8 Ga. 173 | Ga. | 1850
By the Court.
delivering the opinion.
The error assigned to the decision of the presiding Judge of the Court below is, the refusal to sanction a certiorari, presented
There are several grounds stated in the petition for certiorari, which appear to be sustained, by the bill of exceptions signed by the Justices of the Inferior Court.
It appears that a Jury was regularly drawn and summoned for the trial of the slave, for the offence of murder. The 8th section of the Act of 1811, required the Justices of the Inferior Court to draw a Jury for the trial of slaves, at their regular terms. Prince, 790. The Act of 1811 was amended by the Act of 1816, which authorizes a majority of the Justices of the Inferior Court forthwith to draw a Jury, after being notified of the commitment of a slave charged with a capital offence, of not more than thirty-six, nor less than twenty-six Jurors. Prince, 792.
According to that part of the 8th section of the Act of 1811, which was not repealed by the Act of 1816, twenty-four of the Jurors so drawn and summoned, according to the Act of 1816, are to be impannelled for the trial of such slave. The 9th section of the Act of 1811 declares, that the owner or manager of the slave, shall haye the right of challenging seven of said number, (that is, of the twenty-four,) and the said Court five on the part of the State, and the remaining twelve shall proceed to the trial of such slave. Prince, 791.
The construction which we give to the Act of 1816 is, that it was not intended to alter the number, twenty-four, which was to constitute the panel out of which the Jury were to be selected for the trial of the slave, as provided by the 8th section of the Act of 1811. The Act of 1816 requires not less than twenty-six Jurors to be drawn and summoned — twenty-four of whom will constitute a legal panel for the trial of the slave.
It appears a Jury had been regularly drawn and summoned for the trial of the slave Judge, and were discharged by the Court without any cause, so far as the record discloses. Without some good and legal cause shown, the slave was entitled, under the law, to have been tried by a Jury, to be selected out of the twentyfpqr impannelled out of the twenty-six so regularly drawn and
The fourth ground of error alleged in the certiorari is, that after the evidence was closed on the part of the prosecution, and the cause was submitted to the Jury on both sides, the counsel for the prisoner then asked the Court to instruct the Jury, that they must find the prisoner not guilty, on the gx-ound that the proceedings had befox-e the committing Magistrates had not been given in evidence to the Jury, nor any of them, which instruction the Court refused to give, but, on motion of the counsel for the prosecution, the Court allowed the warrant and all the other preliminary proceedings set forth in the indictment, to be read in evidence to the Jury.
Let the judgment of the Court below be reversed.