31 Fla. 255 | Fla. | 1893
The plaintiff in error was indicted on April 16th, 1892r at the Sx>ring term °f Cradsden Circuit Court, for murder in the first degree, for killing W. P. Bussey, and on being arraigned on the twenty-second day of the same month, he x’leaded in abatement of the indictment that it “was found .upon the assent of only eight grand jurors, and that only eight grand jurors concurred in the finding of said indictment.” To this plea the State demurred on the ground that eight grand jurors were sufficient under its law's to find an indictment, and the defendant joined in the demurrer, and thereux>on the defendant x>leaded not guilty, and there was a mistrial and the jury were discharged. At the "next, or Fall, term, 1892, the cause was tried, the jury returning a verdict of guilty, with a recommendation of mercy, and thereupon the court sentenced the prisoner to confinement in the State prison during his natural life; to which sentence or judgment tbe prisoner has taken a writ of error.
The fifth section of an act relating to jurors, approved June 8th, 1891 (Chapter 4015), reads as follows: Every grand jury shall consist of twelve persons, and the assent of eight of them shall be necessary to the finding of indictments.” The question arising is that of the validity of this statute in so far as it authorizes an indictment upon the concurrence of eight members of the grand jury, in view of the guaranty of our Con
The clauses of the organic law which are within the terms: “Otherwise provided by this Constitution,” are those relating to prosecutions in the Criminal Courts of Record, which courts, whenever established, have jurisdiction of all criminal cases not capital, and prosecutions in them are by information. (Sections 24-28, Art. Y). No such court has been established in Gadsden county, and, this being so, the case at bar, considered independently of its capital nature, is, if for no other reason, not within any of the exceptions of the quoted section of the Declaration of Rights. Misdemeanors might in 1892, and may nowr, under the act of February, 1877 (McClellan’s Digest, section 4, p. 442, Rev. Stat., section 2887), be prosecuted in the Circuit Courts upon informations filed by the State attorneys (King vs. State, 17 Fla., 183); but no felony could then, or can now, be tried in such courts except upon indictment found by a grand jury. Rev. Stat., section 2887. The 38th section of Article Y of the Constitution,
That by the common law, at least twelve jurors were necessary to constitute a grand jury, and that the concurrence of the same number in finding an indictment was also essential to the validity of the indictment, we do not doubt; nor are we less satisfied that the purpose and effect of the provision set out above from the Declaration of Rights was to preserve this essential of a grand jury and of the validity of an indictment for a capital crime or other felony. In view of what is said on these points in the opinion in the case of English vs. State, filed cotemporaneously with this, it is unnecessary to do more than announce the above conclusions, which are fully sustained by the reasoning of thaij opinion and the authorities cited therein-See also Bishop’s Crim.' Pro., sections 854, 855 ; Sherlock vs. Mayor of Jacksonville, 17 Fla., 93.
With the conclusion, which is also reached in the case of English vs. State, supra, that the invalidity of the clause of the fifth section of the act of 1891, that the assent of eight of a grand jury shall be necessary to the finding of indictments, does not impair the provision of the act that the grand jury shall consist of twelve, we are also satisfied.
The act is one “relating to jurors.” Its first section prescribes certain qualifications for jurors, and the second provides for the selection from the regis
The legislative intent, that the grand jury shall not consist of more than twelve is shown by the third as well as the fifth section, and we are inclined to the view that if we should strike out the fifth section entirely, the result, considering the constitutional guaranty of at least twelve jurors, would be that the grand jury would consist of twelve and no more. The distribution of statutes into sections is, however, purely artificial, and in determining whether the valid parts can remain operative notwithstanding the unconstitutional parts, the point is not whether they are contained in the same section, but whether they are essentially and inseparably connected in substance, or
A plea in abatement was the proper means for presenting the objection. This must be regarded as settled law here, notwithstanding a contrary view may obtain elsewhere. Kitrol vs. State, 9 Fla., 9 ; Gladden vs. State, 13 Fla., 623, 630 ; Burroughs vs. State, 17 Fla., 643; Ex parte Warris, 28 Fla., 371, 9 South. Rep., 718. See also McQuillin vs. State, 8 Smedes & M., 587, and note (a) to Commonwealth vs. Smith, 9 Mass., 110, and State vs. Symonds, 36 Maine, 128.
It is unnecessary to notice other assignments of error. .The judgment will be reversed and the cause remanded for proceedings not inconsistent with this opinion. J ndgmenf accordingly.