80 P. 354 | Ariz. | 1905
The appellant, Z. H. Booth, and his brother, John Booth, in the district court of Gila County, were jointly indicted and jointly tried for murder. The appellant, Z. H. Booth, was convicted of murder in the first degree, and his co-defendant, John Booth, was acquitted. The verdict against appellant fixed his punishment at death.
Upon the trial the court ruled that the defendants were jointly entitled to ten peremptory challenges, and denied their request that each be allowed that number. Appellant complains of this ruling of the trial court, and of no other. In so far as this court is concerned, a new, and, in its general application to the practice in our trial courts, an important, question is thus presented. The practice in the district courts since the organization of the territory has been uniform, in allowing to two or more defendants jointly tried only the number of peremptory challenges each would have been entitled to if separately tried. This practice, so long adhered to and acquiesced in, while not controlling, should be considered in construing our statutes, if a reading of these leaves the legislative intent a matter of doubt. Until the revision of our laws in 1887 took effect, the California statutes upon the subject of the organization of trial juries in criminal cases were in force in this territory. These statutes, prior to their adoption by our legislature, had been construed by the supreme court of California to limit the number of peremptory challenges, when two or more defendants were jointly tried, to that allowed to a single defendant. People v. McCalla, 8 Cal. 301. From their organization the trial courts of the territory followed the practice thus sanctioned by the courts
A study of the practice which prevailed at common law, while interesting, does not materially aid in the construction
¥e hold, therefore, that the right of each defendant, under a joint indictment, to sever his peremptory challenges, and exercise the full number allowed by law to a defendant, is not recognized by the statutes, and we see no reason for overturning the contemporaneous construction put upon the statutes by the trial courts, and long acquiesced in.
The judgment is affirmed.