16 Gratt. 519 | Va. | 1861
delivered the opinion of the court.
The plaintiffs in error were presented for unlawful
This ease involves the construction of the first section of the act passed April 9,1853, entitled “an act concerning the compensation and’ empanneling of jurors, their qualifications and manner of selection in certain cases,” which declares “that all free white male persons who are twenty-one years of age, and not over sixty, shall be liable to serve.as jurors, except as hereinafter provided.” .Sess. Acts, p. 43, ch. 27, § 1. The exceptions here referred to are certain officers and professional persons, who, by the second section of the act, are £t exempted from serving on juries.”
Does the first section apply to grand jurors as well as petit jurors? And if so, does it -create a disqualification, or a mere exemption from serving on juries? These are the questions, upon the decision of which, or one of which, the case depends. If the section does not apply to grand jurors; or does not disqualify a person over sixty years of age to serve as a juror; in either case there is no error in the judgment of the Circuit court. If the converse of both propositions be.true, then there is such error. It is well settled that the disqualification of one of the grand jury finding an indictment may be pleaded in abatement to the indictment. 3 Rob. Pr., old ed., p. 82, and cases cited; 1 Chit. C. L. 307.
The first is a doubtful question, to say the least of it. The first section of chapter 162 of the Code, entitled
The fourth section of chapter 206 of the Code, entitled “of grand juries,” as reported by the Revisors Id. p. 1008, was in these words: “ For every grand jury there shall be summoned twenty-four citizens of this state who are freeholders of the county or corporation in which the court is to be held, and when they are grand jurors for a county court not inhabitants of a town having a corporation court, and who are mother respects qualified jurors, and not constables, ordinary keepers, surveyors of roads, nor owners nor occupiers of water grist mills.”
The former of these two sections expressly embraces grand as well as petit juries, and tlié words, “who are in other respects qualified jurors,” in the latter, clearly refer in part at least, to the qualifications prescribed by the former. Indeed, the note appended to the said words by the revisors, points directly to the" former section.
The former section was materially amended by the legislature, so as to make it read, “Wo person shall-be qualified to serve upon a petit jury, in any proceeding, civil or criminal, unless he is 21 years of age, and owns property, real or personal, of the value of $ 100.” Code, p. 628, ch. .162, § 1. The latter section was adopted without amendment, except an immaterial transposition of words. Id. p. 767, ch. 206, § i. The words “and in other respects qualified jurors,” were retained in the section. But they had not the same meaning in the Code as in the report of the Revisors. In the latter, as before
There was then no doubt about the meaning, and no room for construction, of the report of the revisors, nor of the Code on this subject. Then came the act of April 9,1853, the first section of which is before recited, and is of doubtful meaning. It does not mention “ a jury, grand or petit,” as the report of the re visors does; nor “a petit jury,” as the Code does; but “jurors” only, without any adjective. And the question is, whether this word embraces both grand a/nd petit as the former does, or petit only as the latter does.
The act is very long, containing forty sections, and certainly relates, in different parts of it, to grand as well as petit jurors. The most of it relates to petit jurors only. But three sections relate expressly to grand jurors, viz: The fourth, which amends and re-enacts the second section of chapter 206 of the Code, p. 766, for the purpose of requiring a grand jury to be at only two, instead of four, of the quarterly terms of the county, and some of the corporation courts; the fifth, authorizing any court in which a grand jury is to be empanneled, to limit the number of persons to serve thereon, provided it be not less than sixteen; and the ninth, which, after prescribing how jurors required for the trial of cases, except felony, shall be selected and returned to serve, concludes with directing that “grand jurors shall be summoned as now provided by law.” In all the other sections in which juries or jurors are mentioned, they are mentioned without the adjective
I am therefore inclined to think that the first section of the act of 1853 does not apply to grand jurors. Indeed the counsel for the plaintiffs in error admit that it does not; that it was intended to fix and define the qualification of petit jurors, and is substituted to the place of sec. 1 of ch. 162 of the Code, and occupies the same relation which it did to sec. 4 of ch. 206; but they contend that the words, “in other respects • qualified jurors,” in the last mentioned section, refer to the qualification of petit jurors prescribed by the first section of the act of 1853. If I have shown, as I think I have, that the words in question did not refer to sec. 1 of ch. 162 of the Code, it follows, on the admission aforesaid, that they do not refer to section 1, of the act of 1853.
But suppose the first section of the act of 1853 does apply to grand as well as petit jurors, does it create disqualification; or a mere exemption from serving on juries ?
The first section of chapter 162 of the Oode, clearly creates a disqualification. It declares expressly that “no person shall be qualified” deo., “unless he Is 21 years of age,” &c. But the first section of the act of 1853 uses very different language. It declares “that all free white male persons, who are 21 years of age and not
But it may be asked, if this be so, why were not persons of that class included among the exempts embraced in the second section. They might ivell, perhajrs, have been. But they are at least as well embraced in the first section, or implied thereby. The second section seems to be confined to persons who are exempted on account of their office or profession. A person exempt from serving on juries is not liable to serve; and a person not liable to serve is exempt from serving. The terms seem to be convertible. If the legislature had intended to exempt only persons under 21 or over 60 years of age, they could not have done so more plainly or appropriately than by the first section. But intending, besides this general exemption, to make certain special ones, they enumerated them in the second section' The words “ liable to serve” embrace all persons mentioned in the first and not exempted in the second section; and are so used in some of the other sections of the act, as the seventh and twenty-second.
Again, it may be asked, is a person under 21 years of-age a qualified juror? And if not, how can a person over 60 be a qualified juror, since the two ages are men
Again it may be said, that the 4th sec. of ch. 206 of the Code, p. 767, which still remains in force, requires that “for every grand jury there shall be summoned twenty-four citizens of this state, who are freeholders of the county or corporation in which the court is to be held, and in other respects qualified jurors, and not constables,” &c., and that the words “in other respects qualified jurors” must refer to the first section of the act of 1853, as there is no other act now in force which creates any other qualification than those contained in the 4th section itself of ch. 206 of the Code. I have already had occasion to notice why these words were inserted in the
As to the argument that if the fii’st section of the act of 1853, does not pa-escribe a qualification, then there is no law to disqualify minors, free negroes, Indians and women, froan serving on juries; it is a sufficient answer to say, that such persons are not Uteri et legales homines, and aa-e therefoa’e not qualified jurors at comanon law. The same objection, in kind if-not in degree, might .have been taken to the law as contained in the Codes
I am therefore of opinion that the first section of the act does not create a disqualification. There is no other statute which disqualifies a person over 60 years old from serving on a jury, and certainly he is not disqualified by the common law. It follows that I am for affirming the judgment.
Allen, P. and Lee and Robertson, I. concurred in the opinion.
Daniel, J. dissented.
J UDGMENT AFFIRMED.