60 S.E. 502 | N.C. | 1908
After stating the facts: The defendants upon their arraignment, (606) and before pleading, moved to quash the indictment, and supported their motion by affidavits. This was substantially a plea in abatement, which is the proper and regular method of attacking the bill upon the ground stated in the record. S. v. Haywood,
This is an exception to the general and almost universal rule that the provisions of the law for drawing and summoning jurors are directory. *444
(607) Here, there was what has been called a positive disqualification of one of the jurors; indeed, William McLawhorn was not and could not be a grand juror, and the grand jury was, for that reason, illegally impaneled to serve as the accusing body at that court. In S. v. Seaborn, 15 N.C. at p. 309, Chief Justice Ruffin refers to the subject thus: "It is insisted that the grand jury must be composed only of those summoned, and that if one be impaneled on it by a different name from all those summoned, he must be taken to be a different person, and the bill is not well found. This objection, if founded in fact and taken in due season, would, in the Superior Court, have been unanswerable, and had it then been overruled it would have been error." It is true that he was there speaking for himself, but a dictum emanating from him is of itself entitled to the greatest consideration and is at least very persuasive authority, but it has more recently been approved and adopted as a correct statement of the law. S. v. Haywood supra; S. v. Daniels, supra;S. v. Griffice,
For the reason we have given, the bill was not well found and was properly quashed by the court.
No error.
(608)