The defendant moved to set aside the indictment for the reason that certain exhibits which were before the grand jury were not returned with the indictment and filed by the clerk of the court. It is undisputed that the county auditor, lods, identified the same exhibits on the trial, and that they were introduced in evidence. Code, section 5258, among other things, provides that, “ when an indictment is found, all minutes and exhibits relating thereto shall be returned therewith and filed by the clerk of the court, and attached to the indictment.” The provision requiring the return and filing of all exhibits was first enacted in 1897 as a part o’f said section of the Code, and, so far as we are advised, the question now under consideration has not before been considered or determined by us. Prior to its enactment we held in State v. Mullenhoff, 74 Iowa, 271, that it was not necessary to set out documentary evidence, or note it, in the minutes of the evidence returned with the indictment. In State v. Boomer, 103 Iowa, 106, decided in October, 1897, we followed the rule announced'in the Mullenhoff case, saying, it is not necessary to return with the indictment documentary evidence which was before the grand jury. The Boomer case was tried below before section 5258 became a part of the law, although it was decided in this court thereafter; and it is not an authority on the precise question involved in this appeal. The requirement that all exhibits be returned with the indictment and filed by the clerk was manifestly intended to cure the defect in the statute theretofore existing, and to meet the decision in the Mullenhoff case. But, if this be true, it does not necessarily follow that the motion to set aside the indictment should have been sustained. Aside from
Further objection is based on the court’s refusal to set aside the indictment because the minutes of the testimony of one of the witnesses before the grand jury was not signed by him. What we have already said relative to the statutory grounds for setting aside an indictment applies to this contention for it is not contended that the minutes of his testimony, returned and filed are not correct. In addition to this, however, we think the requirement that the minutes be signed by the witness directory only. The case of State v. Hurd, 101 Iowa, 391, is analogous to this on the point. 'There the minutes of the testimony of the witnesses before the grand jury were taken by the clerk of that body, and then taken and copied by a stenographer and typewriter in the office of the county attorney and the copy made by her was returned with the indictment. This was made a ground of the motion to quash the indictment and we held that it was not good, saying: “ It is not pretended but that the minutes returned are correct. They were before the grand jury, recognized by it as the minutes of the evidence taken before it and by it returned into court with the indictment. We know of nothing in the letter or spirit of the law to make it necessary for the grand jury to return the minutes of the evidence in the handwriting of the clerk. The important thing is that they shall be the same as those written by him. The irregularity, if it be one, is without
Complaint is made of other rulings on the admission of evidence, but we find nothing further demanding more specific attention.
The instructions as a whole clearly state the law governing the case, and in the twenty-five errors assigned we find no cause for reversing the case. It is therefore affirmed.
