State v. Wetzel

83 S.E. 68, 75 W. Va. 7, 1914 W. Va. LEXIS 209
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 29, 1914
StatusPublished
Cited by51 cases

This text of 83 S.E. 68 (State v. Wetzel) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering West Virginia 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. Wetzel, 83 S.E. 68, 75 W. Va. 7, 1914 W. Va. LEXIS 209 (W. Va. 1914).

Opinion

WilliaMS, Judge:

Defendant was tried and convicted on ah indictment for embezzlement and brings error.

Before pleading in bar he filed four several pleas in abatement, three of them challenging the validity- of the indictment on the ground that the grand jurors had not been selected in the manner provided by law, and the fourth on the ground that certain persons, not sworn as witnesses, were permitted to appear before them, while' they were engaged in their deliberations, and discuss with them, and make suggestions respecting, the evidence on which the indictment was found. Demurrers to all these pleas were sustained, and that ruling is one of the errors assigned.

The first plea avers that no grand jury was lawfully impaneled to serve at the term of the court at which defendant was indicted, because the clerk did not, at least thirty days, or at any other time, before the beginning of the said [9]*9term issue a writ of venire facias. It does not aver that the persons appearing and serving as grand jurors were not drawn from the box containing the ballots with the names of those listed by the county court to serve as such in the manner provided by section 2, chapter 157, Code 1913. The plea presents the single question whether, in view of the method now provided by statute for selecting persons to serve as grand jurors, a venire facias is indispensable. At common law such a writ was necessary. It was the sheriff’s precept and authority, and without it he could not summon a grand jury, and one summoned without the writ was powerless to act. Whitehead v. Commonwealth, 19 Grat. 640; Nicholas v. State, 5 N. J. L. 539; 20 Cyc. 1312. But the statute has provided a different method of selecting both petit and grand jurors, which takes the. place of the common law' method. The sheriff has no longer the right to select; he can only summon those whose names have been drawn from the box, except when some of them have failed to appear and he has been directed by the court to summon others in their places. Hence the only purpose of a venire facias now is to authorize the summoning of the sixteen men who have been drawn to serve as grand jurors. Suppose they are notified that they have been drawn and they do appear at court and are impaneled and sworn and actually serve as grand jurors, must their proceedings be held void for want of a writ commanding the sheriff to summon them? To so hold -would certainly be very unreasonable and hyperteehnical. The statute in this particular is directory merely, and a venire facias is no longer essential to'the constitution of a legal grand jury. 20 Cyc. 1307. Apropos to this question see State v. Medley, 66 W. Va. 216 and State v. Taylor, 57 W. Va. 228. The supreme court of Pennsylvania, in Commonwealth v. Slater, 2 Pearson 461, held that if a grand juror, selected in the manner provided, attended court, it made no difference how he -was summoned. A similar holding by the supreme court of Kentucky is found in Commonwealth v. Graddty, 4 Metc. 223. A venire facias can have no possible effect upon the selection of persons to serve as grand jurors, and a grand jury which has been selected in the manner provided by the [10]*10statute is not rendered illegal by the failure of the clerk to issue a writ of.venire facias. The demurrer to this plea was properly sustained.

The other pleas present more serious questions. Plea No. 2 avers that the clerk of the circuit eourt did not issue a summons for the clerk of the county court to appear at the office of the former, before the term of eourt at which the indictment was found, to assist in drawing from the box the names of persons to serve as grand jurors, pursuant to Sec. 3 of Oh. 157, Code 1913; and that the clerk of the county court did not attend such drawing. Sec. 2 of Ch. 157 provides for making up the list of persons to serve as grand jurors for the yea'r, in the following manner, viz.: The county court, at its levy term, and at any other time when required by an order of the circuit court, shall prepare a list of not less than one hundred nor more than one hundred and fifty names of freeholders of the county, to be selected from the various magisterial districts, as near as may be in proportion to their respective populations, who shall be qualified jurors. The list so made out is .then to. be delivered to the clerk of the circuit court whose duty it is to safely keep the same. At, the time of making out the-list the county eourt is required to have the name of each person appearing on the list.clearly written, each on a like separate paper or ballot. The ballots are then to be folded or rolled up so as to resemble each other as near as may be, and the names from each magisterial district are to be enclosed in a separate envelope, indorsed with the name of the district and the .number of ballots enclosed, and the envelopes placed in a secure box which shall be delivered to, and safely kept by, the clerk of the circuit court. Continuing, the statute says the box “shall be opened only on the order of the court, or by the cleric of the county court, or a justice as hereinafter described.” By Sec. 3 of the same chapter it is provided that all grand jurors shall be selected by drawing ballots from said box, and the persons whose names are drawn shall be returned to serve as grand jurors. The statute directs the clerk of every circuit eourt to issue a venire facias for sixteen grand jurors at least thirty days before any term of the court at which [11]*11a grand jury may be wanted, section 1 of the chapter providing that a grand jury shall be drawn for every term unless the court, or the judge in vacation, by. order addressed to the clerk twenty days before the term, dispenses with a grand jury at that term. Quoting the statute in relation to the provision which the plea alleges has been violated, “At the time of issuing such venire the clerk shall issue a summons in the name of the State, requiring the clerk of the county court of such county, on a day named in such summons, which shall not be less than twenty days before such term, for the purpose of drawing the ballots for the number of grand jurors mentioned in said writ. If the clerk of the circuit court be also clerk of the county court, the summons shall require a justice to attend for such purpose. The writ of venire facias and summons shall be served as provided in section nine of chapter one hundred and sixteen of this Code, and the said officer shall attend and cause the proper number of grand jurors to be drawn from the box, and a list thereof to be delivered as provided in said section. The drawing and summoning of grand jurors shall be according to sections nine, ten, eleven, twelve and thirteen of said chapter one hundred and sixteen, so far as they are applicable, except that the ballots shall be drawn from the several envelopes in proportion as near as may be to the numbers endorsed thereon, but so that at least one ballot shall be drawn from each envelope.” The sections of chapter T16, to which reference is made, relate to the drawing of petit jurors,' and described with great particularity the manner in which it shall be done by the two jury commissioners. The two clerks must comply with those sections of the statute in the drawing of grand jurors. It is only necessary to read those sections to be convinced that the presence of both jury commissioners at the drawing is imperative; and the presence of both clerks is just as indispensable in the drawing of grand jurors.

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Bluebook (online)
83 S.E. 68, 75 W. Va. 7, 1914 W. Va. LEXIS 209, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-wetzel-wva-1914.