18 How. Pr. 380 | U.S. Cir. Ct. | 1860
The prisoner in this case was indicted and convicted for setting fire to the ship Japan. There were, at the same time, five others indicted and convicted for various felonies. A motion in arrest of judgment was made, in the several cases, on the ground that the indictments were not valid, as they did not contain the signature of the district-attorney, the office being vacant at the time the indictments were found. The motion having been argued by counsel for the prisoners, and the district-attorney for the United States, Judge Betts, assigned, orally, his reasons on deciding the motion, as follows:
The main objection taken by the prisoners’ counsel to the indictment was, that the grand jury originated them of their own accord, and that they were brought into court, and the prisoners were put to trial under them, without the signature of a district-attorney being affixed to the indictments; and that, in fact, the office of district-attorney was vacant when the grand jury acted upon the cases, and found and brought the indictments into court. It was also objected that the indictments were void in not charging that the various offences, being felonies, were committed feloniously.
The judge observed, that the facts attending the course of the proceedings in the cases before the grand jury, had been more accurately ascertained since the trial than they were known to the court at the time the motions in arrest of judgment were first presented. The grand j ury were empanneled and sworn during the lifetime of the late district-attorney; all
1. The grand jury did not originate any of the indictments of their oavu motion and accord, but the cases Avere submitted to their attention and action by the express instructions of the court.
2. One case Avas actually laid before the jury cn the 7th of December by the then district-attorney, and there is reasonable ground to presume that all the other cases but one, in the same condition at the time, Avere also brought before the jury on the commitments theretofore made by magistrates during the life of the then district-attorney. .
3. McAvoy alone was examined and committed by a com
4. The signature of a district-attorney constitutes no part of an indictment, and is only necessary as evidence to the court that he is officially prosecuting the delinquents conformably to the duty imposed upon him by statute.
5. The appearance in court of the district-attorney on the 10th of January, moving the arraignment of the prisoners and their trial under these indictments, is an adoption of the indictments by him, and full evidence to the court of his concurrence in the acts of the grand jury, and of his prosecuting the delinquents in the name of the United States, pursuant to the authority and directions of the act of congress.
6. There appears to be no power, by statute or usage, conferred on the courts of the United States to recognize a suit, civil or criminal, as legally before them in the name of the United States, except the same is instituted and prosecuted by a district-attorney legally appointed and commissioned conformably to the statute.
7. The offence of wilfully setting fire to a ship at sea, with intent to bum her, being charged in the indictment in the words of the statute creating the crime, the allegation is sufficient without adding the words “ feloniously.”
The motion in arrest of judgment in this case, and all the others .in which the same questions are involved, is accordingly denied.