82 Miss. 514 | Miss. | 1903
delivered the opinion of the court.
The appellant was indicted by the grand jury of Lauderdale county January, 1902, for violating sections 1120, 1121, of the Code of 1902, against dealing in futures. The defendant filed the following motion to quash the indictment against him:
“And now comes the defendant, in his own proper person, and moves the court to quash the indictment herein, and in support of' said motion he assigns the following reasons:
“First. Because the Hon. Gr. Q. Hall, judge of the tenth judicial district, at the January term of the circuit court, 1902, charged the grand jury at length on the criminal character of the business of this defendant, and the grand jury, after being in session two or three weeks, and after having examined
“Second. Because the Hon. Gr. Q. Hall, judge of the tenth, judicial district, in said second charge to said grand jury, among other things, said to the grand jury: 'I don’t know why it is you have not returned indictments against these parties (meaning this defendant). The law is plain and clear, and you have had, I understand, sufficient evidence before you to find indictments. The business has been outlawed in every state in the Hnion, so far as I am informed, except perhaps in New York and Louisiana. It is like a poker game, where the owner of the poker table has a “rake off,” no matter who wins or loses, and it is demoralizing to the manhood of the community. Previous grand juries indicted some of these parties, and they immediately drew their money out of the banks and fled from the state. The cases have not been tried yet, but I will attend to them in due time. They do not deliver, and make no pretense of delivering, a bale of cotton, and the business is a flagrant violation of the statutes which I have read to you. If you do not indict these parties (meaning this defendant), this town will be overrun with bucket shops before another grand jury meets.’
“Third. Because the said grand jury, after the said judge had delivered the said second charge, and being influenced and induced to indict this defendant by reason thereof, returned the indictment herein, which was not the voluntary act of the grand jury. It is therefore void.
“Filed July 9, 1902. D. W. Cameron, Clerk.”
The defendant then and there offered to introduce evidence to prove the facts set out in the motion, but the court stated that it did not care to hear proof, as the facts stated in the motion were substantially true, and were substantially stated in the charge of the court to the grand jury as alleged in the said motion; but the court denied said motion and overruled the same, to which ruling and decision of the court the defendant, by his counsel, then and there excepted.
“And because the matters aforesaid do not fully appear of record the defendant presents this his bill of exceptions, and prays the same may be signed and sealed by the judge of this court, pursuant to the statute, etc., which is accordingly done. G. Q. Hall, Judge.
“Filed July 18, 1902. E. W. Cameron, Clerk.”
This motion was overruled in the following words: “This cause coming on to be heard upon motion of defendant to.quash the indictments herein, and the court, having considered the same, doth order that said motions be overruled and denied. To which action of the court the defendant then and there excepted,” and filed his special bill of exceptions.
Should this motion to quash have been sustained? If this question be answered in the affirmative, a consideration of the numerous other errors assigned will be unnecessary. This presents to some extent a new question in this state. In Allen v. State, 61 Miss., 627, there was a plea in abatement alleging that one or more of the grand jurors were intoxicated when the bill was found". This court held, in an opinion by Justice Chalmers, that the grand jury is not under the guidance and control of the court, like the petit jury is, while considering their verdict, and should not be so judged. In Durr v. The State, 53 Miss., 427, this court sustained the motion to- quash
These authorities show the trend of judicial sentiment in this country. “The grand jury stands as the great inquest between the government and the people; the bulwark between enmity, hatred, and ill-will on the one side and justice and fair-dealing between man and man on the other;- a fortification
After a careful examination of the authorities, we fail to find any reported case where it was so clearly undertaken to dictate to and coerce from the grand jury an indictment. In directing the attention of the grand jury to particular offenses or classes of offenses, to crime and the necessity of suppressing it, a very large, necessary, and useful discretion is conferred upon the presiding judge, and this court will not undertake to control that discretion unless manifestly abused. In this case the court has gone too far. We must keep “that body” pure, its findings unaffected by power, fear, sympathy, or public sentiment. In that way only can it protect the rich, the poor, the humblest, and the greatest in the land alike.
Motion to quash should have been sustained.
Reversed and remanded.