Territory v. Braly

29 Haw. 7, 1926 Haw. LEXIS 65
CourtHawaii Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 8, 1926
DocketNo. 1644.
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 29 Haw. 7 (Territory v. Braly) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Hawaii Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Territory v. Braly, 29 Haw. 7, 1926 Haw. LEXIS 65 (haw 1926).

Opinion

*8 OPINION OP THE COURT BY

BANKS, J.

This is an interlocutory bill of exceptions. On tbe 22d day of April, 1925, the defendant George A. Braly was indicted by tbe grand jury of tbe first judicial circuit, Territory of Hawaii, for tbe crime of manslaughter. Subsequent to bis arraignment tbe defendant filed a plea in abatement by wbicb be sought to have tbe indictment' quashed. In bis plea be challenged tbe validity of tbe indictment on several grounds. Tbe first ground relates to tbe legality of tbe grand jury wbicb returned tbe indictment. Tbe second is, “That there is no valid law defining tbe offense of manslaughter.” Tbe third and fourth grounds challenge tbe validity of tbe territorial statute defining manslaughter for tbe alleged reason that tbe territorial legislature wbicb enacted tbe statute was not legally constituted. Tbe Territory demurred to tbe plea in abatement assigning several reasons why it was insufficient in law. Tbe demurrer was sustained. Tbe defendant thereafter filed a motion to quash tbe indictment on twenty-six grounds. Tbe motion to quash raises all tbe questions presented by tbe plea in abatement and several additional ones. Tbe motion to quash was overruled. Thereupon tbe defendant filed a demurrer to tbe indictment in wbicb its sufficiency was questioned for tbe same reasons given in tbe motion to quash. Tbe demurrer was overruled. Tbe defendant reserved exceptions to tbe rulings of tbe court below on tbe plea in abatement, the motion to quash and tbe demurrer. He then prayed and was allowed an interlocutory bill of exceptions.

Tbe first questions to be considered are those presented *9 by the plea in abatement and the demurrer thereto. It is averred, in substance, in paragraph one of the plea that none of the grand jurors who returned the indictment was legally qualified to act in that capacity, for the reason that the jury commissioners in making up the grand jury list did not make their selection from the citizens, voters and residents of the several precincts in the first judicial district as near as may be according to and in proportion with the respective number of registered voters last registered in each of said precincts. The defendant thus seeks to discredit the indictment because the jury commissioners in selecting the grand jury did not conform to the requirements of the statute in that regard. The pertinent portions of the statute (Sec. 2402, E. L. H. 1925j provide as follows: “Duty to make list, etc. The jury commission of each circuit shall, before the fifteenth day of December in each year, or at any subsequent time, if omitted or neglected before such day, make two lists of persons to serve respectively as grand and trial jurors in the circuit court for the ensuing year. It shall proceed to select and list from the citizens, voters and residents of the several precincts in the circuit, as near as may be according to and in proportion with the respective number of registered voters last registered in each of the precincts, the names of one hundred persons who, in its opinion, are qualified to serve as trial jurors, and the names of fifty persons who are qualified to serve as grand jurors under the provisions of this chapter; provided that the number of persons so selected and listed, as aforesaid, shall be one thousand as trial jurors and seventy-five as grand jurors in the first circuit.”

The quoted portion of the statute was evidently enacted for the benefit of those persons who are subject to jury duty. In order that the burdens of this public service might be equitably distributed the commissioners were *10 directed to make their selections as nearly as may he proportionately to the number of voters and citizens in the different precincts. It manifestly was not the purpose of the legislature to make the statute so mandatory that a failure to meticulously observe its provisions would disqualify every one selected to serve as a juror and there is no denial by the defendant that the grand jurors who returned the indictment against him were otherwise fully qualified to do so. Moreover the statute by its very terms vests in the commission a wide discretion in making its apportionment of jurors. The commission is directed to make the apportionment “as near as may be” among the different precincts. This, of course, means that after a survey of the entire field from which jurors may be chosen and a consideration of the registered voters in the different precincts, the commission shall so apportion its selection of jurors as will in their judgment equitably distribute the burden of jury service. So long as this discretion, with which the commission is clothed, is not abused but is honestly and fairly exercised no one has any ground of complaint.

The next question which we will consider is that presented by paragraphs three and four of the plea in abatement. In these paragraphs the defendant attacks the validity of section 4119, R. L. H. 1925, which defines manslaughter, on the ground that the legislature which enacted the statute was an illegal body and therefore without power to function in that capacity. The contention is that section 55 of the Organic Act requires a reapportionment of the members of the legislature and that this reapportionment has never been made. The conclusion is drawn that because of this omission the legislature was without legal authority to enact the statute in question. Without deciding the effect on legislative enactments of a failure to reapportion the members of *11 the legislature as provided by section 55 of the Organic Act, the contention of the defendant is completely answered by the fact that in 1860, long before the Hawaiian Islands were annexed to the United States, the legislature of the Kingdom of Hawaii passed a statute defining the crime of manslaughter in the same language as that employed in section 4119, R. L. H. 1925. This statute was the law in Hawaii when the Organic Act was enacted and by the terms of that Act the laws of Hawaii then existing were expressly continued in force. Section 6 of the Organic Act provides: “That the laws of Hawaii not inconsistent with the Constitution or laws of the United States or the provisions of this Act shall continue in force, subject to repeal or amendment by the legislature of Hawaii or the Congress of the United States.” The original Hawaiian statute defining manslaughter was not inconsistent with the Constitution or laws of the United States or the provisions of the Organic Act nor has this definition ever been repealed or amended by the legislature of the Territory of Hawaii or the Congress of the United States and thus it was one of the laws continued in force.

The next objection interposed by the defendant to the indictment is that the statute defining manslaughter is too vague and indefinite to comply with the requirements of the fifth and sixth amendments to the Federal Constitution. In order to comply with these amendments it is necessary that statutes defining crimes shall do so with' such reasonable clearness and particularity that they may be understood by the ordinary mind. When a statute fulfills this requirement it is not obnoxious to that part of the Federal Constitution upon which the defendant relies. At common law manslaughter was defined as the “unlawful killing of another without malice express or implied.” This definition has many times been approved

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Bluebook (online)
29 Haw. 7, 1926 Haw. LEXIS 65, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/territory-v-braly-haw-1926.