delivered the opinion of the court.
' On June 12,1890, the petitioner was, by the District Cou^t of the Second Judicial District of the Territory of Arizona, sentenced to be hung. He has sued out this habeas corpus t¿> test the validity of such sentence. .He does not come here .by' writ of error to review the proceedings, so that errors therein may be corrected; but attacks them in this way, collaterally, as void. His attack is' rested on two propositions. The pro: ceedings had were in a territorial court, sitting as a court of the United States. The first claim is, that the court did not have jurisdiction of the offence charged. The indictment *576 charges the crime of murder committed upon one William Fleming, within ■ the White Mountain' Indian Eeservation, in the Second Judicial District of the Territory of Arizona. The petition alleges that the petitioner is a citizen of the United States, of African descent; that William Fleming, the person killed, was also a negro; that the Second Judicial District of Arizona is composed of four counties, one of them being the county of Gila; and that the White Mountain Indian Eeservation is within said county of Gila. The reservation, therefore, is within the territorial limits of the Second Judicial District, but the contention is that the District Court of that.district, sitting as a United States court, .did not have jurisdiction, but that it was vested alone in the District Court sitting as a territorial court; and that the indictment should have run in the name of the people of the Territory, instead of in the name of the United States of America. .The second contention is, that the grand jury which indicted him was not a legally constituted-tribunal, in that it was composed of only fifteen persons. In this respect it is admitted that by the laws of the Territory of Arizona, in force until March 22,, 1889, grand juries were to be composed of not less than thirteen nor more than fifteen members, (Eevised Statutes Arizona, p. 384, sec. 2161,) but it is claimed that on that day a law came into force by which the number of members of a grand jury was increased, and required to be not less than seventeen nor more than twenty-three. Upon these two propositions the petitioner denies the validity of the sentence against him, and asks that he be discharged from custody.
With respect to the first question, it may be observed that ■ the White Mountain Indian Eeservation was a legally constituted Indian reservation. True, when the Territory of Arizona was organized, on February 21, 1863, 12 Stat. 661, c. 56, there Avas no such reservation; and it was created in the first instance by order of the President in 1871. Whatever doubts there might have been, if any, as to the validity of such executive order, are put at rest by the act of Congress of February 8, 1887, 21 Stat. 388, c. 119, § 1, the first clause of which is “ That in all cases where any tribe or band of Indians has been *577 c ' shall hereafter be, located upon any. reservation created for their use, either by treaty stipulations or by virtue of an act of Congress or executive order setting apart the same for their use, the President of the United States be, and he hereby is, authorized, whenever in his opinion any reservation, or any part thereof, of such Indians is advantageous for agricultural and grazing purposes, to cause said reservation, or any part thereof, to be surveyed, or resurveyed if necessary, and to allot the lands in said reservation in severalty to any Indian located thereon, in quantities, as follows.”
The necessary effect of this legislative recognition was to confirm the executive order, and establish beyond .challenge the Indian title to this reservation. Indeed, the fact that this is' an Indian reservation is not contested by the petitioner; but rather assumed by him in his argument. His proposition is, .that “Congress by act- approved: March 3, 1885, 23 Stat. 385, c. 341, § 9, conferred upon the Territory and her courts full jurisdiction of the offence of murder when committed on an Indian reservation by an Indian.
Ex parte Gon-sha-yee,
The second is equally untenable. His proposition is, that the grand jury, which indicted him, was not a legally constituted tribunal — in that it was composed of only fifteen members — whereas, by an act of the legislature of the Territory of Arizona, -passed on March 12, 1889, a day before that upon which the offence is charged to have been committed, it was required that grand juries should be composed of not less than seventeen nor more than twenty-three members. The response thereto is; that no such act was passed; and that,'.even if it were, the defect in the number' of grand jurors did not vitiate the entire proceedings; so that they could be challenged collaterally on habeas corpy'sy but it was only a matter of error, to be corrected by proceedings in error. ! It appears from the record that a challenge to the grand jury was made by the *580 petitioner and overruled; but the ground here presented was not taken in such challenge.
• With regard to this, supposed act of the legislature,- the official volume of the acts and resolutions of the legislative assembly of Arizona, of the year 1889, certified by the secretary of the Territory, contains no siich act. . It is claimed, however, 'that a bill passád both houses of the assembly — passing.the pouse on March 8, 1889, and the council,. March 9, 1889 — as appears from the assembly, journals, and, on March 12, was properly certified and placed in the hands of the governor for •his action; that he did not within ten-days either approve by signing it or return it without his signature to the house in which it originated; and that the assembly continued in session until the 10th day of April, which was more than ten • days after the bill was placed in the hands of' .the governor, whereby the bill passed into a law. The contention on behalf of the government is, that by virtue of the act of Congress of December 23, 1880, 21 Stat. 312, which reads as follows — “ The session of the legislative assemblies of the various Territories of the United States shall be limited to-sixty days’ duration”— the session for the year 1889 was by law terminated on the 21st day of March, sixty days from the day, January 21, on which by law and in fact .it commenced. It is urged that the sixty days mentioned in the statute means! sixty- calendar days; and that at'the expiration'of such sixty days the session terminates as a matter of law, and’ the legislative assembly has no power to do any valid act thereafter, or even to remain in.session. The petitioner insists that the sixty days means sixty legislative days — days in which the legislature is actually in session; that the legislature acted unen this construction by continuing in session until the 10th day of April,, and was thus a defacto legislature at least.
This, presents an interesting question of statutory construction, one into which, however-;' we deem it unnecessary -to-enter. As it is a question, if it had been, duly presented to the District Court, a court having jurisdiction over the offence and the prisoner, and by it erroneously decided, can it be'that such erroneous decision would have vitiated the proceedings *581 and rendered void the sentence thereafter rendered? We think not. Does the fact that the question was not presented put the case in any worse position than if presented and erroneously decided? Assuming that this act of 1889 was legally passed, and was a law of-'the .Territory,..let us see what changes were áccomplished by it. Prior thereto, as we have noticed, grand juries were to be composed of not less than thirteen nor more than fifteen members. The amendment made by this act provided that they should be 'composed of not less than seventeen nor more than twenty-three members. The record discloses that there were but fifteen members. Prior to 1889, the Territorial law authorized the finding of an indictment on the concurrence of twelve grand jurors. Rev. Statutes, Arizona, 778, sec. 1430. A similar provision is found in the Federal statutes. Rev. Stat.. sec. 1021. The act of 1889 made no change in this respect; so, whether the grand jury was composed of thirteen — the lowest number sufficient under the prior law — or twenty-three, the highest number named in the act of 1889, the concurrence of twelve wogld have required the finding of an indictment. By petitioner’s argument, if there had been two more grand jurors it would have been a legal body. If the two had been present, and l\ad voted against the indictment, still such opposing votes would not have prevented its finding by the concurrence ofithe twelve who did in fact vote. in. its favor. It would seem, therefore, as though the error was not prejudicial to the substantial rights of the petitioner.'
Again, by section 1392 of the Arizona Penal Code, (Arizona Rev. Statutes, 775,) “A person held to answer to a charge for. .a public offence can take advantage of any objection to the panel or to an individual grand juror in no other mqde than by challenge.”” A challenge, as heretofore stated, was imfact made, but not on the ground- now presented. When by statute a particular way .is prescribed for raising an objection, and a party neglects to pursue .the statutory way, and the objection is one which could have/been-cured ’at the time if attention had been called to it, must he not be adjudged to have waived that objection ? Montgomery v. The State, 3 Kansas, *582 263. In that case, which was one in which an irregularity in impanelling a jury was the error complained of, the court observed: “ Under the Criminal Code a party charged with crime may have the benefit of all just matters of defence as well as of all defects and imperfections in the proceedings against him on- the part of the State which tend to prejudice .his rights. But he must assert his privilege in the proper way and at the- proper time, or he may be deemed to have waived it.”
If it be said that the section of the Arizona-Penal Code does not apply to proceedings in the District Courts sitting as United States courts, we pass to the general question, whether a deficiency in the number of grand jurors prescribed by law, there being present and acting a greater number than that requisite for the finding of an indictment, is such a defect as, ' though unnoticed by the prisoner until after trial and sentence, vitiates the entire proceedings and compels his discharge on
habeas corpus f
That question must be answered in the negative. The case of
Ex parte Watkins,
It may be true that subsequent decisions of this court have softened a little the rigor of the rule thus declared.
Ex parte
Bain,
As the question whether the grand jury should be constituted of -fifteen or seventeen members was a matter which must necessarily be considered and determined by the trial court, its ruling thereon, however erroneous, would seem within the above authorities' to present simply a matter of error, and not be sufficient to oust the jurisdiction. Indeed, it may be considered doubtful, at least, whether such a defect is not waived if not taken advantage of- before trial and judgment. In the case of.
United States
v. Gale,
If it be, therefore, a‘doubtful question, whether the defendant can, after trial and verdict, take' advantage of such a ■defect by direct challenge, it would clearly seem that it is one not going to the matter of jurisdiction, and one which cannot ■be taken advantage of by a collateral attack in habeas corpus,
The application must therefore be
Denied, and the petitioner remanded to the custody of the marshal.
