16 S.E. 409 | N.C. | 1892
The facts are stated in the opinion. The indictment was drawn for an affray against the defendant and one Jones. On the back of the bill the names of four witnesses are marked as sworn and examined. Two of these were the defendant and said Jones. Presumably, they were sent to be examined as witnesses against each other, as is not unusual on a trial before the petit jury. The grand jury returned a true bill as to the defendant, but ignored the bill as to Jones. The defendant thereupon (723) moved to quash, because "the back of the bill showed that the defendant was a witness against himself before the grand jury." This motion being denied, a motion on the same ground was renewed in arrest of judgment.
There was no error in refusing these motions. There being two defendants in the bill, there was no presumption that the defendant was examined against himself. If there was ground for such allegation, it was competent to have summoned the foreman or any other member of the grand jury to show the fact, and the bill should of course have been quashed if this had been true. There is no presumption, either of law or fact, that the grand jury were so ignorant as to examine a defendant as a witness against himself, or that the defendant would answer such question. The grand jurors were doubtless men of fair intelligence, many of whom had often seen trials for affrays before the petit jury, and who were aware that one defendant could be examined against the other, though not against himself. The defendant could have proved it by his own testimony, as well as by that of a member of the grand jury, if he had in truth been examined against himself. He did not do this, and it certainly does not appear "by the back of the bill" that he was so examined.
The practice of sending defendants in indictments for affrays before *462
the grand jury as witnesses against each other, is not to be commended, since the parties have not counsel present to prevent their testifying against themselves. Yet there is nothing which renders incompetent as evidence before that body any evidence which is permissible before the petit jury. We can do no more than recommend caution in its use. The defendant relies upon a dictum in S. v. Krider,
There is also alleged, as ground for the motion, that is does not appear that the witness was sent before the grand jury by the solicitor. It is not necessary that it should so appear. Even the express requirement that the foreman shall mark on the indictment the names of the witnesses sworn and sent is held merely directory, and the omission to observe is not ground to quash the indictment. S. v. Hines,
This is a proper case in which again to call the attention of appellants to the want of care which is often displayed in making up transcripts for this Court, especially in criminal cases. An appellant does not do his duty by simply taking an appeal and leaving it to the clerk to send up what he may deem necessary. Wilson v. Seagle,
NO ERROR.
Cited: Hemphill v. Morrison,