39 Cal. 370 | Cal. | 1870
delivered the opinion of the Court, Temple, J., concurring:
After an issue of fact is joined in a criminal case, every step thereafter taken for the purpose of a determination of that issue, in the Court where the cause is pending, up to and including the verdict upon such issue, must be regarded as a step or proceeding -“arising during the course of the trial,” within the- meaning of Section 440 of our Criminal Practice Act; hence, any substantial error of the Court upon any matter or question intervening between the joining of issue of fact and the rendition of a verdict thereon, and any misconduct of a juror, who participates in the verdict, from the time he is called in the case and sworn and examined on his voire dire up to the final act of rendering the verdict) is proper ground for a motion for a new trial under said section, and on appeal from an order of the Court denying or granting such motion, based upon such grounds, the appellate Court is confined to a review of the proceedings within these limits.
Objections which go to the form or sufficiency of the indictment, or to the jurisdiction of the tribunal presenting
Errors and irregularities in the proceedings, resulting in the presentation of the indictment^—when the party against whom the same is presented had not, prior to the submission of the charge contained therein to the Grand Jury, been held to answer—any legal ground of challenge to the panel, or to .an individual grand juror, can only be made available to defendant before plea by motion to set aside the indictment.
The action of the Court upon the demurrer, and upon the motion, to set aside the indictment, can only be reviewed in the appellate Court on appeal from the final judgment.
Objections which may be presented by demurrer before plea, may further be made available after verdict by motion in arrest of judgment; and the action of the Court on this motion can only be reviewed on appeal from the judgment.
Thus, it will be seen, that a motion for a new trial presupposes a sufficient valid indictment, upon which, with sufficient legal evidence in support of its allegations, a legal verdict and a valid, binding judgment may be pronounced. The statute does not contemplate or authorize a re-trial upon an insufficient or invalid indictment; hence, a motion for a new trial cannot properly be based upon any objection .to the sufficiency or validity of the indictment, or any errors or irregularities occurring in the proceedings before issue of fact joined by plea to a good and sufficient indictment, the object and purpose of a re-trial being simply to enable the trial Court to avoid the errors and irregularities claimed to have. occurred on the former trial to the prejudice of the rights secured to the defendant. .
This is an appeal by the people from an order granting the defendant, on his motion, a new trial.
The record brings up the entire prodeedings, including the motion of defendant to set aside the indictment, with the grounds thereof, together with the affidavits in support of such motion, which motion was overruled; and this Court, by stipulation of the, .parties, is solicited to review the entire proceedings, not only upon the appeal from the order grant
In reviewing the order of the Court granting to respondent a new trial, we have carefully examined the record, and find no adequate support for either his first, second, third, fourth or fifth ground of motion. We discover no error in the rulings of the Court, to which defendant excepted, by which defendant could have been prejudiced, nor do we discover any error prejudicial to defendant in the instructions given to the jury, or in refusing to give instructions asked for by defendant. Defendant’s sixth, seventh and ninth grounds are not proper grounds on which to base a motion for a new trial. But Ave are not prepared to say that the affidavits presented by defendant in support of his eighth ground of motion were insufficient to sustain the charge of misconduct of the trial juror, Henry Beed.
It appears by the affidavit of Samuel Kearney, that said juror, Beed, after he had been called and interrogated on
The record does not disclose the mode adopted by the Court in impanelling the jury; but from what does appear it is, we think, sufficiently manifest that as the jurors were called they were separately examined as to their qualifications, and either accepted or rejected, and this course was continued until twelve acceptable jurors had been secured, when the final oath, as jurors, was administered to all at once; that during the process of obtaining the requisite number of trial jurors, and after some had been examined on their voire dire and accepted, and before the jury was full, the Court adjourned till the next day, allowing the jurors who had been selected to separate; presumptively with the admonition of the Court, required by Section 394 of the Criminal Practice Act, and with the further and additional admonition, which is very generally and properly given, that they should not listen to conversations between other persons in reference to the case upon which they have been called and selected or sworn as jurors, and that, if other persons should commence a conversation in their presence in reference to the case, the juror should immediately retire
A defendant on trial for felony “is entitled to all the protection which the statute intends to secure against any interference with the action of the jury, whether arising from the hostility of personal enemies or popular prejudiceand when it is shown, either that a juror has engaged in a conversation with others on the subject of the charge upon which he is to pass, or has voluntarily listened to the remarks .of others addressed to himself or to third parties upon matters connected with the charge upon which, as a juror, he has been called upon to pass, then such misconduct is prima facie established as to authorize the Court for that reason to set aside the verdict. (People v. Brannigan, 21 Cal. 340.) “ The evil to be guarded against is improper influence, and when an exposure to such influence is shown, and it is not shown that it failed of effect, then the presumption is against the purity of the verdict.” (McCann v. The State, 9 Sm. & Mar. 468; State v. Prescott, 7 N. H. 288.)
In the present case there seems to have been no effort on the part of the prosecution to rebut the presumption of improper influences exerted upon the juror, Reed, after he had been called, sworn on his voire dire, examined and accepted as a juror, resulting from his own misconduct in attending and remaining at a public meeting, where the charge contained in the indictment against the defendant
This disposes of the appeal at present before us; but inasmuch as we are requested to indicate an opinion upon the order of the Court below in overruling defendant’s motion to set aside the indictment, urged upon grounds which go to the validity thereof as against defendant, we proceed to a brief examination of the question.
. .The defendant had not been held to answer prior to the presentation of the indictment against him. By Section 276 of the Criminal Practice Act,. “when the defendant had not been held to answer before the finding of the indictment, he may move to set it aside on any ground which would have been a good ground of challenge either to the panel or to any individual grand juror.” This motion must be made on arraignmént, before demurrer or plea.to the indictment, which seems to have been done in this case. •
The only ground stated in defendant’s motion, available to him under the statute, is his- alleged ground of challenge to individual grand jurors, whom he names in his motion, to the number of fourteen, and alleges that each of the persons so named were, at the time they were impanelled as grand jurors, incompetent to act as grand jurors in this case, for the reason that they and each of them 'had at that time formed and expressed a decided opinion that the defendant was guilty of the charge contained in the indictment, and for which reason he challenges each of said grand jurors, and asked to be permitted to prove the ground of his said challenge, and that the said indictment against him be set aside, which was denied by the Court. It does not affirmatively appear from the record whether or not the ground of challenge to these individual grand jurors, or either of them, was investigated or directly passed upon by the Court. If the Court denied the motion of defendant without giving him an opportunity to substantiate his ground of challenge before the Court, either by an examination" of the challenged jurors individually, or .by other competent
It was the defendant’s right, on his motion to set aside, to have an investigation before the Court of his ground of challenge of the jurors named, and each of them; and the duty of the Court to afford every facility, by granting process to secure the presence for examination of each of the jurors challenged, and other witnesses, if necessary, and to have a ruling of the Court upon each individual challenge investigated.
From the above intimations, the District Attorney can determine whether a new trial is desirable upon the present indictment.
Order granting new trial affirmed, and cause remanded.
By Rhodes, C. J.:
I concur in the judgment, but express no opinion upon any of the points which are not involved in the motion for a new trial, because the opinion would be a mere obiter dictum.
delivered the following concurring opinion :
I concur in affirming the order of the County Court granting a new trial, not only on the grounds stated by Mr. Justice Sprague, but also on the additional ground that the Court misdirected the jury to the prejudice of the defendant. The Act of May 4, 1852 (Stats. 1852, p. 64), under which the defendant was indicted, was intended, as its title imports, to prevent the officers of the State, county, city or town governments from “dealing in” certain securities or
Wallace,. J., expressed no opinion.