Tbis is an indictment for an assault upon Zanie Coates, with intent to commit rape. Said Zanie and Fronie C'oates, tbe wife of defendant, were sworn and examined as witnesses before a grand jury. Tbe defendant moved to quasb because bis wife was examined before tbe grand jury. Motion denied and defendant excepted. Upon tbe trial tbe wife was not- examined as a witness. Verdict of guilty. Motion- in arrest of judgment upon same ground as in motion to quasb. Motion denied and defendant again excepted. Tbis is tbe only point presented.
Tbe law is uniformly be-ld by many decisions, and not one has been found to tbe contrary, as follows: When an indict-' ment is found upon testimony, all of which is incompetent, or of witnesses, all of whom were disqualified, tbe bill will be quashed; but when some of tbe testimony, or some of tbe witnesses before tbe grand jury, were incompetent, tbe Court will not go into the barren inquiry bow far such testimony or such *702 witnesses contributed to finding th© bill, which- is merely a charge, but will admit tire competent witnesses or testimony on the trial before the petit jury, and, if sufficient to satisfy the jury beyond a reasonable doubt of the prisoner’s guilt, the judgment will not be arrested, for such verdict establishes in the most conclusive mode that the incompetent evidence was mere surplusage in> making out a prima fade case before the grand jury, and works no prejudice to the prisoner.
In
State v. Tucker,
In
State v. Shreve,
Thompson & Merriam on Juries, Sec. 642, notes 1, 2 and 3, says: “An indictment should not be held bad because the grand jury heard improper evidence;” citing, in addition to the cases above cited by Dr. Wharton,
Blumer v. State,
3 Snead, 66;
People v. Strong,
1 Abb. Pr. (N. S.), 244;
Hope v. People,
In 1 Bishop. New Cr. Proc., Sec. 872 (5), “It will not sus. tain a plea in abatement that one of several witnesses (before the grand jury), was incompetent.” There are other authorities, but all seem to be to the same effect, and this was the common law. Rex v. Marsh, 6 Adolphus & Ellis, 236. This uniform ruling is recognized by our own Courts as settled.
In
State v. Fellows,
In
State v. Krider,
In
State v. Knapp,
The uniform practice as established by the authorities is that the Court will not inquire into the proceedings had before the grand jury, and will only quash when all the witnesses were incompetent. This is a totally different matter from the incompetency of a grand juror.
No Error.
