107 Neb. 417 | Neb. | 1922
The defendant ivas indicted by a grand jury called by order of the judge of the district court for Kearney county, and placed upon trial and convicted by a jury of the crime of perjury upon three counts of the indictment, and found not guilty as to one count. His motion for a new trial Avas overruled and he was sentenced to a term in the state penitentiary. He brings his case to this court for revieAV upon a petition in error.
The record discloses that the defendant and a nephew,
The question of the validity of the indictment found by this grand jury is the important and controlling question presented for decision by the petition in error. The determination of this question turns upon the power of the district court, under the present statutes, to make an order during a term of court, directing the calling of a
“Grand juries shall not hereafter be draAvn, summoned, or required to attend at the sittings of any court within this state, as provided by laAV, unless the judge thereof shall so direct by writing, under his hand, and filed with the clerk of said court.”
This was the law of the state for 24 years. In 1909 the legislature again provided for the calling of grand juries by the adoption of chapter 171, Laws 1909, as follows:
“Unless otherwise ordered in writing by the court, .or a judge thereof, a grand jury shall be draAvn and summoned in the manner provided by law, on the first day of the first regular term of the - district court of each county in the state.”
“The district courts are hereby vested with power to call grand juries. A grand jury may be called and summoned in the manner provided by law on such day of a regular term of the district court in each year in each county of the state as the district court may direct; and at such other times and upon such notice as the district court may deem necessary.”
In addition to these several acts of the legislature attention is directed to section 8143, Rev. St. 1913. This general statute has been in force Avithout- amendment since Nebraska became a state. Its provisions are:
“.Whenever the proper officers fail to summon a grand or petit jury, or when all the persons summoned as grand or petit jurors do not appear before the district courts, or whenever at any general or special term, or at any period of a term for any cause there is no panel of grand jurors or petit jurors, or the panel is not complete, said court may order the sheriff, deputy sheriff, or coroner to summon without delay good and laAAfful men, having the qualifications of jurors, and each person summoned shall forthwith appear before the court, and if competent, shall serve on the grand jury or petit jury, as the case may be, unless such person may be excused from serving or lawfully challenged.”
It is contended that this statute, so far as it pertained
“That the code of laws embodying the general statutes, the Code of Civil Procedure and the Code of Criminal Procedure of the state of Nebraska, as prepared and reported to the thirty-third general assembly of the legislature of Nebraska by A. M. Post, J. H. Broady, and E. L. King, pursuant to the authority of chapter 166 of the Laws of 1911, be, and the same is hereby adopted, approved and made of force as the Revised Statutes of the state of Nebraska of 1913."
The provisions of section 8143 are self-executing. It is complete within itself, and reference to any other section is not necessary to carry out its provisions. The authority to provide for prosecutions by indictment presented by a grand jury is amply furnished by section-9031, as adopted by the session of 1917. It is idle to insist that, when an emergency arises after the opening' of the term of court which, in the judgment of the court or judge, requires the services of a grand jury, none can be called because it is then impossible to have the members selected by the county board and the names drawn from a box by the sheriff and clerk ten days before the-opening of the term. The law does not require the performance of impossible acts. The same exercise of common sense should be applied to the interpretation of the laws as obtains in other important affairs of life. The
The defendant cites Jones v. State, supra, and Ellis v. State, supra, as decisive of the question at issue. It must be remembered that Jones v. State was- decided shortly after the act of 1885 was adopted, and that the decision in Ellis v. State was announced in 1908, before any of the acts before referred to were passed. The legislation adopted since 1908 has materially changed the situation, and the district courts now have the undoubted power and authority to order the calling of a grand jury at any time during a term of court. The procedure outlined in sections 8137-8139, Rev. St. 1913, providing for the selection of the names by the county hoard, reporting the list of names by the county clerk to the clerk of the court, and the drawing of the jury by the sheriff and the clerk, has and can have no application to either a grand or petit jury ordered during the term of court at which their services are required. As before stated, the law does not require the performance of that which is impossible. When a jury, either a grand jury or a petit jury, is needed, and none has been provided by the usual method, the way to procure a legal and proper jury is made clear by section 8113. This court has held in Carrall v. State, 53 Neb. 131, that the provisions of this statute are “broad enough to cover and include any and all possible reasons for which at any term of a court there may be no panel of jurors present.”
The conclusion is irresistible from what has been said that the district courts of the state are clothed Avith
Counsel for defendant, in their very able and comprehensive brief, recite many alleged errors of the trial court in their effort to secure a reversal of the judgment. Among these is the admission in evidence of the original pleadings filed in the county court, from which the cause was appealed to the district court. As it appears without controversy in the record that the case was tried upon the same pleadings in both courts, no new pleadings being filed in the district court, this assignment is without merit. It was necessary for the prosecution to shoAV the pleadings in the cause where the alleged perjury was committed, in order to establish that the evidence was material to the issues thus made.
Complaint is also made of the admission of the journal entry and judgment in the civil case. There might Avell be complaint made by the defendant of this action, if the offer had not been limited, as disclosed by the record. The offer was: “The state offers the journal entry and judgment for the purpose only of shoAving the ending of that trial and shoAving the date with relation to the time of the indictment, and not for the purpose of showing who judgment Avas rendered against or for whom judgment was rendered; only that the case was ended prior to the return of the indictment.” To which the court added, presumably in the presence of the jury: “I am going to admit the journal entry and judgment not to shoAV the judgment, but for the sole purpose of showing that the case has been terminated. The pleadings I have admitted may go to the jury, the judgment to that extent.” Thus limited, the admission of this record could in no wise prejudice the defendant.
The assault made upon the third and seventh instructions given by the court is not warranted by the record. The third instruction is not one, as charged, intended to cover the whole case, but setting forth the material allegations of each count of the indictment which the state must prove beyond a reasonable doubt before it would be entitled to a conviction. Complaint is particularly made of the fourth subdivision or paragraph of that instruction which set out “that said testimony was material to an issue then and there being tried,” etc. And in connection therewith that the jury were told in the. seventh instruc-. tion that the testimony set forth was material as a matter of law. It is claimed that these instructions are contradictory and confusing. A careful reading of the instructions establishes the fact that this claim is without merit. In the first instance the jury were told what the state must prove to make out its case, and in the second the jury were properly advised that the evidence upon
It is finally urged that the evidence. does not sustain the verdict. It is particularly pointed out that upon the important question of whether Wirth was employed by the defendant, Wirth testified that the defendant' made the contract of employment with him at the home of his mother, and that this being denied by the defendant, and there being no corroboration, in a prosecution for perjury there could be no conviction upon the testimony of a single witness. This would be important if sustained by the record. Counsel have overlooked the testimony of Caroline Wirth, the sister of the defendant, upon this point. True, she was not present at the alleged conversation at the side of the barn, but she testified that when her brother, the defendant, came into the house he talked with her about the same matter, and she testifies that her brother, the defendant, said to her: “He said that he would like to have Charlie work for him. I didn’t want him to at first, but I said it wouldn’t hurt the boy to earn a little money and that was the way it was done.” This was corroborative of the story of young Wirth that his uncle came over to the home that day to employ him, and that after they had their talk by the side of the barn the defendant went into the house and talked to his mother.
It is manifest from a careful examination of this record that there was a sharp conflict in the evidence. Upon some phases of the case the defense produced a greater number of witnesses than the prosecution. The quantum of proof, however, is not determined by counting the witnesses. There was ample evidence, if believed by the jury, to establish beyond a reasonable doubt that the
There appears to be no error of a substantial nature in the record, and the judgment must be, and is,
Affirmed.