Court Opinion

ID: 3243958
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2016-07-05 16:16:43.659634+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T07:40:41.922007
License: Public Domain

By plea in abatement and by motion to quash defendant drew into question the indictment, alleging as ground for this alternative attack that a cousin of deceased sat upon the grand jury by which the indictment was found. It seems to be the rule of the courts generally that, in the absence of statutory prohibition, the relationship of a grand juror with the party injured is not a good ground of objection to the indictment. State v. Russell (Iowa) 28 L.R.A. note 5, p. 202; 20 Cyc. 1302; Collins v. State, 3 Ala. App. 64, 58 So. 80. Moreover, objections of this character, if good in any event, must be taken by plea in abatement (2 Bishop's Cr. Proc. §§ 883, 884); but the statute (Gen. Acts [Sp. Sess.] 1909, p. 315, § 23) provides that no objection can be taken to an indictment by plea in abatement, except upon the ground that the grand jurors were not drawn by the officer designated by law to draw the same. Whitehead v. State, 206 Ala. 288, 90 So. 351. Section 7304 of the Code does not reach the present case. On these considerations we hold that the trial court committed no error in sustaining demurrers to defendant's plea in abatement and motion to quash.
Evidence for the state went to show that a few minutes before the homicide for which defendant was on trial the deceased and three others were talking about a difficulty some of them — including deceased, perhaps — had had with defendant earlier in the evening and at a different place. Shortly afterwards defendant came up to the place, and thereupon, without provocation or resistance, struck the blow which caused the death of the deceased. The particulars of the former difficulty were excluded, and properly so. It is not perceived how defendant was prejudiced by the court's ruling against this effort by indirection to get before the jury statements in reference to that difficulty not made in the presence or hearing of defendant. Evidence of such circumstances is usually offered by the state to prove malice. 8 Mich. Dig. p. 239.
The foregoing adequately covers all the exceptions reserved at the trial, save only the one taking the ground that the surgeon *Page 155 
who saw deceased after death failed to show an acquaintance with the nature and extent of the wound sufficient to qualify him to testify that it had caused the death of deceased. There was no denial, no attempt to deny, no doubt, that deceased had died within a few minutes after defendant had stabbed him just over (or under) the collarbone. The clothing of deceased was saturated with blood from the wound, and while the surgeon made only a casual examination of the wound — because deceased was already dead — our judgment is that he, or any one else who saw the body, even though not an expert, might have stated an opinion that the wound caused death.
Affirmed.
ANDERSON, C. J., and GARDNER and MILLER, JJ., concur.