176 A. 683 | N.J. | 1935
James Profita, Frank Failla, John Cammariato and Harry Kuller were convicted by a jury in the Passaic Quarter Sessions of the crime of conspiracy. They went by strict writ of error and bill of exceptions to the Supreme Court, and from the judgment of affirmance therein now appeal to us.
They first present that there was no plea or issue to be determined by the jury, that consequently each conviction was a nullity and that the trial court erred in refusing to *336 arrest judgment when so moved. The point is technical. Outside of its technicality it has no merit.
The defendants had made their pleas of not guilty. As the trial was about to begin their counsel sought, and by grace of the court were permitted, to make designated motions in their behalf. The motions should have been made before the taking of the pleas, and to relieve the defendants of the embarrassment in which they found themselves they were allowed to withdraw their pleas for the precise and limited purpose of making those motions. The motions were heard and denied. The defendants then went to their trial in all ways as on the issue which they themselves had framed. Had they made contemporaneous objection, the only result would have been a formal reinstatement of the pleas. It is a just inference that the defendants, the prosecution and the court considered the overruling of the motions as such a reinstatement.People v. Afton (Ill.), 101 N.E. Rep. 557; People v.Brodner,
The decisions of the Supreme Court in State v. Brennan,
We conclude that the point sets forth no error. This for two reasons: First, the original pleas were lifted for a specific purpose and automatically fell back into place when that purpose was served, thus making an issue of guilt or innocence; and second, the defendants, having gone to their trial in apparent reliance upon pleas theretofore entered, must be held to have waived the formality of a reinstatement.
It is next said that the trial court erred in refusing to quash the indictment. The faults laid against the indictment are that it is duplicitous; is vague, uncertain, indefinite and fails to set forth a crime in the manner contemplated by law; does not divide its subject-matter into counts; involves events said to have occurred before the time of the conspiracy; and illegally charges several substantive crimes in one indictment. Stripped of surplusage (State v. Kuehnle,
The motions to quash were properly denied.
Appellants' third point is that the court erred in refusing to sustain a challenge to the array of petit jurors. The state makes no objection either to the sufficiency of the record for the presentation of the point or to the fact or method of the challenge. We go directly to the merits of the argument.
As the January, 1934, term of the Passaic county courts approached, there was no jury commissioner (see statute infra), no panel of grand jurors and no panel of petit jurors for the trial of causes, either civil or criminal. In that emergency Mr. Justice Heher appointed elisors who functioned forthwith. The challenge was to the array of petit jurors so presented. The argument, as we understand it, is primarily that the sheriff was not incapacitated and that therefore the court should have appointed a jury commissioner pro tempore to act with the sheriff; secondarily, that if the sheriff was in fact incapacitated, the coroner was, by law, authorized to be substituted in his place; and, generally, that the court was without power, in the circumstances, to appoint elisors.
Formerly the venire for the summoning and production of jurors was addressed to the sheriff, and on his death or disability to the coroner; this both by common law (3 Bl. Com.,ch. 23), and by statute (Paterson 137) (An act constituting courts of oyer and terminer and general gaol delivery, passed November 27th, 1794 — § 5; Ibid. 253, § 2 — Supplement to the act entitled "An act concerning sheriffs," passed March 10th, 1797). But there was a reserve power in *339 the courts, in the event of a breakdown in the usual agencies, to require the jury to be summoned by persons of its own selection; and the officers so selected were called elisors. Blackstone put it thus:
"If the sheriff be not an indifferent person; as if he be a party in the suit, or be related by either blood or affinity to either of the parties, he is not then trusted to return the jury, but the venire shall be directed to the coroners, who in this, as in many other instances, are the substitutes of the sheriff, to execute process when he is deemed an improper person. If any exception lies to the coroners, the venire shall be directed to two clerks of the court, or two persons of the county named by the court, and sworn. And these two, who are called elisors, or electors, shall indifferently name the jury, and their return is final; no challenge being allowed to their array."
Our early statutes assumed rather than specifically mentioned the existence of the elisor-appointing of the court, as in "An act relative to juries and verdicts" passed November 10th, 1797 (Paterson 260, § 10), "no sheriff, coroner, or otherofficer," and section 15, "the sheriff of the proper county, orother officer, who ought to empanel the jury in such case." But section 9 of the statute of November 6th, 1827 (Elm. Dig. 271, § 36), was specific: "All coroners and elisors to whom any writ or writs of venire facias may be directed * * * as heretofore * * *;" as was also the statute of March 7th, 1837, section 3 (Elm. Dig. 273, § 47:
"Whenever any writ or writs of venire facias shall be directed to the coroners of any county, or to elisors appointed by any court in this state, such writ or writs shall be executed, and the juries thereby required shall be summoned by such coroners or elisors in the same manner as by law was required to be done in such cases before the passage of the act entitled, `An act relative to jurors,' passed the ninth day of March, A.D. one thousand eight hundred and thirty-six."
Coming to the statutory law as it was in 1910 at the publishing of the Compiled Statutes, it was still "the duty of each sheriff in this state or, in case of his death or disability, *340
of the coroners of the respective counties or elisors appointed by the court * * *" (3 Comp. Stat., p. 2967, § 13a), to prepare the jury list and, as directed in the venire (3 Comp. Stat.,p. 2966, § 8), to summon the jurors for service. Upon the law as it then was the opinions of this court were written in State v.Zeller,
Therefore, there being a vacancy, in December, 1933, and January, 1934, in the office of citizen commissioner of juries in Passaic county, the machinery set up by the statute could *341
not operate. With the "commissioners of juries" statute still on the books, the sheriff could not act alone. There was no authority for the court to name a commissioner to act with the sheriff. The coroner had no power because his position was simply that of "a substitute for the sheriff." It need not be considered whether the governor could have made an "ad interim
appointment." He did not do so. The question is whether, under those circumstances, the court could act. The procedure byelisors remained extant, unrepealed by the "jury commissioner" legislation. State v. Bolitho,
Most of the remaining points are repetitions of questions hereinbefore determined, others ground in proofs which are not before us. None presents error.
The judgment below is affirmed.
For affirmance — THE CHANCELLOR, LLOYD, CASE, DONGES, PERSKIE, KAYS, HETFIELD, DEAR, WELLS, JJ. 9.
For reversal — None.