45 Ky. 469 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1846
delivered the opinion of the Court.
It seems that, this action of debt having, as heretofore required bylaw, been placed upon the docket for the first day of the term, was passed over on that day, upon an in] timation that it was to be defended ; and that although several times called up, the issues were not completed until after the regular or standing jury for the term had been discharged. The fourth plea of the defendant was in fact filed on the day after the jury was discharged, and the plaintiff having afterwards on the same day filed his replication tendering issue, the Sheriff was then ordered to summon a jury. The defendant objected to this order. But his objection was overruled, a jury summoned, and a trial had which resulted in a verdict for the plaintiff. The propriety of this proceeding is the principal question now presented. And as it does not appear in what manner the jury was summoned or made up, and there was no objection on this score, the question is whether upon the issue being made up, after the discharge of the regular
Construing the statutes with a view to these considerations, and to the various exigences which must arise in the multifarious business of our Courts, we are of opinion not only, that the summoning of a jury for the trial of a particular case coming up after other jury cases have been disposd of, is not prohibited, but there are several provisions of the statutes which may and should be understood, as providing for such a proceeding. The 11th section of the act of 1836, the first on the subject pro
Neither of the sections referred to authorizes a wanton departure from the regular mode of summoning and selecting a jury, or an evasion of a trial by the regular jury ■of the term. But while the fifth section of the act provides for supplying, from time to time, a new pannel from the list of names furnished by the. Commissioners, the twelfth section provides fora case in which the regular jurors have been exhausted by challenges, or in which, none of them, or not enough to make a jury, being present, the occasion will not admit of the delay of making up from the regular list, a new pannel of jurors who might be at a distance.
Since then, the statute authorizes the formation of a new jury from the regular list, or from the bystanders, as the exigencies of the case may requite, and as the record does not show, and there can be no presumption, that the Court abused a sound discretion in discharging the regular jury before this case was ready for trial, or that its preparation was postponed on the part of the plaintiff, for the purpose of evading a trial by the regular jury, we are of opinion that the defendant’s objection to the order for a jury was properly overruled ; and as the record does not show how the jury was made up, nor that any objection was made on that ground, no question is presented and none is decided in relation to that subject.
It is only necessary to'say further, that as the injunction, (for obtaining which the bond sued on was executed,) was dissolved and the bill dismissed, the obligors were bound by the express terms of the bond and condition to pay the judgmentenjoined, although the complainant in the bill may have been so far justified in resorting to a Court of Equity, as that no damages were decreed against him upon the dissolution of the injunction, and he recovered his costs in the chancery suit.
Wherefore, thejudgment is affirmed.