92 Ky. 605 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1892
DELIVERED THE OPINION OF THE COURT.
Appellant, having been convicted of a felony under an indictment found and returned by a grand jury empaneled and sworn at the October term, 1891, of the court in which he was tried, seeks reversal of the judgment rendered in pursuance of the verdict upon the only ground we need consider, that the grand jury was composed of sixteen persons, in violation of section 248 of the present constitution, as follows : “ A grand jury shall consist of twelve persons, nine of whom concurring may find an, indictment.”
Decision of this case, submitted some time ago, has been suspended to await determination of Miller, &c., v. Johnson, &c., ante, p. 589, wherein was involved question of validity of the present constitution as signed and promulgated September 28, 1891, by the delegates in convention assembled. But as that case has been decided and that instrument held in the opinion delivered to be, as to all its parts, the existing organic law of the State, the section quoted must be now regarded, as from the date mentioned, the law controlling the number of persons required to constitute a grand jury. And as a person can not be legally tried and convicted of a public offense under an indictment found and returned by a grand jury illegally con