The motions to quash these indictments may properly be considered together. The defendants are indicted severally for offences under section 5209 of the Revised Statutes of the United States. The defendants Leake and Farrington are charged with abstracting, embezzling, and misappropriating funds of the First National Bank of Saratoga, and making false entries on the hooks of the hank, they being officers of the bank. The defendant Richards is charged with similar offences as to the funds and hooks of
This summary of the proceedings before the grand jury is sufficient to indicate that they were such as to seriously endanger, if not to preclude, an intelligent and fair consideration of the charges preferred against tho accused. It is the duty of the court, in the control of its proceedings, to see to it that no person shall bo subjected to the expense, vexation, and contumely of a trial for a criminal offence unless the charge has been investigated and a reasonable foundation shown for an indictment or information. It is due also to tho government to require, before the trial of an accused person, a fair preliminary investigation of the charges against him. The cases are frequent when, after all these precautions have been observed, it appears upon the trial that the government has been subjected to discredit and expense which might have been avoided if there had been a more careful preliminary investigation.
Notwithstanding the reasons which exist for insisting upon a rigid adherence to this practice, in the interests of decorum, economy, and justice, it has been zealously maintained that so confidential and sacred should the proceedings of a grand jury be considered that every avenue should be closed which may lead to a scrutiny of their transactions. Accordingly, ancient precedents have been enforced, and even extended, in modern cases, for the purpose of preventing any inquiry into the proceedings of tho grand jury, and many authorities are cited to the effect that not only is it not permissible to show any irregularity or misconduct in their proceedings, by the testimony of any juror, but also that the lips of .witnesses who appeared before them are to be sealed, and that no person whose duty it may have been to ho present shall be heard tc impeach or impugn the propriety and regularity of their proceedings.
In one of these cases it was held by a court entitled to great
Other authorities, however, are found which have adopted more liberal and as it seems to me more sensible views, and assert the right and duty of the court to exercise a salutary supervision over the proceedings of a grand jury. It is only practicable to do this by removing the veil of secrecy whenever evidence of what has transpired before them becomes necessary to protect public or private rights. Thus, in Low’s Case, 4 Greenl. 439, the grand jurors were permitted to testify that they acted under the mistaken impression that it was sufficient if a majority of the jurors concurred in finding a bill and twelve had not concurred. In U. S. v. Cooledge,
In Burdick v. Hunt,
The rule which may be adduced from the authorities, and which seems most consistent with the policy of the law, is that whenever it becomes essential to ascertain what has transpired before a grand jury it may be shown, no matter by whom; and the only limitation is that it may not be shown how the individual jurors voted or what they said during their investigations, (The People v. Shattuck,
It would bo difficult to find a case which more forcibly illustrates the good sense and justice of the rule which permits a free disclosure than the present. It is patent that the grand jury permitted themselves to be influenced by the appeals and arguments of a zealous advocate, by hearsay testimony, and by testimony which the law prohibits, although they were advised to the contrary by the district attorney; and it seems much more probable that they wore led to their conclusions by prejudice and undue zeal than by calm and fair deliberation. If there was evidence which authorized an indictment, it was so blended with and obscured by the mass of hearsay and otherwise incompetent testimony that it was impossible for the jury to distinguish it'; and it would be expecting too much of a body, untrained in judicial investigation, to believe that they could discriminate intelligently between the competent and the incompetent evidence, so as to accord due weight to the former and be uninfluenced by the latter.
It is not intended to suggest that whenever incompetent testimony is received by a grand jury its reception is such error or irregularity as to vitiate their finding, nor to hold that the evidence upon which an indictment is found shall
In State v. Froiseth,
The motions to quash the indictments aré granted.
