98 Ga. 89 | Ga. | 1896
The majority of this court are of the opinion that the inquisition authorized by section 4666 of the code is not a judicial proceeding. That section does not provide either that the sheriff or the ordinary shall preside over the deliberations of the jury, or in any manner participate in the inquiry made by them into the alleged insanity of the convict. It imposes upon neither of the officer’s mentioned the •exercise of any judicial function. Their authority in the premises is confined to the single act of summoning the jury; or rather, the sheriff is to do the summoning, “with concurrence and assistance of the ordinary.” The inquisition itself is to be made by the jury, and the section mentioned contains not a syllable conferring any authority upon the sheriff or the ordinary to give any direction whatever to the inquiry which they are to make. If either is to preside, there is no reason for holding that this function shall fall upon the ordinary rather than upon the sheriff, except the fact that the ordinary is a judicial officer of the State, and the sheriff is not. Be this as it may, the law in question certainly does not declare that'either of them shall have anything whatever to do with the matter, except to •summon the jury. There is an entire absence of any direction as to procedure. No mode of trial is pointed out; nothing is said as to who shall pass upon the competency of jurors or administer the oath to be taken by them, nor as to who shall determine any question which may arise as to the admissibility of evidence. The law is entirely silent as to the manner in 'which the investigation is to be conducted. The only thing we can find in our code giving the inquisi
We agree with the view taken by Judge McCay in the case of Spann v. State, 47 Ga. 549, 551, that the whole proceeding is rather an inquiry based on public propriety and decency, than upon any right of the prisoner; and we axe quite confident that it was never intended or contemplated that such a proceeding should be reviewed by the writ of certiorari.
It may be that the whole subject needs legislation. If, in the wisdom of the General Assembly, it is deemed advisable that there should be a judicial investigation as to the mental condition of one who has been legally convicted and sentenced to death, and who is alleged to have subsecpiently become insane, proper provision should be made for holding and conducting such an investigation under
Judgment affirmed.