9 S.C. 208 | S.C. | 1878
The opinion of the Court was delivered by
The prisoner was indicted for the murder of James J. Gregg at Graniteville, in the County of Aiken, on the
The facts upon which the motion in arrest of judgment is based, as disclosed by the records marked B, are as follows: At the January Term, 1876, of the Court of General Sessions for Aiken County, after the names of the persons summoned as grand jurors for that year had been called, but before they were empaneled, it was brought to the attention of the Circuit Judge that the drawing of the jury “had been fraudulently conducted, and that the jury box had been practiced upon;” whereupon, after investigation, “the Court declared that the listing and drawing of the jurors for the present term was a palpable fraud, and that the persons returned and in attendance as jurors were not lawful jurors, and ordered that they be discharged.” A special term of the Court was then ordered to be held on the fourth Monday in March next after the
The question is, therefore, presented whether such a grand jury was a legal grand jury. We are glad to be relieved from the necessity, in so grave a case as this, of considering the technical question, which has been raised, as to whether a motion to quash the indictment was the proper mode of presenting the objections, because, even conceding that the objection was presented in the proper mode, we are entirely satisfied that the objection cannot be sustained. By Section 1 of Chapter CXXXIX of General Statutes, page 746, it is provided that “ the Clerk of the Court of General Sessions in each County, not less than fifteen days before the commencement of the first term of the Court in each year, shall issue writs of venire Jadas in each County for eighteen grand jurors, to be returned to that Court, who shall be held to serve at each term throughout the year and until another grand jury is empaneled in their stead.” ■ The grand jury, therefore, which found the bill of indictment in this ease was the legal jury, not only for the year of 1875, but also ■until another grand jury was empaneled in their stead ;> not merely until another grand jury was drawn or summoned, but empaneled.
Now, leaving out of view the question as to whether the persons who were supposed to have been drawn as grand jurors for the year 1876 could be said to have been legally either drawn or summoned in face of the determination of the Court that the proceedings of the Board of Jury Commissioners by which such persons were said to have been so drawn “was a palpable fraud,” and it is very certain that such persons were never empaneled as a grand jury, and, therefore, by the express terms of the statute above quoted, the persons who had served as a grand jury during the year 1875 continued to be the legal grand jury of that County, and were so when they found the bill of indictment in this case. Stress is laid upon the fact that at September Term, 1875, the Circuit Judge ordered “ that the grand jury be discharged, and that it be paid,” and it is
The motion for a new trial upon the ground of error in admitting the declarations of the deceased as dying declarations grows out of the following state of facts :
The fatal AvoUnd was inflicted in Graniteville on the 20th April, 1876, and on the same day the deceased made the declarations in question, which were takeh down in writing, signed and sworn to by the deceased, before a Trial Justice, while deceased was on the railroad train which took him to his home in Augusta, Ga., where he died the next day. A very short time before his death, probably about an hour, Dr. Campbell, who was in the train when the Trial Justice read the declarations to the deceased, had a conversation with the deceased, as to which he testified as follows:
“ I asked him, ‘ Mr. Gregg, what do you think of your case?’ He replied, ‘What do you think of it?’ I said, ‘You know, James, gun-shot wounds in the abdomen are very uncertain.’ He then said, ‘ If you say that, I will die certain.’ He referred to my general disposition to have a hopeful view of a ease; my opinion was then that his case was hopeless — bleeding and impossible to tie vessels without reopening his abdomen. I did all I could to keep him from any consciousness of his hopeless condition, but he was conscious. * * * * I asked him this : ‘ Do you recollect a statement made by you before a Magistrate at Graniteville about this difficulty?’ He answered, ‘Yes, I recollect it.’ I asked, ‘Did you*212 intend that as a dying declaration, James?’ He said, ‘Yes, I did.’ I said, ‘ Would you make that statement now as your dying declaration ?’ He answered, ‘ Yes.’ ”
The rule of law as to the admissibility of dying declarations is well established, and, as stated in a recent case, (The State vs. Quick, 15 Rich., 349,) is as follows: “ In order to the proper admission of such declarations it must appear satisfactorily that death was imminent at the time, and that the declarant was so fully aware of this as to be without any hope of life.” Certainly the facts of this case were fully sufficient to make it appear satisfactorily that both of these conditions existed, for death was imminent, if not at the time the declarations were originally made, certainly when they were in effect repeated to Dr. Campbell within an hour before the death actually occurred, and every expression which came from the deceased renders it very manifest, to use his own language, that he made these declarations under the belief that ho would “ die certain ” from the effects of the wound.
It is very clear, therefore, that there was no error on the part of the Circuit Judge in admitting these dying declarations as competent testimony.
The motions in arrest of judgment and for a new trial are refused.