81 Neb. 284 | Neb. | 1908
The plaintiff in error Avas indicted for assault Avith intent to commit great bodily injury. To the indictment he filed a plea in abatement, challenging the authority of the grand jury Avliich presented the indictment. A demurer to this plea Avas sustained, exception Avas taken, a trial upon the charge had, and the plaintiff in error found guilty of a simple assault, from Avhich conviction he has prosecuted error to this court.
It appears from the plea in abatement that no grand jury had been ordered to be summoned for the April, 1906, term of the district court for Madison county; that during the session of the April term an order Avas made by the court, reciting: “It appearing to the court that a grand jury is required, and there having been no grand jury draAvn for service at said term, and there being no grand jury in attendance and it being necessary that a grand jury be called, it is ordered that the sheriff of said county summon from the body of the county Avithout delay 16 good and laAvful men,” etc. The sheriff, in obedience to the order, summoned 16 persons, Avho served as grand jurors, and Avho presented the indictment under Avliich the plaintiff in error AAms tried and convicted. An amended plea in abatement Avas also filed, challenging the indictment on account of certain proceedings had before the grand jury, but, in. vieAV of the conclusion Avliich avo haAre reached as to the first point presented, it is unnecessary to consider the question raised by such amended plea.
We think the interests of justice are more likely to be subserved by draAving a grand jury by lot from a list of names prepared by the county commissioners, and as nearly as may be proportionate from each precinct in the county, than by the selection by one man of the Avhole panel. We do not wish to be understood as holding that vacancies in the panel may not be-filled under the provisions of section 661. The law as to this has not been changed. We have also held repeatedly that the provisions of this section Avith reference to the manner of summoning petit juries are still in force. Barney v. State, 19 Neb. 515; Carrall v. State, 53 Neb. 431; Welsh v. State, 60 Neb. 101; Dinsmore v. State, 61 Neb. 418; Lamb v. State, 69 Neb. 212. The legislation of 1885 did not affect the selection of petit jurors, nor did it interfere with the filling of the panel of either grand jury or' petit juries, under the provisions of section 664.
For these reasons, the judgment of the district court is reversed and the cause remanded.
Eeversed.