1. The Court adheres to the rulings in
Ex Parte
Siebold, 100 U. S. 371, and
Ex Parte Clarke, 100 U. S. 399,
that §§ 5513 and 5515 Rev.Stat. relating to violations of duty by
officers of elections are not repugnant to the Constitution of the
United States, and holds them to be valid.
2. Where a defendant pleads not guilty to an indictment, and
goes to trial without making objection to the mode of selecting the
grand jury, the objection is waived even though a law
unconstitutional, or assumed to be unconstitutional, may be
followed in making the panel.
3. An objection to the qualification of grand jurors or to the
mode of summoning or impaneling them must be made by a motion to
quash or by a plea in abatement before pleading in bar.
Indictment against inspector and clerk of Election District No.
8, Northern District of Florida, for removal of ballots cast by
electors at an election for representative in Congress and
substitution of different ballots.
Page 109 U. S. 66
MR. JUSTICE BRADLEY delivered the opinion of the Court.
The indictment against the defendants in this case was for
misconduct as election officers at an election held in Florida for
a representative to Congress in stuffing the ballot box with
fraudulent tickets and abstracting tickets which had been voted. In
impaneling the grand jury which found the indictment, four persons,
otherwise competent, were excluded from the panel for the causes
mentioned in section 820 of the Revised Statutes, which grounds
are, in substance, voluntarily taking part in the rebellion and
giving aid and comfort thereto. The exclusion of these persons for
this cause appears by an amendment of the record, made
nunc pro
tunc, showing what took place, but no objection was taken to
the indictment or proceedings on that account until after a plea of
not guilty and a conviction, when the objection was first taken on
motion in arrest of judgment. The indictment was founded upon
sections 5512 and 5515 of the Revised Statutes, and the
constitutionality of those sections was called in question, as well
as that of section 820. The judges having disagreed upon the motion
in arrest of judgment, certified up the following questions for the
determination of this Court, namely:
1. Whether sections 5512 and 5515 of the Revised Statutes of the
United States, on which such indictment was founded, are repugnant
to and in violation of the Constitution of the United States.
2. Whether section 820 of the Revised Statutes of the United
States is repugnant to and in violation of the Constitution of the
United States.
3. Whether judgment of this Court could be rendered against the
defendants on an indictment found by a grand jury impaneled and
sworn under the section aforesaid, and
4. Whether the indictment aforesaid charges any offense for
which judgment could be rendered against the defendants in this
Court under the Constitution and laws of the United States.
The question of the validity of sections 5512 and 5515 has
already been decided by this Court in the cases of
Siebold
and
Clarke, 100 U.S.
100 U. S. 371 and
100 U. S. 399, and
was determined in favor of their validity. As to those sections,
therefore, the answer must
Page 109 U. S. 67
be in the negative -- namely that they are not repugnant to nor
in violation of the Constitution of the United States.
The second question, as to the constitutionality of the 820th
section of the Revised Statutes, which disqualifies a person as a
juror if he voluntarily took any part in the rebellion, is not an
essential one in the case, inasmuch as, by pleading not guilty to
the indictment and going to trial without making any objection to
the mode of selecting the grand jury, such objection was waived.
The defendants should either have moved to quash the indictment or
have pleaded in abatement, if they had no opportunity, or did not
see fit, to challenge the array. This, we think, is the true
doctrine in cases where the objection does not go to the subversion
of all the proceedings taken in impaneling and swearing the grand
jury, but relates only to the qualification or disqualification of
certain persons sworn upon the jury or excluded therefrom, or to
mere irregularities in constituting the panel. We have no
inexorable statute making the whole proceedings void for any such
irregularities.
Chitty, in his work on Criminal Law, vol. 1, p. 307, says:
"It is perfectly clear that all persons serving upon the grand
jury must be good and lawful men, by which it is intended that they
must be liege subjects of the King, and neither aliens nor persons
outlawed even in a civil action, attainted of any treason or
felony, or convicted of any species of
crimen falsi, as
conspiracy or perjury, which may render them infamous. And if a man
who lies under any of these disqualifications be returned, he may
be challenged by the prisoner before the bill is presented, or, if
it be discovered after the finding, the defendant may plead it in
avoidance, and answer over to the felony, for which purpose he may
be allowed the assistance of counsel, on producing in court the
record of the outlawry, attainder, or conviction on which the
incompetence of the juryman rests."
This is undoubtedly the general rule as to the manner in which
objection may be taken to the personnel of the grand jury, though
in this country a motion to quash the indictment may be made
instead of pleading specially in abatement. The requirement of
answering over to the felony in connection
Page 109 U. S. 68
with the plea in abatement is for the benefit of the accused, in
order that he may not be concluded on the merits, if he should fail
in sustaining his special plea -- a precaution which probably would
not be necessary in our practice.
By an English statute passed in the 11th year of Henry IV, it
was declared that indictments made by persons not returned by the
sheriff, or by persons nominated to him, or who were outlawed or
had fled to sanctuary for treason or felony, should be void,
revoked, and annulled. On this statute it was held that if any such
persons were on a grand jury which found an indictment, it made the
whole void, and if the matter appeared on the record, or in the
proceedings of the same court, advantage might be taken of it on
motion in arrest of judgment, or even on the suggestion of an
amicus curiae, but if it did not appear on the record of
the cause or in the records of the same court, the better opinion
was that it could only be pleaded in abatement or raised by motion
to quash. Hawkins says:
"If a person who is tried upon such an indictment take no
exception before his trial, it may be doubtful whether he may be
allowed to take exception afterwards, because he hath slipped the
most proper time for it, except it be verified by the records of
the same court wherein the indictment is depending, as by an
outlawry in the same court of one of the indictors,"
etc. Hawkins, book 2, c. 25, sec. 27.
In Bacon's Abridgement (Juries, A), it is said that the court
need not admit of the plea of outlawry of an indictor unless he who
pleads it have the record ready, or it be an outlawry of the same
court, and it is added as the better opinion that no exception
against an indictor is allowable unless the party takes it before
trial. Chitty lays down the same rule. 1 Crim.L. 307-308. Lord
Chief Justice Hale, speaking of what the caption ought to contain,
among other things, says:
"It must name the jurors that presented the offense, and
therefore a return of an indictment or presentment
per
sacramentum, A. B., C. D.,
et aliorum, is not good,
for it may be the
Page 109 U. S. 69
presentment was by a less number than twelve, in which case it
is not good (H. 41 Eliz. B. R. Croke, No. 16,
Clyneard's
Case, 654); and it seems to me that all the names of the
jurors ought to be returned, for the party indicted may have an
exception to some or one of them, as that he is outlawed, in which
case the indictment may be quashed by plea, though there be twelve
besides without exception, for possibly that one, who is not
legalis homo, may influence all the rest, and so vitiate
the whole indictment."
All these authorities tend to the same point -- namely that the
proper mode of taking objection to the personnel of the grand jury,
even under the statute referred to, when the matter does not appear
of record, is by plea in abatement.
If, under the operation of so stringent a statute as that of 11
Hen. IV, the general rule was that the objection to the
constitution of the grand jury must be taken before trial, and
could only be taken afterwards when it appeared on the record, much
more would it seem to be requisite that all ordinary objections
based upon the disqualification of particular jurors, or upon
informalities in summoning or impaneling the jury, where no statute
makes the proceedings utterly void, should be taken
in
limine, either by challenge, by motion to quash, or by plea in
abatement. Neglecting to do this, the defendant should be deemed to
have waived the irregularity. It would be trifling with justice and
would render criminal proceedings a farce if such objections could
be taken after verdict even though the irregularity should appear
in the record of the proceedings. In most cases, it could not
appear in a record properly made up; but if appearing at all, it
would require (as in the present case) a special certificate of the
court analogous to a bill of exceptions, or a case stated, not
constituting a part of the true record. But even if it should
appear upon the record as a proper part thereof, the fact of
pleading to the merits and going to trial without taking the
objection would also appear, and would amount in law to a waiver of
the irregularity. If it could be taken advantage of on a motion in
arrest of judgment, it would be a good ground of reversal on error,
and all the proceedings of a long-term might be rendered nugatory
by
Page 109 U. S. 70
admitting a person to the grand jury or excluding a person from
it, without the matter being called to the attention of the court;
whereas if the objection were taken
in limine, the
irregularity might be corrected by reforming the panel or summoning
a new jury.
These remarks apply with additional force where the objection is
not to the disqualification of jurors who are actually sworn upon
the panel, but to the exclusion, or excuse, of persons from serving
on the panel. A disqualified juror placed upon the panel may be
supposed injuriously to affect the whole panel; but if the
individuals forming it are unobjectionable, and have all the
necessary qualifications, it is of less moment to the accused what
persons may have been set aside or excused. The present case is of
the latter kind. No complaint is made that any of the grand jurors
who found the indictment were disqualified to serve or were in any
respect improper persons. It is only complained that the court
excluded some persons for an improper cause -- that is, because
they labored under the disqualification created by the 820th
section of the Revised Statutes, which is alleged to be
unconstitutional. It is not complained that the jury actually
impaneled was not a good one, but that other persons equally good
had a right to be placed on it. These persons do not complain. If
their right to serve on the grand jury was improperly infringed,
perhaps they might complain of being excluded. That is another
matter. Or perhaps the defendants, if correct in their assumption
that the law is unconstitutional and that the court was governed by
an improper rule in excluding persons under it, might have had the
benefit of the error by moving to quash the indictment, or by
pleading in abatement. But passing by these proper modes of taking
the objection, they waited until they had been tried and convicted
on a plea of not guilty, and then moved in arrest of judgment. We
think they were too late in raising the objection.
Some importance is attached to the fact that the court followed
an unconstitutional law, or one assumed to be such. We do not see
that this is in anywise different from the case in which the court
misconstrues the law. The result is the
Page 109 U. S. 71
same: certain persons, under a misconception of the court, are
excluded from the grand jury who are qualified to serve on it, but
the jury as actually constituted is unexceptional in every other
respect. In either case, whether the court is mistaken as to the
validity of a law or as to its interpretation, the objection
relates so little to the merits of the case that it ought to be
taken in the regular order and due course of proceeding.
There are cases, undoubtedly, which admit of a different
consideration and in which the objection to the grand jury may be
taken at any time. These are where the whole proceeding of forming
the panel is void, as where the jury is not a jury of the court or
term in which the indictment is found, or has been selected by
persons having no authority whatever to select them, or where they
have not been sworn, or where some other fundamental requisite has
not been complied with. But there is no complaint of this kind in
the present case. The complaint simply relates to the action of the
court in excluding particular persons who might properly have
served on the jury. We do not think this vitiated all the
proceedings so as to render them absolutely null and void. It might
have sufficed to quash the indictment if the objection had been
timely and properly made. Nothing more.
We think that this conclusion is the result not only of the
English but of the better American authorities.
Mr. Wharton, in his section on the "Disqualification of Grand
Jurors, and how it may be excepted to," begins by stating the
general rule that irregularities in selecting or impaneling the
grand jury which do not relate to the competency of individual
jurors may usually be objected to by challenge to the array or
motion to quash, and this must be before the general issue.
Crim.Pl. & Pr., 8th ed., § 344. He then shows that in some
states it has been held that objections to disqualification of
individual jurors can only be taken by challenge, and not by motion
to quash or by plea; but that in others the motion to quash as well
as the plea is allowed, the latter rule being more generally
followed and being more in accordance with the English law. He then
adds:
Page 109 U. S. 72
"Ordinarily, after the general issue has been pleaded,
objections are too late, and when the objection goes to the manner
of drawing it should be taken by challenge to the array. . . . But
on principle, in those cases in which the defendant is surprised
and had no opportunity to take exception until after the finding of
the bill, he should he allowed to take advantage of any
irregularity by plea."
§ 350.
We apprehend that the rule last stated is the correct one. But
in § 353 it is added that at common law, if the objection appears
of record and there be no statutory impediment, a motion in arrest
of judgment may be entertained. This last position we do no not
think is well sustained. As we have seen, it was by force of the
statute of 11 Hen. IV that objections might be taken after the
trial in England, and the American cases referred to by Mr. Wharton
do not sustain his observation. In
Harden's Case, 2 Rich.
533, the motion in arrest of judgment was based on the ground that
the grand jury was not such for the term at which the bill was
found, and, of course, the proceedings were
coram non
judice. In other cases cited in support of the position, the
motions were overruled. We think that the doctrine of waiver
applies as well to cases where the objection appears of record as
where it appears by averments, and that it applies to all cases of
objection to the qualifications of jurors and to the mode of
impaneling the jury, but does not apply to cases where the
proceeding is wholly void by reason of some fundamental defect or
vice therein. Brooke's Abr.Indict. 2;
Seaborn's Case, 4
Dev. 305;
Robinson's Case, 2 Parker's Crim.Cas. 308. In
the case in Brooke, persons not
legali homines were on the
grand jury, and it was held that the objection ought to be pleaded
before pleading to the felony. In
Seaborn's Case, it was
held that after conviction of murder, it was too late to take
advantage of an error in constituting the grand jury, though it
appeared in the record. In
Robinson's Case, 2 Parker's
Crim.Cas. 235, 308, 311, which was argued by able counsel in the
supreme court of New York before Justices Parker, Wright, and
Harris, no precept for summoning the grand jury had been issued by
the district attorney to the sheriff as the law
Page 109 U. S. 73
required, though the sheriff summoned them in the usual way. The
court held that this omission did not affect the substantial rights
of the prisoner and that the objection could not be raised after
trial and conviction. Many authorities were referred to in the
opinion of the court delivered by Mr. Justice Parker, and this
general statement was then made:
"It seems to be well settled in most of the states that an
objection to the qualification of grand jurors or to the mode of
summoning or impaneling them must be made by a motion to quash or
by a plea in abatement before pleading in bar."
The subject is also discussed in Bishop's Crim.Procedure, c. LX,
where the same general rule is laid down, though with a reservation
of some doubt as to cases where the objection appears of record. §§
887, 888. As before stated, we think that it is the nature of the
objection, rather than the fact of its appearing or not appearing
on the record, which should decide whether it ought to be taken by
a plea in abatement or whether it may also be taken by motion in
arrest of judgment, though, of course, it cannot be taken by such a
motion unless it does appear of record.
Being satisfied that the defendants could not raise the question
of the constitutionality of § 820 by motion in arrest of judgment,
it is not necessary, as before observed, to express any opinion on
that point. It may be proper, however, to call attention to the
singular position of that section. It was originally enacted as
section 1 of the Act passed June 17, 1862, entitled "An act
defining different causes of challenge, and prescribing an
additional oath for grand and petit jurors in the United States
courts." 12 Stat. 430. At that time (1862), it was no doubt a very
proper and necessary law, but after the rehabilitation of the
insurgent states, the proclamation of general amnesty, and the
adoption of the Fourteenth Amendment, guaranteeing equal rights to
all citizens of the United States, there would seem to have been no
just reason for the continuance of the law, especially as by far
the largest portion of white citizens in the states lately in
rebellion would be disqualified under it. Accordingly, by the 5th
section of the act,
Page 109 U. S. 74
commonly called the "Enforcement Act," passed April 20, 1871, 17
Stat. 15, Congress, after providing that in prosecutions under that
act no person should be a grand or petit juror who should, in the
judgment of the court, be in complicity with any combination or
conspiracy punishable by the provisions thereof, repeal the said
first section of the act of 1862, and the law remained in this
state until the adoption of the Revised Statutes. For some
unexplained reason, the revisors imported the section back again
into the Revised Statutes (as section 820), although it had not
been in force for over two years. It is probable that the fact of
its repeal was overlooked by Congress when the Revision was
adopted, and it is to be hoped that their attention will be called
to it.
In conclusion, to the third and fourth questions, certified by
the court below, the answer will be in the affirmative,
And it is so ordered.