99 P. 982 | Cal. Ct. App. | 1908
Defendant was convicted of the crime of rape, committed upon a female child under the age of sixteen years. He appeals from the judgment and an order denying his motion for a new trial.
The sheriff, under an order for a special venire, summoned a panel of thirty-five men from which to select a jury to try the case. Defendant, upon the ground specified in section 1064 of the Penal Code, interposed a challenge to the entire panel. Thereupon an examination was had and evidence introduced, from which it appeared the sheriff had formed and expressed an opinion adverse to defendant; whereupon, the court allowed the challenge and discharged the jury. Immediately thereafter, the court made a minute order as follows: "There being no jury in attendance on this court to try this cause, in consequence of allowing said challenge interposed by the defendant, it is ordered that the sheriff summon in the manner provided by law twenty good and lawful men to be and appear in this court on August 13th, 1907, at two o'clock P. M., to act as trial jurors in this cause." Pursuant to said minute entry, an order directed to the sheriff was duly issued out of the clerk's office commanding such sheriff to summon twenty men to appear at 2 o'clock of that day to act as trial jurors in said case. The sheriff upon the same day made return to the said writ certifying the names of twenty men so summoned to act as jurors, nineteen of whom were identical with those theretofore discharged from the panel under defendant's challenge thereto. This return was made and signed by "Y. McFadden, Sheriff. By J. L. Walsh, Under Sheriff." Thereupon defendant interposed a challenge to this entire panel upon the grounds of bias and prejudice of the officer who summoned said jurors, and the fact that such officer had formed and expressed an opinion unfavorable to defendant. Upon the evidence introduced and it being stipulated that the sheriff in person had not summoned any of said jurors, the challenge was denied. A second and third panel *547 of jurors were summoned under like orders and with like return, to both of which defendant interposed a like challenge, and the same was by the court denied. Defendant exhausted all peremptory challenges to which he was entitled.
The court found that the sheriff, by reason of his having formed and expressed an opinion adverse to the defendant, was disqualified under the provisions of section 1064 of the Penal Code from summoning jurors to try the case, notwithstanding which fact it issued an order commanding him to summon a second special venire from which to select a jury to serve in the trial thereof. In so doing, and in denying the defendant's subsequent challenge to the special panel summoned under the order directed to the sheriff and executed and returned by said sheriff, through his deputy or under sheriff, the court erred.
The fact that the evidence fails to show that such deputy was disqualified is immaterial. He is not the officer to whom the writ was issued, and, although the person, he is not the officer, who executed and made return thereof. Such officer was the sheriff whom the court had found to be disqualified to act. The right of the deputy to act was by virtue of the authority which the law vests in the sheriff in whose name he acts. Since the sheriff was without warrant, it was impossible for him to confer such authority upon his deputy. "In all cases not otherwise provided for, each deputy possesses the powers and may perform the duties attached by law to the office of his principal." (Pol. Code, sec. 865.) To justify the action of the deputy in executing the writ is to endow him with powers which his principal did not possess. The act of the deputy is the act of the sheriff. (Hirsch v. Rand,
Moreover, the subject is one of statutory regulation. Whether it be a drawn or special panel, it is the duty of the sheriff in the first instance to execute the order of the court in serving the summons. (Code Civ. Proc., secs. 225, 226;Bruner v. Superior Court,
It has been held in this state that where the court errs in disallowing a challenge to a juror for cause; and such obnoxious juror is by defendant excused under a peremptory challenge, the jury being completed without defendant using all of his peremptory challenges, such error will not be reviewed on appeal because of the fact that the rights of the accused are not prejudiced thereby. (People v. Durrant,
When the court found the sheriff disqualified, it should then have made an order directing the coroner, unless also disqualified, to summon the jury to try the case. Failing to do so constituted error, for which the judgment and order appealed from must be reversed.
We deem it unnecessary to consider other points discussed by counsel.
The judgment and order are reversed.
Allen, P. J., and Taggart, J., concurred.