This case was tried and appealed prior to the decision in Toole v. State, 170 Ala.—, 54 South. 195, and that case disposes of the defendant’s fifth, sixth, seventh, eighth, and ninth grounds of demurrer to the indictment. This is confessed by defendant in his brief on file in this case. The first, second, third, and fourth grounds of demurrer are without merit.
The defendant was required by the court to select a jury by striking from a list of jurors furnished by the clerk, composed of less than 24 names. The facts and defendant’s exception on this proposition are set out in the bill of exceptions, as follows: “The solicitor, Hon. Lloyd Tate, representing the state, and Goodwyn & McIntyre, representing the defendant, were furnished by the clerk each a list of 23 jurors as a jury list from which to strike the jury for the trial of the defendant. The defendant objected to the list, upon the ground that the list contained less than the names of 24 jurors, which objection was overruled by the court, upon the statement by the solicitor that he would challenge the absent juror, and the defendant then and there duly and legally reserved an exception to the action of the court in overruling said objection. The court then directed that the solicitor might waive one of his rights to strike for the purpose of covering the discrepancy in the number of jurors on the list, which the solicitor did, and the court stated that the defendant should have the number of his challenges, but that the state should lose one of its challenges. The defendant thereupon duly and legally reserved an exception to this action of the court in requiring the defendant to join in striking a *223jury from jury list composed of less than 24 names of jurors, to wit, 23.”
In construing the same section of the jury law (Sp. Acts 1909, p. 318, § 32) under which the jury in this case was selected, the Supreme Court has held at the present term (Elijah Jackson v. State, 171 Ala. 55 South. 118) that it is reversible error not to give the defendant a list or venire comprising the requisite number of names fixed by the court and contemplated by law. That was a capital case, and the court below fixed the number of names to constitute the venire at 79 persons, and drew 40 names from the box, leaving necessary 39 names to be supplied from the regular jurors drawn and summoned for the week of trial to constitute the venire of 79 names. There were less than 39 regular jurors drawn and summoned for the week, and the court in that case says: “The result is the defendant did not get the venire fixed by the order of court and contemplated by law, for under the order of the court the venire was to consist of 79 persons, and only 40 persons having been drawn by the court, and 39 not having been drawn and summoned on the regular juries for the week, the venire did not comprise the number fixed by the order of the court. The defendant not having been tried by the venire to which he was, under the law, entitled, the case must be reversed, and the error was not cured by section 29 of the act, as it has no application as to what constitutes a legal venire, but relates to the manner of • selecting, drawing, and impaneling jurors.”
The number of persons to constitute the venire from which the jury to try the defendant in the case at bar was to be selected was fixed, not by the court, but by the law itself, at not less than 24. “If for any cause the regular number of jurors competent to try the defendant is reduced below 24, the court must cause twice the *224number of the deficiency * * * to be drawn and summoned, and the names of those appearing who are competent to try the defendant must be placed on the list of jurors for the week.” — Section 32 of the jury law. The venire was reduced below the requisite number provided by law, and the defendant not having a list comprising a sufficient number of names, as provided and fixed by law, from which to select a jury, under the rule laid down in Jackson’s Case, supra, the case must be reversed and remanded. The solicitor’s offer to “strike,” or waive one of his strikes, as to a name not on the venire and which did not in fact exist, did not add the requisite name to the list or cure the error. Besides, the law required not one but two additional names to be drawn and summoned and added to the list, when the number was reduced to 23. Could it be contended that, ha.d the solicitor in Jackson’s Case, supra, offered to strike, or waive his strikes as to, the names not on the list, such offer .or Avaiver would have made the'list, held in that case insufficient and illegal, a sufficient and legal venire, constituting the number of names fixed by order of the court?
The other matters urged by appellant as errors Avill probably not come up in the trial of the case again, and are unnecessary to determine.
Reversed and remanded.