This is an original application for writ of habeas corpus. Relators were convicted of a felony.
The judgments of conviction are assailed upon the ground that the indictment was not found by a legal grand jury. Prior to March 9, 1921, Presidio and Brewster Counties were in the Sixty-third Judicial District, and at that time were transferred to the Eighty-third Judicial District. See Acts of the Thirty-fifth Legislature, p. 126 Acts .of the Thirty-seventh Legislature, p. 31. .At the January term of the District Court of Presidio County the Judge .of the •Sixty-third Judicial District purposely refrained from appointing jury commissioners to make provision for a grand jury at the July term of court. Before the beginning of the July- term and after March 9th, the District Judge of the Eighty-third Judicial. District called a special term of the District Court of Pre-sidio County, at which term jury commissioners were appointed and a grand jury drawn for the July term, .which grand jury was organized and returned the indictments against the relators. The venue of their cases was transferred, upon motion of the trial judge, to Brewster County.
Article 384 of the Code of Crim. Proc. reads thus: “The district judge shall, at each term of the district court, appoint three persons to perform the duties of jury commissioners.”
Article 389 provides that the jury commissioners shall select persons to be summoned as grand jurors for the next term of court, and •Article 399 provides that -if, for any cause, there is a failure to select a grand jury as directed in the articles mentioned, the District Court shall, upon the first day of its organization, direct a writ to be issued to the sheriff commanding him to summon the grand jurors. The relators have not given complete data concerning the matter, but from their application and from the statutes, we gather the foregoing to be a correct statement.
Relators contend that the conviction is rendered void by reason of the alleged fact that the grand jury which found the indictments was not organized according to law, and refer to the case of Woolen v. State, reported in
“The judge of the district in which a counly may be situated, in which it is deemed advisable by such judge that a special' term of the courts should be held, may convene such special term of the courts at any time which may be fixed by him. The said judge may appoint jury commissioners, who may select and draw grand and petit jurors in accordance with the law; said jurors may be summoned to appear before said courts at such time as may be designated by the judge thereof; provided, that, in the discretion of the judge, a grand jury need not be drawn or impaneled.” (Art. 94.)
“The grand jury selected, as provided for in the preceding section, shall be duly impaneled and proceed to the discharge of its duties as at a regular term of the court.” (Art. 95.)
There is a manifest difference in the status of this' case and the procedure followed in Woolen’s case,
supra.
There was no statute followed, but the only one controlling was disregarded. Even under the facts in that case, we are aware of no precedent which would have made the judgment subject to collateral attack. To make the act of the grand jury in finding the indictment amenable to collateral attack by writ of
habeas corpus,
the organization of the grand jury must have been void and not voidable merely. Ogle v. State,
The writ is denied. •
Writ denied.
