Tbe evidence of tbe prosecuting witness, Robert Hudson, which tbe jury has accepted, is sufficient to sustain a conviction of tbe 'defendants, and while there is much evidence tending to prove tbe innocence of tbe defendants, and particularly of tbe defendant Harvey Brewer, it is not within our province to pass on tbe credibility of tbe testimony.
We can only consider tbe errors of law alleged to have been committed, and upon a review of tbe record we find nothing to justify a reversal of tbe judgment.
*717
The motion to quash the indictment, made after the plea of not guilty had been entered, because a witness for the State was a member of the-grand jury which found the bill, was addressed to the discretion of the court, and the ruling thereon is not reviewable.
S. v. Burnett,
The court might also have declined to consider the motion because the .defect did not appear on the face of the record, and had to be established by extraneous evidence, the remedy in such case being by plea in abatement, and not by motion to quash.
We are also less inclined to attach importance to the objection of the defendants, because it appears that the witness did not participate in the deliberations of the grand jury when the bill was considered, and did' not vote on finding the bill, thus excluding all idea that the defendants: have been prejudiced.
In
S. v.
Wilcox,
Also in
S. v. Sharp,
In Krause v. State (Neb.), Ann. Cases, 1912 B, 736, the Court goes, further, holding that: “It is not a good plea in abatement to an indictment that it was returned by a grand jury of which the complaining-witness was a member.”
The other exceptions, eighteen in number, relate to evidence, except' two that are formal.
They present no new question, and there can be no practical benefit, in discussing them seriatim.
We have considered them with the care and diligence the importance of the case demands, and see no sufficient reason for setting aside the verdict.
No error.
