If one of two persons accused of having together committed the
crime of murder makes a voluntary confession in the presence of the
other under such circumstances that he would naturally have
contradicted it if he did not assent, the confession is admissible
in evidence against both.
If two persons are indicted and tried jointly for murder,
declarations of one made after the killing and in the absence of
the other tending to prove the guilt of both are admissible in
evidence against the one making the declarations, but not against
the other.
An objection to the admissibility of such evidence, made at the
trial in the name of both defendants, on the general ground that it
was irrelevant, immaterial, and incompetent, furnishes, if the
testimony be admitted, sufficient ground in case of conviction for
bringing the case to this Court, and warrants the reversal of the
conviction of the defendant against whom it was not admissible.
Confession of a person imprisoned and in irons, under an
accusation of having committed a capital offence, are admissible in
evidence against him, if they appear to have been voluntary, and
not obtained by putting him in fear or by promises.
Section 1035 of the Revised Statutes does not authorize a jury
in a criminal case to find the defendant guilty of a less offense
than the one charged unless the evidence justifies it, but it
enables the jury, in case the defendant is not shown to be guilty
of the particular crime charged, to find him guilty of a lesser
offense necessarily included in the one charged, or of the attempt
to commit the one charged, when the evidence permits that to be
done.
In the courts of the United States, it is the duty of the jury,
in criminal cases, to receive the law from the court, and to apply
it as given by the court, subject to the condition that, by a
general verdict, a jury of necessity determines both law and fact
as compounded in the issue submitted to them in the particular
case.
In criminal cases, it is competent for the court to instruct the
jury as to the legal presumptions arising from a given state of
facts, but it may not, by a peremptory instruction, require the
jury to find the accused guilty of the offense charged, nor of any
offense less than that charged.
On the trial in a court of the United States of a person accused
of committing the crime of murder, if there be no evidence upon
which the jury can properly find the defendant guilty of an offense
included in or less than the one charged, it is not error to
instruct them that they cannot return a verdict of guilty of
manslaughter, or of any offense less than
Page 156 U. S. 52
the one charged, and in such case, if the defendant was not
guilty of the offense charged, it is the duty of the jury to return
a verdict of not guilty.
The case is stated in the opinion.
MR. JUSTICE HARLAN delivered the opinion of the Court.
The plaintiffs in error and Thomas St. Clair were indicted
jointly for the murder of Maurice Fitzgerald upon the high seas, on
board of an American vessel, the bark
Hesper, as set forth
in the indictment mentioned in
St. Clair v. United States,
154 U. S. 134. On
motion of the accused, it was ordered that they be tried
separately. St. Clair was tried, found guilty of murder, and
sentenced to suffer the punishment of death. Subsequently the order
for separate trials was set aside, and the present defendants were
tried together, and both were convicted of murder. A motion for a
new trial having been overruled, a like sentence was imposed upon
them.
The general facts of this case do not differ from those proved
in St. Clair's case, and some of the questions arising upon the
present assignments of error were determined in that case. Only
such questions will be here examined as were not properly presented
or did not arise in the other case and are of sufficient importance
to require notice at our hands.
In the night of January 13, 1893, Fitzgerald, the second mate of
the
Hesper, was found to be missing, and it was believed
that he had been killed and his body thrown overboard. Suspicion
being directed to St. Clair, Sparf, and Hansen, part of the crew of
the
Hesper, as participants in the killing, they were put
in irons by order of Captain Sodergren, master of the vessel, and
were so kept during the
Page 156 U. S. 53
voyage from the locality of the supposed murder to Tahiti, an
island in the South Pacific belonging to the French government.
They were taken ashore by the United States consul at that island,
and subsequently were sent, with others, to San Francisco on the
vessel
Tropic Bird.
At the trial, Captain Sodergren, a witness for the government,
was asked whether or not after the 13th day of January, and before
reaching Tahiti, which was more than one thousand miles from the
locality of the alleged murder, he had any conversation with the
defendant Hansen about the killing of Fitzgerald. This question
having been answered by the witness in the affirmative, he was
fully examined as to the circumstances under which the conversation
was held. He said, among other things, that no one was present but
Hansen and himself. Being asked to repeat the conversation referred
to, the accused, by the counsel who had been appointed by the court
to represent them, objected to the question as "irrelevant,
immaterial, and incompetent, and upon the ground that any statement
made by Hansen was not and could not be voluntary." The objection
was overruled, and the defendants duly excepted. The witness then
stated what Hansen had said to him. That evidence tended strongly
to show that Fitzgerald was murdered pursuant to a plan formed
between St. Clair, Sparf, and Hansen; that all three actively
participated in the murder, and that the crime was committed under
the most revolting circumstances.
Thomas Green and Edward Larsen, two of the crew of the
Hesper, were also witnesses for the government. They were
permitted to state what Hansen said to them during the voyage from
Tahiti to San Francisco. This evidence was also objected to as
irrelevant, immaterial, and incompetent, and upon the further
ground that the statement the accused was represented to have made
was not voluntary. But the objection was overruled and an exception
taken.
Upon the conclusion of the evidence, the defendants requested
certain instructions, which the court refused to give, and they
excepted to its action in that particular, as well as to certain
parts of the charge to the jury.
Page 156 U. S. 54
1. The declarations of Hansen, as detailed by Sodergren, Green,
and Larsen, were clearly admissible in evidence against him. There
was no ground on which their exclusion could have been sustained.
In reference to this proof, the court charged the jury that if they
believed from the evidence that Green and Larsen, or either of
them, were accomplices in the commission of the acts charged in the
indictment, they should act upon their testimony with great
caution, subjecting it to a careful examination, in the light of
all the other evidence, and ought not to convict upon their
testimony alone unless satisfied beyond reasonable doubt of its
truth; that if Larsen and Green, or either of them or any other
person were induced to testify by promises of immunity from
punishment or by hope held out from anyone that it would go easier
with them in case they disclosed their confederates, or in case
they implicated someone else in the crime, this must be taken into
consideration in determining the weight to be given to their
testimony, and should be closely scrutinized; that the confessions
of a prisoner out of court and in custody, made to persons having
no authority to examine him, should be acted upon and received with
great care and caution; that words are often misreported through
ignorance, inattention, or malice, are extremely liable to
misconstruction, are rarely sufficient to warrant conviction, as
well on account of the great danger of mistake upon the part of the
witness as of the fact that the mind of the prisoner himself may be
oppressed by his situation or influenced by motives of hope or fear
to make an untrue confession; that, in considering the weight to be
given to the alleged confessions of the defendants, the jury were
to consider their condition at the time they were made, the fact
that they had been charged with crime, and were in custody, and
that the jury were to determine whether those confessions were
voluntary or whether any inducements were held out to them by
anyone. The defendants did not offer themselves as witnesses, and
the court took care to say that a person charged with crime is
under no obligation to testify in his own behalf, and that his
neglect to testify did not create any presumption whatever against
him.
Page 156 U. S. 55
So far as the record discloses, these confessions were entirely
free and voluntary, uninfluenced by any hope of reward or fear of
punishment. In
Hopt v. Utah, 110 U.
S. 574,
110 U. S. 584,
it was said:
"While some of the adjudged cases indicate distrust of
confessions which are not judicial, it is certain, as observed by
Baron Parke, in
Regina v. Baldry, 2 Denison & Pearce
Cr.Cas. 430, 445, that the rule against their admissibility has
been sometimes carried too far, and in its application justice and
common sense have too frequently been sacrificed at the shrine of
mercy. A confession, if freely and voluntarily made, is evidence of
the most satisfactory character. Such a confession, said Eyre,
C.B.,
King v. Warickshall, 1 Leach Cr.Law 263,"
"is deserving of the highest credit, because it is presumed to
flow from the strongest sense of guilt, and therefore it is
admitted as proof of the crime to which it refers."
"Elementary writers of authority concur in saying that while,
from the nature of such evidence, it must be subjected to careful
scrutiny and received with great caution, a deliberate voluntary
confession of guilt is among the most effectual proofs in the law,
and constitutes the strongest evidence against the party making it
that can be given of the facts stated in such confession."
Counsel for the accused insist that there cannot be a voluntary
statement, a free, open confession, while a defendant is confined
and in irons, under an accusation of having committed a capital
offense. We have not been referred to any authority in support of
that position. It is true that the fact of a prisoner's being in
custody at the time he makes a confession is a circumstance not to
be overlooked, because it bears upon the inquiry whether the
confession was voluntarily made or was extorted by threats or
violence or made under the influence of fear. But confinement or
imprisonment is not, in itself, sufficient to justify the exclusion
of a confession if it appears to have been voluntary and was not
obtained by putting the prisoner in fear or by promises. Wharton's
Cr.Ev., 9th ed., §§ 661, 663, and authorities cited. The
import of Sodergren's evidence was that when Hansen manifested a
desire to speak to him on the subject of the killing, the latter
said he did not
Page 156 U. S. 56
wish to hear it, but "to keep it until the right time came, and
then tell the truth." But this was not offering to the prisoner an
inducement to make a confession. Littledale, J., well observed in
Rex v. Court, 7 Car. & P. 486, that telling a man to
be sure to tell the truth is not advising him to confess anything
of which he is really not guilty.
See also Queen v. Reeve,
L.R. 1 C.C. 362. Nothing said to Hansen prior to the confession was
at all calculated to put him in fear or to excite any hope of his
escaping punishment by telling what he knew or witnessed or did in
reference to the killing.
The declarations of Hansen after the killing, as detailed by
Green and Larsen, were also admissible in evidence against Sparf,
because they appear to have been made in his presence and under
such circumstances as would warrant the inference that he would
naturally have contradicted them if he did not assent to their
truth.
But the confession and declarations of Hansen to Sodergren after
the killing of Fitzgerald were incompetent as evidence against
Sparf. St. Clair, Hansen, and Sparf were charged jointly with the
murder of Fitzgerald. What Hansen said after the deed had been
fully consummated, and not on the occasion of the killing, and in
the presence only of the witness, was clearly incompetent against
his codefendant Sparf, however strongly it tended to connect the
latter with the commission of the crime. If the evidence made a
case of conspiracy to kill and murder, the rule is settled that
"after the conspiracy has come to an end, and whether by success
or by failure, the admissions of one conspirator by way of
narrative of past facts are not admissible in evidence against the
others."
Logan v. United States, 144 U.
S. 263,
144 U. S. 309;
Brown v. United States, 150 U. S. 93,
150 U. S. 98;
Wright's Criminal Conspiracies, Carson's ed. 212, 213, 217; 1
Greenleaf § 233. The same rule is applicable where the
evidence does not show that the killing was pursuant to a
conspiracy, but yet was by the joint act of the defendants.
The objection to the question in answer to which the
declarations of Hansen to Sodergren were given was sufficiently
specific. The general rule undoubtedly is that an objection
Page 156 U. S. 57
should be so framed as to indicate the precise point upon which
the court is asked to rule. It has therefore been often held that
an objection to evidence as irrelevant, immaterial, and
incompetent, nothing more being stated, is too general to be
considered on error if in any possible circumstances it could be
deemed or could be made relevant, material, or competent. But this
principle will not sustain the ruling by which the declarations of
Hansen, made long after the commission of the alleged murder, and
not in the presence of Sparf, were admitted as evidence against the
latter. In no state of case were those declarations competent
against Sparf. Their inadmissibility as to him was apparent. It
appeared upon the very face of the question itself.
In
People v. Beach, 87 N.Y. 508, 513, which was an
indictment for petit larceny, the prosecution offered in evidence
the statements of a third party, not in the presence of the
accused, which related to the vital point upon which the conviction
turned. There was a general objection to the evidence. The court
said:
"We think, however, the general objection made in this case was
sufficient. It appeared when the objection was made that the
conversation proposed to be shown was between the prosecutor and
Hardacre, when the defendant was not present. There was no possible
view of the case, as it then or afterwards stood, in which such a
conversation was admissible. When the witness was asked to state
the conversation and counsel objected, both the court and the
prosecuting officer must have understood that it was an objection
to the competency of the proposed evidence. If the objection had
been made in terms on the ground that the evidence was incompetent,
the sufficiency of the objection could not have been questioned,
and the objection, as made, necessarily implied this. Neither the
court nor prosecuting attorney could have been misled as to the
point of the objection. It was patent on considering the objection
in connection with the proof offered. If any doubt could be
entertained as to the technical sufficiency of the objection, we
should be disinclined, in a criminal case, to deprive a defendant
of the benefit of an exception by the strict application of a rule
more especially
Page 156 U. S. 58
applicable to civil cases when we can see that its application
would produce injustice."
And in
Turner v. City of Newburgh, 109 N.Y. 301, 308,
it was said:
"This Court has held that when the objection to evidence is
general, and it is overruled and the evidence is received, the
ruling will not be held erroneous unless there be some grounds
which could not have been obviated had they been specified, or
unless the evidence in its essential nature be incompetent."
Tozer v. N.Y. Central & Hudson River Railroad, 105
N.Y. 659;
Alcorn v. Chicago & Alton Railway, 108 Mo.
81;
Curr v. Hundley (Colo. App.), 31 P. 939, 940;
McCaden v. Lowenstein, 92 Tenn. 614;
Ward v.
Wilms, 16 Colo. 86.
We are of opinion that as the declarations of Hansen to
Sodergren were not, in any view of the case, competent evidence
against Sparf; the court, upon objection's being made by counsel
representing both defendants, should have excluded them as evidence
against him, and admitted them against Hansen. The fact that the
objection was made in the name of both defendants did not justify
the court in overruling it as to both when the evidence was
obviously incompetent, and could not have been made competent
against Sparf, and was obviously competent against Hansen. It was
not necessary that counsel should have made the objection on behalf
of one defendant and then formally repeated it, in the same words,
for the other defendant. If Sparf had been tried alone, a general
objection in his behalf on the ground of incompetency would have
been sufficiently definite. Surely such an objection, coming from
Sparf when tried with another, ought not to be deemed ineffectual
because of the circumstance that his counsel, who, by order of the
court, represented also his codefendant, incautiously spoke in the
name of both defendants. Each was entitled to make his own defense,
and the jury could have found one of them guilty and acquitted the
other.
Mutual Life Ins. Co. v. Hillmon, 145 U.
S. 285,
145 U. S. 293.
See also Commonwealth v. Robinson, 1 Gray 555, 560.
For the error of the court in not sustaining the objection
referred to so far as it related to Sparf, the judgment must be
reversed as to him. If he were the only defendant, we might
Page 156 U. S. 59
withhold any expression of opinion upon other questions raised
by the assignments of error. But as some of those questions are
important, and may arise upon another trial of Sparf, and
especially as they must be now determined with reference to Hansen,
we proceed to their examination.
2. One of the specifications of error relates to the refusal of
the court to give certain instructions asked by the defendants, and
to parts of the charge to the jury.
The defendants asked the court to instruct the jury as
follows:
"In all criminal causes, the defendant may be found guilty of
any offense the commission of which is necessarily included in that
with which he is charged in the indictment, or the defendant may be
found guilty of an attempt to commit the offense so charged,
provided that such attempt be itself a separate offense. . . .
Under an indictment charging murder, the defendant may be convicted
of murder, of manslaughter, or an attempt to commit either murder
or manslaughter. . . . Under the indictment in this case, the
defendants may be convicted of murder, or manslaughter, or of an
attempt to commit murder or manslaughter, and if, after a full and
careful consideration of all the evidence before you, you believe
beyond a reasonable doubt that the defendants are guilty either of
manslaughter, or of an assault with intent to commit murder or
manslaughter, you should so find your verdict."
These instructions were refused, and the defendants
excepted.
In its charge to the jury, the court, among other things,
said:
"What, then, is murder? There are only two kinds of felonious
homicide known to the laws of the United States. One is murder, and
the other is manslaughter. There are no degrees of murder. . . .
There is no definition of 'murder' by any United States statute. We
resort to the common law for that. By the common law, murder is the
unlawful killing of a human being in the peace of the state, with
malice aforethought, either express or implied. Malice, then, is an
element in the offense, and discriminates it from the other crime
of felonious homicide which I have mentioned, to-wit, manslaughter;
that is, malice, express or implied, discriminates
Page 156 U. S. 60
murder from the offense of manslaughter. . . . Express malice
exists when one, by deliberate premeditation and design, formed in
advance, to kill or to do bodily harm, the premeditation and design
being implied from external circumstances capable of proof, such as
lying in wait, antecedent threats, and concerted schemes against a
victim. Implied malice is an inference of the law from any
deliberate and cruel act committed by one person against another.
The two kinds of malice, therefore, to repeat, indicate but one
state of mind, established in different ways -- the one by
circumstances showing premeditation of the homicide, the other by
an inference of the law from the act committed; that is, malice is
inferred when one kills another without provocation, or when the
provocation is not great. Manslaughter is the unlawful killing of a
human being without malice, either expressed or implied. I do not
consider it necessary, gentlemen, to explain it further,
for if
a felonious homicide has been committed, of which you are to be the
judges from the proof, there is nothing in this case to reduce it
below the grade of murder. In other words, it may be in the
power of the jury, under the indictment by which these defendants
are accused and tried, of finding them guilty of a less crime than
murder, to-wit, manslaughter, or an attempt to commit murder;
yet, as I have said in this case, if a felonious homicide has
been committed at all, of which I repeat you are the judges, there
is nothing to reduce it below the grade of murder."
The court further said to the jury:
"You are the exclusive judges of the credibility of the
witnesses, and, in judging of their credibility, you have a right
to take into consideration their prejudices, motives, or feelings
of revenge, if any such have been proven or shown by the evidence
in the case. If you believe from the evidence that any witness or
witnesses have knowingly and willfully testified falsely as to any
material fact or point, you are at liberty to disregard entirely
the testimony of such witness or witnesses. . . . Gentlemen, I have
given you these instructions as carefully as I could, avoiding all
references to the testimony, but I do not wish to be misunderstood,
and out of abundant
Page 156 U. S. 61
caution I say further to you, in giving you these instructions,
I may by accident have assumed facts to be proven. If so, you must
disregard the assumption. It is not my purpose, nor is it my
function, to assume any fact to be proven, nor to suggest to you
that any fact has been proven.
You are the exclusive judges of
the fact. No matter what assumption may appear during the course of
the trial in any ruling of mine, or what may appear in any one of
these instructions, you are to take this case and consider it, and
remember you are the tribunal to which the law has referred the
case and whose judgment the law wants on the case."
After the jury had been in consultation for a time, they
returned into court for further instructions. The colloquy between
the court and the jurors is set forth at large in the
margin.{1}
Page 156 U. S. 62
The requests for instruction made by the defendants were based
upon section 1035 of the Revised Statutes of the United
Page 156 U. S. 63
States, providing that
"in all criminal causes, the defendant may be found guilty of
any offense the commission of which is necessarily included in that
with which he is charged in indictment, or may be found guilty of
an attempt to commit the offense so charged,
provided that
such attempt be itself a separate offense."
The refusal to grant the defendants' requests for instructions,
taken in connection with so much of the charge as referred to the
crime of manslaughter, and the observations of the court when the
jury, through their foreman, applied for further instructions,
present the question whether the court transcended its authority
when saying, as in effect it did, that in view of the evidence, the
only verdict the jury could under the law properly render would be
either one of guilty of the offense charged or one of not guilty of
the offense charged, that if a felonious homicide had been
committed by either of the defendants,
of which the jury were
the judges from the proof, there was nothing in this case to
reduce it below the grade of murder, and that, "as one of the
tribunals of the country, a jury is expected to be governed by law,
and the law it should receive from the court."
The court below assumed, and correctly, that section 1035 of the
Revised Statutes did not authorize a jury in a criminal case to
find the defendant guilty of a less offense than the one charged
unless the evidence justified them in so doing. Congress did not
intend to invest juries in criminal cases with power arbitrarily to
disregard the evidence and the principles of law applicable to the
case on trial. The only object of that section was to enable the
jury, in case the defendant was not shown to be guilty of the
particular crime charged,
and if the evidence permitted them to
do so, to find him guilty of a lesser offense necessarily
included in the one charged, or of the offense of attempting to
commit the one charged. Upon a careful scrutiny of the evidence, we
cannot find any ground whatever upon which the jury could properly
have reached the conclusion that the defendant Hanson was only
guilty of an offense included in the one charged, or of a mere
attempt to commit the offense charged. A verdict of guilty of
an
Page 156 U. S. 64
offense less than the one charged would have been in flagrant
disregard of all the proof, and in violation by the jury of their
obligation to render a true verdict. There was an entire absence of
evidence upon which to rest a verdict of guilty of manslaughter or
of simple assault. A verdict of that kind would have been the
exercise by the jury of the power to commute the punishment for an
offense actually committed, and thus impose a punishment different
from that prescribed by law.
The general question as to the duty of the jury to receive the
law from the court is not concluded by any direct decision
of this Court. But it has been often considered by other courts and
by judges of high authority, and, where its determination has not
been controlled by specific constitutional or statutory provisions
expressly empowering the jury to determine both law and facts, the
principle by which courts and juries are to be guided in the
exercise of their respective functions has become firmly
established. If this be true, this Court should not announce a
different rule unless impelled to do so by reasons so cogent and
controlling that they cannot properly be overlooked or disregarded.
Some of the members of this Court, after much consideration, and
upon an extended review of the authorities, are of opinion that the
conclusion reached by this Court is erroneous both upon principle
and authority. For this reason, and because the question is of
great importance in the administration of justice, and also
involves human life, we deem it appropriate to state with more
fullness than under other circumstances would be necessary the
grounds upon which our judgment will rest, looking first to cases
determined in the courts of the United States.
In
Georgia v.
Brailsford, 3 Dall. 1,
3
U. S. 4, a case in this Court tried by a special jury
upon an amicable issue, Chief Justice Jay is reported to have
said:
"It may not be amiss here, gentlemen, to remind you of the good
old rule that on questions of fact, it is the province of the jury,
on questions of law it is the province of the court, to decide. But
it must be observed that by the same law which recognizes this
reasonable distribution of jurisdiction, you have, nevertheless, a
right to take
Page 156 U. S. 65
upon yourselves to judge of both, and to determine the law as
well as the fact in controversy. On this and on every other
occasion, however, we have no doubt you will pay that respect which
is due to the opinion of the court, for as on the one hand it is
presumed that juries are best judges of facts, it is, on the other
hand, presumable that the courts are the best judges of the law.
But still both objects are lawfully within your power of
decision."
Of the correctness of this report, Mr. Justice Curtis in
United States v. Morris, 1 Curtis 23, 58, expressed much
doubt, for the reason that the Chief Justice is reported as saying
that, in
civil cases -- and that was a civil case -- the
jury had the right to decide the law, and because also the
different parts of the charge conflict with each other, the Chief
Justice, according to the report, saying at the outset that it is
the province of the jury to decide questions of fact, and of the
court to decide questions of law, and in the succeeding sentence
informing the jury that they had the
right to take upon
themselves the determination of
both law and fact. If the
Chief Justice said that it was the
province of the court
to
decide questions of law, and the
province of
the jury to
decide questions of fact, he could not have
said that the jury had the
right, in a civil case, to
judge of and
determine both law and fact. "The
whole case," Mr. Justice Curtis said,
"was an anomaly. It purports to be a trial by jury in the
Supreme Court of the United States of certain issues out of
chancery, and the Chief Justice begins by telling the jury that the
facts are all agreed, and the only question is a matter of law, and
upon that the whole court were agreed. If it be correctly reported,
I can only say it is not in accordance with the views of any other
court, so far as I know, in this country or in England, and is
certainly not in accordance with the course of the Supreme Court
for many years."
Certain observations of Chief Justice Marshall in the course of
the trial of Burr have sometimes been referred to in support of the
contention that the jury in a criminal case are under no legal
obligation to accept the law as laid down by the court. But nothing
said by him at that trial was inconsistent with the views expressed
by eminent jurists in cases
Page 156 U. S. 66
to be presently cited. In the course of an opinion relating
merely to the order of evidence, the Chief Justice said:
"Levying of war is a fact which must be decided by the jury. The
court may give general instructions on this as on every other
question brought before them, but the jury must decide upon it
as compounded of fact and law."
1
Burr's Trial 470. This language is supposed to
justify the contention that the jury in a criminal case are
entitled, of right, to determine questions of pure law adversely to
the direction of the court. But that no such thought was in the
mind of the Chief Justice is manifest from his written charge to
the jury at a subsequent stage of the trial, the accuracy of the
report of which has never been disputed, in which he discussed, in
the light of the authorities, the question as to what constituted
treason.
In the course of that charge, he indicated quite distinctly his
view of the respective functions of court and jury. "It has been
thought proper," he said,
"to discuss this question at large, and to review the opinion of
the Supreme Court [
Ex Parte Bollman and
Swartwout, 4 Cranch 75], although this Court would
be more disposed to leave the question of
fact whether an
overt act of levying war were committed on Blennerhassett's Island
to the jury
under this explanation of the law, and
to
instruct them that unless the assemblage on Blennerhassett's
Island was an assemblage in force -- was a military assemblage in a
condition to make war -- it was not levying war, and that
they
could not construe it into an act of war, than to arrest the
further testimony which might be offered to connect the prisoner
with that assemblage, or to prove the intention of those who
assembled together at that place. This point, however, is not to be
understood as decided. It will, perhaps, constitute an essential
inquiry in another case."
2 Burr's Trial 422. This language is wholly inconsistent with
the theory that the Chief Justice recognized the right of the jury
to disregard the court's view of the law upon any question arising
in the case before them. It was consistent only with the theory
that the court could speak authoritatively as to the law, while the
function of the jury
Page 156 U. S. 67
was to respond as to the facts. Again:
"It is the further opinion of the court
that there is no
testimony whatever which tends to prove that the accused was
actually or constructively present when that assemblage did take
place; indeed, the contrary is most apparent. . . . The opinion of
this Court on the order of testimony has frequently been adverted
to as deciding this question against the motion. If a contradiction
between the two opinions exist, the court cannot perceive it. It
was said that levying war is an act
compounded of law and
fact, of which the jury, aided by the court, must judge. To
that declaration the court still adheres."
He concluded his memorable charge in these words:
"The jury have now heard the opinion of the court on the law of
the case. They
will apply that law to the facts, and will
find a verdict of guilty or not guilty as their own consciences may
direct."
Again, according to the only recognized report of that trial
ever published, the Chief Justice, in response to certain inquiries
of counsel made after the jury returned their verdict, said:
"Without doubt, the court intended to deliver merely a legal
opinion as to what acts amounted in law to an overt act of levying
war, and not whether such an overt act has or has not been proved.
It merely stated the law,
to which the jury would apply the
facts proved. It is their province to say whether,
according to this statement and the evidence, an overt act
has been proved or not."
Ib., 448. The language of the Chief Justice plainly
imports that, while the jury must of necessity often pass upon a
question "compounded of fact and law," their duty, when considering
the evidence, was to apply the law, as given by the court, to the
facts proved, and
thus applying the law, return a verdict
of guilty or not guilty as their consciences might direct. If he
had believed that the jury were entitled, of right, whatever might
be the views of the court, to determine for themselves the law of
the case, it is impossible that he could have said that "they will
apply that law [the law as he declared it to be] to the facts." On
the contrary, he observed that the province of the jury was to
determine whether the accused was guilty or not guilty, according
to his statement of the law as applied to the evidence.
Page 156 U. S. 68
Of course this Court has no means of determining what were the
views of Chief Justice Marshall except by referring to such
authorized publications as show what he said while discharging
judicial functions. In none of his opinions delivered at the
circuit court and published can there be found anything at all in
conflict with his declarations at the trial of Burr. And it may be
observed that the circumstances attending that trial were such as
to induce him to weigh every word embodied in his elaborate written
charge to the jury. That he understood the gravity of the occasion,
so far as it related to the conduct of the trial, is manifest from
his referring in the following language to certain considerations
that had been advanced in argument:
"That this Court dares not usurp power is most true. That this
Court dares not shrink from its duty is not less true. No man is
desirous of placing himself in a disagreeable situation. No man is
desirous of becoming the peculiar subject of calumny. No man, might
he let the bitter cup pass from him without self-reproach, would
drain it to the bottom. But if he have no choice in the case, if
there be no alternative presented to him but a dereliction of duty
or the opprobrium of those who are denominated the 'world,' he
merits the contempt as well as the indignation of his country who
can hesitate which to embrace. That, gentlemen, in a case the most
interesting, in the zeal with which they advocate particular
opinions, and under the conviction in some measure produced by that
zeal, should on each side press their arguments too far, should be
impatient at any deliberation in the court, and should suspect of
fear the operation of motives to which alone they can ascribe that
deliberation, is perhaps a frailty incident to human nature; but if
any conduct on the part of the court could warrant a sentiment that
it would deviate to the one side or the other from the line
prescribed by duty and by law, that conduct would be viewed by the
judges themselves with an eye of extreme severity, and would long
be recollected with deep and serious regret."
Pp. 444-445.
In
Henfield's Case, Mr. Justice Wilson, with whom sat
Mr. Justice Iredell, stated that the jury, in a general verdict,
must
Page 156 U. S. 69
decide both law and fact, but that "this did not authorize them
to decide it as they pleased," and that, "the questions of law
coming into
joint consideration with the facts, it is the
duty of the court to explain the law to the jury, and give it to
them
in direction." Wharton's State Trials 48, 84. This
statement of the principle is sometimes referred to in support of
the proposition that the jury is not under a legal duty to accept
the law as declared by the court in a criminal case. We think it
tends to show that it is the province and duty of the jury to apply
to the facts of the case the law as given to them by the court "in
direction."
There is nothing in conflict with this in the Lectures on Law
delivered by Mr. Justice Wilson. In one of those lectures,
referring to the duties of jurors in criminal cases, he said:
"On questions of law, his [the juror's] deficiencies will be
supplied by the professional directions of the judges, whose
duty and
whose business it is professionally to
direct him, for, as we have seen, verdicts in criminal
cases generally determine the question of law as well as the
question of fact. Questions of fact it is his exclusive province to
determine. With the consideration of evidence unconnected with the
question which he is to try his attention will not be distracted,
for everything of that nature, we presume, will be excluded by the
court. The collected powers of his mind therefore will be fixed,
steadily and without interruption, upon the issue he is sworn to
try.
This issue is an issue
of fact."
2 Wilson's Works 386. Other observations found in these
lectures, if considered alone, are not so explicit upon the
question of the respective functions of court and jury, but, taken
in connection with all that he said, it is reasonably clear that
when Mr. Justice Wilson spoke of the determination by a jury, in a
criminal case, of both law and fact, he meant only that a general
verdict of guilty or not guilty of necessity decided every question
before them which involved a
joint consideration of law
and fact, not that the jury could ignore the directions of the
court and take the law into their own hands.
The observations of Mr. Justice Samuel Chase in the
Case of
John Fries, tried for treason in 1800, are supposed to
sustain
Page 156 U. S. 70
the broad proposition that the jury may, of right, disregard the
law as expounded by the court. He undoubtedly did say that while it
was the duty of the court in all criminal cases to state the law
arising on the facts, the jury were to decide "both the law and
facts, on their consideration of the whole case."
Chase's
Trial, App. 45. But on the trial, in the same year, in the
Circuit Court of the United States for the Virginia District, of
James Thompson Callender for seditious libel, he was appalled at
the suggestion by learned counsel that the jury were entitled, of
right, to determine the constitutional validity of the act of
Congress under which the accused was indicted. Mr. Wirt, counsel
for the defendant, said:
"Since, then, the jury have a right to consider the law, and
since the Constitution is law, the conclusion is certainly
syllogistic that the jury have a right to consider the
Constitution."
Ib. 710. But Mr. Justice Chase declined to accept this
view. He said:
"The statute on which the traverser is indicted enacts"
"that the jury who shall try the cause shall have a right to
determine the law and the fact, under the direction of the court,
as in other cases. By this provision I understand that a
right is given to the jury to determine what the law is in the case
before them, and not to decide whether a statute of the United
States produced to them is a law or not, or whether it is void,
under an opinion that it is unconstitutional -- that is, contrary
to the Constitution of the United States. I admit that the jury are
to compare the statute with the facts proved, and then to decide
whether the acts done are prohibited by
the law and
whether they amount to the offense described in the indictment.
This power the jury necessarily possesses, in order to enable them
to decide on the guilt or innocence of the person accused. It is
one thing to decide what the law is on the facts proved, and
another and a very different thing to determine that the statute
produced is no law. To decide what the law is on the facts is an
admission that the law exists. If there be no law in the case,
there can be no comparison between it and the facts, and it is
unnecessary to establish facts before it is ascertained that there
is a law to punish the commission of them."
Ib., 713.
Page 156 U. S. 71
"It was never pretended," he continued,
"as I ever heard, before this time, that a petit jury in England
(from whence our common law is derived) or in any part of the
United States ever exercised such power. If a petit jury can
rightfully exercise this power over one statute of Congress, they
must have an equal right and power over any other statute, and
indeed over all the statutes, for no line can be drawn, no
restriction imposed, on the exercise of such power; it must rest in
discretion only. If this power be once admitted, petit jurors will
be superior to the national legislature, and its laws will be
subject to their control. The power to abrogate or to make laws
nugatory is equal to the authority of making them. The evident
consequences of this right in juries will be that a law of Congress
will be in operation in one state and not in another. A law to
impose taxes will be obeyed in one state and not in another, unless
force be employed to compel submission. The doing of certain acts
will be held criminal and punished in one state and similar acts
may be held innocent, and even approved and applauded in another.
The effects of the exercise of this power by petit jurors may be
readily conceived. It appears to me that the right now claimed has
a direct tendency to dissolve the union of the United States, on
which, under divine Providence, our political safety, happiness,
and prosperity depend."
Ib., 714. He concluded his opinion in these words:
"I consider it of the greatest consequence to the administration
of justice that the powers of the court and the powers of the petit
jury should be kept
distinct and
separate. I have
uniformly delivered the opinion 'that the petit jury have a right
to decide the law as well as the fact in criminal cases,' but it
never entered into my mind that they therefore had a right to
determine the constitutionality of any statute of the United
States."
Ib., 718.
What Mr. Justice Chase said is quite sufficient to show the
mischievous consequences that would flow from the doctrine that the
jury may, of right, disregard the directions of the court, and
determine the law for themselves; for if, as is contended, the jury
in criminal cases are not bound to take the law from the court, it
is impossible to deny their absolute
Page 156 U. S. 72
right in a case depending entirely upon an act of Congress, or a
statute of a state, to determine, upon their own responsibility,
whether that act or statute is or is not law -- that is, whether it
is or is not in violation of the Constitution.
Mr. Justice Thompson, who became a member of this Court in 1823,
concurred in the opinion delivered by Kent, J., in
People v.
Croswell (1804), 3 Johns.Cas. 337, 362, where the court was
equally divided, Chief Justice Lewis and Judge Brockholst
Livingston, afterwards a justice of this Court, holding that to
questions of law the court, to questions of fact the jury, must
respond. But in his opinion in
Pierce v. State, 13 N.H.
356, 564, Chief Justice Parker, referring to Judge Kent's opinion
in
People v. Croswell, said:
"Mr. Justice Thompson, who concurred in that opinion, must have
understood that concurrence to be merely in the points necessary to
the decision of that cause, or have subsequently changed his views,
for I have his authority for saying that he has repeatedly ruled
that the jury are not judges or the law in criminal cases."
And in the dissenting opinion of Judge Bennett in
State v.
Croteau, 23 Vt. 14, 63 (where it was held that the jury, in
criminal cases, could rightfully decide questions of both law and
fact, but which case has been overruled, 65 Vt. 1, 34), it was
said:
"Judge Thompson, whose judicial learning and experience while on
the bench of the Supreme Court of New York, and on the bench of the
United States were very extensive, thus wrote to a friend some
short time before his death:"
"I have repeatedly ruled on the trial of criminal cases that it
was the
right as well as the duty of the court to decide
questions of law, and any other rule, it appears to me, would be at
war with our whole judicial system, and introduce the utmost
confusion in criminal trials. It is true, the jury may disregard
the instructions of the court, and in some cases there may be no
remedy. But it is still the right of the court to instruct the jury
on the law, and the duty of the jury to obey the instructions."
See also Wharton's Cr.Pl. & Pr. § 810, note
3.
The remarks of Mr. Justice Baldwin in
United States v.
Wilson and Porter, 1 Baldwin 78, 100, 108, have sometimes
Page 156 U. S. 73
been referred to as in conflict with the rule that it is the
duty of the jury to accept the law as expounded by the court. It is
quite true that, in the charge in
Wilson's Case, Mr.
Justice Baldwin said that if the jury were prepared to say that the
law was different from what the court had announced, they were in
the exercise of their constitutional right to do so. But in his
charge in
Porter's Case he explained what was said in
Wilson's Case. After remarking that, if a jury find a
prisoner guilty against the court's opinion of the law of the case,
a new trial would be granted, as no court would pronounce
a judgment on a prisoner against what it believes to be the law, he
said:
"This, then, you will understand to be what is meant by your
power to determine upon the law; but you will still bear
in mind that it is a very old, sound, and valuable maxim that the
court answers to questions of law, and the jury to facts. Every
day's experience evinces the wisdom of this rule."
Subsequently, in
United States v. Shive, 1 Baldwin 510,
513, which was an indictment for passing a counterfeit note of the
Bank of the United States, and when the question arose as to the
right of the jury to pass upon the constitutionality of the act of
Congress on which the prosecution was founded, Mr. Justice Baldwin
said in his charge:
"
If juries once exercise this power, we are without a
Constitution or laws; one jury has the same power as another;
you cannot bind those who may take your places; what you declare
constitutional today another jury may declare unconstitutional
tomorrow."
The question before us received full consideration by Mr.
Justice Story in
United States v. Battiste, 2 Sumner 240,
243-244. That was an indictment for a capital offense, and the
question was directly presented whether, in criminal cases,
especially in capital cases, the jury were the judges of the law as
well as of the facts. He said:
"My opinion is that the jury are no more judges of the law in a
capital or other criminal case, upon the plea of not guilty, than
they are in every civil case tried upon the general issue. In each
of these cases, their verdict, when general, is necessarily
compounded of law and of fact, and includes both. In each they must
necessarily
Page 156 U. S. 74
determine the law as well as the fact. In each they have the
physical power to disregard the law, as laid down to them by the
court. But I deny that in any case, civil or criminal, they have
the moral right to decide the law according to their own notions or
pleasure. On the contrary, I hold it the most sacred constitutional
right of every party accused of a crime that the jury should
respond as to the facts, and the court as to the law. It is the
duty of the court to instruct the jury as to the law, and it is the
duty of the jury to follow the law as it is laid down by the court.
This is the right of every citizen, and it is his only protection.
If the jury were at liberty to settle the law for themselves, the
effect would be not only that the law itself would be most
uncertain, from the different views which different juries might
take of it, but in case of error there would be no remedy or
redress by the injured party, for the court would not have any
right to review the law as it had been settled by the jury. . . .
Every person accused as a criminal has a right to be tried
according to the law of the land -- the fixed law of the land, and
not by the law as a jury may understand it, or choose, from
wantonness or ignorance of accidental mistake, to interpret it. If
I thought that the jury were the proper judges of the law in
criminal cases, I should hold it my duty to abstain from the
responsibility of stating the law to them upon any such trial. But
believing as I do that every citizen has a right to be tried by the
law, and according to the law, that it is his privilege and truest
shield against oppression and wrong, I feel it my duty to state my
views fully and openly on the present occasion."
In
United States v. Morris, 1 Curtis 23, 51, 52-58, the
question, in all of its aspects, was examined by Mr. Justice Curtis
with his accustomed care. In that case, the contention was that
every jury impaneled in a court of the United States was the
rightful judge of the existence, construction, and effect of every
law that was material in a criminal case, and could, of right, and
if it did its duty must, decide finally on the constitutional
validity of any act of Congress which the trial brought in
question. Touching the rightful powers and duties of the court and
the jury under the Constitution in criminal cases,
Page 156 U. S. 75
Mr. Justice Curtis, among other things, said:
"The sixth article, after declaring that the Constitution, laws,
treaties of the United States shall be the supreme law of the land,
proceeds, 'And the
judges, in every state, shall be bound
thereby.' But was it not intended that the Constitution, laws, and
treaties of the United States should be the supreme law in
criminal as well as in
civil cases? If a state
law should make it penal for an officer of the United States to do
what an act of Congress commands him to do, was not the latter to
be supreme over the former? And if so, and in such cases juries
finally and rightfully determine the law, and the Constitution so
means when it speaks of a trial by jury, why was this command laid
on the judges alone, who are thus mere advisers of the jury, and
may be bound to give sound advice, but have no real power in the
matter? It was evidently the intention of the Constitution that all
persons engaged in making, expounding, and executing the laws, not
only under the authority of the United States, but of the several
states, should be bound by oath or affirmation to support the
Constitution of the United States. But no such oath or affirmation
is required of jurors, to whom it is alleged the Constitution
confides the power of expounding that instrument, and not only
construing, but holding invalid, any law which may come in question
on a criminal trial. . . . In my opinion,"
the learned justice proceeded,
"it is the duty of the court to decide every question of law
which arises in a criminal trial. If the question touches any
matter affecting the course of the trial, such as the competency of
a witness, the admissibility of evidence, and the like, the jury
receive no direction concerning it. It affects the materials out of
which they are to form their verdict, but they have no more concern
with it than they would have had if the question had arisen in some
other trial. If the question of law enters into the issue and forms
part of it, the jury are to be told that the law is, and they are
bound to consider that they are told truly; that law they apply to
the facts, as they find them, and thus, passing both on the law and
the fact, they, from both, frame their general verdict of guilty or
not guilty. Such is my view of the respective duties of the
different
Page 156 U. S. 76
parts of this tribunal in the trial of criminal case, and I have
not found a single decision of any court in England, prior to the
formation of the Constitution, which conflicts with it."
It was also contended that the clause in the act of Congress,
known as the Sedition Law of 1798, c. 74, § 3, 1 Stat.
596-597, declaring that "the jury who shall try the cause shall
have a right to determine the law and the fact, under the direction
of the court, as in other cases," implied that the jury "in other
cases" might decide the law contrary to the direction of the court.
But in response to this view, Mr. Justice Curtis said:
"I draw from this the opposite inference, for where was the
necessity of this provision if, by force of the Constitution,
juries, as such, have both the power and the right to determine all
questions in criminal cases, and why are they to be directed by the
court?"
See also Montgomery v. State, 11 Ohio 427.
But Mr. Justice Curtis considered the question from another
point of view, and gave reasons which appear to us entirely
conclusive against the proposition that it is for the jury, in
every criminal case, to say authoritatively what is the law by
which they are to be governed in finding their verdict. He
said:
"There is, however, another act of Congress which bears directly
on this question. The act of the 29th of April, 1802, in section 6,
after enacting that, in case of a division of opinion between the
judges of the circuit court on any question, such question may be
certified to the supreme court, proceeds:"
"And shall by the said court be
finally decided, and
the decision of the supreme court and their order in the premises
shall be remitted to the circuit court, and be there entered of
record and have effect according to the nature of such judgment and
order."
"The residue of this section proves that criminal as well as
civil cases are embraced in it, and under it many questions arising
in criminal cases have been certified to and decided by the supreme
court, and persons have been executed by reason of such decisions.
Now can it be, after a question arising in a criminal trial has
been certified to the supreme court, and there, in the language of
this act, finally decided, and their order remitted here and
entered
Page 156 U. S. 77
of record, that when the trial comes on, the jury may rightfully
revise and reverse this final decision? Suppose, in the course of
this trial, the judges had divided in opinion upon the question of
the constitutionality of the act of 1850, and that, after a final
decision thereon by the supreme court and the receipt of its
mandate here, the trial should come on before a jury, does the
Constitution of the United States, which established that supreme
court, intend that a jury may, as matter of right, revise and
reverse that decision? And if not, what becomes of this supposed
right? Are the decisions of the supreme court binding on juries,
and not the decisions of inferior courts? This will hardly be
pretended, and if it were, how is it to be determined whether the
supreme court has or has not, in some former case, in effect
settled a particular question of law? In my judgment, this act of
Congress is in accordance with the Constitution, and designed to
effect one of its important and even necessary objects -- a uniform
exposition and interpretation of the law of the United States -- by
providing means for a final decision of any question of law --
final as respects every tribunal and every part of any tribunal in
the country, and if so, it is not only wholly inconsistent with the
alleged power of juries, to the extent of all questions so decided,
but it tends strongly to prove that no such right as is claimed
does or can exist."
Again:
"Considering the intense interest excited, the talent and
learning employed, and consequently the careful researches made, in
England, near the close of the last century, when the law of libel
was under discussion in the courts and in Parliament, it cannot be
doubted that if any decision having the least weight could have
been produced in support of the general proposition that juries are
judges of the law in criminal cases, it would then have been
brought forward. I am not aware that any such was produced. And the
decision of the King's Bench in
Rex v. Dean of St. Asaph,
3 T.R. 428, note, and the answers of the twelve judges to the
questions propounded by the House of Lords, assume, as a necessary
postulate, what Lord Mansfield so clearly declares in terms, that,
by the law of England, juries cannot rightfully decide a
question
Page 156 U. S. 78
of law. Passing over what was said by ardent partisans and
eloquent counsel, it will be found that the great contest
concerning what is known as 'Mr. Fox's Libel Bill' was carried on
upon quite a different ground by its leading friends -- a ground
which, while it admits that the jury are not to decide the law,
denies that the libelous intent is matter of law, and asserts that
it is so mixed with the fact that, under the general issue, it is
for the jury to find it as a fact. 34 An.Reg. 170; 29
Parl.Hist.Debates in the Lords. Such I understand to be the effect
of that famous declaratory law. 32 Geo. III, c. 60. . . . I
conclude, then, that when the Constitution of the United States was
founded, it was a settled rule of the common law that, in criminal
as well as in civil cases, the court decided the law, and the jury
the facts, and it cannot be doubted that this must have an
important effect in determining what is meant by the Constitution
when it adopts a trial by jury."
That eminent jurist, whose retirement from judicial station has
never cased to be a matter of deep regret to the bench and bar of
this country, closed his great opinion with an expression of a firm
conviction that, under the Constitution of the United States,
juries in criminal cases have not the right to decide any question
of law, and that, in rendering a general verdict, their duty and
their oath require them to apply to the facts, as the find them,
the law given to them by the court. And in so declaring, he
substantially repeated what Chief Justice Marshall had said in
Burr's Case.
In
United States v. Greathouse, 4 Sawyer 457, 464,
which was an indictment for treason, Mr. Justice Field said:
"There prevails a very general, but an erroneous, opinion that
in all criminal cases the jury are the judges as well of the law as
of the fact -- that is, that they have the right to disregard the
law as laid down by the court, and to follow their own notions on
the subject. Such is not the right of the jury. . . . It is their
duty to take the law from the court, and apply it to the facts of
the case. It is the province of the court, and of the court alone,
to determine all questions of law arising in the progress of a
trial, and it is the province of the jury to
Page 156 U. S. 79
pass upon the evidence, and determine all contested questions of
fact. The responsibility of deciding correctly as to the law rests
solely with the court, and the responsibility of finding correctly
the facts rests solely with the jury."
These principles were applied by Judge Shipman in
United
States v. Riley, 5 Blatchford 204, and by Judge Cranch upon an
extended review of the authorities, in
Stettinius v. United
States, 5 Cranch C.C. 573. They were also applied by Judge
Jackson, in the District of West Virginia, in
United States v.
Keller, 19 F. 633, in which case it was said that although an
acquittal in a criminal case was final, even if the jury
arbitrarily disregarded the instructions of the court on the law of
the case, a jury, in order to discharge its whole duty, must take
the law from the court and apply it to the facts of the case.
Turning, now, to cases in the state courts, we find that in
Commonwealth v. Porter, 10 Met. 263, 276, the Supreme
Judicial Court of Massachusetts, speaking by Chief Justice Shaw,
delivering the unanimous judgment of the court composed of himself
and Justices Wilde, Dewey, and Hubbard, held that it was a well
settled principle, lying at the foundation of jury trials, admitted
and recognized over since jury trial had been adopted as an
established and settled mode of proceeding in courts of justice,
that it was the proper province and duty of judges to consider and
decide all questions of law, and the proper province and duty of
the jury to decide all questions of fact. In the same case, the
court, observing that the safety, efficiency, and purity of jury
trial depend upon the steady maintenance and practical application
of this principle, and adverting to the fact that a jury, in
rendering a general verdict, must necessarily pass upon the whole
issue, compounded of the law and of the fact, and thus incidentally
pass on questions of law, said:
"It is the duty of the court to instruct the jury on all
questions of law which appear to arise in the cause, and also upon
all questions, pertinent to the issue, upon which either party may
request the direction of the court upon matters of law. And it is
the duty of the jury to receive the law from the court, and to
conform their judgment
Page 156 U. S. 80
and decision to such instructions, as far as they understand
them, in applying the law to the facts to be found by them, and it
is not within the legitimate province of the jury to revise,
reconsider, or decide contrary to such opinion or direction of the
court in matter of law."
P. 286.
Perhaps the fullest examination of the question upon principle,
as well as upon authority, to be found in the decisions of any
state court, was made in
Commonwealth v. Anthes, 5 Gray
185, 208, 218, where Chief Justice Shaw, speaking for a majority of
the court, said that the true theory and fundamental principle of
the common law, both in its civil and criminal departments, was
that the judges should adjudicate finally upon the whole question
of law, and the jury upon the whole question of fact.
Considering, in the light of the authorities, the grounds upon
which a verdict of guilty or not guilty, in a criminal case, was
held at common law, to be conclusive, he observed that though the
jury had the power they had not the right to decide, that is, to
adjudicate, on both law and evidence. He said:
"The result of these several rules and principles is that, in
practice, the verdict of a jury, both upon the law and the fact, is
conclusive; because, from the nature of the proceeding, there is no
judicial power by which the conclusion of law thus brought upon the
record by that verdict can be reversed, set aside, or inquired
into. A general verdict, either of conviction or acquittal, does
embody had declare the result of both the law and the fact, and
there is no mode of separating them on the record so as to
ascertain whether the jury passed their judgment on the law, or
only on the evidence. The law authorized them to adjudicate
definitively on the evidence; the law presumes that they acted upon
correct rules of law given then by the judge. The verdict therefore
stands conclusive and unquestionable, in point both of law and
fact. In a certain limited sense, therefore, it may be said that
the jury have a power and legal right to pass upon both the law and
the fact. And this is sufficient to account for many and most of
the
dicta in which the proposition is stated. But it would
be more accurate to state that it is the right of the jury to
return
Page 156 U. S. 81
a general verdict; this draws after it, as a necessary
consequence, that they incidentally pass upon the law. But here
again is the question, what is intended by 'passing upon the law'?
I think it is by embracing it in their verdict, and thus bringing
it upon the record, with their finding of the facts. But does it
follow that they may rightfully and by authority of the common law,
by which all are conscientiously bound to govern their conduct,
proceed upon the same grounds and principles in the one case as the
other? What the jury have a right to do, and what are the grounds
and principles upon which they are in duty and conscience bound to
act and govern themselves in the exercise of that right, are two
very distinct questions. The latter is the one we have do deal
with. Suppose they have a right to find a general verdict, and by
that verdict to conclude the prosecutor in the matter of law, still
it is an open and very different question whether, in making up
that verdict and thereby embracing the law, they have the same
right to exercise their own reason and judgment, against the
statement of the law by the judge, to adjudicate on the law, as
unquestionably they have on the fact. The affirmative of this
proposition is maintained by the defendant in this case, and by
others in many of the cases before us. If I am right in the
assumption that the judge is to adjudge the law, and the jury the
fact only, it furnishes the answer to this question to what extent
the jury adjudicate the law, and it is that they receive
authoritative directions from the court, and act in conformity with
them, though by their verdict they thus embrace the law with the
fact, which they may rightfully adjudicate."
Alluding to the history of this question in England, and
particularly, as did Mr. Justice Curtis, to the controversy in
King v. Dean of St. Asaph, 3 T.R. 428, note, and which
resulted in the passage by Parliament, after the separation of this
country from Great Britain, of the Libel Act, 32 Geo. III., and
observing that both parties to that controversy assumed the force
and existence of the rule as the ancient rule of the common law,
the court said:
"The court and high prerogative party say judges answer to the
law, and jurors to the fact; the question
Page 156 U. S. 82
of guilty or not, in the peculiar form of a criminal prosecution
for libel, after the jury have found the fact of publication and
truth of the innuendoes, is a question of law, and therefore must
be declared exclusively by the court. The popular party, assuming
the same major proposition, say the question of guilty or not is
question of fact, and can be found only by the jury. It appears to
me, therefore, as I stated on the outset, that, considering the
course of the controversy, the earnestness and ability with which
every point was contested, and the thorough examination of the
ancient authorities, this concurrence of views on the point in
question affords strong proof that up to the period of our
separation from England, the fundamental definition of trials by
jury depended on the universal maxim, without an exception,
ad
quaestionem facti respondent juratores, and quaestionem juris
respondent judices."
The
Anthes Case, it may be observed, arose under a
statute enacted in 1855, after the decision in the
Porter
Case. But the court held that that statute did not confer upon
juries in criminal trials the power of determining questions of law
against the instruction of the court. And the Chief Justice said --
Justices Metcalf and Merrick concurring -- that if the statute
could be so interpreted as to prescribe that the jury, consistently
with their duty, may decide the law upon their judgment contrary to
the decision and instruction of the court before whom the trial was
had, such enactment would be beyond the scope of legitimate
legislative power, repugnant to the Constitution, and, of course,
inoperative and void.
See also Commonwealth v. Rock, 10
Gray 4, where the doctrine announced in
Commonwealth v.
Anthes were reaffirmed, no one of the members of the court
expressing a dissent.
This question was also fully considered in
Montee v.
Commonwealth, 3 J. J. Marsh. 132, 149, 151, in which case
Chief Justice Robertson said:
"The circuit judge would be a cipher, and a criminal trial
before him a farce, if he had no right to decide all questions of
law which might arise in the progress of the case. The jury are the
exclusive judges of
the facts. In this particular they
cannot be controlled, and ought not to be instructed, by the court.
They are also,
ex
Page 156 U. S. 83
necessitate, the ultimate judges, in one respect, of
the law. If they acquit, the judge cannot grant a new trial, how
much soever they have misconceived or disregarded the law. . . . If
the court had no right to decide on the law, error, confusion,
uncertainty, and licentiousness would characterize the criminal
trials, and the safety of the accused might be as much endangered
as the stability of public justice would certainly be."
In
Pierce v. State, 13 N.H. 536, 554, it was held to be
inconsistent with the spirit of the Constitution that questions of
law, and, still less, questions of constitutional law, should be
decided by the verdict of the jury contrary to the instructions of
the court.
In
Duffy v. People, 26 N.Y. 588, 591, Judge Selden,
speaking for the Court of Appeals of New York, said:
"The unquestionable power of juries to find general verdicts,
involving both law and fact, furnishes the foundation for the
opinion that they are judges of the law as well as of the fact, and
gives some plausibility to that opinion. They are not, however,
compelled to decide legal questions, having the right to find
special verdicts, giving the facts, and leaving the legal
conclusions which result from such facts to the court. When they
find general verdicts, I think it is their duty to be governed by
the instructions of the court as to all legal questions involved in
such verdicts. They have the power to do otherwise, but the
exercise of such power cannot be regarded as rightful, although the
law has provided no means, in criminal cases, of reviewing their
decisions, whether of law of fact, or of ascertaining the grounds
upon which their verdicts are based."
See also People v. Finnegan, 1 Parker's Cr.Cas. 147,
152;
Safford v. People, 1 Parker's Cr.Cas. 474, 480.
So, in
Hamilton v. People, 29 Mich. 173, 192, Mr.
Justice Campbell, as the organ of the court, said:
"We understand the uniform practice and the decided weight of
opinion to require that the judge give his views of the law to the
jury as authority, and not as a matter to be submitted to their
review."
And in
People v. Anderson, 44 Cal. 65, 70: "In this
state it is so well settled as no longer to be open to debate that
it is the duty of a jury, in a criminal case, to take the law from
the court."
Page 156 U. S. 84
The principle was accurately stated by Chief Justice Ames,
speaking for the Supreme Court of Rhode Island, when he said:
"The line between the duties of a court and jury in the trial of
causes at law, both civil and criminal, is perfectly well defined,
and the rigid observance of it is of the last importance to the
administration of systematic justice. Whilst, on the one hand, the
jury are the sole, ultimate judges of the facts, they are, on the
other, to receive the law applicable to the case before them solely
from the publicly given instructions of the court. In this way,
court and jury are made responsible, each in its appropriate
department, for the part taken by each in the trial and decision of
causes, and in this way alone can errors of fact and errors of law
be traced, for the purpose of correction, to their proper sources.
If the jury can receive the law of a case on trial in any other
mode than from the instructions of the court, given in the presence
of parties and counsel, how are their errors of law with any
certainty to be detected, and how, with any certainty therefore to
be corrected? It is a statute right of parties here -- following,
too, the ancient course of the common law -- to have the law given
by the court, in their presence, to the jury, to guide their
decision, in order that every error in matter of law may be known
and corrected."
State v. Smith, 6 R.I. 33, 34.
In Pennsylvania, in the case of
Commonwealth v. Sherry
(reported in the appendix to Wharton's treatise on Homicide, pp.
481-482), Judge Rogers, a jurist of high reputation, thus charged
the jury in a capital case:
"You are, it is true, judges in a criminal case, in one sense,
of both law and fact, for your verdict, as in civil cases, must
pass on law and fact together. If you acquit, you interpose a final
bar to a second prosecution, no matter how entirely your verdict
may have been in opposition to the views expressed by the court. .
. . It is important for you to keep this distinction in mind,
remembering that while you have the physical power, by an
acquittal, to discharge a defendant from further prosecution, you
have no moral power to do so against the law laid down by the
court. . . . For your part, your duty is to receive the law, for
the purposes of this trial, from the court. If an error injurious
to
Page 156 U. S. 85
the prisoner occurs, it will be rectified by the revision of the
court
en banc. But an error resulting from either a
conviction or acquittal against the law can never be rectified. In
the first case, an unnecessary stigma is affixed to the character
of a man who was not guilty of the offense with which he is
charged. In the second case, a serious injury is effected by the
arbitrary and irremediable discharge of a guilty man. You will see
from these considerations the great importance of the preservation,
in criminal as well as in civil cases, of the maxim that the law
belongs to the court, and the facts to the jury."
About the same time, Judge Sergeant charged a jury:
"The point, if you believe the evidence on both sides, is one of
law, on which it is your duty to receive the instructions of the
court. If you believe the evidence in the whole case, you must find
the defendant guilty."
Commonwealth v. Van Sickle, Brightly (Penn.) 73. To the
same effect, substantially, was the language of Chief Justice
Gibson, who, when closing a charge in a capital case, said, "If the
evidence on these points fail the prisoner, the conclusion of his
guilt will be irresistible, and it will be your duty to draw it."
Commonwealth v. Harman, 4 Penn.St. 269. In a more recent
case,
Kane v. Commonwealth, 89 Penn.St. 522, Sharswood,
C.J., said that the power of the jury to judge of the law in a
criminal case was one of the most valuable securities guarantied by
the bill of rights of Pennsylvania. But in a later case,
Nicholson v. Commonwealth, 96 Penn.St. 505, it was
said:
"The court had an undoubted right to instruct the jury as to the
law, and to warn them as they did against finding contrary to it.
This is very different from telling them that they
must
find the defendant guilty, which is what is meant by a binding
instruction in criminal cases."
In
Commonwealth v. McManus, 143 Penn.St. 64, 85, it was
adjudged that the statement by the court was the best evidence of
the law within the reach of the jury, and that the jury should be
guided by what the court said as to the law. And this view the
court, speaking by Chief Justice Paxson, said was in harmony with
Kane v. Commonwealth.
The question has recently been examined by the Supreme Court of
Vermont, and after an elaborate review of the
Page 156 U. S. 86
authorities, English and American, that court, by a unanimous
judgment, overruling
State v. Croteau, 23 Vt. 14, and all
the previous cases which had followed that case, said:
"We are thus led to the conclusion that the doctrine that jurors
are the judges of the law in criminal cases is untenable; that it
is contrary to the fundamental maxims of the common law from which
it is claimed to take its origin; contrary to the uniform practice
and decisions of the courts of Great Britain, where our jury system
had its beginning and where it matured; contrary to the great
weight of authority in this country; contrary to the spirit and
meaning of the Constitution of the United States; repugnant to the
Constitution of this state; repugnant to our statute relative to
the reservation of questions of law in criminal cases, and passing
the same to the supreme court for final decision."
State v. Burpee, 65 Vt. 1, 34.
These principles are supported by a very large number of
adjudications, as will be seen by an examination of the cases cited
in margin.{2}
To the same purport are the text writers. "In theory,
therefore," says Judge Cooley,
"the rule of law would seem to be that it is the duty of the
jury to receive and follow the law as delivered to them by the
court, and such is the clear weight of authority."
Const.Lim. 323, 324. Greenleaf, in his treatise on the Law of
Evidence, says:
"In trials by jury, it is the province of the presiding judge to
determine all questions
Page 156 U. S. 87
on the admissibility of evidence to the jury, as well as to
instruct them in the rules of law by which it is to be weighed.
Whether there be any evidence or not is a question for the judge;
whether it is sufficient evidence is a question for the jury. . . .
Where the question is mixed, consisting of law and fact, so
intimately blended as not to be easily susceptible of separate
decision, it is submitted to the jury, who are first instructed by
the judge in the principles and rules of law by which they are to
be governed in finding a verdict, and these instructions they are
bound to follow."
Vol. 1, § 49. Starkie, in his treatise on Evidence,
observes, "Where the jury find a general verdict, they are bound to
apply the law as delivered by the court, in criminal as well as
civil cases." P. 816. So, in Phillips on Evidence:
"They [the jury] are not in general, either in civil or criminal
cases, judges of the law. They are bound to find the law as it is
propounded to them by the court. They may indeed find a general
verdict, including both law and fact, but if in such verdict they
find the law contrary to the instructions of the court, they
thereby violate their oath."
Vol. 3, Hill & Cowen's Notes, part 2, 1501.
See
also 1 Taylor on Ev. §§ 21 to 24; 1 Best's Ev.
Morgan's ed. § 82.
In 1 Crim.Law Mag. 51 will be found a valuable note to the case
of
Kane v. Commonwealth prepared by Mr. Wharton, in which
the authorities are fully examined and in which he says:
"It would be absurd to say that the determination of the law
belongs to the jury, not court, if the court has power to set aside
that which the jury determines. We must hold, to enable us to avoid
the inconsistency, that, subject to the qualification that all
acquittals are final, the law in criminal cases is to be
determined by the court. In this way we have our liberties and
rights determined not by an irresponsible but by a responsible
tribunal; not by a tribunal ignorant of the law, but by a tribunal
trained to and disciplined by the law; not by an irreversible
tribunal, but by a reversible tribunal; not by a tribunal which
makes its own law, but by a tribunal that obeys the law as made. In
this way we maintain two fundamental maxims. The first is that
while to
Page 156 U. S. 88
facts answer juries, to the law answers the court. The second,
which is still more important, is '
nullum crimen, nulla poena,
sine lege. Unless there be a violation of law pre-announced,
and this by a constant and responsible tribunal, there is no crime,
and can be no punishment.' 1 Crim.Law Mag. 56. The same author, in
his treatise on Pleading and Practice, concludes his examination of
the question in these words:"
"The conclusion we must therefore accept is that the jury are no
more judges of law in criminal than in civil cases, with the
qualification that, owing to the peculiar doctrine of
autrefois
acquit, a criminal
acquitted cannot be overhauled by
the court. In the federal courts, such is now the established
rule."
§§ 809, 810.
Forsyth, in his History of Trial by Jury -- a work of merit --
discusses the doctrine advanced by some that the jury were entitled
in all cases, where no special pleas have been put on the record,
to give a general verdict according to their own views of the law
in criminal as well as in civil cases. He says:
"It is impossible to uphold the doctrine. It is founded on a
confusion between the ideas of
power and
right. .
. . Indeed it is difficult to understand how anyone acquainted with
the principles and settled practice of the English law can assert
that it sanctions the doctrine which is here combated."
Again:
"The distinction between the province of the judge and that of
the jury is, in the English law, clearly defined, and observed with
jealous accuracy. The jury must in all cases determine the value
and effect of evidence which is submitted to them. They must decide
what degree of credit is to be given to a witness, and hold the
balance between conflicting probabilities. The law throws upon them
the whole responsibility of ascertaining
facts in dispute,
and the judge does not attempt to interfere with the exercise of
their unfettered discretion in this respect. But on the other hand,
the judge has his peculiar duty in the conduct of a trial. He must
determine whether the kind of evidence offered is such as ought or
ought not to be submitted to the jury, and what liabilities it
imposes. When any questions of law arise, he alone determines them,
and their consideration is absolutely
Page 156 U. S. 89
withdrawn from the jury, who must in such cases follow the
direction of the judge; or if they perversely refuse to do so,
their verdict (in civil cases) will be set aside, and a new trial
granted."
London ed. 1852. pp. 261-261, 282; Morgan's ed. pp. 235-236.
Worthington, in his Inquiry into Power of Juries, an English
work Published in 1825 and often cited in the adjudged cases,
says:
"Were they [the jury] permitted to decide the law, the
principles of justice would be subverted; the law would become as
variable as the prejudices, the inclinations, and the passions of
men. If they could legally decide upon questions of law, their
decision must, of necessity, be final and conclusive, which would
involve an absurdity in all judicial proceedings and would be
contradictory to the fundamental principles of our jurisprudence. .
. . The jury, when called upon to decide facts which are
complicated with law, are therefore constitutionally, and must be,
from the nature and intention of the institution, bound to seek and
to obey the direction of the judge with respect to the law. It
becomes their duty to apply to the law thus explained to them the
facts (which it is their exclusive province to find), and thus they
deliver a verdict compounded of law and fact, but they do not
determine or decide upon the law in any case."
Pp. 193-194.
Judge Thompson, in his work on Trials, §§ 1016-1017,
thus states the principles: "The judge decides questions of law;
the jury, questions of fact." So, in Proffat on Trial by Jury
§ 375:
"The preponderance of judicial authority in this country is in
favor of the doctrine that the jury should take the law from the
court, and apply it to the evidence under its direction."
The language of some judges and statesmen in the early history
of the country, implying that the jury were entitled to disregard
the law as expounded by the court, is perhaps to be explained by
the fact that
"in many of the states, the arbitrary temper of the colonial
judges, holding office directly from the crown, had made the
independence of the jury, in law as well as in fact, of much
popular importance."
Wharton's
Page 156 U. S. 90
Cr.Pl. & Pr., 8th ed., § 806;
Williams v.
State, 32 Miss. 389, 396.
Notwithstanding the declarations of eminent jurists and of
numerous courts, as disclosed in the authorities cited, it is
sometimes confidently asserted that they all erred when adjudging
that the rule at common law was that the jury, in criminal cases,
could not properly disregard the law as given by the court. We are
of opinion that the law in England at the date of our separation
from that country was as declared in the authorities we have cited.
The contrary view rests, as we think in large part upon expressions
of certain judges and writers enforcing the principle that when the
question is
compounded of law and fact, a general verdict,
ex necessitate, disposes of the case in hand both as to
law and fact. That is what Lord Somers meant when he said, in his
essay on "The Security of Englishmen's Lives, or the Trust, Power,
and Duty of the Grand Juries of England," that jurors only "are the
judges from whose sentence the indicted are to expect life or
death," and that, "by finding guilty or not guilty, they do
complicately resolve both law and fact." In the speeches of many
statesmen and in the utterances of many jurists will be found the
general observation that when law and fact are "blended," their
combined consideration is for the jury, and a verdict of guilty or
not guilty will determine both for the particular case in hand. But
this falls far short of the contention that the jury, in applying
the law to the facts, may rightfully refuse to act upon the
principles of law announced by the court.
It is to be observed that those who have maintained the broad
position that a jury may, of right, disregard the law as declared
by the court cite the judgment of Chief Justice Vaughan in
Bushell's Case, Vaughan 135. In that case, the accused
were acquitted by a general verdict, in opposition, as it was
charged, to the directions of the court. And the question presented
upon habeas corpus was whether, for so doing, they were subject to
be fined and committed to prison until the fine was paid. Upon a
careful examination of the elaborate opinion in that case, it will
become clear that the fundamental
Page 156 U. S. 91
proposition decided was that, in view of the different functions
of court and jury, and because a general verdict of necessity
resolves "both law and fact complicately, and not the fact by
itself," it could never be proved, where the case went to the jury
upon both law and facts, that the jurors did not proceed upon their
view
of the evidence. Chief Justice Vaughan said that the
words in the warrant
"that the jury did acquit against the direction of the court in
matter of law, literally taken, and
de plano, are
insignificant, and not intelligible, for no issue can be joined of
matter in law;
no jury can be charged with the trial of matter
in law barely; no evidence ever was or can be given to a jury of
what is law or not, nor no such oath can be given to or taken by a
jury, to try matter in law, nor no attaint can lie for such a
false oath."
Vaughan 143. Touching the distinction between the oath of a
witness and that of a juror, he said:
"A witness swears but to what hath fallen under his senses. But
a juryman swears to what he can infer and conclude from the
testimony of such witnesses, by the act and force of his own
understanding, to be the fact inquired after, which differs nothing
in the reason, though much in the punishment, from what a judge,
out of various cases considered by him infers to be law in the
question before him."
P. 142.
In referring to the opinion in
Bushell's Case, Mr.
Justice Curtis well observed that it would be found that Chief
Justice Vaughan
"confines himself to a narrow, though, for the case, a
conclusive, line of argument -- that, the general issue embracing
fact as well as law, it can never be proved that the jury believed
the testimony on which the fact depended and in reference to which
the direction was given, and so they cannot be shown to be guilty
of any legal misdemeanor in returning a verdict, though apparently
against the direction of the court in matter of law."
And this is the view of the opinion in
Bushell's Case,
expressed by Hallam in his Constitutional History of England, c.
13.
A similar criticism was made by the Supreme Judicial Court of
Massachusetts in the case of
Anthes. Chief Justice Shaw,
after stating the principles involved in
Bushell's
Case,
Page 156 U. S. 92
said:
"It may be remarked that from the improved views of the nature
of jury trials during the two hundred years which have elapsed
since the decision of Chief Justice Vaughan, the juror is now in no
more danger of punishment for giving an erroneous judgment in
matter of fact than a judge is for giving an erroneous judgment in
matter of law. But his statement clearly implies that the judge,
within his appropriate sphere, is to act by the force of his reason
and understanding, and, by the aid of his knowledge of the law and
all appropriate means, to adjudge all questions of law, and direct
the jury thereon, and in like manner the jury, by the force of
their reason and understanding, acting upon all the competent
evidence in the case, to reason, weigh evidence, draw inferences,
and adjudge the question of fact embraced in the issue. Again:"
"In these cases, the jury, and not the judge, resolve and find
what the fact is. Therefore, always, in discreet and lawful
assistance of the jury, the judge's direction is hypothetical and
upon supposition, and not positive, upon coercion, namely: If you
find the fact thus [leaving it to them what to find], then you are
to find for the plaintiff; but, if you find the fact thus, then it
is for the defendant."
"Vaughan, 144. . . . It is strange,"
Chief Justice Shaw felt constrained to say,
"that the authority of Vaughan, C.J., in this case should be
cited, as it has been, to prove that a juror, in finding a general
verdict, embracing law and fact, being sworn to try the issue, must
find his verdict upon his own conviction and conscience, relying,
in support of the proposition, upon the following words of Vaughan,
C.J.:"
"A man cannot see by another's eye, nor hear by another's ear.
No more can a man decide and infer the thing to be resolved by
another's understanding or reasoning."
"Vaughn 148."
Had these words been applied to
the whole issue
embraced in a general verdict, as would be implied from the manner
of referring to them, they would have countenanced the proposition;
but they are used expressly to illustrate the position that the
jury cannot be required
implicitly to give a verdict by
the dictates and authority of the judge. "I refer," Chief
Justice Shaw continued,
"only to one other passage,
Page 156 U. S. 93
which serves as a key to the whole judgment. He says:"
"That
decantatum in our books,
ad quaestionem facti
non respondent judices, ad quaestionem legis non respondent
juratores, literally taken, is true, for if it be demanded
what is the fact?, the judge cannot answer; if be asked
what is
the law in the case?, the jury cannot answer it."
"Vaughn 149."
All this tends to show that the leading thought in the opinion
of Chief Justice Vaughan was that while the jury cannot answer as
to the law, nor the court as to the fact, a general verdict,
compounded of law and fact, of necessity determines both as to the
case on trial.
In
Townsend's Case, an office taken by virtue of a writ
of mandamus and decided in the sixteenth century, the court
said:
"For the office of twelve men is no other than to inquire of
matters of fact, and not to adjudge what the law is, for that is
the office of the court, and not of the jury, and if they find the
matter of fact at large, and further say that thereupon the law is
so where in truth the law is not so, the judges shall adjudge
according to the matter of fact, and not according to the
conclusion of the jury."
1 Plowd. 110, 114. In
Willion v. Berkley, 1 Plowd. 222,
231, also a civil case:
"Matters of fact, being traverse, shall be tried by twelve men,
and if the plaintiff should take a traverse here, it would be to
make twelve illiterate men try a matter of law, whereof they have
no knowledge. It is not their office to try matters of law, but
only to try matters of fact, for at the beginning of our law, it
was ordained that matters of fact should be tried by twelve men of
the country where the matter arises, and matters of law by twelve
judges of the law, for which purpose there were six judges here,
and six in the King's Bench, who, upon matters of law, used to
assemble together in a certain place in order to discuss what the
law was therein. So that if a traverse should be here taken, it
would be to make twelve ignorant men of the country try that
whereof they are not judges, and which does not belong to them to
try."
See also Grendon v. Bishop of Lincoln, 2 Plowden 493,
496.
As early as 1727, Raymond, C.J., delivering the unanimous
opinion of the twelve judges of the King's bench in a
Page 156 U. S. 94
case of murder, said that the jury are judges only of the fact,
and the court of the law.
Rex v. Oneby, 2 Strange, 766,
773. The force of this language as to the functions of judge and
jury is not materially weakened by the fact that the case was
before the judges upon a special verdict, for it was expressly
declared that jurors were judges only of the fact.
Within a few years after
Oneby's Case was determined,
in 1734, the case of
King v. Poole, which was a criminal
information in the nature of a
quo warranto, came before
Lord Hardwicke. In passing upon a motion for a new trial, that
famous judge -- than whom there could be no higher authority as to
what was the settled law of England -- said:
"The thing that governs greatly in this determination is that
the point of law is not to be determined by juries; juries have a
power by law to determine matters of fact only, and it is of the
greatest consequence to the law of England, and to the subject,
that these powers of the judge and the jury are kept distinct; that
the judge determines the law, and the jury the fact, and if ever
they come to be confounded, it will prove the confusion and
destruction of the law of England."
Cas.Temp.Hardwicke 23, 27-28.
Upon the question here under examination, Mr. Foster, to whose
work Chief Justice Marshall frequently refers in his opinion or
charge delivered in
Burr's Case, says, in the first
edition of his work, which appeared in 1762, and again in the third
edition, which appeared in 1792:
"In every case where the point turneth upon the question whether
the homicide was committed willfully and maliciously, or under
circumstances justifying, excusing, or alleviating the matter of
fact,
viz., whether the facts alleged by way of justification,
excuse, or alleviation are true, is the proper and only
province of the jury. But whether, upon a supposition of the truth
of facts, such homicide be justified, excused, or alleviated must
be submitted to the judgment of the court, for the construction the
law putteth upon facts stated and agreed, or found by a jury, is in
this, as in all other cases, undoubtedly the proper province of the
court. In cases of doubt and real difficulty, it is commonly
recommended to the jury to state facts and circumstances
Page 156 U. S. 95
in a special verdict. But where the law is clear, the jury,
under the direction of the court
in point of law, matters
of fact being still left to their determination, may, and, if they
are well advised, always will, find a general verdict conformably
to such direction."
Foster's Crown Law 255-256, ed ed.
See also Rex v.
Withers (Lord Kenyon), 3 T.R. 428; Bacon's Abridg. Title
Juries, M. 2; 2 Hawkins' P.C. c. 22, § 21; 1 Duncomb, Trials
per Pais (Dublin 1793), pp. 229-231.
In Wynne's Eunomus, or Dialogues Concerning the Law and
Constitution of England, a work of considerable reputation, the
first edition having been published about the time of the adoption
of our Constitution, the principle is thus stated:
"All that I have said or have to say upon the subject of juries
is agreeable to the established maxim that 'juries must answer to
questions of fact, and judges to questions of law.' This is the
fundamental maxim acknowledged by the Constitution. . . . It is
undoubtedly true that the
jury are judges -- the only
judges -- of the
fact. Is it not equally within the spirit
of the maxim that
judges only have the competent
cognizance of the
law? Can it be contended that the jury
have in reality an adequate knowledge of law? Or that the
Constitution ever designed they should? . . . Well -- 'but the law
and the fact are often complicated' -- then it is the province of
the judge to distinguish them; to tell the jury that, supposing
such and such facts were done, what the law is in such
circumstances. This is an unbiased direction; this keeps the
province of judge and jury distinct; the facts are left altogether
to the jury, and the law does not control the fact, but arises from
it. . . . Every verdict is compounded of law and fact, but the law
and fact are always distinct in their nature."
Wynne's Eunomus, Dialogue III, § 53, 5th ed. 1822, pp. 523,
527-528; 3d ed. 1809, Vol. 2, pp. 142-144.
Mr. Stephens, in his great work on the History of the Criminal
Law of England, in discussing the powers of juries in France,
says:
"The right of the counsel for the defense to address the jury on
questions of law, as, for instance, whether killing in a duel is
meurtre, is one of the features in which the
Page 156 U. S. 96
administration of justice in France differs essentially from the
administration of justice in England. In England, the judge's duty
is to direct the jury in all matters of law, and any arguments of
counsel upon the subject must be addressed to him, and not to the
jury. This is not only perfectly well established as matter of law,
but it is as a fact acquiesced in by all whom it concerns."
Vol. 1, p. 551.
To the same effect is
Levi v. Milne, 4 Bing. 195,
reported as
Levy v. Milne, 12 J. B. Moore 418, and decided
in 1827. That was an action of libel. Mr. Sergeant Wilde, a counsel
in the case, contended that in cases of libel the jury are judges
of the law as well as of the fact. B ut Lord Chief Justice Best
said:
"If the jury were to be made judges of the law as well as of
fact, parties would be always liable to suffer from an arbitrary
decision. In the present case, the jury have made themselves judges
of the law, and have found against it. . . . My Brother Wilde has
stated that in cases of libel, the jury are judges of the law as
well as of fact, but I beg to deny that. Juries are not judges of
the law, or at any rate, not in civil actions. The authority on
which the learned sergeant has probably grounded his supposition is
32 Geo. III. c. 60, which was the famous bill brought in by Mr.
Fox, or, more properly, by Lord Erskine. But whoever reads that act
will see that it does not apply to civil actions; it applies only
to criminal cases. There is nothing in it that in any way touches
civil actions, and the jury, with respect to them, stand in the
same situation as they ever have done. I mean, however, to protest
against juries,
even in criminal cases, becoming judges of
the law. The act only says that they may find a general verdict.
Has a jury then a right to act against the opinion of the judge,
and to return a verdict on their own construction of the law? I am
clearly of opinion that they have not."
The report by Moore of this opinion is not as full as the report
in Bingham, but the two reports do not differ in any material
respect.
But a later decision was that by Lord Abinger, Chief Baron, in
1837, in
Regina v. Parish, 8 Carr. & P. 94. That was
an indictment for offering, disposing of, and putting off a
forged
Page 156 U. S. 97
bill of exchange. In the course of his argument to the jury, the
counsel for the accused read the observations of Mr. Justice
Coleridge in a certain case as sustaining his view of the law. He
was interrupted by the judge, who said:
"I cannot allow you to read cases to the jury.
It is the
duty of the jury to take the law from the judge. It no doubt
often happens that, in an address to the jury, counsel cite cases,
but then it is considered that that part of the speech of the
counsel is addressed to the judge. That cannot be so here, as you
very properly in the first instance referred me to the case, and
you have my opinion upon it; you can therefore make no further
legitimate use of the case, and the only effect of reading it would
be it discuss propositions of law with the jury,
with which
they have nothing to do, and which they ought to take from
me."
The case of
Parmiter v. Coupeland, 6 M. & W. 104,
106, 108, which was an action for libel, is not without value, as
tending to show that Fox's Libel Bill, so far from changing the
rule as generally applicable in criminal cases, only required the
same practice to be pursued in prosecutions for libel as in other
criminal cases. In the course of the argument of counsel, Parke,
B., said:
"In criminal cases, the judge is to define the crime, and the
jury are to find whether the party has committed that offense. Mr.
Fox's act made it the same in cases of libel, the practice having
been otherwise before."
Again:
"But it has been the course for a long time for a judge, in
cases of libel, as in other cases of a criminal nature, first to
give a
legal definition of the offense and then to leave
it to the jury to say whether the facts necessary to constitute
that offense are proved to their satisfaction, and that
whether the libel is the subject of a criminal prosecution or civil
action. A publication, without justification or lawful excuse,
which is calculated to injure the reputation of another by exposing
him to hatred, contempt, or ridicule is a libel. Whether the
particular publication, the subject of inquiry, is of that
character and would be likely to produce that effect is a question
upon which a jury is to exercise their judgment, and pronounce
their opinion
as a question of fact. The judge,
Page 156 U. S. 98
as a matter of advice to them in deciding
that
question, might have given his own opinion as to the nature of the
publication, but was not bound to do so as a matter of law. Mr.
Fox's Libel Bill was a declaratory act, and put prosecution for
libel on the same footing as other criminal cases."
Alderson, B., concurring, said that the judge
"ought, having defined what is a libel, to refer to the jury the
consideration of the particular publication,
whether falling
within that definition or not."
It is therefore a mistake to suppose that the English Libel Act
changed in any degree the general common law rule in criminal
cases, as to the right of the court to decide the law, and the duty
of the jury to apply the law thus given to the facts, subject to
the condition, inseparable from the jury system, that the jury, by
a general verdict, of necessity determined in the particular case
both law and fact, as compounded in the issue submitted to them.
That act provides that
"the court or judge, before whom such indictment or information
shall be tried, shall, according to their or his discretion, give
their or his
opinion and directions to the jury on the
matter in issue between the King and the defendant
in like
manner as in other criminal cases. . . . This seems,"
Mr. Justice Curtis well said,
"to carry the clearest implication that in this and all other
criminal cases, the jury may be
directed by the judge, and
that while the object of the statute was to declare that there was
other matter of fact besides publication and the
innuendoes to
be decided by the jury, it was not intended
to interfere with the proper province of the judge to decide all
matters of law."
United States v. Morris, 1 Curtis 55. And this accords
with the views expressed by Lord Abinger in
Reeves v.
Templar, 2 Jur. 137-138. He said:
"Before that statute, a practice had arisen of considering that
the question libel or no libel was always for the court independent
of the intention and meaning of the party publishing. That statute
corrected the error, and now, if the intention does not appear on
the body of the libel, a variety of circumstances are to be left to
the jury from which to infer it; but it was never intended to take
from the court the power of deciding whether certain words are,
per se, libelous or not. "
Page 156 U. S. 99
The rule that jurors do not respond to questions of law was
illustrated in
Bishop of Meath v. Marquis of Winchester, 4
Cl. & Fin. 445, 556-557, where Lord Chief Justice Tindal,
delivering the unanimous opinion of the judges, said:
"With respect to the second question lastly above proposed to
us,
viz., whether, if the fine were received in evidence,
it ought to be left to the jury to say whether it barred the action
of
quare impedit, we all think that the legal effect of
such fine as a bar to the action of
quare impedit is a
matter of law merely, and not in any way a matter of fact; and,
consequently the judge who tried the cause should state to the jury
whether, in point of law, the fine had that effect, or what other
effect, on the rights of the litigant parties, upon the general and
acknowledged principle
ad quaestionem juris non respondent
juratores."
Briefly stated, the contention of the accused is that,
although there may not have been any evidence whatever to
support a verdict of guilty of an offense less than the one charged
-- and such was the case here -- yet to charge the jury as matter
of law that the evidence in the case did not authorize any verdict
except one of guilty or one of not guilty of the particular offense
charged was an interference with their legitimate functions, and
therefore with the constitutional right of the accused to be tried
by a jury.
The error in the argument on behalf of the accused is in making
the general rule as to the respective functions of court and jury
applicable equally to a case in which there is some substantial
evidence to support the particular right asserted and a case in
which there is
an entire absence of evidence to establish
such right. In the former class of cases, the court may not,
without impairing the constitutional right of trial by jury, do
what, in the latter cases, it may often do without at all
entrenching upon the constitutional functions of the jury. The law
makes it the duty of the jury to return a verdict according to the
evidence in the particular case before them. But if there are no
facts in evidence bearing upon the issue to be determined, it is
the duty of the court, especially when so requested, to instruct
them as to the law arising out of that state of case. So if there
be some evidence bearing upon a
Page 156 U. S. 100
particular issue in a cause, but it is so meager as not in law
to justify a verdict in favor of the party producing it, the court
is in the line of duty when it so declares to the jury.
Pleasants v.
Fant, 22 Wall. 116,
89 U. S. 121;
Montclair v. Dana, 107 U. S. 162;
Randall v. Baltimore & Ohio Railroad, 109 U.
S. 478,
109 U. S. 482;
Schofield v. Chicago & St. Paul Railway, 114 U.
S. 615,
114 U. S. 619;
Marshall v. Hubbard, 117 U. S. 415,
117 U. S. 419;
Meehan v. Valentine, 145 U. S. 611,
145 U. S.
625.
The cases just cited were, it is true, of a civil nature, but
the rules they announce are, with few exceptions, applicable to
criminal causes, and indicate the true test for determining the
respective functions of court and jury. Who can doubt, for
instance, that the court has the right, even in a capital case, to
instruct the jury as matter of law to return a verdict of acquittal
on the evidence adduced by the prosecution? Could it be said, in
view of the established principles of criminal law, that such an
instruction entrenched upon the province of the jury to determine
from the evidence whether the accused was guilty or not guilty of
the offense charged, or of some lesser offense included in the one
charged? Under a given state of facts outlined in an instruction to
the jury, certain legal presumptions may arise. May not the court
tell the jury what those presumptions are, and should not the jury
assume that they are told truly? If the court excludes evidence
given in the hearing of the jury, and instructs them to disregard
it altogether, is it not their duty to obey that instruction,
whatever may be their view of the admissibility of such evidence?
In
Smith v. United States, 151 U. S.
50,
151 U. S. 55,
which was an indictment for the murder, in the Indian Territory, of
one Gentry, "a white man, and not an Indian," we said:
"That Gentry was a white man, and not an Indian, was a fact
which the government was bound to establish, and if it failed to
introduce any evidence upon that point, defendant was entitled to
an instruction to that effect. Without expressing any opinion as to
the correctness of the legal propositions embodied in this charge,
we think there was no testimony which authorized the court to
submit to the jury the question whether Gentry was a white man and
not an Indian.
Page 156 U. S. 101
The objection went to the jurisdiction of the court, and if no
other reasonable inference could have been drawn from the evidence
that Gentry was an Indian, defendant, was entitled as matter of law
to an acquittal,"
citing
Pleasants v.
Fant, 22 Wall. 116;
County Commissioners v.
Clark, 94 U. S. 278, and
Marshall v. Hubbard, 117 U. S. 415. So,
in this case, it was competent for the court to say to the jury
that,
on account of the absence of all evidence tending to
show that the defendants were guilty of manslaughter, they could
not, consistently with law, return a verdict of guilty of that
crime.
Any other rule than that indicated in the above observations
would bring confusion and uncertainty in the administration of the
criminal law. Indeed, if a jury may rightfully disregard the
direction of the court in matter of law, and determine for
themselves what the law is in the particular case before them, it
is difficult to perceive any legal ground upon which a verdict of
conviction can be set aside by the court as being against law. If
it be the function of the jury to decide the law as well the facts
-- if the function of the court be only advisory as to the law --
why should the court interfere for the protection of the accused
against what it deems an error of the jury in matter of law?
Public and private safety alike would be in peril if the
principle be established that juries in criminal cases may, of
right, disregard the law as expounded to them by the court, and
become a law unto themselves. Under such a system, the principal
function of the judge would be to preside and keep order while
jurymen, untrained in the law, would determine questions affecting
life, liberty, or property according to such legal principles as,
in their judgment, were applicable to the particular case being
tried. If because, generally speaking, it is the function of the
jury to determine the guilt or innocence of the accused according
to the evidence, of the truth or weight of which they are to judge,
the court should be held bound to instruct them upon a point in
respect to which there was no evidence whatever, or to forbear
stating what the law is upon a given state of facts, the result
would be that the enforcement of the law against criminals, and the
protection of
Page 156 U. S. 102
citizens against unjust and groundless prosecutions, would
depend entirely upon juries uncontrolled by any settled, fixed,
legal principles. And if it be true that a jury in a criminal case
are under no legal obligation to take the law from the court, and
may determine for themselves what the law is, it necessarily
results that counsel for the accused may, of right, in the presence
of both court and jury, contend that what the court declares to be
the law applicable to the case in hand is not the law, and in
support of his contention, read to the jury the reports of adjudged
cases, and the views of elementary writers. Undoubtedly, in some
jurisdictions where juries in criminal cases have the right, in
virtue of constitutional or statutory provisions, to decide both
law and facts upon their own judgment as to what the law is and as
to what the facts are, it may be the privilege of counsel to read
and discuss adjudged cases before the jury. And in a few
jurisdictions in which it is held that the court alone responds as
to the law, that practice is allowed in deference to long usage.
But upon principle, where the matter is not controlled by express
constitutional or statutory provisions, it cannot be regarded as
the right of counsel to dispute before the jury the law as declared
by the court. Under the contrary view -- if it be held that the
court may not authoritatively decide all questions of law arising
in criminal cases -- the result will be that when a new trial in a
criminal case is ordered, even by this Court, the jury, upon such
trial, may of right return a verdict based upon the assumption that
what this Court has adjudged to be law is not law. We cannot give
our sanction to any rule that will lead to such a result. We must
hold firmly to the doctrine that, in the courts of the United
States, it is the duty of juries in criminal cases to take the law
from the court and apply that law to the facts as they find them to
be from the evidence. Upon the court rests the responsibility of
declaring the law; upon the jury, the responsibility of applying
the law so declared to the facts as they, upon their conscience,
believe them to be. Under any other system, the courts, although
established in order to declare the law, would for every practical
purpose be eliminated from our system of government as
instrumentalities
Page 156 U. S. 103
devised for the protection equally of society and of individuals
in their essential rights. When that occurs, our government will
cease to be a government of laws and become a government of men.
Liberty regulated by law is the underlying principle of our
institutions.
To instruct the jury in a criminal case that the defendant
cannot properly be convicted of a crime less than that charged, or
to refuse to instruct them in respect to the lesser offenses that
might, under some circumstances, be included in the one so charged,
there being no evidence whatever upon which any verdict could be
properly returned except one of guilty or one of not guilty of the
particular offense charged, is not error, for the instructing or
refusing to instruct, under the circumstances named, rests upon
legal principles or presumptions which it is the province of the
court to declare for the guidance of the jury. In the case
supposed, the court is as clearly in the exercise of its legitimate
functions as it is when ruling that particular evidence offered is
not competent, or that evidence once admitted shall be stricken out
and not be considered by the jury, or when it withdraws from the
jury all proof of confessions by the accused upon the ground that
such confessions, not having been made freely and voluntarily, are
inadmissible under the law as evidence against the accused.
These views are sustained by a very great weight of authority in
this country. In
People v. Barry, 90 Cal. 41 (which was a
criminal prosecution for an assault with intent to commit robbery,
the accused having been twice before convicted of petit larceny),
it was held not to be error to refuse to instruct the jury that
under the charge they might find him guilty of simple assault,
because "the evidence tended to show that he was guilty of the
crime charged or of no offense at all," and therefore "the
instruction asked was not applicable to the facts of the case;" in
People v. McNutt, 93 Cal. 658 (the offense charged being
an assault with a deadly weapon and with intent to commit murder),
that an instruction that the jury might convict of a simple assault
could have been properly refused, because, "under the evidence,
he
Page 156 U. S. 104
was either guilty of an offense more serious than simple assault
or he was not guilty;" in
Clark v. Commonwealth, 123
Penn.St. 81 (a case of murder), that the omission of an instruction
on the law of voluntary manslaughter, and the power of the jury to
find it, was not error because the murder was deliberate murder,
and "there was no evidence on which it could be reduced to a milder
form of homicide;" in
State v. Lane, 64 Mo. 319, 324
(which was an indictment for murder in the first degree), that
"if the evidence makes out a case of murder in the first degree,
and applies to that kind of killing, and no other, the court would
commit no error in confining its instructions to that offense and
refusing to instruct either as to murder in the second degree or
manslaughter in any of its various degrees,"
and when an instruction "is given for any less grade of offense,
and there is no evidence upon which to base it," the judgment
should be reversed for error; in
McCoy v. State, 27
Tex.App. 415 (the charge being murder of the first degree), that
the refusal to charge the law of murder in the second degree was
not error, for the reason that if the defendant was "criminally
responsible at all for the homicide, the grade of the offense under
the facts is not short of murder of the first degree;" in
State
v. McKinney, 111 N.C. 683 (a murder case), that as there was
no testimony on either side tending to show manslaughter, a charge
that there was no element of manslaughter in the case and that the
defendant was guilty of murder or not guilty of anything at all, as
the jury should find the facts, was strictly in accordance with the
testimony and the precedents; in
State v. Musick, 101 Mo.
261, 270 (where the charge was an assault with malice aforethought,
punishable by confinement in the penitentiary), that an instruction
looking to a conviction for a lower grade, included in the offense
charged, was proper where there was evidence justifying it; in
State v. Casford, 76 Ia. 332, that the defendant, so
charged in an indictment that he could be convicted of rape, an
assault to commit rape, or an assault and battery, was not
prejudiced by the omission of the court to instruct the jury that
he would be convicted of a simple assault, there being no evidence
to authorize
Page 156 U. S. 105
a verdict for the latter offense; in
Jones v. State, 52
Ark. 346 (a murder case), that it was not error to refuse to charge
as to a lower grade of offense, there being "no evidence of any
crime less than murder in the first degree," and the defendant
being therefore guilty of "murder in the first degree, or
innocent;" in
McClernand v. Commonwealth (Kentucky), 12
S.W. 148, and in
O'Brien v. Commonwealth, 89 Ky. 354
(murder cases), that an instruction as to manslaughter need not be
given unless there is evidence to justify it; in
State v.
Estep, 44 Kan. 575 (a case of murder of the first degree),
that there was no testimony tending to show that the defendant was
guilty of manslaughter in either the first, second, or fourth
degree, instructions as to those degrees should not have been
given, and in
Robinson v. State, 84 Ga. 674 (a case of
assault with intent to murder), that the refusal to instruct the
jury that the defendant could have been found guilty of an assault,
or of assault and battery, was not error, "for there was nothing in
the evidence to justify the court in so instructing the jury."
We have said that, with few exceptions, the rules which obtain
in civil cases in relation to the authority of the court to
instruct the jury upon all matters of law arising upon the issues
to be tried are applicable in the trial of criminal cases. The most
important of those exceptions is that it is not competent for the
court in a criminal case to instruct the jury peremptorily to find
the accused guilty of the offense charged or of any criminal
offense less than that charged. The grounds upon which this
exception rests were well stated by Judge McCrary, Mr. Justice
Miller concurring, in
United States v. Taylor, 11 F. 470.
It was there said:
"In a civil case, the court may set aside the verdict, whether
it be for the plaintiff or defendant, upon the ground that it is
contrary to the law as given by the court; but in a criminal case,
if the verdict is one of acquittal, the court has no power to set
it aside. It would be a useless form for a court to submit a civil
case involving only questions of law to the consideration of a jury
where the verdict, when found, if not in accordance with the
court's view of the law, would be set aside. The same result
Page 156 U. S. 106
is accomplished by an instruction given in advance to find a
verdict in accordance with the court's opinion of the law. But not
so in criminal cases. A verdict of acquittal cannot be set aside,
and therefore, if the court can direct a verdict of guilty, it can
do indirectly that which it has on power to do directly."
We are of opinion that the court below did not err in saying to
the jury that they could not, consistently with the law arising
from the evidence, find the defendants guilty of manslaughter, or
of any offense less than the one charged; that if the defendants
were not guilty of the offense charged, the duty of the jury was to
return a verdict of not guilty. No instruction was given that
questioned the right of the jury to determine whether the witnesses
were to be believed or not, nor whether the defendant was guilty or
not guilty of the offense charged. On the contrary, the court was
careful to say that the jury were the exclusive judges of the
facts, and that they were to determine -- applying to the facts the
principles of law announced by the court -- whether the evidence
established the guilt or innocence of the defendants of the charge
set out in the indictment.
The trial was thus conducted upon the theory that it was the
duty of the court to expound the law, and that of the jury to apply
the law as thus declared to the facts as ascertained by them. In
this separation of the functions of court and jury is found the
chief value, as well as safety, of the jury system. Those functions
cannot be confounded or disregarded without endangering the
stability of public justice, as well as the security of private and
personal rights.
The main reason ordinarily assigned for a recognition of the
right of the jury in a criminal case to take the law into their own
hands, and to disregard the directions of the court in matters of
law, is that the safety and liberty of the citizen will be thereby
more certainly secured. That view was urged upon Mr. Justice
Curtis. After stating that, if he conceived the reason assigned to
be well founded, he would pause long before denying the existence
of the power claimed, he said that a good deal of reflection had
convinced him that the
Page 156 U. S. 107
argument was the other way. He wisely observed that,
"[a]s long as the judges of the United States are obliged to
express their opinions publicly, to give their reasons for them
when called upon in the usual mode, and to stand responsible for
them not only to public opinion, but to a court of impeachment, I
can apprehend very little danger of the laws' being wrested to
purposes of injustice. But on the other hand, I do consider that
this power and corresponding duty of the court authoritatively to
declare the law is one of the highest safeguards of the citizen.
The sole end of courts of justice is to enforce the laws uniformly
and impartially, without respect of persons or times or the
opinions of men. To enforce popular laws is easy. But when an
unpopular cause is a just cause; when a law, unpopular in some
locality, is to be enforced -- there then comes the strain upon the
administration of justice, and few unprejudiced men would hesitate
as to where that strain would be most firmly borne."
United States v. Morris, 1 Curtis 62, 63.
The questions above referred to are the only ones that need be
considered on this writ of error.
Mr. JUSTICE JACKSON participated in the decision of this case,
and concurs in the views herein expressed.
The judgment of the circuit court is affirmed as to Hansen,
but is reversed as to Sparf, with directions for a new trial as to
him.
"Foreman: There is one of us who wishes to be instructed by your
honor as to certain points upon the question of United States
marine laws in regard to murder on the high seas."
"Court: The instruction which I gave you, gentlemen, in regard
to the law upon which the indictment was based, was section 5339 of
the Revised Statutes, which I will read to you again."
"Juror: Your honor, I would like to know in regard to the
interpretation of the laws of the United States in regard to
manslaughter, as to whether the defendants can be found guilty of
manslaughter, or that the defendants must be found guilty."
"Court: I will read the section to you, and see if that touches
the proposition. The indictment is based upon section 5339, which
provides, among other things, 'that every' person who commits
murder upon the high seas, or in any arm of the sea, or in any
river, haven, creek, basin, or bay within the admiralty and
maritime jurisdiction of the United States, and out of the
jurisdiction of any particular state, or who, upon any such waters,
maliciously strikes, stabs, wounds, poisons, 'or shoots any other
person, of which striking, stabbing, wounding, poisoning, or
shooting such other person dies on land or at sea, within or
without the United States, shall suffer death.' Hence, that is the
penalty for the offense described in the indictment. I have given
you the definition of 'murder.' If you remember it, you will
connect it with these words: 'Every person who commits murder upon
the high seas, or in any arm of the sea, or in any river, haven,'
etc."
"Juror: Are the two words 'aiding' or 'abetting' defined?"
"Court: The words 'aiding' or 'abetting' are not defined, but I
have instructed you as to the legal effect of aiding and abetting,
and this you should accept as law. If I have made an error, there
is a higher tribunal to correct it."
"Juror: I am the spokesman for two of us. We desire to clearly
understand the matter. It is a barrier in our mind to our
determining the matter. The question arising amongst us is to
aiding and abetting. Furthermore, as I understand, it must be one
thing or the other. It must be guilty or not guilty."
"Court: Yes; under the instructions I have given you. I will
read them to you again, so as to be careful, and that you may
understand. Murder is the unlawful killing of a human being in the
peace of the state, with malice aforethought, either express or
implied. I defined to you what malice was, and I assume you can
recall my definition to your minds. Manslaughter is the unlawful
killing of a human being without malice, either express or implied.
I do not consider it necessary to explain it further. If a
felonious homicide has been committed by either of the defendants,
of which you are to be the judges from the proof, there is nothing
in this case to reduce it below the grade of murder."
"Juror: Then, as I understand your honor clearly, there is
nothing about manslaughter in this Court?"
"Court: No; I do not wish to be so understood. A verdict must be
based on evidence, and in a proper case a verdict for manslaughter
may be rendered."
"Juror: A crime committed on the high seas must have been
murder, or can it be manslaughter?"
"Court:
In a proper case, it may be murder, or it may be
manslaughter, but in this case it cannot be properly manslaughter.
As I have said, if a felonious homicide has been committed, the
facts of the case do not reduce it below murder. Do not
understand me to say that manslaughter or murder
has ben
committed. That is for you gentlemen to determine,
from
the testimony and the instructions I have given you. . .
."
"Mr. Smith: We take an exception."
"Juror: We have got to bring a verdict for either manslaughter
or murder?"
"Court: Do not misunderstand me. I have not said so."
"Juror: I know you have not."
"Court:
I cannot direct you what conclusion to come to from
the facts. I direct you only as to the law. A judgment on the facts
is your province."
"Mr. Garter: May I ask the court to instruct this jury that in
cases where persons are being upon a charge of murder, and the
facts proven at their trial show that the defendants are guilty of
manslaughter, under an indictment, they may find him guilty of
manslaughter, as a general rule, but, however, if the facts show
that the defendants have been guilty of murder, and that, in this
case, there is no evidence tending to establish the crime or
offense of manslaughter --"
"Mr. Smith: It is the province of the jury."
"Court: I have already so instructed the jury. I have endeavored
to make myself understood."
"Juror: If we bring in a verdict of guilty, that is capital
punishment?"
"Court: Yes."
"Juror: Then there is no other verdict we can bring in except
guilty or not guilty?"
"Court: In a proper case, a verdict for manslaughter may be
rendered, as the district attorney has stated, and even in this
case you have the physical power to do so;
but, as one of the
tribunals of the country, a jury is expected to be governed by law,
and the law it should receive from the court."
"Juror: There has been a misunderstanding amongst us. Now it is
clearly interpreted to us, and no doubt we can now agree on certain
facts."
People v. Wright, 93 Cal. 564;
Brown v.
Commonwealth, 87 Va. 215;
People v. Barry, 90 Cal.
41;
People v. Madden, 76 Cal. 521;
State v.
Jeandell, 5 Harr. (Del.) 475;
State v. Wright, 53 Me.
328;
Commonwealth v. Van Tuyl, 1 Met. (Ky.) 1;
Montgomery v. State, 11 Ohio, 427;
Adams v.
State, 29 Ohio St. 412;
Robbins v. State, 8 Ohio St.
131, 167;
Williams v. State, 32 Miss. 389, 396;
Pleasant v. State, 13 Ark. 360, 372;
Robinson v.
State, 66 Ga. 517;
Brown v. State, 40 Ga. 689, 695;
Hunt v. State (Ga.), 7 S.E. 142;
State v. Drawdy,
14 Rich. (S.C.) 87;
Nels v. State, 2 Tex. 280;
Myers
v. State, 33 Tex. 525;
State v. Jones, 64 Mo. 391;
Hardy v. State, 7 Mo. 607;
State v. Elwood, 73
N.C. 189;
State v. McLain, 104 N.C. 894;
People v.
Neumann, 85 Mich. 98;
State v. Johnson, 30 La.Ann.
904;
State v. Ford, 37 La.Ann. 443, 465;
Fisher v.
Railway Co., 131 Penn.St. 292, 297;
Union Pacific Railway
v. Hutchinson, 40 Kan. 51.
MR., JUSTICE BREWER, with whom concurred MR. JUSTICE BROWN,
dissenting.
I concur in the views expressed in the opinion of the Court as
to the separate functions of court and jury, and in the judgment of
affirmance against Hansen, but I do not concur in holding that the
trial court erred in admitting evidence of confessions or in the
judgment of reversal as to Sparf.
The facts, briefly stated, are these: there was a single
indictment charging the defendants jointly with the crime of
murder. T here was a single case on trial -- a case in which the
government was the party on one side and the two defendants
Page 156 U. S. 108
the party on the other. These two defendants were represented by
the same counsel. Three witnesses testified to confessions of
Hansen. Counsel for defendants objected to each of these
confessions. These objections were in the same form. They purported
to be for the defendants jointly, and not separately for each. Two
of the confessions were given in the presence of Sparf, and in
admitting them it is not pretended that there was any error. One
was made in the absence of Sparf, and it is held that the court
erred in overruling the objection to it. The objection was that the
testimony offered was "irrelevant, immaterial, and incompetent, and
upon the ground that any statement made by Hansen was not, and
could not be, voluntary." It will be noticed that this objection
was both general and special, the special ground -- that which
would naturally arrest the attention of the court -- being that the
confession was not voluntary. This ground of objection, it is
admitted, was not well taken. If there was any error, it was in
overruling the general objection that the testimony was irrelevant,
immaterial, and incompetent. But it is conceded that this
confession was material, relevant, and competent, was properly
admitted in evidence on the single trial then pending, and properly
heard by the jury. The real burden of complaint is that when the
court admitted the testimony, it ought to have instructed the jury
that it was evidence only against Hansen, and not against Sparf.
But, in common fairness, ought not the attention of the court to
have been called to the difference, and a ruling had upon that
difference? Cannot parties present a joint objection to testimony,
and rest their case upon such objection? Is it the duty of the
court to consider a matter which is not called to its attention,
and make a ruling which it is not asked to make? Is it not the duty
of the court to be impartial between the government and the
defendant, and decide simply the questions which each party
presents? Is it its duty to watch over the interests of either
party, and to put into the mouth of counsel an objection which he
does not make? To my mind, such a doctrine is both novel and
dangerous. I do not question the proposition that a confession
Page 156 U. S. 109
made by one of two defendants in the absence of the other is to
be considered by the jury only as against the one making it, and I
admit that, if a separate objection had been made by Sparf, the
court would have been called upon to formally sustain such
objection and instruct the jury that such testimony was to be
considered by them only as against Hansen. If an instruction had
been asked, as is the proper way, the attention of the court would
have been directed to the matter, and an adverse ruling would have
rightly presented the error which is now relied upon. But I need
not refer to the oft-repeated decisions of this Court that there is
no error in failing to give an instruction which is not asked,
unless it be one of those which a statute in terms requires the
court to give, and there is no pretense of any such statute.
Lewis v. Lee County, 66 Ala. 480, 489, was decided in
accordance with the views which I have expressed. The court in that
case say:
"The witness Frazier's testimony as to his conversation with the
defendant Lewis regarding the condition of his accounts as county
treasurer was properly admitted in evidence. It was certainly good
as an admission against him, and could not be excluded because not
admissible against the sureties, who were his codefendants in the
action. The practice on this point is well settled in this state
that the only remedy of a codefendant in such a case is to request
a charge from the court to the jury, limiting the operation of the
evidence, so as to confine its influence only to the defendant
against whom it is admissible."
So in
State v. Brite, 73 N.C. 26, 28, a similar ruling
was made, the court saying:
"The defendant's first exception is that his honor allowed
Culpepper, a codefendant, to introduce witnesses to prove his
(Brite's) declarations while in jail, which tended to exonerate
Culpepper."
"While these declarations are not evidence either for or against
Culpepper, being as to him
res inter alios acta and made
by one not under oath and subject to cross-examination, yet they
are clearly admissible against Brite, and it makes no difference
whether they were called forth by the state or by
Page 156 U. S. 110
Culpepper, without objection, or rather with the sanction of the
state."
I have been able to find no case laying down a contrary
doctrine. In
Mutual Life Ins. Co. v. Hillmon, 145 U.
S. 285, each defendant separately for itself presented
the objection, and each therefore had the right to avail itself of
the ruling made by the court. Indeed, I think this will be found to
be the first case in which it has been held that while the court
properly allowed testimony to go to the jury on the trial of a
case, the judgment has been reversed because it failed to call the
attention of the jury to the bearing of that evidence upon the
different parties when such parties never asked the court to so
instruct the jury.
I am authorized to say that MR. JUSTICE BROWN concurs in these
views.
MR. JUSTICE GRAY, with whom concurred MR. JUSTICE SHIRAS,
dissenting.
MR. JUSTICE SHIRAS and myself concur in so much of the opinion
of the majority of the Court as awards a new trial to one of the
defendants by reason of the admission in evidence against him of
confessions made in his absence by the other.
But from the greater part of that opinion, and from the
affirmance of the conviction of the other defendant, we are
compelled to dissent because in our judgment the case, involving
the question of life or death to the prisoners, was not submitted
to the decision of the jury as required by the Constitution and
laws of the United States.
The two defendants, Herman Sparf and Hans Hansen, together with
Thomas St. Clair, seamen on board the brig
Hesper, an
American vessel, were indicted for the murder of Maurice
Fitzgerald, the second mate, on the high seas on January 13, 1893,
by striking him with a weapon, and by throwing him overboard and
drowning him.
St. Clair was separately tried, convicted, and sentenced, and
his conviction was affirmed by this Court at the last term.
154 U. S. 154 U.S.
134.
Page 156 U. S. 111
At the trial of Sparf and Hansen, there was no direct testimony
of any eyewitness to the killing, or to any assault or affray.
There was evidence that at ten o'clock in the evening of the day in
question, the second mate was at the wheel, in charge of the
starboard watch, consisting of St. Clair, Sparf, Hansen, and
another seaman, and that, when the watch was changed at midnight,
the second mate could not be found, and there was much blood on the
deck, as well as a bloody broomstick and a wooden bludgeon. The
rest of the evidence consisted of testimony of other seamen to acts
and statements of each defendant and of St. Clair, before and after
the disappearance of the second mate, tending to prove a conspiracy
to kill him, and to subsequent confessions of Hansen tending to
show that the killing was premeditated.
The judge, in his charge to the jury, gave the following
instructions:
"The indictment is based upon section 5339 of the Revised
Statutes, which provides, among other things, that"
"every person who commits murder . . . upon the high seas, or in
any arm of the sea, or in any river, haven, creek, basin or bay,
within the admiralty and maritime jurisdiction of the United
States, and out of the jurisdiction of any particular state, or who
upon any of such waters maliciously strikes, stabs, wounds, poisons
or shoots at any other person, of which striking, stabbing,
wounding, poisoning or shooting such other person dies, either on
land or at sea, within or without the United States, shall suffer
death."
"Murder is the unlawful killing of a human being in the peace of
the state, with malice aforethought, express or implied." "Express
malice" was defined as
"deliberate premeditation and design, formed in advance, to kill
or to do bodily harm, the premeditation and design being implied
from external circumstances capable of proof, such as lying in
wait, antecedent threats, and concerted schemes against a
victim;"
and "implied malice" as
"an inference of the law from any deliberate and cruel act
committed by one person against another, . . . that is, malice is
inferred when one kills another without provocation, or when the
provocation is not great. . . . Manslaughter is the unlawful
killing of
Page 156 U. S. 112
a human being without malice, either express or implied. I do
not consider it necessary, gentlemen, to explain it further, for if
a felonious homicide has been committed -- of which you are to be
the judges from the proof -- there is nothing in this case to
reduce it below the grade of murder. . . . Every person present at
a murder, willingly aiding or abetting its perpetration, is guilty
of murder, and may be indicted and convicted as principal in the
first degree. . . . It is not my purpose, nor is it my function, to
assume any fact to be proven, nor to suggest to you that any fact
has been proven. You are the exclusive judges of the facts."
The defendants requested the judge to instruct the jury that
"under the indictment in this case, the defendants may be
convicted of murder or manslaughter or of an attempt to commit
murder or manslaughter, and if, after a full and careful
consideration of all the evidence before you, you believe beyond a
reasonable doubt that the defendants are guilty either of
manslaughter, or of an assault with intent to commit murder or
manslaughter, you should so find your verdict."
The judge refused to give this instruction, and the defendants
excepted to the refusal.
The jury, after deliberating on the case for some time, returned
into court and, being asked whether they had agreed upon a verdict,
the foreman said that one of the jurors wished to be instructed
upon certain points under the laws of the United States as to
murder upon the high seas. One of the jurors then said that he
"would like to know, in regard to the interpretation of the laws
of the United States in regard to manslaughter, as to whether the
defendants can be found guilty of manslaughter, or that the
defendants must be found guilty,"
evidently meaning "of murder," the whole offense charged in the
indictment. The judge then read again section 5339 of the Revised
Statutes. The juror asked. "Are the two words
aiding' or
`abetting' defined?" The judge replied:
"The words 'aiding or abetting' are not defined. But I have
instructed you as to the legal effect of aiding and abetting, and
this you should accept as law. If I have made an error, there is a
higher tribunal to correct it."
The juror
Page 156 U. S. 113
said:
"I am the spokesman for two of us. We desire to clearly
understand the matter. It is a barrier in our mind to our
determining the matter. The question arising amongst us is as to
aiding and abetting. Furthermore, as I understand, it must be one
thing or the other. It must be either guilty or not guilty."
The judge replied: "Yes, under the instructions I have given
you." The judge, then, after repeating the general definitions, as
before given, of murder and of manslaughter, said:
"If a felonious homicide has been committed by either of the
defendants -- of which you are to be the judges from the proof --
there is nothing in this case to reduce it below the grade of
murder,"
and in answer to further questions of the juror, repeated this
again and again, and said: "In a proper case, it may be murder, or
it may be manslaughter, but in this case, it cannot properly be
manslaughter." The defendants excepted to these instructions. And
finally, in answer to the juror's direct question, "Then there is
no other verdict we can bring in, except guilty or not guilty?" the
judge said:
"In a proper case, a verdict for manslaughter may be rendered,
as the district attorney has stated, and even in this case you have
the physical power to do so; but, as one of the tribunals of the
country, a jury is expected to be governed by law, and the law it
should receive from the court."
The juror then said: "There has been a misunderstanding amongst
us. Now, it is clearly interpreted to us, and no doubt we can now
agree on certain facts." Thereupon a verdict of guilty of murder
was returned against both defendants, and they were sentenced to
death, and sued out this writ of error.
The judge, by instructing the jury that they were bound to
accept the law as given to them by the court, denied their right to
decide the law. And by instructing them that, if a felonious
homicide by the defendants was proved, there was nothing in the
case to reduce it below the grade of murder, and they could not
properly find it to be manslaughter, and by declining to submit to
them the question whether the defendants were guilty of
manslaughter only, he denied their right to decide the fact. The
colloquy between the judge and the
Page 156 U. S. 114
jurors, when they came in for further instructions, clearly
shows that the jury, after deliberating upon the case, were in
doubt whether the crime which the defendants had committed was
murder or manslaughter, and that it was solely by reason of these
instructions of the judge that they returned a verdict of the
higher crime.
It is our deep and settled conviction, confirmed by a
reexamination of the authorities under the responsibility of taking
part in the consideration and decision of the capital case now
before the Court, that the jury, upon the general issue of guilty
or not guilty in a criminal case, have the right, as well as the
power, to decide, according to their own judgment and consciences,
all questions, whether of law or of fact, involved in that
issue.
The question of the right of the jury to decide the law in
criminal cases has been the subject of earnest and repeated
controversy in England and America, and eminent jurists have
differed in their conclusions upon the question. In this country,
the opposing views have been fully and strongly set forth by
Chancellor Kent in favor of the right of the jury, and by Chief
Justice Lewis against it, in
People v. Croswell, 3
Johns.Cas. 337; by Judge Hall in favor of the right, and by Judge
Bennett against it, in
State v. Croteau, 23 Vt. 14, and by
Chief Justice Shaw against the right, and by Mr. Justice Thomas in
its favor, in
Commonwealth v. Anthes, 5 Gray 185.
The question of the right of the jury under the Constitution of
the United States cannot be usefully or satisfactorily discussed
without examining and stating the authorities which bear upon the
scope and effect of the provisions of the Constitution regarding
this subject. In pursuing this inquiry, it will be convenient to
consider first the English authorities, secondly the authorities in
the several colonies and states of America, and lastly the
authorities under the national government of the United States.
By Magna Charta, no person could be taken or imprisoned or
deprived of his freehold or of his liberties or free customs unless
by the lawful judgment of his peers, or the law of the
Page 156 U. S. 115
land --
nisi per legale judicium parium suorum, vel per
legem terrae. Accordingly, by the law of England at the time
of the discovery and settlement of this country by Englishmen,
every subject (not a member of the House of Lords) indicted for
treason, murder, or other felony had the right to plead the general
issue of not guilty, and thereupon to be tried by a jury, and if
they acquitted him, the verdict of acquittal was conclusive, in his
favor, of both the law and the fact involved in the issue. The
jury, in any case, criminal or civil, might indeed, by finding a
special verdict reciting the facts, refer a pure question of law to
the court, but they were not bound and could not be compelled to do
so, even in a civil action.
By the statute of Westm. 2, 13 Edw. I, c. 30,
"it is ordained that the justices assigned to take assizes shall
not compel the jurors to say precisely whether it be disseisin or
not, so that they do shew the truth of the fact, and require aid of
the justices; but if they of their own head will say that it is or
is not disseisin, their verdict shall be admitted at their own
peril."
1 Statutes of the Realm 86. That statute, as Lord Coke tells us,
was declaratory of the common law, and before its enactment, some
justices directed juries to return general verdicts, thus
subjecting them to the peril of an attaint if they mistook the law.
2 Inst. 422, 425.
Littleton, speaking of civil actions in which the jury, upon the
general issue pleaded, might return a special verdict, says that,
"if they will take upon them the knowledge of the law upon the
matter, they may give their verdict generally, as is put in their
charge." Lit. § 368. And accordingly, Lord Coke says:
"Although the jury, if they will take upon them (as Littleton
here saith) the knowledge of the law, may give a general verdict,
yet it is dangerous for them so to do, for if they do mistake the
law, they run into the danger of an attaint; therefore to find the
special verdict is the safest, where the case is doubtful."
Co.Lit. 227
b.
Lord Coke elsewhere says that "the jury ought, if they will not
find the special matter, to find "at their peril" according to
law."
Rawlyns' Case, 4 Rep. 52
a, 53
b.
And Lord Chief Justice Hobart says:
"Legally it will be hard to quit
Page 156 U. S. 116
a jury that finds against the law, either common law or several
statute law, whereof all men were to take knowledge, and whereupon
verdict is to be given, whether any evidence be given to them or
not,"
and "though no man informed them what the law was in that case."
Needler v. Bishop of Winchester, Hob. 220, 227.
The peril or danger above spoken of, into which the jury ran by
taking upon themselves the knowledge of the law and undertaking to
decide by a general verdict the law involved in the issue of fact
submitted to them, was the peril of an attaint, upon which their
verdict might be set aside and themselves punished. Upon the
attaint, however, the trial was not by the court, but by a jury of
twenty-four; it was only by a verdict of the second jury, and not
by judgment of the court only, that the first verdict could be set
aside, and if not so set aside, the second verdict was final and
conclusive. Co.Litt. 293
a, 294
b; Vin.Ab. Attaint,
A.(6); Com.Dig. Attaint, B. Moreover, no attaint lay in a criminal
case.
Bushell's Case, Vaughan 135, 146;
King v.
Shipley, 4 Doug. 73, 115.
Lord Bacon, in his History of Henry VII (originally written and
published in English, and afterwards translated into Latin by
himself or under his supervision), speaking of the Parliament held
in the eleventh year of his reign, says:
"This Parliament also made that good law which gave the attaint
upon a false verdict between party and party, which before was a
kind of evangile, irremediable -- in the Latin,
judicia
juratorum, quae veredicta vocantur, quae ante illud tempus
evangelii cujusdam instar erant, atque plane irrevocabilia. It
extends not to causes capital, as well because they are for the
most part at the King's suit as because in them, if they be
followed in course of indictment, there passeth a double jury, the
indictors and the triers, and so not twelve men, but four and
twenty. But it seemeth that was not the only reason, for this
reason holdeth not in the appeal --
ubi causa capitalis a parte
gravata peragitur. [That is, the appeal of murder, brought by
the heir of the deceased.
See Louisville & St. Louis
Railroad v. Clarke, 152 U. S. 230,
Page 156 U. S. 117
152 U. S. 239.] But the
great reason was lest it should tend to the discouragement of
jurors in cases of life and death --
ne forte juratores in
causis capitalibus timidius se gererent -- if they should be
subject to suit and penalty, where the favour of life marketh
against them."
6 Bacon's Works (ed. 1858) 5, 7, 160-161; 5 Bacon's Works (ed.
1803) 117; 9
id. 483.
Lord Bacon was mistaken in assuming that the attaint was
introduced by the statute of 11 Hen. VII, c. 24, for it existed at
common law in writs of assize, and had been regulated and extended
to other civil actions by many earlier statutes. 2 Inst. 130, 237,
427; Finch, Law, lib. 4, c. 47.
But the mistake does not diminish the force of Lord Bacon's
statements that wherever an attaint did not lie, the "judgment of
the jury, commonly called
verdict,' was considered as a kind of
gospel," and that the reasons why an attaint did not lie in a
capital case were not only that two juries, the indictors and the
triers, had passed upon the case, but chiefly that juries, in cases
of life and death, should not be discouraged, or act timidly, by
being subjected to suit and penalty if they decided in favor of
life.
John Milton, in his Defence of the People of England, after
speaking of the King's power in his courts and through his judges,
adds:
"Nay, all the ordinary power is rather the people's, who
determine all controversies themselves by juries of twelve men. And
hence it is that when a malefactor is asked at his arraignment,
'How will you be tried?', he answers always, according to law and
custom, 'By God and my country;' not by God and the King, or the
King's deputy."
8 Milton, Works (Pickering's ed.) 198, 199. The idea is as old
as Bracton. Bract. 119.
In the reign of Charles II, some judges undertook to instruct
juries that they must take the law from the court, and to punish
them if they returned a verdict in favor of the accused against the
judge's instructions. But as often as application was made to
higher judicial authority, the punishments were set aside and the
rights of juries vindicated.
In 1665, upon the trial of an indictment against three Quakers
for an unlawful conventicle, Wagstaffe and other
Page 156 U. S. 118
jurors were fined by Chief Justice Kelyng for acquitting
"against full evidence, and against the direction of the court in
matter of law, in said court openly given and declared," --
contra plenam evidentiam, et contra directionem curiae in
materia legis, in dicta curia ibidem aperte datam et
declaratam. His reasons for this (as stated in his own
manuscript note of the case, not included in the first edition of
his Reports, published by Lord Holt in 1708) were
"that they and others may know that a willful jury cannot make
an act of Parliament or the law of England of no effect, but they
are accountable and punishable for it,"
and
"that in criminal cases, the court may fine a jury who will give
a verdict contrary to their evidence, and the reason (as I take it)
is that otherwise a headstrong jury might overthrow all the course
of justice, for no attaint lieth in criminal causes, and also one
verdict is peremptory, and a new trial cannot be granted in
criminal causes, and therefore the judges have always punished such
willful juries by fine and imprisonment and binding them to their
good behaviour."
But at the end of his report is this memorandum: "Note. The
whole case of the Quakers, as to fining jury, now not law." J. Kel.
(3d ed.) 69-75. And Lord Hale, then Chief Baron, tells us that the
jurors
"were thereupon committed, and brought their habeas corpus in
the Court of Common Bench, and all the judges of England were
assembled to consider of the legality of this fine, and the
imprisonment thereupon,"
and the jurors were discharged of their imprisonment for the
following reasons:
"It was agreed by all the judges of England (one only
dissenting) that this fine was not legally set upon the jury, for
they are the judges of matters of fact, and although it was
inserted in the fine that it was
contra directionem curiae in
materia legis, this mended not the matter, for it was
impossible any matter of law could come in question till the matter
of fact were settled and stated and agreed by the jury, and of such
matter of fact they were the only competent judges. And although
the witnesses might perchance swear the fact to the satisfaction of
the court, yet the jury are judges as well of the credibility of
the witnesses as of the truth of the
Page 156 U. S. 119
fact, for possibly they might know somewhat of their own
knowledge that what was sworn was untrue, and possibly they might
know the witnesses to be such as they could not believe, and it is
the conscience of the jury that must pronounce the prisoner guilty
or not guilty. And to say the truth, it were the most unhappy case
that could be to the judge if he at his peril must take upon him
the guilt or innocence of the prisoner, and if the judge's opinion
must rule the matter of fact, the trial by jury would be
useless."
2 Hale P.C. 312-313.
Lord Hale's apparent meaning is that at a trial upon the plea of
not guilty, the jury are the judges of the issue of fact thereby
presented, and it is the conscience of the jury that must pronounce
the prisoner guilty or not guilty; that as no matter of law can
come in question unless the facts are first found by the jury in a
special verdict, it were idle to say that a general verdict was
against the judge's direction or opinion in matter of law, and
that, if the judge's opinion in matter of law must rule the issue
of fact submitted to the jury, the trial by jury would be
useless.
The reasons are more fully brought out in
Bushell's
Case, in 1670, not mentioned in the text of Lord Hale's
treatise and doubtless decided after that was written. William Penn
and William Mead having been indicted and tried for a similar
offense, and acquitted against the instructions of the court,
Bushell and the other jurors who tried them were fined by Sir John
Howell, Recorder of London, and Bushell was committed to prison, in
like terms, for not paying his fine, and sued out a writ of habeas
corpus.
Penn & Mead's Case, 6 Howell's State Trials
951;
Bushell's Case, Vaughan 135, 6 Howell's State Trials
999; 1 Freeman 1; T. Jones 13.
At the hearing thereon, Scroggs, the King's Serjeant,
argued:
"It is granted that in matters of fact only, the jury are to be
judges; but when the matter of fact is mixed with matter of law,
the law is to guide the fact, and they are to be guided by the
court. The jury are at no inconvenience, for if they please, they
may find the special matter; but if they will
Page 156 U. S. 120
take upon them to know the law, and do mistake, they are
punishable."
1 Freeman 3.
But Bushell was discharged from imprisonment for reasons stated
in the judgment delivered by Sir John Vaughan, Chief Justice of the
Common Pleas, after a conference of all the judges of England,
including Lord Hale, and with the concurrence of all except Chief
Justice Kelyng. Vaughan 144-145; 1 Freeman 5; Lord Holt in
Groenvelt v. Burwell, 1 Ld.Raym. 454, 470.
In that great judgment, as reported by himself, Chief Justice
Vaughan discussed separately the two parts of the return: first,
that the acquittal was "against full and manifest evidence," and
second that it was "against the direction of the court in matter of
law."
It was in discussing the first part that he observed
"that the verdict of a jury and evidence of a witness are very
different things, in the truth and falsehood of them. A witness
swears but to what he hath heard or seen, generally or more
largely, to what hath fallen under his senses. But a juryman swears
to what he can infer and conclude from the testimony of such
witnesses, by the act and force of his understanding, to be the
fact inquired after, which differs nothing in the reason, though
much in the punishment, from what a judge, out of various cases by
him, infers to be the law in the question before him."
Vaughan 142.
After disposing of that part of the return, he proceeds as
follows:
"We come now to the next part of the return,
viz.: that the
jury acquitted those indicted against the direction of the court in
matter of law, openly given and declared to them in
court."
"The words,
that the jury did acquit, against the direction
of the court in matter of law, literally taken, and
de
plano, are insignificant, and not intelligible, for no issue
can be joined of matter of law, no jury can be charged with the
trial of matter in law barely, no evidence ever was or can be given
to a jury of what is law or not, nor no such oath can be given to
or taken by a jury to try matter in law, nor no attaint can lie for
such a false oath. "
Page 156 U. S. 121
"Therefore we must take off this vail and color of words which
make a show of being something, and in truth are nothing."
"If the meaning of these words,
finding against the
direction of the court in matter of law, be that if the judge,
having heard the evidence given in court (for he knows no other),
shall tell the jury, upon this evidence, the law is for the
plaintiff, or for the defendant, and you are under the pain of fine
and imprisonment to find accordingly, then the jury ought of duty
so to do. Every man sees that the jury is but a troublesome delay,
great charge, and of no use in determining right and wrong, and
therefore the trials by them may be better abolished than
continued, which were a strange new-found conclusion after a trial
so celebrated for many hundreds of years."
"For if the judge, from the evidence, shall by his own judgment
first resolve upon any trial what the fact is, and so knowing the
fact shall then resolve what the law is, and order the jury penally
to find accordingly, what either necessary or convenient use can be
fancied of juries, or to continue trials by them at all?"
"But if the jury be not obliged in all trials to follow such
directions, if given, but only in some sort of trials (as, for
instance, in trials for criminal matters upon indictments or
appeals), why then the consequence will be, though not in all, yet
in criminal trials, the jury (as of no material use) ought to be
either omitted or abolished, which were the greater mischief to the
people than to abolish them in civil trials."
"And how the jury should, in any other manner, according to the
course of trials used, find against the direction of the court in
matter of law is really not conceptible."
Vaughan 143, 144.
He then observes:
"This is ordinary, when the jury find unexpectedly for the
plaintiff or defendant, the judge will ask, how do you find such a
fact in particular?, and upon their answer, he will say, then it is
for the defendant, though they find for the plaintiff, or
e
contrario, and thereupon they rectify their verdict. And in
these cases, the jury, and not the
Page 156 U. S. 122
judge, resolve and find what the fact is. Therefore always, in
discreet and lawful assistance of the jury, the judge's direction
is hypothetical, and upon supposition, and not positive and upon
coercion,
viz.: if you find the fact thus (leaving it to
them what to find), then you are to find for the plaintiff; but if
you find the fact thus, then it is for the defendant."
But he is careful to add that
"whatsoever they have answered the judge upon an interlocutory
question or discourse, they may lawfully vary from it if they find
cause, and are not thereby concluded."
Pp. 144-145.
It is difficult to exhibit the strength of Chief Justice
Vaughan's reasoning by detached extracts from his opinion. But a
few other passages are directly in point:
"A man cannot see by another's eye, nor hear by another's ear;
no more can a man conclude or infer the thing to be resolved by
another's understanding or reasoning, and though the verdict be
right the jury give, yet they, being not assured it is so from
their own understanding, are forsworn at least
in foro
conscientiae."
P. 148.
"That
decantatum in our books,
ad quaestionem facti
non respondent judices, and quaestionem legis non respondent
juratores, literally taken, is true; for if it be demanded,
what is the fact?, the judge cannot answer it; if it be asked, what
is the law in the case?, the jury cannot answer it."
He then explains this by showing that upon demurrers, special
verdicts, or motions in arrest of judgment,
"the jury inform the naked fact, and the court deliver the law.
. . . But upon all general issues, as upon not culpable pleaded in
trespass,
nil debet in debt,
nul tort, nul
disseisin in assize,
ne disturba pas in
quare
impedit, and the like, though it be matter of law whether the
defendant be a trespasser, a debtor, disseisor, or disturber in the
particular cases in issue, yet the jury find not (as in a special
verdict) the fact of every case by itself, leaving the law to the
court, but find for the plaintiff or defendant upon the issue to be
tried, wherein they resolve both law and fact complicately, and not
the fact by itself; so as though they answer not singly to the
question what is the law, yet they determine the law in all
matters, where issue is joined and tried in the principal
Page 156 U. S. 123
case, but [
i.e. except] where the verdict is
special."
Pp. 149-150.
He then observes that "to this purpose, the Lord Hobart in
Needler's case against the Bishop of Winchester, is very
apposite," citing the passage quoted near the beginning of this
opinion, and concluded his main argument as follows:
"The legal verdict of the jury, to be recorded, is finding for
the plaintiff or defendant; what they answer, if asked, to
questions concerning some particular fact is not of their verdict
essentially, nor are they bound to agree in such particulars; if
they all agree to find their issue for the plaintiff or defendant,
they may differ in the motives wherefore [therefor], as well as
judges, in giving judgment for the plaintiff or defendant, may
differ in the reasons wherefore they give that judgment, which is
very ordinary."
P. 150.
That judgment thus clearly appears to have been rested not
merely on the comparatively technical ground that upon the general
issue no matter of law could come in question until the facts had
been found by the jury, nor yet upon the old theory that the jurors
might have personal knowledge of some facts not appearing in
evidence, but mainly on the broad reasons that if the jury,
especially in criminal trials, were obliged to follow the
directions of the court in matter of law, no necessary or
convenient use could be found of juries, or to continue trials by
them at all; that though the verdict of the jury be right according
to the law as laid down by the court, yet if they are not assured
by their own understanding that it is so, they are forsworn at
least
in foro conscientiae, and that the
decantatum in our books,
ad questionem facti non
respondent judices, and quaestionem legis non respondent
juratores, means that issues of law, as upon demurrers,
special verdicts, or motions in arrest of judgment, are to be
decided by the court, but that upon general issues of fact
involving matter of law, the jury resolve both law and fact
complicately, and so determine the law.
Notwithstanding that authoritative declaration of the right of
the jury, upon the general issue, to determine the law, Chief
Justice Scroggs, upon the trial of Harris for a seditions libel in
1680, 7 Howell's State Trials 925, 930, insisted that
Page 156 U. S. 124
the jury must take the law from the court, and Chief Justice
Jeffreys, presiding at the trial of Algernon Sidney in 1683,
charged the jury as follows:
"It is our duty upon our oaths to declare the law to you, and
you are bound to receive our declaration of the law, and upon this
declaration to inquire whether there be a fact, sufficiently
proved, to find the prisoner guilty of the high treason of which he
stands indicted."
And Sidney was convicted, sentenced, and executed. 9 Howell's
State Trials 817, 889.
In the last year of the reign of James II, the
Trial of the
Seven Bishops, reported 12 Howell's State Trials 183, took
place upon an information for a seditious libel contained in their
petition to the King, praying that he would be pleased not to
insist on their distributing and reading in the churches his
declaration dispensing with the penal statutes concerning the
exercise of religion. The trial was at bar before all the justices
of the King's Bench upon a general plea of not guilty. A principal
ground of defense was that the King had no dispensing power, and
therefore the petition of the bishops to him was an innocent
exercise of the right of petition, and was not a libel. In support
of this defense, ancient acts of Parliament were given in evidence
and, upon the offer of one in Norman French, the Chief Justice
said, "Read it in English, for the jury to understand it," and it
was so read by a sworn interpreter. Pp. 374-375. And when the
Attorney General argued that these matters were not pertinent to
the case, the Chief Justice, interrupting him, said:
"Yes, Mr. Attorney, I'll tell you what they offer, which it will
lie upon you to give an answer to -- they would have you show how
this has disturbed the government or diminished the King's
authority."
P. 399.
At the close of the arguments, each of the four judges in turn
charged the jury. Lord Chief Justice Wright said:
"The only question before me is, and so it is before you,
gentlemen, it being a question of fact, whether here be a certain
proof of a publication. And then the next question is a question of
law, indeed, whether, if there be a publication proved, it be a
libel. . . . Now, gentlemen, anything that
Page 156 U. S. 125
shall disturb the government, or make mischief and a stir among
the people, is certainly within the case of
libellus
famosis, and I must, in short, give you my opinion. I do take
it to be a libel. Now, this being a point of law, if my brothers
have anything to say to it, I suppose they will deliver their
opinions."
Mr. Justice Holloway said:
"If you are satisfied there was an ill intention of sedition or
the like, you ought to find them guilty, but if there be nothing in
the case that you find, but only that they did deliver a petition
to save themselves harmless and to free themselves from blame by
showing the reason of their disobedience to the King's command,
which they apprehended to be a grievance to them and which they
could not in conscience give obedience to, I cannot think it is a
libel. It is left to you, gentlemen, but that is my opinion."
Mr. Justice Powell also expressed his opinion that the paper was
not a libel, and said: "Now, gentlemen, the matter of it is before
you; you are to consider of it, and it is worth your
consideration." He then expressed his opinion that the King had no
dispensing power, and concluded:
"If this be once allowed of, there will need no Parliament; all
the legislation will be in the King, which is a thing worth
considering, and I leave the issue to God and your
consciences."
Mr. Justice Allybone, after saying,
"The single question that falls to may share is to give my sense
of this petition, whether it shall be in construction of law a
libel in itself, or a thing of great innocence,"
expressed his opinion that it was a libel.
The jury, on retiring, requested, and were allowed by the court,
to take with them the statute book, the information, the petition
of the bishops, and the declaration of the King, and they returned
a verdict of not guilty, whereat there was great popular rejoicing
in London and throughout England. 12 Howell's State Trials 425-431;
1 Burnet's Own Time 744.
It thus clearly appears that upon that trial, one of the most
important in English history, deeply affecting the liberties of the
people, the four judges of the King's Bench, while differing among
themselves upon the question whether the petition
Page 156 U. S. 126
of the bishops was a libel, concurred in submitting that
question, as a question of law, to the decision of the jury, not as
umpires between those judges who thought the paper was a libel and
those judges who thought it was not, but as the tribunal vested by
the law of England with the power and the right of ultimately
determining, as between the Crown and the accused, all matters of
law, as well as of fact, involved in the general issue of guilty or
not guilty.
Upon the accession of William and Mary, Parliament declared the
King's power of dispensing with the laws to be unlawful, and
reversed the conviction of Algernon Sidney, "for a partial and
unjust construction of the statute" of treasons in the instructions
by which his conviction had been procured. Stat. 1 W. & M.
sess. 2, c. 2; 6 Statutes of the Realm, 143, 155; 9 Howell's State
Trials 996. And early in the new reign, Holt was appointed lord
Chief Justice, and Somers Lord Keeper.
Lord Somers, in the opening pages of his essay on "The Security
of Englishmen's Lives. or the Trust, Power, and Duty of the Grand
Juries of England" (first published in 1681 and republished in
1714, towards the end of his life, after he had been Lord
Chancellor), lays down in the clearest terms the right of the jury
to decide the law, saying:
"It is made a fundamental in our government that (unless it be
by Parliament) no man's life shall be touched for any crime
whatsoever, save by the judgment of at least twenty-four men --
that is, twelve or more, to find the bill of indictment, whether he
be peer of the realm or commoner, and twelve peers or above, if a
lord, if not, twelve commoners, to give the judgment upon the
general issue of not guilty joined. . . . The office and power of
these juries is
judicial. They only are the judges from
whose sentence the indicted are to expect life or death. Upon their
integrity and understanding the lives of all that are brought into
judgment do ultimately depend. From their verdict there lies no
appeal. By finding guilty or not guilty, they do complicately
resolve both law and fact. As it hath been the law, so it hath
always been the custom and practice of these juries, upon all
general issues, pleaded
Page 156 U. S. 127
in cases, civil as well as criminal, to judge both of the law
and fact. . . . Our ancestors were careful that all men of the like
condition and quality, presumed to be sensible of each other's
infirmity, should mutually be judges of each other's lives, and
alternately taste of subjection and rule, every man being equally
liable to be accused or indicted, and perhaps to be suddenly judged
by the party, of whom he is at present judge, if he be found
innocent."
Lord Chief Justice Holt declared that
"in all cases and in all actions, the jury may give a general or
special verdict, as well in causes criminal as civil, and the court
ought to receive it, if pertinent to the point in issue, for if the
jury doubt, they may refer themselves to the court, but are not
bound so to do."
Anon. (1697) 3 Salk. 373. And upon the trial of an
information for a seditious libel, while he expressed his opinion
that the paper was upon its face a criminal libel, he submitted the
question whether it was such to the jury, saying: "Now you are to
consider whether these words I have read to you do not tend to
beget an ill opinion of the administration of the government."
Tutchin's Case (1704), 14 Howell's State Trials 1095,
1128. Although he concluded his charge with the words, "If you are
satisfied that he is guilty of composing and publishing these
papers at London, you are to find him guilty," yet, as Mr. Starkie
well observes,
"these words have immediate reference to the ground of defense
upon which Mr. Tutchin's counsel meant to rely -- namely that the
offense had not been proved to have been committed in London, and
cannot be considered as used for the purpose of withdrawing the
attention of the jury from the quality of the publication, upon
which they had just before received instructions, and, indeed, to
suppose it had so meant would prove too much, since, if so, the
jury were directed not to find the truth of the innuendoes."
Starkie on Slander 56.
Some decisions, often cited as against the right of the jury by
a general verdict to determine matter of law involved in the
general issue of guilty or not guilty, were upon special verdicts
presenting pure questions of law. Such were
Townsend's
Case (1554), 1 Plow. 111, and
The King v. Oneby
Page 156 U. S. 128
(1726), 2 Ld.Raym. 1485; 2 Stra. 766; 1 Barnard 17; 17 Howell's
State Trials 29.
After the accession of George II, Lord Chief Justice Raymond, on
trials at
nisi prius for seditious libels (ignoring the
cases of Tutchin and of the Seven Bishops), told juries that they
were bound to take the law from the court, and that the question
whether the paper which the defendant was accused of writing and
publishing was a libel was a mere question of law, with which the
jury had nothing to do.
Clarke's Case (1729), 17 Howell's
State Trials 667, note, 1 Barnard 304;
Francklin's Case
(1731), 17 Howell's State Trials 625, 672.
In 1734, upon an information in the nature of a
quo
warranto against the defendant to show cause by what authority
he acted as Mayor of Liverpool, his motion for a new trial, because
the jury had found a general verdict for the Crown against the
instructions of the judge, and notwithstanding he ordered them to
return a special verdict, was granted by the Court of King's Bench,
Lord Chief Justice Hardwicke saying:
"The general rule is that if the judge of
nisi prius
directs the jury on the point of law, and they think fit
obstinately to find a verdict contrary to his direction, that is
sufficient ground for granting a new trial, and when the judge upon
a doubt of law directs the jury to bring in the matter specially,
and they find a general verdict, that also is a sufficient
foundation for a new trial. . . . The thing that governs greatly in
this determination is that the point of law is not to be determined
by juries; juries have a power by law to determine matters of fact
only, and it is of the greatest consequence to the law of England
and to the subject that these powers of the judge and jury are kept
distinct; that the judge determines the law, and the jury the fact;
and, if ever they come to be confounded, it will prove the
confusion and destruction of the law of England."
The King v. Poole, Cas.Temp.Hardw. 23, 26, 28,
Cunningham 11, 14, 16.
But such an information to try title to a civil office (though
it had some of the forms of a criminal prosecution) was brought for
the mere purpose of trying a civil right, and was considered
Page 156 U. S. 129
as in the nature of a civil proceeding. 3 Bl.Com. 263;
The
King v. Francis, 2 T.R. 484;
Ames v. Kansas,
111 U. S. 449,
111 U. S.
460-461. And, as appears by the first passage above
cited from Lord Hardwicke's opinion, it was evidently so treated by
the court, under the practice of granting new trials on motion of
either party to a civil case, which had gradually grown up within
the century preceding as a substitute for attaints.
Bell v.
Wardell (1740), Willes 204, 206;
Witham v. Lewis
(1744), 1 Wils. 48, 55;
Bright v. Eynon (1757), 1 Burrows
390, 394. In a criminal case, certainly, the court could not compel
the jury to return a special verdict. Nothing therefore was
adjudged in
Poole's Case as to the right of the jury to
decide the law in prosecutions for crime. And it is significant
that, although both reports of that case were published in 1770, it
was not cited by Lord Mansfield, in 1784, when collecting the
authorities against the right of the jury in criminal cases.
The King v. Shipley, 4 Doug. 73, 168.
Lord Hardwicke's own opinion, indeed, may be presumed to have
been against the right of the jury, for when Attorney General, he
had so argued in
Francklin's Case, 17 Howell's State
Trials 669, and he was, as justly observed by Mr. Hallam, "a
regularly bred crown lawyer, and in his whole life disposed to hold
very high the authority of government." 3 Hallam's Const.Hist. (9th
ed.) 287. His opinion therefore is of less weight upon a
constitutional question affecting the liberty of the subject than
upon other questions of law or of equity.
The later history of the law of England upon the right of the
jury to decide the law in criminal cases is illustrated by a long
conflict between the views of Mr. Murray, afterwards Lord
Mansfield, against the right, and of Mr. Pratt, afterwards Lord
Camden, in its favor, which, after the public sentiment had been
aroused by the great argument of Mr. Erskine in
The Dean of St.
Asaph's Case, was finally settled, in accordance with Lord
Camden's view, by a declaratory act of Parliament.
Upon the trial of Owen, in 1752, for publishing a libel, Mr.
Murray, as Solicitor General, argued to the jury that if
Page 156 U. S. 130
they determined the question of fact of publication, the judge
determined the law. But Mr. Pratt, of counsel for the defendant,
argued the whole matter to the jury, and, although the publication
was fully proved, and Chief Justice Lee told the jury that, this
being so, they could not avoid bringing in the defendant guilty,
they returned and persisted in a general verdict of acquittal. 18
Howell's State Trials 1203, 1223, 1227-1228; 29 Parl.Hist.
1408.
In the like case of Nutt, in 1728, Starkie on Slander 615,
conducted by Mr. Murray as Attorney General, the like direction was
given to the jury by Chief Justice Ryder. Lord Mansfield, in
The King v. Shipley, 4 Doug. 168.
In the similar case of
Shebbeare, in 1758, Starkie on
Slander 56, 616, Mr. Pratt, as Attorney General, when moving before
Lord Mansfield for leave to file the information, said:
"It is merely to put the matter in a way of trial, for I admit,
and his Lordship well knows, that the jury are judges of the law as
well as the fact, and have an undoubted right to consider whether,
upon the whole, the pamphlet in question be or be not published
with a wicked, seditious intent, and be or not a false, malicious,
and scandalous libel."
Second postscript to Letter to Mr. Almon on Libels (1770) p. 7;
4 Collection of Tracts 1763-1770, p. 162. And at the trial, as he
afterwards said in the House of Lords, he "went into court
predetermined to insist on the jury taking the whole of the libel
into consideration," and "so little did he attend to the authority
of the judges on that subject that he turned his back on them, and
directed all he had to say to the jury." 29 Parl.Hist. 1408.
And see 20 Howell's State Trials 709. But Lord Mansfield
instructed the jury that the question whether the publication was a
libel was to be determined by the court. 4 Doug. 169.
Lord Camden, when Chief Justice of the Common Pleas, presiding
at criminal trials, instructed the jury that they were judges of
the law as well as the fact. Pettingal on Juries (1769), cited in
21 Howell's State Trials 853; 29 Parl.Hist. 1404, 1408.
In the prosecutions, in the summer of 1770, of Miller and
Page 156 U. S. 131
Woodfall for publishing the letter of Junius to the King, Lord
Mansfield instructed the jury in the same way as in
Shebbeare's
Case. In
Miller's Case, the jury returned a verdict
of not guilty. In
Woodfall's Case, the jury returned a
verdict of "guilty of printing and publishing only," and the court
therefore granted a motion for a new trial. But Lord Mansfield, on
November 20, 1770, in delivering judgment upon that motion, took
occasion to say that the court was of opinion "that the direction
is right and according to law."
Miller's Case, 20 Howell's
State Trials 869, 893-895;
Woodfall's case, 20 Howell's
State Trials 895, 901-903, 9180-920; 5 Burrow, 2661, 2666-2668.
On December 5, 1770, in the House of Lords, the judgment in
Woodfall's Case was attacked by Lord Chatham and defended
by Lord Mansfield, in replying to whom Lord Chatham said:
"This, my lords. I never understood to be the law of England,
but the contrary. I always understood that the jury were competent
judges of the law as well as the fact; and indeed, if they were
not, I can see no essential benefit from their institution to the
community."
And Lord Camden, after observing that it would be highly
necessary to have an authentic statement of the direction to the
jury in that case laid before the House, said:
"If we can obtain this direction and obtain it fully stated, I
shall very readily deliver may opinion upon the doctrines it
inculcates, and if they appear to me contrary to the known and the
established principles of the constitution, I shall not scruple to
tell the author of his mistake in the open face of this
assembly."
16 Parl.Hist. 1302-1307.
On the next day, a warm debate took place in the House of
Commons upon a motion by Serjeant Glynn for a committee
"to inquire into the administration of criminal justice, and the
proceedings of the judges in Westminster Hall, particularly in
cases relating to the liberty of the press and the constitutional
power and duty of juries,"
in the course of which Mr. Dunning, then the leader of the bar,
and afterwards Lord Ashburton, emphatically denied that the
doctrine of Lord Raymond and Lord Mansfield was the established law
of the land. 16 Parl. Hist. 1212, 1276.
See also 2
Cavendish's Debates, 141, 369.
Page 156 U. S. 132
Pursuant to a wish expressed by Lord Mansfield on the day after,
the House of Lords met on December 10, when he informed the House
that he had left with its clerk a copy of the judgment of the court
in
Woodfall's Case. Lord Camden thereupon said that he
considered the paper as a challenge directed personally to him,
which he accepted, and said:
"In direct contradiction to him, I maintain that his doctrine is
not the law of England. I am ready to enter into debate whenever
the noble lord will fix a day for it."
And he proposed questions in writing to Lord Mansfield, framed
with the view of ascertaining how far that judgment denied the
right of the jury, by a general verdict in a criminal case, to
determine the law as well as the fact. Lord Mansfield evaded
answering the questions, and, while declaring himself ready to
discuss them at some future day, declined to name one. And the
matter dropped for the time. 16 Parl.Hist. 1312-1322.
In 1783, after the independence of the United States had been
recognized by Great Britain, came the case of
King v.
Shipley, commonly known as
Dean of St. Asaph's Case,
fully reported in 4 Doug. 73 and in 21 Howell's State Trials 847,
and briefly stated in 3 T.R. 428, note, which was a criminal
prosecution for a seditious libel contained in a pamphlet written
by Sir William Jones. Mr. Justice Buller at the trial told the jury
that the only questions for them were whether the defendant
published the pamphlet, and whether the innuendoes in the
indictment were true, and that the question of libel or no libel
was a question of law for the court, and not for the jury, upon
which he declined to express any opinion, but that it would be open
for the consideration of the court upon a motion in arrest of
judgment. The jury returned a verdict of "guilty of publishing
only," but were persuaded by the judge to put it in this form:
"Guilty of publishing, but whether a libel or not the jury do not
find." 4 Doug. 81, 82, 85-86; 21 Howell's State Trials 946,
950-955. The effect of all this was that the defendant was found
guilty of publishing a paper, which neither the judge nor the jury
had held to be a libel, and judgment was ultimately arrested
Page 156 U. S. 133
upon the ground that, as set out in the indictment, it was not
libelous. 21 Howell's State Trials 1044.
But before the motion in arrest of judgment was argued, Mr.
Erskine obtained a rule to show cause why a new trial should not be
granted, principally upon the ground that the judge told the jury
that the question whether libel or not was not for their decision,
whereas the jury, upon the general issue, had not only the power
but the right to decide the law. It was upon this rule that Mr.
Erskine made his famous argument in support of the rights of
juries, and that Lord Mansfield delivered the judgment, in which
Mr. Justice Ashurst concurred, which has since been the principal
reliance of those who deny the right of the jury to decide the law
involved in the general issue in a criminal case.
It should not be overlooked that at the hearing of this motion,
Mr. Bearcroft, the leading counsel for the Crown, said he
"agreed with the counsel for the defendant that it is the right
of the jury, if they please, on the plea of not guilty, to take
upon themselves the decision of every question of law necessary to
the acquittal of the defendant; and, Lord Mansfield observing that
he should call it the 'power,' not the 'right,' he adhered to the
latter expression, and added that he though it an important
privilege, and which, on particular occasions -- as, for instance,
if a proper censure of the measures of the servants of the Crown
were to be construed by a judge to be libelous -- it would be
laudable and justifiable in them to exercise."
4 Doug. 94, note.
See also p. 108.
Mr. Justice Willes, dissenting from the opinion of the court,
said he was sure that these statements of Mr. Bearcroft expressed
"the sentiments of the greater part of Westminster Hall," and
declared:
"I conceive it to be the law of this country that the jury, upon
a plea of not guilty or upon the general issue upon an indictment
or an information for a libel, have a constitutional right, if they
think fit, to examine the innocence or criminality of the paper
notwithstanding there is sufficient proof given of the publication.
. . . I believe no man will venture to say they have not the power,
but I mean expressly to say they have the right. Where a civil
power of
Page 156 U. S. 134
this sort has been exercised without control, it presumes --
nay, by continual usage, it gives -- the right. It was the
right which juries exercised in those times of violence
when the Seven Bishops were tried, and which even the partial
judges who then presided did not dispute, but authorized them to
exercise upon the subject matter of the libel, and the jury, by
their solemn verdict upon that occasion, became one of the happy
instruments, under Providence, of the salvation of this country.
This privilege has been assumed by the jury in a variety of ancient
and modern instances, and particularly in the case of
The King
v. Owen, without any correction or even reprimand of the
court. It is a right, for the most cogent reasons, lodged in the
jury, as without this restraint the subject in bad times would have
no security for his life, liberty, or property."
And he concurred in refusing a new trial solely because, in his
opinion, neither the counsel for the prosecution nor the judge
presiding at the trial had impugned these doctrines, and the
verdict returned by the jury was in the nature of a special
verdict, in effect submitting the law to the court. 4 Doug.
171-175.
In 1789, in
The King v. Withers, 3 T.R. 428, Lord
Kenyon instructed a jury in the same way that Mr. Justice Buller
had done in
Dean of St. Asaph's Case.
In 1791, the declaratory statute, entitled "An act to remove
doubts respecting the functions of juries in cases of libel," and
known as "Fox's Libel Act," was introduced in Parliament, and was
passed in 1792. Stat. 32 Geo. III, c. 60.
By that act, "the legislature," as lately observed by Lord
Blackburn in the House of Lords, "adopted almost the words and
quite the substance" of that passage of the opinion of Mr. Justice
Willes first above quoted.
Capital and Counties Bank v.
Henty, L.R. 7 App.Cas. 741, 775.
The doubts which the act was passed to remove were, as recited
at the beginning of the act, upon the question whether upon the
trial of an indictment or information for libel, on the plea of not
guilty, "it be competent to the jury impaneled to try the same to
give their verdict upon the whole matter put in issue," and it
was
"therefore declared and enacted [not merely enacted, but
declared to be the law as already
Page 156 U. S. 135
existing] that on every such trial, the jury sworn to try the
issue may give a general verdict of guilty or not guilty upon the
whole matter put in issue upon such indictment or information, and
shall not be required or directed, by the court or judge before
whom such indictment or information shall be tried, to find the
defendant or defendants guilty merely on the proof of the
publication by such defendant or defendants of the paper charged to
be a libel, and of the sense ascribed to the same in such
indictment or information."
The act then provides first that the presiding judge may, at his
discretion, give instructions to the jury; second, that the jury
may, at their discretion, return a special verdict; and, third,
that the defendant, if found guilty, may move in arrest of
judgment. The first of these provisos, and the only one requiring
particular notice, is that the judge shall, at his discretion, give
"his opinion and directions to the jury on the matter at issue,"
"in like manner as in other criminal cases." His "opinion and
directions" clearly means by way of advice and instruction only,
and not by way of order or command, and the explanation "in like
manner as in other criminal cases" shows that no particular rule
was intended to be laid down in the case of libel. And that this
was the understanding at the time is apparent from the debate on
the proviso, which was adopted on the motion of Sir John Scott
(then Solicitor General, and afterwards Lord Eldon) just before the
bill passed the house of commons in 1791. 29 Parl. Hist.
594-602.
The clear effect of the whole act is to declare that the jury
(after receiving the instructions of the judge, if he sees fit to
give any instructions) may decide, by a general verdict, "the whole
matter put in issue," which necessarily includes all questions of
law as well as of fact, involved in the general issue of guilty or
not guilty, and to recognize the same rule as existing in all
criminal cases.
Not only is this the clear meaning of the words of the act, but
that such was its intent and effect is shown by the grounds taken
by supporters and its opponents in Parliament, as well as by
subsequent judicial opinions in England.
Page 156 U. S. 136
Mr. Fox, upon moving the introduction of the bill in the House
of Commons in 1791, after observing that he was not ignorant that
"power" and "right" were not convertible terms, said that, "if a
power was vested in any person, it was surely meant to be
exercised;" that
"there was a power vested in the jury to judge the law and fact,
as often as they were united, and, if the jury were not to be
understood to have a right to exercise that power, the constitution
would never have entrusted them with it, . . . but they knew it was
the province of the jury to judge of law and fact, and this was the
case not of murder only, but of felony, high and of every other
criminal indictment,"
and that "it must be left in all cases to a jury to infer the
guilt of men, and an English subject could not lose his life but by
a judgment of his peers." 29 Parl.Hist. 564, 565, 597. And Mr.
Pitt, in supporting the bill, declared that his own opinion was
against the practice of the judges,
"and that he saw no reason why, in the trial of a libel, the
whole consideration of the case might not go precisely to the
unfettered judgment of twelve men, sworn to give their verdict
honestly and conscientiously, as it did in matters of felony and
other crimes of a high nature."
29 Parl.Hist. 588.
In the debate in the House of Lords, on a motion of Lord
Chancellor Thurlow to put off the reading of the bill, Lord Camden
said:
"He would venture to affirm, and should not be afraid of being
contradicted by any professional man, that, by the law of England
as it now stood, the jury had a right, in deciding on a libel, to
judge whether it was criminal or not, and juries not only possessed
that right, but they had exercised it in various instances."
He added, as
"a matter which he conceived should be imprinted on every
juror's mind, that if they found a verdict of the publishing, and
left the criminality to the judge, they had to answer to God and
their consciences for the punishment that might by such judge be
inflicted on the defendant, whether it was fine, imprisonment, loss
of ears, whipping, or any other disgrace, which was the sentence of
the court."
After further enforcing his opinion, he said:
"I will affirm that they have that right, and that there is
no
Page 156 U. S. 137
power by the law of this country to prevent them from the
exercise of that right if they think fit to maintain it, and when
they are pleased to acquit any defendant, their acquittal will
stand good until the law of England is changed. . . . My
lords,"
said he,
"give to the jury or to the judge the right of trial of the
subjects of this country. You must give it to one of them, and I
think you can have no difficulty which to prefer."
And he concluded by saying that
"he did not apprehend that the bill had a tendency to alter the
law, but merely to remove doubts that ought never to have been
entertained, and therefore the bill had his hearty concurrence;
but, as he was assured that the proposed delay was not hostile to
the principle of the bill, but only to take it into serious
consideration, and to bring it again forward, he had no objection
to the motion of the Lord Chancellor."
29 Parl.Hist. 729-730, 732.
In the House of Lords in 1792, the bill having again passed the
House of Commons, Lord Loughborough, for many years Chief Justice
of the Common Pleas, said that he "had ever deemed it his duty, in
cases of libel, to state the law as it bore on the facts, and to
refer the combined consideration to the jury," and that
"their decision was final. There was no control upon them in
their verdict. The evident reason and good sense of this was that
every man was held to be acquainted with the criminal law of the
land. Ignorance was no plea for the commission of a crime, and no
man was therefore supposed to be ignorant of judging upon the
evidence adduced of the guilt or innocence of a defendant. It was
the admitted maxim of law,
ad quaestionem juris respondent
judices, and quaestionem facti juratores; but when the law and
the fact were blended, it was the undoubted right of the jury to
decide. If the law was put to them fairly, there was undoubtedly
not one case in a thousand on which they would not decide properly.
If they were kept in the dark, they were sometimes led into wrong
through mere jealousy of their own right."
29 Parl.Hist. 1296, 1297.
Pending the debate, the House of Lords put questions to the
judges, who returned an opinion in which, after saying that "the
general criminal law of England is the law of
Page 156 U. S. 138
libel," they laid down, as a fundamental proposition, applicable
to treason as well as to other crimes,
"that the criminality or innocence of any act done (which
includes any paper written) is the result of the judgment which the
law pronounces upon that act, and must therefore be in all cases,
and under all circumstances, matter of law, and not matter of
fact."
With such a basis, it is hardly to be wondered at that they
"conceived the law to be that the judge is to declare to the jury
what the law is," and
"that it is the duty of the jury, if they will find a general
verdict upon the whole matter in issue, to compound that verdict of
the fact as it appears in evidence before them, and of the law as
it is declared to them by the judge."
The judges, however, "took this occasion to observe" that they
had "offered no opinion which will have the effect of taking matter
of law out of a general issue, or out of a general verdict,"
and
"disclaimed the folly of undertaking to prove that a jury, who
can find a general verdict, cannot take upon themselves to deal
with matter of law arising in a general issue, and to hazard a
verdict made up of the fact, and of the matter of law, according to
their conception of that law, against all direction by the
judge."
29 Parl.Hist. 1361-1369.
On Lord Camden's motion, the bill was postponed in order to
enable the house to consider the opinion of the judges, and was
then proceeded with, when Lord Camden
"exposed the fallacy of the pretended distinction between law
and fact, in the question of guilty or not guilty of printing and
publishing a libel. They were united as much as intent and action
in the consideration of all other criminal proceedings. Without an
implied malice, a man could not be found guilty even of murder. The
simply killing of a man was nothing until it was proved that the
act arose from malice. A man might kill another in his own defense,
or under various circumstances which rendered the killing no
murder. How were these things to be explained? By the circumstances
of the case. What was the ruling principle? The intention of the
party. Who were judges of the intention of the party -- the judge?
No; the jury. So that the jury were allowed to judge of the
Page 156 U. S. 139
intention upon an indictment for murder, and not to judge of the
intention of the party upon libel."
And Lord Loughborough, as well as Lord Camden, distinctly
affirmed, and Lord Thurlow as distinctly denied, that upon the
general issue in criminal cases, after the judge had stated the law
to the jury, the jury were to decide both the question of law and
the question of fact. 29 Parl.Hist. 1370, 1405-1406, 1426,
1429.
Towards the close of the debate, Lord Thurlow moved to amend the
bill by inserting the words "that the judge state to the jury the
legal effect of the record." Lord Camden successfully opposed the
amendment
"as an attempt indirectly to convert the bill into the very
opposite of what it was intended to be, and to give the judges a
power ten times greater than they had ever yet exercised,"
and said:
"He must contend that the jury had an undoubted right to form
their verdict themselves according to their consciences, applying
the law to the fact. If it were otherwise, the first principle of
the law of England would be defeated and overthrown. If the twelve
judges were to assert the contrary again and again, he would deny
it utterly, because every Englishman was to be tried by his
country, and who was his country but his twelve peers, sworn to
condemn or acquit according to their consciences? If the opposite
doctrine were to obtain, trial by jury would be a nominal trial, a
mere form, for in fact the judge, and not the jury, would try the
man. He would contend for the truth of this argument to the latest
hour of his life,
manibus pedibusque. With regard to the
judge stating to the jury what the law was upon each particular
case, it was his undoubted duty so to do; but, having done so, the
jury were to take both law and fact into their consideration, and
to exercise their discretion and discharge their consciences."
29 Parl.Hist. 1535, 1536.
The first ground of the protest of Lord Thurlow, Lord Bathurst,
Lord Kenyon, and three other lords against the passage of the act
was
"because the rule laid down by the bill, contrary to the
determination of the judges and the unvaried practice of ages,
subverts a fundamental and important principle of English
jurisprudence, which, leaving to the jury
Page 156 U. S. 140
the trial of the fact, reserves to the court the decision of the
law."
29 Parl.Hist. 1537.
Lord Brougham, in his sketch of Lord Camden, declares that
"the manly firmness which he uniformly displayed in maintaining
the free principles of the Constitution, wholly unmixed with any
leaning towards extravagant popular opinions or any disposition to
court vulgar favour, justly entitles him to the very highest place
among the judges of England,"
and, speaking of his conduct in carrying the libel bill through
the House of Lords, says that
"nothing can be more refreshing to the lovers of liberty, or
more gratifying to those who venerate the judicial character, than
to contemplate the glorious struggle for his long-cherished
principles with which Lord Camden's illustrious life closed,"
and quotes some of his statements, above cited, as passages upon
which "the mind fondly and reverently dwells, . . . hopeful that
future lawyers and future judges may emulate the glory and the
virtue of this great man." 3 Brougham's Statesmen of George III
(ed. 1843) 156, 178,-179.
In the well known case of
The King v. Burdett, 3 B.
& Ald. 717, 4 B. & Ald. 95, and 1 State Trials (N.S.) 1,
for publishing a seditious libel, Mr. Justice Best (afterwards
Chief Justice of the Common Pleas and Lord Wynford) told the jury
that, in his opinion, the publication was a libel; that they were
to decide whether they would adopt his opinion; but that they were
to take the law from him, unless they were satisfied that he was
wrong. 4 B. & Ald. 131, 147, 183. The defendant having been
convicted, the Court of King's Bench, upon a motion for a new
trial, held, after advisement, that this instruction was
correct.
Mr. Justice Best said:
"It must not be supposed that the statute of George III made the
question of libel a question of fact. If it had, instead of
removing an anomaly, it would have created one. Libel is a question
of law, and the judge is the judge of the law in libel as in all
other cases, the jury having the power of acting agreeably to his
statement of the law or not. All that the statute does is to
prevent the question from being left to the jury in the narrow way
in which
Page 156 U. S. 141
it was left before that time. The jury were then only to find
the fact of the publication, and the truth of the innuendoes, for
the judges used to tell them that the intent was an inference of
law, to be drawn from the paper, with which the jury had nothing to
do. The legislature has said that that is not so, but that the
whole case is to be left to the jury. But judges are in express
terms directed to lay down the law as in other cases. In all cases,
the jury may find a general verdict. They do so in cases of murder
and treason, but there the judge tells them what is the law, though
they may find against him unless they are satisfied with his
opinion. And this is plain from the words of the statute."
4 B. & Ald. 131-132.
Justices Holroyd and Bayley and Chief Justice Abbott (afterwards
Lord Tenterden) expressed the same view. 4 B. & Ald. 145-147,
183-184. Mr. Justice Bayley said:
"The old rule of law is
ad quaestionem juris respondent
judices, ad quaestionem facti respondent juratores, and I take
it to be the bounden duty of the judge to lay down the law as it
strikes him, and that of the jury to accede to it unless they have
superior knowledge on the subject, and the direction in this case
did not take away from the jury the power of acting on their own
judgment."
And the Chief Justice said:
"If the judge is to give his opinion to the jury, as in other
criminal cases, it must be not only competent but proper for him to
tell the jury, if the case will so warrant, that in his opinion the
publication before them is of the character and tendency attributed
to it by the indictment, and that if it be so in their opinion, the
publication is an offense against the law. . . . The statute was
not intended to confine the matter in issue exclusively to the jury
without hearing the opinion of the judge, but to declare that they
should be at liberty to exercise their own judgment upon the whole
matter in issue, after receiving thereupon the opinion and
directions of the judge."
The weight of this deliberate and unanimous declaration of the
rightful power of the jury to decide the law in criminal cases is
not impaired by the
obiter dictum hastily uttered and
promptly recalled by Chief Justice Best in the civil case
(summarily decided upon a narrower point) of
Levi v.
Milne, and
Page 156 U. S. 142
reported so differently in 4 Bing. 195 and in 12 Moore 418, as
to leave it doubtful what he really said. And according to later
English authorities, even in civil actions, the question of libel
or no libel may be submitted by the judge to the jury without
expressing his own opinion upon it.
Parmiter v. Coupland,
6 M. & W. 105, 108;
Baylis v. Lawrence, 11 Ad. &
El. 920, 3 Per. & Dav. 526;
Cox v. Lee, L.R. 4 Ex.
284.
It is to be remembered that, by the law of England, a person
convicted of treason or felony could not appeal, or move for a new
trial, or file a bill of exceptions, or in any other manner obtain
a judicial review of rulings or instructions not appearing upon the
record unless the judge himself saw fit to reserve the question for
the opinion of all the judges. In short, as observed by Dr.
Lushington in delivering judgment in the Privy Council,
"the prisoner has no 'legal right,' in the proper sense of the
term, to demand a reconsideration, by a court of law, of the
verdict, or of any legal objection raised at the trial."
The Queen v. Eduljee Byramjee, 5 Moore P.C. 276, 287;
The Queen v. Bertrand, L.R. 1 P.C. 520; 1 Chit.Crim.Law
622, 654; 3 Russell on Crimes (9th ed.) 212. Consequently, a
prisoner tried before an arbitrary, corrupt, or ignorant judge had
no protection but in the conscience and the firmness of the
jury.
There is no occasion further to pursue the examination of modern
English authorities because, in this country, from the time of its
settlement until more than half a century after the Declaration of
Independence, the law as to the rights of juries, as generally
understood and put in practice, was more in accord with the views
of Bacon, Hale, Vaughan, Somers, Holt, and Camden than with those
of Kelying, Scroggs, Jeffreys, Raymond, Hardwicke, and Mansfield.
Upon a constitutional question affecting the liberty of the
subject, there can be no doubt that the opinions of Somers and of
Camden, especially, were of the very highest authority, and were so
considered by the founders of the Republic.
In Massachusetts, the leading authorities upon the question,
nearest the time of the Declaration of Independence and the
Page 156 U. S. 143
adoption of the Constitution of the United States, are John
Adams and Theophilus Parsons, each of whom was appointed, with the
general approval of the bar and the people, Chief Justice of the
state, the one, appointed to that office by the revolutionary
government in 1775, resigning it the next year, remaining in the
Continental Congress to support the Declaration of Independence,
and afterwards the first Vice-President and the second President of
the United States, the other a leading supporter of the
Constitution of the United States in the convention of 1788 by
which Massachusetts ratified the Constitution, appointed by
President Adams, in 1801, Attorney General of the United States,
but declining that office, and becoming Chief Justice of
Massachusetts in 1806.
John Adams, writing in 1771, said:
"Juries are taken, by lot or by suffrage, from the mass of the
people, and no man can be condemned of life or limb or property or
reputation without the concurrence of the voice of the people. . .
. The British empire has been much alarmed of late years with
doctrines concerning juries, their powers and duties, which have
been said in printed papers and pamphlets to have been delivered
from the highest tribunals of justice. Whether these accusations
are just or not, it is certain that many persons are misguided and
deluded by them to such a degree that we often hear in conversation
doctrines advanced for law which, if true, would render juries a
mere ostentation and pageantry, and the court absolute judges of
law and fact. . . . Whenever a general verdict is found, it
assuredly determines both the fact and the law. It was never yet
disputed or doubted that a general verdict, given
under the
direction of the court in point of law, was a legal
determination of the issue. Therefore the jury have a power of
deciding an issue upon a general verdict. And if they have, is it
not an absurdity to suppose that the law would oblige them to find
a verdict according to the direction of the court, against their
own opinion, judgment, and conscience? . . . The general rules of
law and common regulations of society under which ordinary
transactions arrange themselves are well enough known to ordinary
jurors. The great principles of the Constitution
Page 156 U. S. 144
are intimately known. They are sensibly felt by every Briton. It
is scarcely extravagant to say they are drawn in and imbibed with
the nurse's milk and first air. Now should the melancholy case
arise that the judges should give their opinions to the jury
against one of these fundamental principles, is a juror obliged to
give his verdict generally, according to this direction, or even to
find the fact specially, and submit the law to the court? Every man
of any feeling or conscience will answer 'No.' It is not only his
right, but his duty, in that case, to find the verdict according to
his own best understanding, judgment, and conscience, though in
direct opposition to the direction of the court. . . . The English
law obliges no man to decide a cause upon oath against his own
judgment."
2 John Adams' Works 253-255.
Theophilus Parsons, in the Massachusetts convention of 1788,
answering the objection that the Constitution of the United States,
as submitted to the people for adoption, contained no bill of
rights, said:
"The people themselves have it in their power effectually to
resist usurpation, without being driven to an appeal to arms. An
act of usurpation is not obligatory; it is not law, and any man may
be justified in his resistance. Let him be considered as a criminal
by the general government; yet only his fellow citizens can convict
him. They are his jury, and if they pronounce him innocent, not all
the powers of Congress can hurt him, and innocent they certainly
will pronounce him if the supposed law he resisted was an act of
usurpation."
2 Elliot Deb. 94; 2 Bancroft's History of the Constitution
267.
In 1808, Chief Justice Parsons, in delivering judgment in a
civil action for slander, said:
"Both parties have submitted the trial of this issue to a jury.
The issue involved both law and fact, and the jury must decide the
law and the fact. To enable them to settle the fact, they were to
weigh the testimony. That they might truly decide the law, they
were entitled to the assistance of the judge. If the judge had
declined his aid in a matter of law, yet the jury must have formed
their conclusion of law as correctly as they were able."
And, as the reporter states:
"In this opinion of the
Page 156 U. S. 145
Chief Justice the other judges,
viz., Sedgwick, Sewall,
Thatcher, and Parker, severally declared their full and entire
concurrence."
Coffin v. Coffin, 4 Mass. 1, 25, 37.
In 1816, upon the trial of an indictment for murder, the Supreme
Judicial Court of Massachusetts, held by Chief Justice Parker and
Justices Jackson and Putnam, instructed the jury as follows:
"In all capital cases, the jury are the judges of the law and
fact. The court are to direct them in matters of law, and, although
it is safer for them to rely on the instructions derived from that
source, still, gentlemen, they are to decide for themselves."
Bowen's Trial, 13 Mass. 356.
In 1826, Mr. Justice Wilde, speaking for the whole court,
assumed as unquestionable that "in criminal prosecutions. the jury
are the judges of both law and fact."
Commonwealth v.
Worcester, 3 Pick. 462, 475.
In 1830, in a celebrated trial for murder before Justices
Putnam, Wilde, and Morton, the right and duty of the jury to decide
the law as well as the fact involved in the general issue were
recognized and affirmed in the charge to the jury, and were
distinguished from the right of deciding questions of evidence, as
follows:
"As the jury have the right, and, if required by the prisoner,
are bound, to return a general verdict of guilty or not guilty,
they must necessarily, in the discharge of this duty, decide such
questions of law, as well as of fact, as are involved in this
general question, and there is no mode in which their opinions upon
questions of law can be reviewed by this Court or by any other
tribunal. But this does not diminish the obligation resting upon
the court to explain the law, or their responsibility for the
correctness of the principles of law by them laid down. The
instructions of the court in matters of law may safely guide the
consciences of the jury unless they known them to be wrong. And
when the jury undertake to decide the law (as they undoubtedly have
the power to do) in opposition to the advice of the court, they
assume a high responsibility, and should be very careful to see
clearly that they are right. Although the jury have the power, and
it is their duty, to decide all points of law which are involved in
the general question of the guilt or
Page 156 U. S. 146
innocence of the prisoner, yet when questions of law arise in
the arraignment of the prisoner or in the progress of the trial in
relation to the admissibility of evidence, they must be decided by
the court, and may not afterwards be reviewed by the jury."
Commonwealth v. Knapp, 10 Pick. 477, 496.
Many other Massachusetts authorities, from the earliest times to
the date last mentioned, tending to maintain the right of the jury
to decide the law involved in the general issue are collected in
the opinion of Mr. Justice Thomas in
Commonwealth v.
Anthes, 5 Gray 275-280, and in a note to Quincy, 558-560,
563-567.
To that date, or later, the right of the jury in criminal cases
to decide both the law and the fact, even against the directions of
the court, was certainly recognized and acted on throughout New
England, unless in Rhode Island.
State v. Snow (1841), 18
Me. 346; Doe, C.J., in
State v. Hodge, 50 N.H. 510, 523;
State v. Wilkinson (1829), 2 Vt. 480, 488;
State v.
Croteau (1849), 23 Vt. 14;
Witter v. Brewster (1788),
Kirby 422;
Bartholomew v. Clark (1816), 1 Conn. 472, 481;
State v. Buckley (1873), 40 Conn. 246.
See Laws
of 1647, in 1 Rhode Island Col.Rec. 157, 195, 203-204.
In the Province of New York in 1702, on the trial of Colonel
Nicholas Bayard for high treason, it was argued by his counsel, and
not denied by the court, that the jury, upon the general issue of
not guilty, were judges as well of matter of law as of matter of
fact. 14 Howell's State Trials 471, 502-503, 505.
In the same province in 1735, upon the trial of John Peter
Zenger for a seditious libel, his counsel, Andrew Hamilton, of
Philadelphia, while admitting that the jury might, if they pleased,
find the defendant guilty of printing and publishing, and leave it
to the court to judge whether the words were libelous, said,
without contradiction by the court:
"But I do likewise know they may do otherwise. I know they have
the right, beyond all dispute, to determine both the law and the
fact, and, where they do not doubt of the law, they ought to do
so."
The court afterwards submitted to the jury, in the
Page 156 U. S. 147
words of Lord Chief Justice Holt in
Tutchin's Case, 14
Howell's State Trials 1128, above cited, the question whether the
words set forth were libelous. And Zenger was acquitted by the
jury. 17 Howell's State Trials 675, 706, 716, 722.
Upon the trial in the Supreme Court of the State of New York, in
1803, of an indictment for a libel on the President of the United
States, Chief Justice Lewis instructed the jury, among other
things, that the question of libel or no libel was an inference of
law from the fact, and that the law as laid down by Lord Mansfield
in
Dean of St. Asaph's Case was the law of this state. The
defendant was convicted, and brought the question of the
correctness of these instructions before the full court in 1804,
upon a motion for a new trial.
People v. Croswell, 3
Johns.Cas. 337, 341-342.
Alexander Hamilton was of counsel for the defendant. Two reports
of his argument upon that motion have come down to us, the one in 3
Johns.Cas. 352-362, the other in a contemporary pamphlet of the
speeches in the case, pp. 62-78, and reprinted in 7 Hamilton's
Works (ed. 1886) 336-373. But the most compact and trustworthy
statement of his position upon the general question, unsurpassed
for precision and force by anything on the subject to be found
elsewhere, is in three propositions upon his brief (7 Hanilton's
Works 335, 336), read by him in recapitulating his argument, 3
Johns.Cas. 361, 362, which were as follows:
"That in the general distribution of powers in our system of
jurisprudence, the cognizance of law belongs to the court, of fact
to the jury. That as often as they are not blended, the power of
the court is absolute and exclusive. That in civil cases it is
always so, and may rightfully be so exerted. That in criminal
cases, the law and fact being always blended, the jury, for reasons
of a political and peculiar nature, for the security of life and
liberty, is entrusted with the power of deciding both law and
fact."
"That this distinction results 1, from the ancient forms of
pleading in civil cases, none but special pleas being allowed in
matter of law, in criminal, none but the general issue; 2, from the
liability of the jury to attaint in civil cases, and the
Page 156 U. S. 148
general power of the court as its substitute in granting new
trials, and from the exemption of the jury from attaint in criminal
cases, and the defect of power to control their verdicts by new
trials, the test of every legal power being its capacity to produce
a definitive effect, liable neither to punishment nor control."
"That in criminal cases, nevertheless, the court are the
constitutional advisers of the jury in matter of law, who may
compromit their conscience by lightly or rashly disregarding that
advice, but may still more compromit their consciences by following
it if, exercising their judgments with discretion and honesty, they
have a clear conviction that the charge of the court is wrong."
The court was equally divided in opinion, Judge Kent (afterwards
Chief Justice and Chancellor) and Judge Thompson being in favor of
a new trial, and Chief Justice Lewis and Judge Livingston against
it. Judge Kent drew up a careful opinion in which he reviewed the
leading English authorities, and from which the following passages
are taken:
"In every criminal case, upon the plea of not guilty, the jury
may, and indeed they must, unless they choose to find a special
verdict, take upon themselves the decision of the law, as well as
the fact, and bring in a verdict as comprehensive as the issue,
because in every such case they are charged with the deliverance of
the defendant from the crime of which he is accused. . . . The law
and fact are so involved that the jury are under an indispensable
necessity to decide both, unless they separate them by a special
verdict. This right in the jury to determine the law as well as the
fact has received the sanction of some of the highest authorities
in the law."
"But while the
power of the jury is admitted, it is
denied that they can
rightfully or
lawfully
exercise it without compromitting their consciences, and that they
are bound implicitly in all cases to receive the law from the
court. The law must, however, have intended, in granting this power
to a jury, to grant them a lawful and rightful power, or it would
have provided a remedy against the undue exercise of it. The true
criterion of a legal power is its capacity to produce
Page 156 U. S. 149
a definitive effect, liable neither to censure nor review. And
the verdict of not guilty in a criminal case is in every respect
absolutely final. The jury are not liable to punishment, nor the
verdict to control. No attaint lies, nor can a new trial be
awarded. The exercise of this power in the jury has been sanctioned
and upheld in constant activity from the earliest ages."
People v. Croswell, 3 Johns.Cas. 366-368.
"The result from this view is, to my mind, a firm conviction
that this court is not bound by the decisions of Lord Raymond and
his successors. By withdrawing from the jury the consideration of
the essence of the charge, they render their function nugatory and
contemptible. Those opinions are repugnant to the more ancient
authorities, which had given to the jury the power, and with it the
right, to judge of the law and fact, when they were blended by the
issue, and which rendered their decisions in criminal cases final
and conclusive. The English bar steadily resisted those decisions
as usurpations on the rights of the jury. Some of the judges
treated the doctrine as erroneous, and the Parliament at last
declared it an innovation by restoring the trial by jury, in cases
of libel, to that ancient vigor and independence by which it had
grown so precious to the nation, as the guardian of liberty and
life against the power of the court, the vindictive persecution of
the prosecutor, and the oppression of the government."
"I am aware of the objection to the fitness and competency of a
jury to decide upon questions of law, and especially with a power
to overrule the directions of the judge. In the first place,
however, it is not likely often to happen that the jury will resist
the opinion of the court on the matter of law. That opinion will
generally receive its due weight and effect; an in civil cases it
can and always ought to be ultimately enforced by the power of
setting aside the verdict. But in human institutions, the question
is not whether every evil contingency can be avoided, but what
arrangement will be productive of the least inconvenience. And it
appears to be most consistent with the permanent security of the
subject that in criminal cases the jury should, after receiving
the
Page 156 U. S. 150
advice and assistance of the judge as to the law, take into
their consideration all the circumstances of the case, and the
intention with which the act was done, and to determine, upon the
whole, whether the act done be or be not within the meaning of the
law. This distribution of power, by which the court and jury
mutually assist and mutually check each other, seems to be the
safest, and consequently the wisest, arrangement in respect to the
trial of crimes. The constructions of judges on the intention of
the party may often be (with the most upright motives) too
speculative and refined, and not altogether just in their
application to every case. Their rules may have too technical a
cast, and become, in their operation, severe and oppressive. To
judge accurately of motives and intentions does not require a
master's skill in the science of the law. It depends more on a
knowledge of the passions and of the springs of human action, and
may be the lot of ordinary experience and sagacity."
3 Johns.Cas. 375, 376.
In April, 1805, the Legislature of New York passed a statute,
very like Fox's Libel Act, declaring that upon an indictment or
information for libel,
"the jury, who shall try the same, shall have a right to
determine the law and the fact, under the direction of the court in
like manner as in other criminal cases."
And the reporter notes that,
"in consequence of this declaratory statute the court, in August
term, 1805 (no motion having been made for judgment on the verdict)
unanimously awarded a new trial in the above cause."
3 Johns.Cas. 412, 413.
In 1825, Judge Walworth (afterwards Chancellor) presiding in a
court of oyer and terminer at trials of indictments for murder,
instructed the jury
"that in criminal trials, they had a right to decide both as to
the law and the facts of the case; that the court was bound, by the
oaths of office of its judges, honestly and impartially to decide
the questions of law arising in the case, and state them to the
jury; but the jury had a right to disregard the decision of the
court upon questions of law, especially in favor of life, if they
were fully satisfied that such decision was wrong."
People v. Thayer, 1 Parker's Crim.Cas. 595, 598;
People v. Videto, 1 Parker'a Crim.Cas. 603-604.
Page 156 U. S. 151
In New Jersey, by provincial laws of 1676 and 1681, it was not
only enacted "that the trial of all causes, civil and criminal,
shall be heard and decided by the verdict of twelve honest men of
the neighbourhood," but also
"that there shall be, in every court, three justices or
commissioners, who shall sit with the twelve men of the
neighbourhood, with them to hear all causes, and to assist the said
twelve men of the neighbourhood in case of law, and that they the
said justices shall pronounce such judgment as they shall receive
from, and be directed by the said twelve men, in whom only the
judgment resides, and not otherwise; and in case of their neglect
and refusal, that then one of the twelve, by consent of the rest,
pronounce their own judgment as the justices should have done."
Leaming & Spicer's Laws, pp. 396-398, 428-429. How far,
under the present constitution and laws of the state, juries in
criminal cases have the right to decide the law for themselves,
disregarding the instructions of the judge presiding at the trial,
does not appear to be settled.
State v. Jay (1871), 34
N.J.L. 368;
Drake v. State (1890), 53 N.J.L. 23.
In Pennsylvania, Chief Justice Sharswood said: "No one
acquainted with the life of the founder of this commonwealth can
entertain any doubt of his opinion, or that of his friends and
followers," referring to the case of Penn and Mead before the
Recorder of London, and to that of Bushell, upon habeas corpus,
cited in the earlier part of this opinion, as well as to the
argument of Andrew Hamilton, of Philadelphia, "certainly the
foremost lawyer of the colonies," in
Zenger's Case, above
cited. And the right of the jury in criminal cases to decide both
law and fact, notwithstanding opinions to the contrary expressed
near the end of the last century by a judge of a county court in
charging juries and grand juries,m Addison's Reports, pp. 160, 257,
and Charges, pp. 57-63, was long and generally recognized in that
state.
Kane v. Commonwealth, 89 Penn.St. 522, 526;
Testimony of William Lewis and Edward Tilghman, Chase's Trial
(Evans' ed.) 20, 21, 27.
In Maryland, the provision of the Constitution of 1851, art.
Page 156 U. S. 152
10, sec. 5, repeated in the constitutions of 1864, art. 12, sec.
4, and of 1867, art. 15, sec. 5, that "in the trial of all criminal
cases the jury shall be the judges of law as well as fact," has
been held by the Court of Appeals to be merely declaratory of the
preexisting law, but not applicable to the question of the
constitutionality of a statute. 1 Charters and Constitutions, 858,
885, 918;
Franklin v. State (1858), 12 Md. 236, 249. As
has been said by that court, speaking by Mr. Justice Alvey:
"The jury are made the judges of law as well as of fact, in the
trial of criminal cases, under the constitution of this state, and
any instruction given by the court as to the law of the crime is
but advisory, and in no manner binding upon the jury except in
regard to questions as to what shall be considered as
evidence."
Wheeler v. State (1875), 42 Md. 563, 570.
See also
Broll v. State (1876) 45 Md. 356;
Bloomer v. State
(1878), 48 Md. 521, 538-539;
World v. State (1878), 50 Md.
49, 55.
In Virginia, the doctrine that the jury, upon the general issue
in a criminal case, had the right as well as the power to decide
both law and fact appears to have been generally admitted and
practiced upon until 1829, when, to the surprise of the bar, it was
treated by the Court of Appeals as doubtful.
Dance's Case
(1817), 5 Munf. 349, 363;
Baker v. Preston (1821), Gilmer,
235, 303;
Davenport v. Commonwealth (1829), 1 Leigh 588,
596;
Commonwealth v. Garth (1827), 3 Leigh 761, 770; 3
Rob.Va.Pract. (1839), c. 23.
In Georgia, Alabama, and Louisiana, the right of the jury was
formerly recognized.
McGuffie v. State (1855), 17 Ga. 497,
513;
McDaniel v. State (1860), 30 Ga. 853;
State v.
Jones (1843), 5 Ala. 666;
Bostwick v. Gasquet (1836),
10 La. 80;
State v. Scott (1856), 11 La.Ann. 429;
State v. Jurche (1865) 17 La.Ann. 71.
The Ordinance of the Continental Congress of 1787 for the
government of the Northwest Territory provided that the inhabitants
of the territory should always be entitled to the benefit of the
trial by jury, and that no man should be deprived of his liberty or
property but by the judgment of his peers or the law of the land,
and the Constitutions of the
Page 156 U. S. 153
State of Indiana in 1816 and of Illinois in 1818 and 1848
contained similar provisions. 1 Charters and Constitutions 431,
446, 447, 466, 500, 501.
In Indiana, the supreme court, under the Constitution of 1816,
having alternately denied and affirmed the right of the jury in
criminal cases to decide the law, the people, by the constitution
which took effect in November, 1851, declared that "in all criminal
cases whatever, the jury shall have the right to determine the law
and the facts," and this right has since been maintained by that
court even when the constitutionality of a statute was involved.
Townsend v. State (1828), 2 Blackford 151;
Warren v.
State (1836), 4 Blackford 150;
Carter v. State (May,
1851), 2 Ind. 617; 1 Charters and Constitutions 513, 526;
Lynch
v. State (1857), 9 Ind. 541;
McCarthy v. State
(1877), 56 Ind. 203;
Hudelson v. State (1883), 94 Ind.
426;
Blake v. State (1891), 130 Ind. 203.
In Illinois, the Criminal Code having declared that "juries in
all cases shall be judges of the law and the fact," the jury at a
trial for murder, after being out for some time, came into court
and through their foreman suggested that a juror maintained that he
was competent to judge of the correctness of the instructions of
the judge as the juror's opinion of the law might dictate. The
judge instructed the jury that they must take the law as laid down
to them by the court, and could not determine for themselves
whether the law so given to them was or was not the law. Upon
exception to the instructions, the Supreme Court of Illinois,
speaking by Judge Breese, granted a new trial, and said:
"Being judges of the law and the fact, they are not bound by the
law as given to them by the court, but can assume the
responsibility of deciding, each juror for himself, what the law
is. If they can say upon their oaths that they know the law better
than the court, they have the power so to do. If they are prepared
to say the law is different from what it is declared to be by the
court, they have a perfect legal right to say so, and find the
verdict according to their own notions of the law. It is a matter
between their consciences and their God, with which no power can
interfere."
Fisher v. People (1860), 23 Ill. 283, 294.
See
Page 156 U. S. 154
also Mullinix v. People (1875), 76 Ill. 211;
Spies
v. Illinois (1887), 122 Ill. 1, 252.
In the declaration of rights unanimously adopted October 14,
1774, by the Continental Congress, of which John Adams, Samuel
Adams, Roger Sherman, John Jay, Samuel Chase, George Washington,
and Patrick Henry were members, it was resolved
"that the respective colonies are entitled to the common law of
England, and more especially to the great and inestimable privilege
of being tried by their peers of the vicinage, according to the
course of that law."
1 Journals of Congress 28.
The Constitution of the United States, as framed in 1787 and
adopted in 1788, ordained, in Article III, Section 2, that
"The trial of all crimes, except in cases of impeachment, shall
be by jury, and such trial shall be held in the state where the
said crime shall have been committed,"
and, in the Fifth, Sixth, and Seventh Amendments, adopted in
1791,
"nor shall any person be subject for the same offense to be
twice put in jeopardy of life or limb, . . . nor be deprived of
life, liberty or property, without due process of law; . . . in all
criminal prosecutions, the accused shall enjoy the right to a
speedy and public trial, by an impartial jury of the state and
district wherein the crime shall have been committed, which
district shall have been previously ascertained by law,"
and
"In suits at common law, where the value in controversy shall
exceed twenty dollars, the right of trial by jury shall be
preserved, and no fact tried by a jury shall be otherwise
reexamined in any court of the United States, than according to the
rules of the common law."
Within six years after the Constitution was established, the
right of the jury, upon the general issue, to determine the law as
well as the fact in controversy was unhesitatingly and
unqualifiedly affirmed by this Court, in the first of the very few
trials by jury ever had at its bar, under the original jurisdiction
conferred upon it by the Constitution.
That trial took place at February term, 1794, in
Georgia v.
Brailsford, 3 Dall. 1, which was an action at law
by the State of Georgia against Brailsford and others, British
subjects. The pleadings, as appears by the files of this Court,
were as
Page 156 U. S. 155
follows: the declaration was in assumpsit for money had and
received; the defendants pleaded
non assumpsit, and "put
themselves upon the country," and the replication was, "and the
said State of Georgia also putteth herself upon the country." The
action, as the report shows, was brought to recover moneys received
by the defendants upon a bond of a citizen of Georgia to them, to
which the State of Georgia claimed title under an act of
confiscation passed by that state in 1782, during the Revolutionary
War, under circumstances which were agreed to be as stated in the
suit in equity between the same parties, reported in
2
U. S. 2 Dall. 402,
2
U. S. 415. After the case had been argued for four days
to the Court and jury, Chief Justice Jay, on February 7, 1794, as
the report states, "delivered the following charge":
"This cause has been regarded as of great importance, and
doubtless it is so. It has accordingly been treated by the counsel
with great learning, diligence, and ability, and on your part it
has been heard with particular attention. It is therefore
unnecessary for me to follow the investigation over the extensive
field into which it has been carried. You are now, if ever you can
be, completely possessed of the merits of the cause."
"The facts comprehended in the case are agreed. The only point
that remains is to settle what is the law of the land arising from
those facts, and on that point it is proper that the opinion of the
Court should be given. It is fortunate on the present, as it must
be on every, occasion to find the opinion of the Court unanimous.
We entertain no diversity of sentiment, and we have experienced no
difficulty in uniting in the charge which it is my province to
deliver."
The Chief Justice, after stating the opinion of the Court in
favor of the defendants upon the questions of law, proceeded as
follows:
"It may not be amiss, here, gentlemen, to remind you of the good
old rule, that on questions of fact it is the province of the jury,
on questions of law it is the province of the court, to decide. But
it must be observed that by the same law, which recognizes this
reasonable distribution of jurisdiction, you have nevertheless a
right to take upon yourselves
Page 156 U. S. 156
to judge of both, and to determine the law as well as the fact
in controversy. On this and on every other occasion, however, we
have no doubt you will pay that respect which is due to the opinion
of the Court, for as on the one hand, it is presumed that juries
are the best judges of facts, it is, on the other hand presumable
that the Court are the best judges of law. But still both objects
are lawfully within your power of decision."
Then, after telling the jury that they should not be influenced
by a consideration of the comparative situations and means of the
parties, he concluded the charge thus:
"Go, then, gentlemen, from the bar, without any impressions of
favor or prejudice for the one party or the other. Weigh well the
merits of the case, and do on this as you ought to do on every
occasion, equal and impartial justice."
The jury, after coming into court, and requesting and receiving
further explanations of the questions of law, returned a verdict
for the defendants, without going again from the bar.
The report shows that in a case in which there was no
controversy about the facts, the Court, while stating to the jury
its unanimous opinion upon the law of the case, and reminding them
of "the good old rule that on questions of fact it is the province
of the jury, on questions of law it is the province of the court,
to decide," expressly informed them that "by the same law, which
recognizes this reasonable distribution of jurisdiction," the jury
"have nevertheless a right to take upon yourselves to judge of
both, and to determine the law as well as the fact in
controversy."
The Court at that time consisted of Chief Justice Jay and
Justices Cushing, Wilson, Blair, Iredell, and Paterson, all of
whom, as appears by its records, except Justice Iredell, were
present at the trial.
The doubts which have been sometimes expressed of the accuracy
of Mr. Dallas' report are unfounded, as is apparent from several
considerations. He was of counsel for the plaintiff. The court was
then held at Philadelphia, and there is no reason to doubt that the
practice mentioned in the preface to his first volume, containing
reports of cases in the courts of
Page 156 U. S. 157
Pennsylvania only, by which "each case, before it was sent to
the press, underwent the examination of the presiding judge of the
court in which it was determined," was continued in his succeeding
volumes containing "reports of cases ruled and adjudged in the
several courts of the United States and of Pennsylvania, held at
the seat of the federal government." The charge contains internal
evidence of being reported verbatim, and has quotation marks at the
end, although they are omitted at the beginning. And the charge, in
the same words, with the prefix that it "was delivered by Jay,
Chief Justice, on the 7th of February, in the following lowing
terms," is printed in Dunlop and Claypole's American Daily
Advertiser of February 17, 1794.
That was not a criminal case, nor a suit to recover a penalty.
Had it been, it could hardly have been brought within the original
jurisdiction of this Court.
Wisconsin v. Pelican Ins. Co.,
127 U. S. 265,
127 U. S.
294-295. But it was a suit by a state to assert a title
acquired by an act of its legislature in the exercise of its
sovereign powers in time of war against private individuals. As the
charge of the court dealt only with the case before it, without any
general discussion, it does not appear whether the opinion
expressed as to the right of the jury to determine the law was
based upon a supposed analogy between such a suit and a prosecution
for crime, or upon the theory, countenanced by many American
authorities of the period, that at the foundation of the republic,
as in early times in England, the right of the jury extended to all
cases, civil or criminal, tried upon the general issue.
However that may have been, it cannot be doubted that this Court
at that early date was of opinion that the jury had the right to
decide for themselves all matters of law involved in the general
issue in criminal cases, and it is certain that in the century that
has since elapsed, there has been no judgment or opinion of the
Court deciding or intimating in any form that the right does not
appertain to the jury in such cases. And the opinions expressed by
individual Justices of the Court upon the subject, near the time of
the decision in
State v. Brailsford or within forty years
afterwards, of
Page 156 U. S. 158
which any reports are known to exist, tend more or less directly
to affirm this right of the jury. That there is not a greater
accumulation of evidence to this effect is easily accounted for
when it is remembered that comparatively few reports of trials were
printed, and that the right of the jury was considered to be so
well settled that it was seldom controverted in practice or
specially noticed in reporting trials.
Upon the trial of Gideon Henfield in the Circuit Court of the
United States for the District of Pennsylvania in 1793, before
Justices Wilson and Iredell and Judge Peters, for illegal
privateering, Mr. Justice Wilson told the jury that
"the questions of law coming into joint consideration with the
facts, it is the duty of the court to explain the law to the jury
and give it to them in direction,"
and, after expressing the unanimous opinion of the court upon
the questions of law involved in the case,
"concluded by remarking that the jury, in a general verdict,
must decide both law and fact, but that this did not authorize them
to decide it as they pleased. They were as much bound to decide by
law as the judges. The responsibility was equal upon both."
Wharton's State Trials 49, 84, 87-88,.
This statement that the jury, in a general verdict, must decide
both law and fact, and were as much bound to decide by law as the
judges, and under an equal responsibility, is quite inconsistent
with the idea that the jury were bound to accept the explanation
and direction of the court in matter of law as controlling their
judgment. That neither Mr. Justice Wilson nor Mr. Justice Iredell
entertained any such idea is conclusively disproved by authentic
and definite statements of their views upon the question.
Mr. Justice Iredell, speaking for himself only, in a civil case
before this Court at February term, 1795, said:
"It will not be sufficient that the court might charge the jury
to find for the defendant, because, though the jury will generally
respect the sentiments of the Court on points of law, they are not
bound to deliver a verdict conformably to them."
Bingham v.
Cabot, 3 Dall. 19, 33 [argument of counsel --
omitted].
Mr. Justice Wilson, in his lectures on law at the
Philadelphia
Page 156 U. S. 159
College in 1790 and 1791, discussing the maxim that the judges
determine the law and the jury determine the fact, made the
following observations:
"This well known division between their provinces has been long
recognized and established. When the question of law and the
question of fact can be decided separately, there is no doubt or
difficulty in saying by whom the separate decision shall be made.
If, between the parties litigant, there is no contention concerning
the facts, but an issue is joined upon a question of law, as is the
case in a demurrer, the determination of this question, and the
trial of this issue, belong exclusively to the judges. On the other
hand, when there is no question concerning the law and the
controversy between the parties depends entirely upon a matter of
fact, the determination of this matter, brought to an issue,
belongs exclusively to the jury. But in many cases, the question of
law is intimately and inseparably blended with the question of
fact, and when this is the case, the decision of one necessarily
involves the decision of the other. When this is the case, it is
incumbent on the judges to inform the jury concerning the law, and
it is incumbent on the jury to pay much regard to the information
which they receive from the judges. But now the difficulty in this
interesting subject begins to press upon us. Suppose that, after
all the precautions taken to avoid it, a difference of sentiment
takes place between the judges and the jury with regard to a point
of law. Suppose the law and the fact to be so closely interwoven
that a determination of one must at the same time embrace the
determination of the other. Suppose a matter of this description to
come in trial before a jury. What must the jury do? The jury must
do their duty, and their whole duty. They must decide the law as
well as the fact. This doctrine is peculiarly applicable to
criminal cases, and from them indeed derives its peculiar
importance."
"Juries undoubtedly may make mistakes. They may commit errors.
They may commit gross ones. But, changed as they constantly are,
their errors and mistakes can never grow into a dangerous system.
The native uprightness of their sentiments will not be bent under
the weight of precedent and
Page 156 U. S. 160
authority. The
esprit de corps will not be introduced
among them, nor will society experience from them those mischiefs
of which the
esprit de corps, unchecked, is sometimes
productive. Besides, their mistakes and their errors, except the
venial ones on the side of mercy made by traverse juries, are not
without redress. The court, if dissatisfied with their verdict,
have the power, and will exercise the power, of granting a new
trial. This power, while it prevents or corrects the effects of
their errors, preserves the jurisdiction of juries unimpaired. The
cause is not evoked before a tribunal of another kind. A jury of
the country -- an abstract, as it has been called, of the citizens
at large -- summoned, selected, impaneled, and sworn as the former,
must still decide."
"One thing, however, must not escape our attention. In the cases
and on the principles which we have mentioned, jurors possess the
power of determining legal questions. But they must determine them
according to law."
2 Wilson's Works 371-374.
In closing his discussion of the subject, and reviewing the
principles before stated, he said:
"With regard to the law in criminal cases, every citizen in a
government such as ours should endeavor to acquire a reasonable
knowledge of its principles and rules, for the direction of his
conduct, when he is called to obey, when he is called to answer,
and when he is called to judge. On questions of law, his
deficiencies will be supplied by the professional directions of the
judges, whose duty and whose business it is professionally to
direct him, for, as we have seen, verdicts in criminal cases
generally determine the question of law as well as the question of
fact. Questions of fact it is his exclusive province to determine.
With the consideration of evidence unconnected with the question
which he is to try his attention will not be distracted, for
everything of that nature, we presume, will be excluded by the
court. The collected powers of his mind therefore will be fixed,
steadily and without interruption, upon the issue which he is sworn
to try. This issue is an issue of fact."
2 Wilson's Works 386, 387.
These passages, taken together, clearly evince the view of
Page 156 U. S. 161
Mr. Justice Wilson to have been that while an issue of law is to
be tried and decided by the judge, an issue of fact, although it
involve a question of law blended and interwoven with the fact, is
to be tried and decided by the jury after receiving the
instructions of the court, and if a difference of opinion arise
between them and the judge upon the question of law, it is their
right and their duty to decide the law as well as the fact; that a
reasonable knowledge of the principles and rules of law is
important to the citizen not only "when he is called to obey," as
an individual, and "when he is called to answer," as a defendant,
but also "when he is called to judge" as a juror, and that the
general issue which the jury in a criminal case are sworn to try,
and which it is their duty to decide, even if it involve questions
of law, is "an issue of fact."
The provision of section 3 of the Act of Congress of July 14,
1798, c. 74, for punishing seditious libels, that "the jury who
shall try the cause shall have a right to determine the law and the
fact, under the direction of the court, as in other cases" (1 Stat.
597), is a clear and express recognition of the right of the jury
in all criminal cases to determine the law and the fact. The words,
"direction of the court," as here used, like the words "opinions
and directions" in the English Libel Act, do not oblige the jury to
adopt the opinion of the court, but are merely equivalent to
"instruction," "guide," or "aid," and not to "order," "command," or
"control." The provision is in affirmance of the general rule, and
not by way of creating an exception, and the reason for inserting
it probably was that the right of the jury had been more often
denied by the English courts in prosecutions for seditious libels
than in any other class of cases.
Upon the trial of John Fries for treason in 1800 before Mr.
Justice Chase and Judge Peters in the Circuit Court of the United
States for the District of Pennsylvania, the district attorney
having quoted from English law books definitions of actual and
constructive treason, Mr. Justice Chase said:
"They may, any of them, be read to the jury, and the decisions
thereupon, not as authorities whereby we are bound, but as the
opinions and decisions of men of great
Page 156 U. S. 162
legal learning and ability. But even then the court would attend
carefully to the time of the decision, and in no case must it be
binding upon our juries."
Trials of Fries 180. And he afterwards instructed the jury as
follows:
"It is the duty of the court in this case, and in all
criminal cases, to state to the jury their opinion of the
law arising on the facts; but the jury are to decide on
the present and in all
criminal cases both the law and the
facts, on their consideration of the whole case."
And he concluded his charge in these words:
"If, upon consideration of the whole matter (
law as
well as
fact), you are
not fully satisfied,
without any doubt, that the prisoner is guilty of the treason
charged in the indictment, you will find him not guilty; but if,
upon the consideration of the whole matter (
law as well as
fact), you are convinced that the prisoner is guilty of
the treason charged in the indictment, you will find him
guilty."
These instructions, with words italicized as above, are in the
exhibits annexed by Mr. Justice Chase to his answer upon the
impeachment in 1805. Chase's Trial (Evans' ed.) Append. 44-45, 48.
See also Trials of Fries 196, 199; Wharton's State Trials
634, 636.
In 1806, at the trial of William S. Smith in the Circuit Court
of the United States for the District of New York upon an
indictment for setting out a military expedition against a foreign
country at peace with the United States, Judge Talmadge said to the
jury:
"You have heard much said upon the right of a jury to judge of
the law as well as the fact. . . . The law is now settled that this
right appertains to a jury in all criminal cases. They
unquestionably may determine upon all the circumstances, if they
will take the responsibility and hazard of judging incorrectly upon
questions of mere law. But the jury is not therefore above the law.
In exercising this right, they attach to themselves the character
of judges, and as such are as much bound by the rules of legal
decision as those who preside upon the bench."
Trials of Smith and Ogden 236, 237.
In prosecutions in the District Court of the United States for
the District of Massachusetts under the Act of Congress of January
8, 1808, c. 8, laying an embargo (2 Stat. 453),
Page 156 U. S. 163
Samuel Dexter argued the unconstitutionality of the act to the
jury, and they acquitted the defendant, although the evidence of
the violation of the act was clear, and the court held, and
instructed the jury, that the act was constitutional. 3 Bradford's
Hist.Mass. 108, note; 3 Webster's Works 329-330;
United States
v. The William, 2 Hall's Law Journal 255; Sigma's
Reminiscences of Dexter 60-61.
In 1812, at the trial of an action in the District Court of the
United States for the District of New York upon a bond given under
the Embargo Act, Judge Van Ness instructed the jury that
"this was in its nature and essence, though not in its form, a
penal or criminal action, and they were therefore entitled to judge
both of the law and the fact."
United States v. Poillon, 1 Carolina Law Repository 60,
66.
In 1815, at the trial of John Hodges in the Circuit Court of the
United States for the District of Maryland for treason, William
Pinkney, for the defendant, argued:
"The best security for the rights of individuals is to be found
in the trial by jury. But the excellence of this institution
consists in its exclusive power. The jury are here judges of law
and fact, and are responsible only to God, to the prisoner, and to
their own consciences."
And Mr. Justice Duvall, of this Court, after expressing his
opinion upon the law of the case, said, with the concurrence of
Judge Houston: "The jury are not bound to conform to this opinion,
because they have a right, in all criminal cases, to decide on the
law and the facts." Hall's Law Tracts, III. 19, 28; 2 Wheeler,
Crom.Cas. 477-478, 485.
In 1830, George Wilson and James Porter were jointly indicted in
the Circuit Court of the United States for the District of
Pennsylvania for robbing the mail, and were tried separately. In
Wilson's Case, Mr. Justice Baldwin (Judge Hopkinson
concurring), after expressing to the jury an opinion upon the law,
said to them:
"We have thus stated to you the law of this case, under the
solemn duties and obligations imposed on us, under the clear
conviction that in doing so we have presented to you the true test
by which you will apply the evidence to the case; but you will
distinctly understand
Page 156 U. S. 164
that you are the judges both of the law and fact in a criminal
case, and are not bound by the opinion of the court; you may judge
for yourselves, and, if you should feel it your duty to differ from
us, you must find your verdict accordingly. At the same time, it is
our duty to say that it is in perfect accordance with the spirit of
our legal institutions that courts should decide questions of law,
and the juries of facts. The nature of the tribunals naturally
leads to this division of duties, and it is better, for the sake of
public justice, that it should be so. When the law is settled by a
court, there is more certainty than when done by a jury. It will be
better known, and more respected in public opinion. But if you are
prepared to say that the law is different from what you have heard
from us, you are in the exercise of a constitutional right to do
so. We have only one other remark to make on this subject: by
taking the law as given by the court, you incur no moral
responsibility; in making a rule of your own, there may be some
danger of a mistake."
Baldwin 78, 99-100. And in
Porter's Case, the court,
after repeating and explaining these instructions, said to the
jury:
"In a word, gentlemen, decide on the law and the facts as best
comports with your sense of duty to the public and yourselves. Act
on the same rule under which you would be guided, as a magistrate
or judge, on the oath and responsibility of office. Then you will
not err."
Baldwin 108-109.
Some Justices of this Court, indeed, who, as already shown,
admitted the general right of jurors in criminal cases to decide
both law and fact, denied their right to pass upon the
constitutionality of a statute, apparently upon the ground that the
question of the existence or the validity of a statute was for the
court alone. Paterson, J., in
Lyon's Case (1798) Wharton's
State Trials 333, 336; Chase, J., in
Callender's Case
(1800), Wharton's State Trials 688, 710-718; Baldwin, J., in
United States v. Shive (1832), Baldwin 510. It may well be
doubted whether such a distinction can be maintained.
Commonwealth v. Anthes, 5 Gray 185, 188-192, 262; Cooley,
Const.Lim. (6th ed.) 567. But the point does not arise in this
case.
Page 156 U. S. 165
Upon the general question of the right of the jury in criminal
cases to decide the law, Chief Justice Marshall's opinion is of so
great weight that the evidence of that opinion, although, perhaps,
not so satisfactory as might be wished, should not be
disregarded.
At the trial of Aaron Burr in the Circuit Court of the United
States for the District of Virginia in 1808, for treason by levying
war in Blennerhassett's Island, Chief Justice Marshall, in
delivering an opinion upon the order of evidence, said:
"Levying of war is a fact, which must be decided by the jury.
The court may give general instructions on this, as on every other
question brought before them, but the jury must decide upon it as
compounded of fact and law."
1 Burr's Trial 470.
In the charge, drawn up by the Chief Justice in writing and read
by him to the jury, speaking of the question of the defendant's
constructive presence, he said:
"Had he not arrived in the island, but had taken a position near
enough to cooperate with those on the island, to assist them in any
act of hostility, or to aid them if attacked, the question whether
he was constructively present would be a question compounded of law
and fact, which would be decided by the jury, with the aid of the
court, so far as respected the law."
2 Burr's Trial 429.
The Chief Justice took occasion to demonstrate that questions of
the admissibility of evidence must be decided by the court only,
saying:
"No person will contend that in a civil or criminal case, either
party is at liberty to introduce what testimony he pleases, legal
or illegal, and to consume the whole term in details of facts
unconnected with the particular case. Some tribunal, then, must
decide on the admissibility of testimony. The parties cannot
constitute this tribunal, for they do not agree. The jury cannot
constitute it, for the question is whether they shall hear the
testimony or not. Who then but the court can constitute it? It is,
of necessity, the peculiar province of the court to judge of the
admissibility of testimony."
P. 443.
Referring to his previous opinion on the order of testimony,
Page 156 U. S. 166
he remarked:
"It was said that levying war is an act compounded of law and
fact, of which the jury, aided by the court, must judge. To that
declaration the court still adheres."
P. 444. And he concluded his charge thus:
"The jury have now heard the opinion of the court on the law of
the case. They will apply that law to the facts, and will find a
verdict of guilty or not guilty as their own consciences may
direct."
P. 445.
It thus appears that Chief Justice Marshall, while affirming
that a question of the admissibility of evidence must be decided by
the court, because that question was whether the jury should hear
the evidence or not, yet told the jury (in many forms, but of the
same meaning) that upon a question compounded of fact and law,
involved in the issue submitted to the jury, the court might give
general instructions, but the jury must decide it; that such a
question, compounded of law and fact, would be decided by the jury,
with the aid of the court, so far as respects the law; that of such
a question the jury, aided by the court, must judge, and that,
having "heard the opinion of the court on the law of the case, they
will apply" not "that opinion," but "that law," namely, the law as
to which the court had expressed its opinion, "to the facts, and
will find a verdict of guilty or not guilty as their own
consciences may direct." The manifest intent and effect of all this
were that the jury, after receiving the aid of the instructions of
the court on matter of law, must judge of and determine, as their
own consciences might direct, every question compounded of law and
fact involved in the general issue of guilty or not guilty.
The meaning of the charge in this respect, as carefully prepared
by the Chief Justice is too clear to be controlled by the words
attributed to him by the reporter, on page 448, in the course of a
desultory conversation with counsel in regard to other defendants,
after the jury had found Burr not guilty.
In 1817, before Chief Justice Marshall in the same court, there
was tried an indictment for piracy, by robbing on the high seas,
under the Act of Congress of April 30, 1790, c. 9,
Page 156 U. S. 167
§ 8, 1 Stat. 113; Rev.Stat. § 5372, enacting that any
person committing upon the high seas
"murder or robbery, or any other offense which, if committed
within the body of a county, would by the laws of the United States
be punishable with death"
should be deemed a pirate. Mr. Upshur, for the defendant,
argued
"that it was necessary that robbery should first be made
punishable with death by the laws of the United States, when
committed on land, before it could amount to piracy, when committed
on the sea, which was not now the case; that Judge Johnson had so
decided in South Carolina, although a contrary decision had been
subsequently pronounced by Judge Washington; that the conflict
between these two learned judges proved that the law was at least
doubtful; that the jury, in a capital case, were judges as well of
the law as the fact, and were bound to acquit, where either was
doubtful."
Chief Justice Marshall (far from denying this right of the
jury),
"being appealed to for the interpretation of the law, decided
that it was not necessary that robbery should be punishable by
death when committed on land in order to amount to piracy if
committed on the ocean, but as two judges (for both of whom the
court entertained the highest respect) had pronounced opposite
decisions upon it, the court could not undertake to say that it was
not at least doubtful."
And, the case being submitted to the jury, they returned a
verdict of not guilty.
United States v. Hutchings, 2
Wheeler Crim.Cas. 543, 547-548.
*
It may be added that Mr. Conway Robinson, well known to many
members of this Court and this bar as a most careful and accurate
as well as learned lawyer, informed Mr. Justice Blatchford and
myself that he well remembered hearing Chief Justice Marshall,
presiding at the trial of a criminal case in the circuit court of
the United States at Richmond, after expressing at the request of
the counsel on both sides, his own
Page 156 U. S. 168
opinion upon the construction of the statute on which the
indictment was founded, conclude his charge to the jury by telling
them that, as it was a criminal case, they were not bound to accept
his opinion, but had the right to decide both the law and the
fact.
Until nearly forty years after the adoption of the Constitution
of the United States, not a single decision of the highest court of
any state, or of any judge of a court of the United States, has
been found, denying the right of the jury upon the general issue in
a criminal case to decide, according to their own judgment and
consciences, the law involved in that issue, except the two or
three cases, above mentioned, concerning the constitutionality of a
statute. And it cannot have escaped attention that many of the
utterances above quoted, maintaining the right of the jury, were by
some of the most eminent and steadfast supporters of the
Constitution of the United States, and of the authority of the
national judiciary.
It must frankly be admitted that in more recent times, beginning
with the judgment of the Court of Appeals of Kentucky in 1830 in
Montee v. Commonwealth, 3 J. J. Marsh. 132, and with Mr.
Justice Story's charge to a jury in 1835 in
United States v.
Battiste, 2 Sumner 240, the general tendency of decision in
this country (as appears by the cases cited in the opinion of the
majority of the Court) has been against the right of the jury, as
well in the courts of the several states, including many states
where the right was once established, as in the circuit courts of
the United States. The current has been so strong that in
Massachusetts, where counsel are admitted to have the right to
argue the law to the jury, it has yet been held that the jury have
no right to decide it, and it has also been held by a majority of
the court that the legislature could not constitutionally confer
upon the jury the right to determine, against the instructions of
the court, questions of law involved in the general issue in
criminal cases, and in Georgia and in Louisiana a general provision
in the constitution of the state declaring that "in criminal cases
the jury shall be judges of the law and fact" has been held not to
authorize them to decide the law against the instructions
Page 156 U. S. 169
of the court.
Commonwealth v. Porter, 10 Met. 263;
Commonwealth v. Anthes, 5 Gray 185;
Ridenhour v.
State, 75 Ga. 382;
State v. Tisdale, 41 La.Ann.
338.
But, upon the question of the true meaning and effect of the
Constitution of the United States in this respect, opinions
expressed more than a generation after the adoption of the
Constitution have far less weight than the almost unanimous voice
of earlier and nearly contemporaneous judicial declarations and
practical usage.
Stuart v.
Laird, 1 Cranch 299. And upon this constitutional
question neither decisions of state courts nor rulings of lower
courts of the United States can relieve this Court from the duty of
exercising its own judgment.
Liverpool Steam Co. v. Phenix Ins.
Co., 129 U. S. 397,
129 U. S. 443;
Andrews v. Hovey, 124 U. S. 694,
124 U. S. 717;
The J. E. Rumbell, 148 U. S. 1,
148 U. S. 17.
The principal grounds which have been assigned for denying the
right of a jury, upon the general issue in a criminal case, to
determine the law against the instructions of the court have been
that the old maxim
ad quaestionem juris respondent judices, ad
quaestionem facti respondent juratores is of universal
application -- that judges are more competent than juries to
determine questions of law, and that decisions upon such questions
in one case become precedents to guide the decision of subsequent
cases.
But the question what are the rights in this respect of persons
accused of crime, and of juries summoned and impaneled to try them,
under the Constitution of the United States is not a question to be
decided according to what the court may think would be the wisest
and best system to be established by the people or by the
legislature, but what, in the light of previous law, and of
contemporaneous or early construction of the Constitution, the
people did affirm and establish by that instrument.
This question, like all questions of constitutional
construction, is largely an historical question, and it is for that
reason that it has seemed necessary, at the risk of tediousness, to
review and to state at some length the principal authorities upon
the subject in England and America. The reasons to be
Page 156 U. S. 170
derived from these authorities for maintaining the contested
right of the jury in this regard may be summed up as follows:
By the Great Charter of England and by the American
constitutions, it is not by a decision of the ablest or most
learned judges that the citizen can be deprived of his life or
liberty, but it is only by "the judgment of his peers," or, in the
ancient phrase, "by his country" -- a jury taken from the body of
the people.
The ancient forms, used before and since the adoption of the
Constitution and hardly altered at the present day, in which the
general issue is pleaded by the accused and submitted to the jury,
are significant. When the defendant, being arraigned upon the
indictment, pleads not guilty, he is asked by the clerk of the
court, "How will you be tried?," and answers, "By God and my
country." The oath administered to each juror as he is called and
accepted is:
"You shall well and truly try and true deliverance make between
our sovereign lord the King [or the state or people, or the United
States, as the case may be] and the prisoner at the bar, whom you
shall have in charge, according to your evidence. So help you
God."
And, after the jury have been impaneled, the clerk reads the
indictment to the jury, and then says to them:
"To this indictment the prisoner at the bar has pleaded not
guilty, and for trial has put himself upon the country, which
country you are. You are now sworn to try the issue. If he is
guilty, you will say so; if not guilty, you will say so, and no
more."
In the maxim
ad quaestionem juris respondent judices, ad
quaestionem facti respondent juratores, the word
"quaestio" denotes an issue joined by the pleadings of the
parties, or otherwise stated on the record, for decision by the
appropriate tribunal. Issues of law, so joined or stated, are to be
decided by the judge, issues of fact, by the jury. If the accused
demurs to the indictment, an issue of law only is presented, which
must be decided and judgment rendered thereon by the court, and by
the court alone. But if the accused pleads generally not guilty,
the only issue joined is an issue of fact, to be decided by the
jury, and by the jury only, unless the jury
Page 156 U. S. 171
choose to return a special verdict, so that the record may
present an issue of mere law, to be decided by the court. After a
verdict of guilty, again, any defense in matter of law apparent on
the record is to be considered and decided by the court on motion
in arrest of judgment.
The maxim has no application to rulings, in the course of the
trial, upon the admission of evidence. The object of rules as to
the competency of evidence is to prevent trials from being unduly
prolonged, and the consideration and decision of the merits of the
real issue on trial obscured, embarrassed, or prejudiced by the
introduction of irrelevant matter. The question whether particular
evidence shall be admitted or not is one to be decided before the
evidence can be submitted to the jury at all, and must be, as it
always is, decided by the court, and this is so whether the
admissibility of the evidence depends, as it usually does, upon a
question of law only, or depends largely or wholly upon a question
of fact, as whether dying declarations were made under immediate
apprehension of death, or whether a confession of the defendant was
voluntary, or whether sufficient foundation has been laid for the
introduction of secondary evidence or for permitting a witness to
testify as an expert. To infer, because the court must decide
questions of law upon which the admissibility of evidence depends,
that the jury have no right to determine the matter of law involved
in the general issue would be as unwarrantable as to infer, because
the court must decide questions of fact upon which the
admissibility of evidence depends, that the jury have no right to
decide the matter of fact involved in that issue.
The jury to whom the case is submitted, upon the general issue
of guilty or not guilty, are entrusted with the decision of both
the law and the facts involved in that issue. To assist them in the
decision of the facts, they hear the testimony of witnesses, but
they are not bound to believe the testimony. To assist them in the
decision of the law, they receive the instructions of the judge,
but they are not obliged to follow his instructions.
Upon the facts, although the judge may state his view of
Page 156 U. S. 172
them, the duty of decision remains with the jury, and cannot be
thrown by them upon the judge. Upon the law involved in the issue
of fact, the jury, if they are satisfied to do so, may let it be
decided by the judge either by returning a general verdict in
accordance with his opinion as expressed to them or by returning a
special verdict reciting the facts as found by them, and, by thus
separating the law from the facts, put the question of law in a
shape to be decided by the court in a more formal manner. But the
whole issue, complicated of law and fact, being submitted to their
determination, the law does not require them to separate the law
from the fact, but authorizes them to decide both at once by a
general verdict.
The duty of the jury, indeed, like any other duty imposed upon
any officer or private person by the law of his country, must be
governed by the law, and not by willfulness or caprice. The jury
must ascertain the law as well as they can. Usually they will, and
safely may, take it from the instructions of the court. But if they
are satisfied on their consciences that the law is other than as
laid down to them by the court, it is their right and their duty to
decide by the law as they know or believe it to be.
In the forcible words of Chief Justice Vaughan in
Bushell's
Case, Vaughan 135, 148, already quoted:
"A man cannot see by another's eye, nor hear by another's ear;
no more can a man conclude or infer the thing to be resolved by
another's understanding or reasoning; and, though the verdict be
right the jury give, yet they, being not assured it is so from
their own understanding, are forsworn at least in
foro
conscientiae."
Or, as more briefly stated in another report of the same
case:
"The jury are perjured if the verdict be against their own
judgment, although by directions of the court, for their oath binds
them to their own judgment."
T. Jones 13, 17.
It is universally conceded that a verdict of acquittal, although
rendered against the instructions of the judge, is final, and
cannot be set aside, and consequently that the jury have the legal
power to decide for themselves the law involved in the general
issue of guilty or not guilty.
Page 156 U. S. 173
It has sometimes, however, been asserted that although they have
the power, they have no right to do this, and that it is their
legal, or at least their moral, duty in every criminal case to obey
and follow the judge's instructions in matter of law. The
suggestion is not that the jury ought not to exercise the power
wrongfully, but that they ought not to exercise it at all; that
whether the instructions of the court be right or wrong, just or
arbitrary, according to the law as known of all men or directly
contrary to it, the jury must be controlled by and follow them.
But a legal duty which cannot in any way, directly or
indirectly, be enforced, and a legal power of which there can
never, under any circumstances, be a rightful and lawful exercise,
are anomalies;
"the test of every legal power [as said by Alexander Hamilton,
and affirmed by Chancellor Kent, in
People v. Croswell, 3
Johns.Cas. 362, 368, above cited] being its capacity to produce a
definitive effect, liable neither to punishment nor control, . . .
to censure nor review."
It has been said that, if not their legal duty, it is their
moral duty, to follow the instructions of the court in matter of
law. But moral duties, as distinguished from legal duties, are
governed not by human but by divine laws, and the oath which the
jurors in a capital case severally take to the Almighty Judge is to
well and truly try and true deliverance make between the government
and the prisoner at the bar, according to their evidence, not
according to the instructions of the court, and to decide whether,
in their own judgment and conscience, the accused is guilty or not
guilty.
The rules and principles of the criminal law are for the most
part elementary and simple, and easily understood by jurors taken
from the body of the people. As every citizen or subject is
conclusively presumed to know the law, and cannot set up his
ignorance of it to excuse him from criminal responsibility for
offending against it, a jury of his peers must be presumed to have
equal knowledge, and, especially after being aided by the
explanation and exposition of the law by counsel and court, to be
capable of applying it to the facts as proved by the evidence
before them.
Page 156 U. S. 174
On the other hand, it is a matter of common observation that
judges and lawyers, even the most upright, able, and learned, are
sometimes too much influenced by technical rules, and that those
judges who are wholly or chiefly occupied in the administration of
criminal justice are apt not only to grow severe in their
sentences, but to decide questions of law too unfavorably to the
accused.
The jury having the undoubted and uncontrollable power to
determine for themselves the law as well as the fact by a general
verdict of acquittal, a denial by the court of their right to
exercise this power will be apt to excite in them a spirit of
jealousy and contradiction, and to prevent them from giving due
consideration and weight to the instructions of the court in
matters of law.
In civil cases, doubtless, since the power to grant new trials
has become established, the court, having the right to grant one to
either party as often as the verdict appears to be contrary to the
law, or to the evidence, may, in order to avoid unnecessary delay,
whenever in its opinion, the evidence will warrant a verdict for
one party only, order a verdict accordingly.
Pleasants
v. Fant, 22 Wall. 116;
Hendrick v.
Lindsay, 93 U. S. 143;
Schofield v. Chicago &c. Railway, 114 U.
S. 615.
But a person accused of crime has a two-fold protection -- in
the court and the jury -- against being unlawfully convicted. If
the evidence appears to the court to be insufficient in law to
warrant a conviction, the court may direct an acquittal.
Smith
v. United States, 151 U. S. 50. But
the court can never order the jury to convict, for no one can be
found guilty but by the judgment of his peers.
Decisions of courts, and especially of courts of last resort,
upon issues of law such as are presented by a demurrer or by a
special verdict, become precedents to govern judicial decisions in
like cases in the future. But the verdict of a jury upon the
general issue of guilty or not guilty settles nothing but the guilt
or innocence of the accused in the particular case, and the issue
decided is so complicated of law and fact, blended together, that
no distinct decision of any question of law is recorded or made.
The purpose of establishing trial by jury was not to
Page 156 U. S. 175
obtain general rules of law for future use, but to secure
impartial justice between the government and the accused in each
case as it arose.
As said by Alexander Hamilton in
Croswell's Case, above
cited, the power of deciding both law and fact upon the general
issue in a criminal case is entrusted to the jury "for reasons of a
political and peculiar nature, for the security of life and
liberty." 7 Hamilton's Works 335; 3 Johns.Cas. 362. The people, by
a jury drawn from among themselves, take part in every conviction
of a person accused of crime by the government, and the general
knowledge that no man can be otherwise convicted increases public
confidence in the justice of convictions, and is a strong bulwark
of the administration of the criminal law.
By the law of England, as has been seen, a person accused of
murder or other felony, and convicted before a single judge could
not move for a new trial, and had no means of reviewing his
instructions to the jury upon any question of law unless the judge
himself saw fit to reserve the question for decision by higher
judicial authority.
Although Mr. Justice Story, in
United States v. Gibert
(1834), 2 Sumner 19, thought that a new trial could not be granted
to a man convicted of murder by a jury, because to do so would be
to put him twice in jeopardy of his life, yet the circuit courts of
the United States may doubtless grant new trials after conviction,
though not after acquittal, in criminal cases tried before them.
United States v.
Fries (1799), 3 Dall. 515;
United States v.
Porter (1830), Baldwin 78, 108;
United States v.
Harding (1846), 1 Wall.Jr. 127;
United States v. Keen
(1839), 1 McLean 429;
United States v. Macomb (1851), 5
McLean 2862;
United States v. Smith (1855), 3 Blatchford
255;
United States v. Williams (1858), 1 Clifford 5. But
the granting or refusal of a new trial rests wholly in the
discretion of the court in which the trial was had, and cannot be
reviewed on error.
Blitz v. United States, 153 U.
S. 308.
By the Constitution of the United States, this Court has
appellate jurisdiction in such cases, and under such
regulations
Page 156 U. S. 176
only, as Congress may prescribe, and, under the legislation of
Congress before 1889, no rulings or instructions of a circuit court
of the United States in a criminal case could be brought to this
Court unless upon a certificate of division of opinion between two
judges presiding at the trial. A person accused of murder or other
crime might be tried, and, if convicted by the jury, sentenced
before a single judge, perhaps only a district judge, and if so
convicted and sentenced, there was no way in which the judge's
rulings could be reviewed by this Court. Act April 29, 1802, c. 31,
§ 6, 2 Stat. 159; Rev.Stat. §§ 651, 697;
United States v.
More, 3 Cranch 159,
7 U. S. 172;
Ex Parte
Kearney, 7 Wheat. 38,
20 U. S. 42;
Ex Parte
Gordon, 1 Black 503;
Ex Parte Yarbrough,
110 U. S. 651;
United States v. Perrin, 131 U. S. 55.
By the Acts of February 6, 1889, c. 113, § 6, and March 3,
1891, c. 517, indeed, a person convicted of murder or other
infamous crime in a circuit court of the United States may bring
the case to this Court by writ of error, although the United States
cannot do so. 25 Stat. 656; 26 Stat. 827;
United States v.
Sanges, 144 U. S. 310. But
the right of review, so given to this Court, cannot supersede or
impair the rightful power of the jury under the Constitution in
deciding the issue submitted to them at the trial.
There may be less danger of prejudice or oppression from judges
appointed by the President elected by the people than from judges
appointed by an hereditary monarch. But as the experience of
history shows, it cannot be assumed that judges will always be just
and impartial and free from the inclination, to which even the most
upright and learned magistrates have been known to yield, from the
most patriotic motives, and with the most honest intent to promote
symmetry and accuracy in the law, of amplifying their own
jurisdiction and powers at the expense of those entrusted by the
Constitution to other bodies. And there is surely no reason why the
chief security of the liberty of the citizen -- the judgment of his
peers -- should be held less sacred in a republic than in a
monarchy.
Upon these considerations, we are of opinion that the learned
judge erred in instructing the jury that they were
Page 156 U. S. 177
bound to accept the law as stated in his instructions, and that
this error requires the verdict to be set aside as to both
defendants.
But we are also of opinion that the judge committed an equally
grave error in declining to submit to the jury matter of fact
involved in the issue on trial.
It clearly appears that the jury were not only instructed that,
while they had the physical power to return a verdict of
manslaughter, yet they must take the law from the court, but that
they were also instructed that if they found these defendants
guilty of any crime, it could not properly be manslaughter. There
can be no doubt upon the record before us -- and it is admitted in
the opinion of the majority of the Court -- that the judge denied
the right of the jury to find as a fact that the defendants had
been guilty of manslaughter only. Nor can there be any doubt that
the jury were thereby led to agree upon a verdict of guilty of
murder, to the great prejudice of the defendants.
In a case in which the jury, as appeared by their inquiries of
the court, were in doubt whether the homicide committed by the
defendants was murder or manslaughter, to instruct them that they
could not acquit the defendants of murder and convict them of
manslaughter only, but must find them guilty of murder or of no
crime at all, does not appear to us to differ in principle from
instructing them, in a case in which there was no question of
manslaughter, that there was no evidence upon which they could
acquit the defendant, or do anything but convict him of murder.
This is not a case in which the judge simply declined to give
any instructions upon a question of law which he thought did not
arise upon the evidence. But after giving sufficient definitions
both of murder and of manslaughter, he peremptorily told them that
they could not convict the defendants of manslaughter only, and
thereby denied the right of the jury to pass upon a matter of fact
necessarily included in the issue presented by the general plea of
not guilty.
This appears to us to be inconsistent with settled principles of
law and with well considered authorities.
Page 156 U. S. 178
As said by this Court, speaking by Mr. Justice Clifford:
"In criminal cases, the true rule is that the burden of proof
never shifts; that in all cases, before a conviction can be had,
the jury must be satisfied from the evidence, beyond a reasonable
doubt, of the affirmative of the issue presented in the accusation
that the defendant is guilty in the manner and form as charged in
the indictment."
Lilienthal's Tobacco v. United States, 97 U. S.
237,
97 U. S. 266.
See also Potter v. United States, 155 U.
S. 438;
Commonwealth v. McKie, 1 Gray 61;
People v. Downs, 123 N.Y. 558.
Upon the trial of an indictment under a statute of the Territory
of Utah establishing two degrees of murder, with different
punishments, the jury were instructed
"that an atrocious and dastardly murder has been committed by
some person is apparent, but in your deliberations you should be
careful not to be influenced by any feeling,"
and the defendant was found guilty of murder in the first
degree, and sentenced to death. This Court, upon writ of error to
the supreme court of the territory, reversed the judgment, because
that instruction must have been regarded by the jury as
"an instruction that the offense, by whomsoever committed, was
murder in the first degree, whereas it was for the jury, having
been informed as to what was murder by the laws of Utah, to say
whether the facts made a case of murder in the first degree or
murder in the second degree,"
and
"the prisoner had the right to the judgment of the jury upon the
facts, uninfluenced by any direction from the court as to the
weight of the evidence."
Hopt v. Utah, 110 U. S. 574,
110 U. S.
582-583.
As stated by THE CHIEF JUSTICE, speaking for this Court in a
case of murder decided at the last term:
"It is true that in the federal courts the rule that obtains is
similar to that in the English courts, and the presiding judge may,
if in his discretion he think proper, sum up the facts to the jury,
and if no rule of law is incorrectly stated, and the matters of
fact are ultimately submitted to the determination of the jury, it
has been held that an expression of opinion upon the facts is not
reviewable on error.
Rucker v. Wheeler, 127 U. S.
85,
Page 156 U. S. 179
127 U. S. 93;
Lovejoy v.
United States, 128 U. S. 171,
128 U. S.
173. But he should take care to separate the law from
the facts, and to leave the latter in unequivocal terms to the
judgment of the jury as their true and peculiar province.
M'Lanahan v. Universal Ins.
Co., 1 Pet. 170,
26 U. S.
182. As the jurors are the triers of facts, expressions
of opinion by the court should be so guarded as to leave the jury
free in the exercise of their own judgments."
Starr v. United States, 153 U.
S. 614,
153 U. S.
624-625.
The Supreme Court of Michigan, speaking by Chief Justice Cooley,
in setting aside a verdict of murder in a case in which the
homicide was admitted and the only question was whether it was
murder or manslaughter, said:
"The trial of criminal cases is by a jury of the country, and
not by the court. The jurors and they alone are to judge of the
facts, and weigh the evidence. The law has established this
tribunal because it is believed that, from its numbers, the mode of
their selection, and the fact that the jurors come from all classes
of society, they are better calculated to judge of motives, weigh
probabilities, and take what may be called a 'common sense view' of
a set of circumstances, involving both act and intent, than any
single man, however pure, wise, and eminent he may be. This is the
theory of the law, and, as applied to criminal accusations, it is
eminently wise and favorable alike to liberty and to justice. But
to give it full effect, the jury must be left to weigh the evidence
and to examine the alleged motives by their own tests. They cannot
properly be furnished for this purpose with balances which leave
them no discretion, but which, under certain circumstances, will
compel them to find a malicious intent when they cannot
conscientiously say they believe such an intent to exist."
People v. Garbutt, 17 Mich. 9, 27.
In
The King v. Burdett, cited in the earlier part of
this opinion, Mr. Justice Best said:
"If there was any evidence, it was my duty to leave it to the
jury, who alone could judge of its weight. The rule that governs a
judge as to evidence applies equally to the case offered on the
part of the defendant and that in support of the prosecution. It
will hardly be contended that if there was evidence offered on the
part of
Page 156 U. S. 180
the defendant, a judge would have a right to take on himself to
decide on the effect of the evidence, and to withdraw it from the
jury. Were a judge so to act, he might with great justice be
charged with usurping the privileges of the jury and making a
criminal trial not what it is by our law, a trial by jury, but a
trial by the judge."
And Lord Tenterden, in words peculiarly applicable to the
present case, said:
"In cases of murder, it rarely happens that the eye of any
witness sees the fatal blow struck or the poisonous ingredients
poured into the cup. In drawing an inference or conclusion from
facts proved, regard must always be had to the nature of the
particular case and the facility that appears to be afforded,
either of explanation or contradiction. . . . . The premises may
lead more or less strongly to the conclusion, and care must be
taken not to draw the conclusion hastily; but in matters that
regard the conduct of men, the certainty of mathematical
demonstration cannot be required or expected, and it is one of the
peculiar advantages of our jurisprudence that the conclusion is to
be drawn by the unanimous judgment and conscience of twelve men,
conversant with the affairs and business of life, and who know that
where reasonable doubt is entertained, it is their duty to acquit,
and not of one or more lawyers, whose habits might be suspected of
leading them to the indulgence of too much subtlety and
refinement."
4 B. & Ald. 95, 121, 161-162.
The care with which courts of the highest authority have guarded
the exclusive right of the jury to decide the facts in a criminal
case is exemplified in a very recent case before the Judicial
Committee of the Privy Council, in which, under section 423 of the
Criminal Law Amendment Act of 1883, 46 Vict. c. 17, authorizing the
judge presiding at a criminal trial to reserve questions of law for
review, with a proviso that no judgment should be reversed "unless
for some substantial wrong or other miscarriage of justice," the
questions reserved were whether certain evidence had been
improperly admitted and whether, if the court came to the
conclusion that it was not legally admissible, the court could
nevertheless affirm the judgment if it was of opinion that,
independently of that evidence,
Page 156 U. S. 181
there was sufficient evidence to support the conviction, and
that the accused was guilty of the offense with which he was
charged. It was argued that if, without the inadmissible evidence,
there was evidence sufficient to sustain the verdict and to show
that the accused was guilty, there had been no substantial wrong or
miscarriage of justice in affirming a judgment upon the conviction
by the jury. But Lord Chancellor Herschell, speaking for six other
law lords as well as for himself, held otherwise, and said:
"It is obvious that the construction contended for transfers
from the jury to the court the determination of the question
whether the evidence -- that is to say, what the law regards as
evidence -- establishes the guilt of the accused. The result is
that in a case where the accused has the right to have his guilt or
innocence tried by a jury, the judgment passed upon him is made to
depend not on the finding of the jury, but on the decision of the
court. The judges are in truth substituted for the jury. The
verdict becomes theirs and theirs alone, and is arrived at upon a
perusal of the evidence, without any opportunity of seeing the
demeanor of the witnesses and weighing the evidence with the
assistance which this affords. It is impossible to deny that such a
change of the law would be a very serious one, and that the
construction which their lordships are invited to put upon the
enactment would gravely affect the much-cherished right of trial by
jury in criminal cases."
Makin v. Attorney General (1894), App.Cas. 57,
69-70.
By section 1035 of the Revised Statutes,
"in all criminal causes, the defendant may be found guilty of
any offense the commission of which is necessarily included in that
with which he is charged in the indictment, or may be found guilty
of an attempt to commit the offense so charged, provided that such
attempt be itself a separate offense."
The defendants, therefore, under this indictment, might have
been convicted of murder, or of manslaughter, or of an assault
only. Having pleaded not guilty, they could only be convicted by
the verdict of a jury. If a homicide was committed with malice, it
was murder; if committed without malice, but without any lawful
excuse, it was manslaughter only. The
Page 156 U. S. 182
burden of proof at every step was upon the government. In order
to obtain a conviction of murder, it must prove beyond a reasonable
doubt that the homicide was committed with malice. The question
whether, taking into consideration all the circumstances in
evidence as well as the credibility of the several witnesses, there
was a criminal homicide, and, if so, whether it was murder or only
manslaughter, could be finally decided against the defendants by
the jury alone. According to the settled practice of the courts of
the United States, indeed, the court, even in a criminal case, may
express its opinion to the jury upon any question of fact, provided
that it submits that question to the jury for decision. But the
court in this case went beyond this, and distinctly told the jury
that if they found that a felonious homicide had been committed by
the defendants, they could not properly convict them of
manslaughter, which was equivalent to saying that if any crime was
proved, it was murder. This instruction had the direct tendency and
the actual effect of inducing the jury to return a verdict of
guilty of the higher crime. The jury may have been satisfied that
the defendants killed the mate without lawful excuse, and may yet
have had doubts whether, upon so much of the testimony as they
believed to be true, the killing was malicious, and therefore
murder. That doubts had occurred to the jurors upon this point is
shown by the questions addressed by one of them to the presiding
judge. The judge dispelled those doubts not by further defining the
distinction as matter of law between murder and manslaughter, but
by telling the jury that, as matter of fact, they could not convict
the defendants of manslaughter only. He thus substituted his own
decision upon this question of fact for the decision of the jury to
which the defendants were entitled under the Constitution and laws
of the United States. If all the Justices of this Court should
concur in the opinion of the judge below upon this question of
fact, still the defendants have not had the question decided by the
only tribunal competent to do so under the Constitution and
laws.
For the twofold reason that the defendants, by the instructions
given by the court to the jury, have been deprived both
Page 156 U. S. 183
of their right to have the jury decide the law involved in the
general issue and also of their right to have the jury decide every
matter of fact involved in that issue, we are of opinion that the
judgment should be reversed, and the case remanded with directions
to order a new trial as to both defendants,
* The decision of Mr. Justice Johnson there referred to does not
appear to have been reported. But the decision of Mr. Justice
Washington is reported as
United States v. Jones (1813), 3
Wash.C.C. 209, and the point was decided the same way by this Court
(Mr. Justice Johnson dissenting) in
United
States v. Palmer (1818), 3 Wheat. 610.