2 La. Ann. 744 | La. | 1847
The judgment of the court was pronounced by
To an indictment preferred against the defendant he filed a special plea, setting forth several grounds in avoidance of the proceedings, none of which were sustained. He was subsequently tried, convicted, and sentenced, and from the judgment of the lower court has appealed.
I. The original entry on the minutes of the court makes no mention of the swearing of the grand-jury, but merely sets forth-the names of the jurors, and that they were selected by the sheriff and clerk under the direction of the court, to serve during the months of November and December. A fevf days after this entry was made, the grand-jury returned the bill preferred against the present defendant, which commences: “ The grand jurors of the State of Louisiana, duly empannelled and sworn, &e.” The defendant then made tlie objection to the indictment now urged,, that the grand jurors by whom it was preferred were not duly empannelled and sworn.- The clerk, thereupon, made an affidavit that the grand jurors had been sworn according‘to law, and that the failure to make the entry was an inadvertent omission of his own ; and asked- permission of the court so to amend the minutes as to make the entry accord with the fact. The judge permitted the amendment to be made, and we think correctly. The power is inherent in courts to direct the correction of the minutes of their proceedings, so as to make the entries conform to the truth, whenever errors or omissions are satisfactorily shown; and in criminal proceedings it is well settled, that all ministerial acts are amendable at any time. 1 Chitty’s Criminal Pleading, 335, 336. 4 East. Rep. 173. In the present instance it appears upon the face of the indictment that the jurors by whom it was found were duly empannelled and sworn, and the oath of the clerk further confirms the fact. It is no objection to the amendment, that it was intended to supply an omission which occurred while a different judge presided.
II. The seal of the court was necessary to the order for selecting and summoning the jury, if such an order issued. The statutes of 1831 and 1833, (B. and C.’s Dig. 525-6,) directs that the clerk and sheriff, or deputy sheriff, shall, at stated periods, draw the requisite number of jurors, who are to be summoned. No writ from the court, for the performance of these duties, is required, and none such appears to have issued. 2 Rob. 268.
III. No rule of criminal pleading requires that the facts stated in the fourth should be set forth in the indictment. The objection seems to be founded upon the recital of facts essential to the validity of a caption. The caption forms no part of the indictment, and the necessity for that instrument cannot arise while the prosecution is pending in the court in which the bill is preferred. 1 Chitty’s Crim. Pleading, 326. State v. Kennedy, 8 Robinson, 990.
IV. The foreman of the grand-jury signed his name “Geo. W. West,” to the finding endorsed on the indictment. We are aware of no rule which requires the foreman to sign his name at full length to a finding, and have been referred to no authority in support of the position assumed by the defendant’s counsel. Judgment affirmed,
Eustis, C. J. was absent when the judgmont became final by the refusal of a rohoaring, though present when the opinion was first road.