16 Miss. 587 | Miss. Ct. App. | 1847
delivered the opinion of the court.
The plaintiff in error was indicted for an assault, committed with intent to rob, and found guilty on the first and third counts, and not guilty on the second and fourth. The case is brought up on a writ of error, and a number of errors are now assigned for reversing the judgment. We shall proceed to consider of the sufficiency of such as seem to require to be noticed.
1st. It is said that the record does not show that the grand jury were charged. It is the duty of the circuit courts to charge the grand jury when impanelled, in regard to the nature of the duty which they are required to perform, and- the motives which should govern them in the discharge of that duty, but the charge so given is not to be placed upon the record, nor can
2d. The second error assigned is, that it does not appear that the accused ever pleaded to the indictment. The law undoubtedly is that the defendant must plead in person. In this instance there was a plea by attorney, but that was a nullity. But there may be some doubt whether he did not plead at the subsequent term when he was tried. The record contains an entry in these words : “ This day came the plaintiff, by Fullon E. Anderson, Esq., district attorney, and the defendant in his own proper person, and the said defendant having been arraigned at the last term" of this court, pleaded not guilty, and put himself upon the country, and the district attorney likewise.” It would seem quite probable that this entry has reference to the plea entered at the former term. The true sense is rather obscure for want of punctuation. But it does appear from this entry, that the defendant had been arraigned at the previous term. By looking at the record of the previous term, no arraignment is mentioned. It was incompetent for the clerk at a subsequent term, to make any entry of what had transpired at the preceding term. The consequence is, that it does not legally appear that the accused ever was arraigned, which was error. 2 Hale’s Pleas of the Crown, 217. The regular time for pleading is when the prisoner is arraigned ; it is the more probable, therefore, that the plea by attorney, which was doubtless put in at that time, is the plea referred to in the entry, quoted as having been pleaded at a former term.
3d. It is thirdly assigned that seven of the jurors were tendered to the prisoner and elected, and permitted to disperse until next day without having been sworn, and that they were not
It is also assigned as error, that the court refused to allow the accused to file three pleas in abatement, the first of which avers that the grand jurors were not sworn according to law; the second, that they were not drawn according to law; and the third, that the foreman was not sworn as such. It is said these pleas were tendered before the prisoner pleaded not guilty. We have already seen that it is doubtful whether the accused ever did plead in person to the indictment. If he did not, these pleas were offered in time, but if he had previously pleaded not guilty, of course he could not afterwards plead in abatement. We are uninformed as to the precise ground on which these pleas were rejected. Before us the question has been argued as though the pleas were rejected because no exception can be taken to the competency of the grand jury by plea in abatement. The law requires that grand jurors shall possess certain quali
It is not deemed necessary that we should notice particularly the instructions given or refused, as the other points dispose of the case, and the same difficulties may not again arise.
Judgment reversed, and cause remanded for a new trial.