Section 7283 of the Code of 1907 is in the following language: “If fifteen persons, duly qualified to serve as grand jurors, do not appear, or if the number of those who appear is reduced below fifteen by reason of discharges, or excuses allowed by the court, of by any other cause, the court must cause an order to be entered on the minutes, commanding the sheriff to summon from the qualified citizens of the county twice the number of persons required to complete the grand jury, which order the sheriff must forthwith execute, and in any event the court may in its discretion order a sufficient number of qualified jurors summoned to increase the number of grand jurors to eighteen, and the persons summoned by him are bound to appear presently, and, if necessary, to serve as grand jurors, under the same penalties as if they had been regularly drawn and summoned on the original list of grand jurors for the term; and of .the persons so summoned, if a greater number appear than is necessary to complete the grand jury, the names must be written
It will be noted that under the language of the statute as it existed prior to our present Code, the court was required, when organizmg a grand jury, to meet the
The sections now under consideration were brought' forward into our Codes of 1876, 1886, and 1896, with the construction which this court had placed upon them —and which construction we have above explained— and when the Legislatures adopted said Codes of 1876, 1886, and 1896, they, in effect, wrote into the sections, as a part of them, the decisions of this court construing them. When, therefore, the Legislature, in adopting the present Code, placed in section 7283 the words which we have above italicized, it clearly intended to declare that, in the future, at all times and in any event, a court should have the right within its discretion, if for any valid reason a grand jury was reduced in number below 18, to increase that number to 18. The sections, as they are now worded, require that a grand jury shall, at all times, be composed of at least 15 qualified grand jurors, and that at all times it may, in the discretion of the court, be kept at the number of 18. While in the revision of a statute the addition thereto of new
Section 20 of the jury law (see pamp. Gen. & Loc. Acts, supra, p. 314) provides, among other things, as follows: ”In the event the juries, either grand or petit, after being completed should be reduced from any cause below the number required by law, the court shall, in the manner provided in this act supply all deficiencies in the number of any such jury in the court.” This provision relates solely to the manner in which, in case a grand jury falls below the legal number, 15, the deficiency in the grand jury shall be supplied. It does not preclude the court, if the number falls below 18, from supplying the deficiency in the manner prescribed by the act.
Section 21 of said jury law (pamp. Gen. & Loc. Acts, supra, p. 314) provides, among other things, that “whenever any judge of a court, or of a division of a court, needing jurors, grand or petit, requires it, he shall procure the jury box and the key thereto and shall, as soon as he has drawn therefrom the jurors required at that time have the key and box delivered to any other judge,” etc. -This quoted provision of the jury law, in
Taking into consideration the history of sections 7282 and 7283 of the Code, and the unbroken line of decisions which definitely fixed their meaning before the addition of the new words to section 7283 of the Code, taking into consideration the history of our new jury law, in the light of which these sections must now be read, taking into consideration the evident purpose of our legislators in framing our new jury law to so hedge the selection of our juries, both grand and petit, as to prevent the possibility of fraud or partiality in their selection and impanelment, and, at the same time, the equally evident purpose of the Legislature that the act should be liberally construed in favor of the validity of juries, grand and petit, organized in compliance with the forms provided by the act, taking into consideration the fact that, as was pointed out in Patterson’s Case, supra, the grand jury, under the terms of the new jury law, for the ordinary court having juries, must be organized with 18 jurors, we are constrained to hold that the purpose of the Legislature in adding the new words to the statute is clear, and that the legislative purpose in adding the new words will be defeated unless the statute is held to be as we have above' construed it. This is made
There is not a word in said case of Patterson v. State, supra, from which a contrary holding can be inferred. The opinions of the Court of Appeals in Yeager v. State, 8 Ala. App. 374, 62 South. 318, and in Hafley v. State, 8 Ala. App. 378, 62 South. 319, are, however, not in accordance with the above views. The Court of Appeals simply followed our former decisions, and we doubt if the italicized changes in section 7283 of the Code were called to the attention of that court.
Mandamus denied.