40 F. 451 | C.C.N.D. Fla. | 1889
The defendant filed a plea in abatement to the indictment herein, and alleges that it should bo abated and quashed upon the ground, in substance, that William Pittman, one of the grand jurors who presented said indictment, is not, and was not when he was impaneled as a member of tbe grand jury, a duly-registered elector of tlie county of Duval, bis place of residence. The jilea admits that bis name appears upon the registration list of Duval county; but it is contended that it is there illegally', in this: that it was placed there on tbe 29th day of September, 1887, and by an officer not entitled to register, and therefore he is not a legally qualified juror. To this plea the government has interposed a demurrer, and alleges that the plea does not state facts which in point of law show that the juror in question was incompetent and disqualified.
Section 800 of the Revised Statutes declares that “jurors to serve in the courts of the United States, in each state, respectively, shall have the same qualifications ⅜ ⅜ * as jurors of the highest court of law in such state * * * at the time.” Act Aug, 1, 1868, Laws Fla,., provides that “all persons who are qualified electors of this state shall be liable to bo drawn as jurors, except as hereinafter provided,” etc.; and Act June 7, 1887, § 9, provides that qualified electors can register only between certain dates in each year in which there shall be a general election. The grand juror William Pittman did not register in such a year. Is lie a competent grand juror, or must the indictment against the prisoner, J. W. Ewan, be quashed for this reason? In the case of U. S. v. Season, decided by Field, circuit justice, Sawyek, circuit judge, and HoeemaN, district judge, in the district of California, reported in 81 Fed. Rep. 896, the facts upon which the decision was rendered are very similar to those in this case. In that case the plea in abatement set up that “tbe grand jury which found the indictment was an illegal and incompetent body, having no authority or jurisdiction to find or present it, or lo find or present any indictment, for the reasons that some of the persons who composed the jury * * * were not at the time tax-payers in California, nor were they assessed for taxes on any property on the last assessment roll of the counties from which they were respectively summoned.” The defendants in that case contended that the in
“In .this ease the objections to some of the grand jurors, that their names were not among the list of tax-payers on the last assessment roll of their respective counties,- is technical only. There is no allegation in the plea that the jurors were not in all respects, as to ability and knowledge, fully qualified for the duties imposed upon them, or that the defendants were in any respect prejudiced by the absence of their names from the assessment roll. In these circumstances the objection must fall under the general rule of the federal courts, that omissions which do not impair any substantial right, or prejudice the defense, of the accused must be disregarded, unless otherwise required by positive statute. Section 1025, Rev. St., declares that ‘ no indictment found and presented by a grand jury, in any district or circuit or other court of the United States, shall be deemed insufficient, nor shall the trial, judgment, or other proceeding thereon be affected, by reason of any defect or imperfection in matter of form only, which shall not tend to the prejudice of the defendant.’
“In U. S. v. Tuska it was held by Judge Blatchford, then district judge, now a justice of the supreme court, that, where there is no averment in a plea in abatement of injury or prejudice to the defendant, irregularities in the finding of an indictment, consisting, among other things,-of some of the grand jurors not possessing the proper property qualifications, became matters of mere form, to be disregarded under the above statute. 14 Blatchf. 5. Without accepting this conclusion in full, the spirit which it expresses undoubtedly governs the action of the federal courts, that omissions or defects in such cases which do not prejudice the accused shall not avail to set aside an indictment or other proceeding.”
The demurrer to the plea in that case was sustained, and the defendant ordered to plead to the indictment. I have quoted thus extensively