State v. Matthews

9 Port. 370 | Ala. | 1839

GÓLDTHWAITE, J.

Questions very similar to this, have several times been referred to this court for determination, but each one has hitherto been decided on its peculiar features, and no general rule, applicable to all cases, has been laid down.

In the case of the State vs. Collier, (2 Stewart, 388,) the prisoner’s counsel, at the trial, objected to the reading of any of the papers transmitted from Jackson county, (from which the venue was changed.) on the ground, that they were not properly in court. The clerk of the Jackson Circuit court, stated on oath, that three days before the trial commenced, he came to Huntsville, from Jackson county, bringing with him the original papers and transcript, with the certificate thereon, all open and unsealed; that on his arrival in Huntsville, he handed them over to the solicitor unsealed, who kept them till the morning of the trial, when, on their being returned to him, he, in Huntsville, and not in Jackson county, sealed them up and and handed them to the clerk of Madison Circuit court. The Supreme court determined, that the papers were properly before the Circuit court, notwithstanding the certificate was actually made out of Jackson county.

In the case of the State vs. Williams, (3 Stewart, 454,) one of the errors relied on was, that no proof was offered *373to show the manner wherein the indictment on which it was proposed to try the prisoner, came into the Circuit court of Autauga county, to which the venue had been changed. The learned judge who delivered the opinion of this court, as to that objection, remarks: “As to the manner in which the indictment was conveyed into the office of-the Circuit court of Autauga, it must be presumed to have been in conformity with the order which transferred the case from the one eonrt to the other. The order required, that the clerk of the Circuit court of Montgomery county, should safely transmit lo the clerk of the Circuit court of Autauga county, the indictment, and all original papers in the case, together with a certified copy of all orders and other proceedings which have been had in the case. This certified copy of the proceedings, is at the next term of the Circuit court, found in the possession, and among the official papers of the clerk of that court, and the indictment is filed with them; the case is twice continued by the defendant afterward ; he certainly cannot, at so latea period, and under these circumstances, be heard to say that the indictment does not appear to have come regularly into that court.”

In the case of the State vs. Greenwood, (5 Porter, 474,) the objection urged was, that the indictment should have been copied upon the records of the court where it was found. The court, in answer, remark: “All the papers relating to the cause, including the indictment, were in fieri, when the order for change of venue was made; and asit did not become a record until after enrolment, the objection could as' well be made in the court where the *374indictment was found, as elsewhere. The papers are, by law, entrusted to the custody of the clerk, and the certificate which he has made in this cause, that the indictment has been subjoined to the transcript, imports as absolute verity, as would bis production of it, on trial in the court where it was found. In either case, were it not the true indictment, the matter might be disputed in a proper mode.”

It is manifest, that the two former cases go much further than the present, to sustain the proceedings against the prisoner, but it is conceived that the true foundation on which all these must rest, independent of the peculiar features appertaining to each of them, is this — That no enquiry, such as was entered into, was proper, after the case was submitted to a jury : a defect in, or the want of a proper certificate, would be no good cause of acquittal: so, also, if the prisoner was tried on a copy, instead of the original indictment. All enquiries into the genuineness of the records of the court, are improper, after the case is submitted, and can only have a tendency to withdraw the consideration of the jury from the true matters in issue. It is evident, that an enquiry into the authenticity of a paper purporting to contain a statement of the charge, would have no tendency to prove the guilt or innocence of the prisoner, and is consequently wholly immaterial, when the trial is in progress. Neither is it conceived that the omission of the clerk to forward the original indictment, in conformity with the rule of court, could so operate as to produce an acquittal of the defendant. It might, and doubtless would be irregular, to force a trial in the absence of the indictment, or if a copy, in*375stead of the original, was read to the jury, and the fact was unknown to the prisoner before the trial, it might be a reason why a new trial should be awarded, though even to this extent, the doctrine may be considered as questionable, and worthy of the closest examination.

For the reasons stated, we are of the opinion, that the questions preserited could not properly arise on the trial, and therefore, no error was committed, as the enquiry, at that time, was wholly immaterial. We are further of bpinion, that if the objection had been taken before the trial, and in order to prevent it, this would not have availed the prisoner, as the indictment was transmitted enclosed in the same envelope, toith the certificate of the propel* clerk. This was a substantial compliance with the rule of court. If the indictment had never been, in point of fact, sealed up, but was transmitted in any other way, it would not lose its character as a record, and could be received by the court to which the venue was changed, on evidence similar to that shown in this case; but as before remarked, the enquiry would be presented to the court, and not to the jury.

Let it be certified, that there is no error in the decision of the court, on the point referred.