30 A. 467 | R.I. | 1894
The defendants' pleas in abatement in each of these cases respectively, are clearly bad for uncertainty.
In the first named case, the pleas set out that the indictment should be quashed because two of the grand jurors, *597
naming them, who participated in the finding of the indictment and who were drawn from the city of Newport, had not at any time within the year next preceding the time of their service as grand jurors paid any tax upon their property respectively in said city, and therefore were not qualified to vote upon any proposition to impose a tax or for the expenditure of money in said city, and hence were not qualified to serve upon the grand jury. But said pleas do not allege that the jurors were not possessed in their own right respectively of real estate in said city to an amount sufficient to qualify them to vote under Article 2, § 1 of the Constitution of this State. See In re theVoting Laws,
For aught that appears in said pleas, therefore, the jurors named therein might have been qualified to vote upon any proposition to impose a tax or for the expenditure of money in said city, and if so, and if they were over twenty-five years of age, as now required by the Judiciary Act, cap. 7, § 1, they were also qualified to serve as grand jurors. State v. Duggan,
The pleas in the second case being precisely similar to those *598 in the one already considered, and the jurors objected to therein being the same as those objected to in the first named case, there is no occasion for any separate consideration thereof, what we have said applying with equal force to each case.
The demurrers of the Attorney General to the pleas in each of said cases respectively must therefore be sustained.
Demurrers sustained.