63 Ala. 126 | Ala. | 1879
The qualifications’of grand and petit jurors, the mode of selecting and summoning them, and the number which may be selected, and a precept issued to summon, are the subject of very careful and ample statutory provisions. Not more nor less than eighteen persons can be drawn and selected, and no precept can be properly issued for the summoning of any other number,, to serve as grand jurors. When organized, the grand jury cannot be composed of more than eighteen, nor less than fifteen persons, of the requisite qualifications. In the first instance, the drawing and selection of jurors is committed to the judge of probate, tbe sheriff, and the clerk of the Circuit Court of the county; unless the jury is drawn for a City Court, when the clerk of that court takes the place of the clerk of the Circuit Court. Their power and authority is exclusive; and the sheriff is charged with the duty of summoning those who are drawn and selected. When the court assembles, if fifteen of the persons so drawn and selected, duly qualified, do not appear; or if, by reason of excuses or discharges allowed by the court, or from any other cause, the number is reduced below fifteen, the deficiency may be supplied under orders of the court, the mode of - supplying being particularly prescribed. Code of 1876, § 4754. It is only when there are not fifteen
This record discloses that eighteen persons were properly drawn and selected to serve as grand jurors, and a regular precept issued commanding the sheriff to summon them,, which was fully executed. All of them, except one appeared, and two were excused and discharged by the court, leaving fifteen in attendance, who were impanelled and sworn. Yet, the court caused three other persons to be drawn from six summoned under its order, who were also sworn of the panel, and served, thus increasing the jury to eighteen. The body thus organized found and presented the indictment upon which the defendant was put on trial and convicted. The court exercised authority the statute withholds, and the grand jury were not organized and constituted as the law requires. The indictment is, consequently, vicious, and the judgment of conviction cannot be supported. The statute is clear and unambiguous in its terms; there can be no necessity for departing from them; and there is no discretion in any court to observe them, or to substitute for them other provisions and other modes of organizing a grand jury.
Let the judgment be reversed, and the cause remanded. The defendant will remain in custody, until discharged by due course of law.