personal disqualifications of the jurors, as that phrase is understood. In the excellent work of Thompson & Merriam on Juries, it is said that the reports show no authentic instance of a challenge allowed to grand jurors, either individually or to the array, at common law. (§ 507.) If we look to the statute, we find that § 79 of the criminal code provides:

[263]*263“No plea in abatement, or other objection, shall betaken to any grand jury duly charged and sworn, for any alleged irregularity in their selection, unless such irregularity, in the opinion of the court, amounts to corruption, in which case such plea or objection shall be received.”

Under the terms of the statute, no objection going merely to the manner of the selection or drawing of a grand jury will be recognized, unless it be one that implies corruption. (The State v. Marsh, 13 Kas. 596; Hardin v. State, 22 Ind. 347.)

II. Each indictment contained several counts — each count charging a separate offense. Upon the trial, each defendant claimed the right to four peremptory challenges for each count or separate offense contained in the indictment found against him, but was limited to four only. Peremptory challenges were not allowed at common law in trials for misdemeanors. ( Wharton’s Cr. PL, 8th ed., § 618.) The statute regulating peremptory challenges in criminal cases reads:

“The defendant, in every indictment or information, shall be entitled to a peremptory challenge of jurors in the following cases, as follows: . . . 4th. In cases not punishable with death or imprisonment in the penitentiary, to the number of four, and no more.” (Crim. Code, §198.)

With the knowledge that separate public offenses, where they are all misdemeanors of a kindred character and charged against the same person, might be joined in separate counts in the same indictment or information, the legislature has declared that the defendant in every indictment or information is entitled, in cases like those under review, to four peremptory challenges of jurors, and no more. The statute seems to us clear and conclusive, and to limit the defendants to the challenges stated therein, whether the indictment or information contains one or more counts. In civil cases it is said that peremptory challenges are allowed to protect parties not so much from the bias or prejudice which might arise in the mind of a juror from personal dislike or hatred of those who might happen to be plaintiffs or defendants in the action, but rather that which might relate to or grow out of the subject-matter [264]*264in controversy. (Stone v. Segur, 93 Mass. 568.) In a criminal case, it is understood that the peremptory challenge is allowed to the accused upon his own dislike to the individual juror challenged; that is, to protect him from the bias or prejudice in the mind of the juror from personal dislike or hatred of the party being tried. If there is anything in these theories for allowing peremptory challenges, it would be perfectly consistent for the legislature to limit the defendant in every indictment or information, to the challenges named in the statute, although separate .public offenses were charged therein against him.

Whatever may be the reasons, however, for the allowance of peremptory challenges in civil and criminal cases, the statute must control; and the court having followed the terms of the statute, we perceive no error in its refusal to permit other peremptory challenges.

III. The court below committed no error in overruling the several motions of defendants, made before the trials, requiring the state to elect as to what specific offenses it would rely upon. This court has repeatedly decided that separate public offenses, where they are all misdemeanors of a kindred character and. charged against the same person, may be joined in separate counts in one information, to be followed by one trial for all. (In re Donnelly, 30 Kas. 424; In re Macke, 31 id. 54; The State v. Chandler, 31 id. 201; The State v. Crimmins, 31 id. 376.)

After the state had introduced its evidence upon the trials, elections were made as to which particular transactions the state would rely upon for convictions. This is all the law requires, and was sufficient. (The State v. Schweiter, 27 Kas. 500; The State v. Crimmins, supra.)

IV. The defendants in the several actions offered to prove by the county attorney and other witnesses before the grand jury, that the offenses for which they were being tried were not the offenses for which they had been actually indicted, thus attempting to bring themselves within the law as recently [265]*265declared in The State v. Brooks, 33 Kas. 708. The evidence was rejected, and of this complaint is also made, but without any good reason. The county attorney and the other witnesses, not being members of the grand jury, could not by any possibility have had knowledge of the particular offenses which the grand jury had in mind and intended to be covered by the indictments, separate and apart from the allegations therein. Whenever required by any grand jury, it is the duty of the county attorney to attend them for the purpose of examining witnesses in their presence, or giving them advice upon any legal matter; and such attorney may be allowed to appear before the grand jury, on his request, for the purpose of giving an opinion relative to any matter cognizable by them, and may be permitted to interrogate witnesses before them when they or he shall deem it necessary; but no such attorney, or any other officer or person, except the grand jurors, is permitted to be present during the expression of their opinions, or the giving of their votes on any matter before them. (Crim. Code, §§ 82, 83.) Anciently, the grand jury did not examine any witnesses, presentments being made alone upon the knowledge of the members of the body. Later, the grand jury swore to make presentments, not only of matters and things given in charge, but also of other matters and things which should come to their knowledge. It is still in the power of grand jurors to find indictments on their personal knowledge, with no superadded testimony. (Regina v.

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Bluebook (online)
34 Kan. 256, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-skinner-kan-1885.