79 Tenn. 509 | Tenn. | 1883
delivered the opinion of the court.
At the December term, 1882, of the circuit court of Grainger county, the plaintiff in error was indicted for a misdemeanor. The record of the term shows that on the day fixed by law for holding the term, the court was opened by the regular judge, the other officers being present, that a venire facias was properly issued and returned, and that from the jurors summoned, the court “proceeded to as directed by the statutes in such case made and provided to select and empanel a grand jury, when were elected the following good and" lawful men,” naming them; “and the said grand jury, having been duly summoned, elected and empaneled, were sworn, and charged by the court, and retired to consider if indictments,” etc. The indictment was found, and returne'd into court on the next day by this jury. At the next term of- the court, and on April 24, 1883, the plaintiff in- error filed a plea in abatement, that the grand jury who found the indictment were not legally elected, empaneled and sworn;
The natural inference from the order of entries as they appear in the transcript would be, that the defendant first filed his plea in abatement, was then arraigned, pleaded not guilty, and went to trial on the issue joined in this plea, and that afterwards the plea in abatement was stricken out by the court upon the motion of the State.
In this view, the action of the circuit judge was correct. For all objection to the election and qualification of the grand jury -is waived by a plea to the merits, and going to trial thereon, even if 'a plea in
If the filing of the plea, and the.action of the court in striking it out both preceded the plea of not guilty, then the question of the sufficiency of the plea would arise. Such pleas, ' as this court has always held, must possess the highest degree of certainty known to the law in every particular. They must exclude, by proper allegations, every legal intendment or conclusion that might otherwise have been made against ‘ them: State v. Wills, 11 Hum., 222; State v. Bryant, 10 Yer., 527; State v. Deason, 6 Baxt., 511. The plea does aver broadly that the grand jurors were not legally elected, empaneled and sworn, which is only the. averment of a conclusion, not of facts from which the court may draw its own conclusion: Daniel v. State, 3 Heis., 257; State v. Jackson, 3 Leg. Rep., 301. But the draftsman undertakes to state the facts on which he intends that his general averment shall be considered as resting. These facts are that the regular judge was absent at the. beginning of the
If, indeed, the grand jury were elected,- empaneled and sworn by the Attorney-General, and not by the presiding judge, the proceeding was clearly illegal.
Persons deprived thereby of one of the safe- guards, thrown about them by the laws ought, it would seem, to have some remedy. The record of the court shows, however, that the grand jury were properly elected, empaneled and sworn. The defendant, by his plea, seeks to impeach the verity of the record. If the defendant may do this, because there is no other remedy open to him, by plea in abatement, he ought, by his plea to negative every reasonable intendment in favor of the record. He ought, therefore, to have averred that the grand jury were not in fact elected, empánele, and sworn at all by the presiding judge, and that the minutes of. the court were fraudulently made up in their present form contrary to the truth. In this view also, the plea is wanting in the required certainty, and was properly stricken out.
In England, indictments found by inferior tribunals were taken up to the King’s Bench by certiorari, accompanied by a caption which was a historical statement by the clerk of the inferior court of the selection of the jury, and finding of the indictment: McClure v. State, 1 Yer., 206, 216; State v. Long, 1 Hum., 386. Under this system a plea lay to the qualification of the grand jury. Ve have followed the Engli-.h law without noticing the effect, if any, of a change of system: Bennet v. State, M. & Y., 133; State v. Duncan, 7 Yer., 271; State v. Baker, 4 Hum., 12; State v. Deason, 6 Baxt., 511. The actual de-
Affirm the judgment.