An indictment under Rev.Stat. § 5511 which charges that the
accused, at the time named, did then and there: unlawfully and with
force and arms seize, carry away, and secrete the ballot box
containing the ballots of a voting precinct which had been cast for
representative in Congress, and did then and there knowingly aid
and assist in the forcible and unlawful seizure, carrying away, and
secreting of said ballot box, and did then and there counsel,
advise, and procure divers other persons whose names were to the
grand jury unknown, so to seize, carry away, and secrete said
ballot box charges but one offense, although it was within the
discretion of the trial court, if a motion to that effect had been
made, to compel the prosecutor to state whether he would proceed
against the accused for having himself seized, carried away, and
secreted the ballot box or for having assisted or procured others
to do so.
A suitable inquiry is permissible in order to ascertain whether
a juror has any bias, to be conducted under the supervision of the
court and to be largely left to its sound discretion, and in this
case there was no error in not allowing a juror to be asked "would
your political affiliations or party predilections tend to bias
your judgment in this case either for or against the
defendant?"
The case is stated in the opinion.
MR. JUSTICE HARLAN delivered the opinion of the Court.
This was an indictment in the District Court of the United
States for the District of Colorado under § 5511 of the
Revised Statutes, providing:
"If at any election for representative
Page 158 U. S. 409
or delegate in Congress, any person knowingly personates and
votes or attempts to vote in the name of any other person, whether
living, dead, or fictitious; or votes more than once at the same
election for any candidate for the same office; or votes at a place
where he may not be lawfully entitled to vote; or votes without
having a lawful right to vote; or does any unlawful act to secure
an opportunity to vote for himself, or any other person; or by
force, threat, intimidation, bribery, reward, or offer thereof,
unlawfully prevents any qualified voter of any state, or of any
territory, from freely exercising the right of suffrage, or by any
such means induces any voter to refuse to exercise such right, or
compels, or induces, by any such means, any officer of an election
in such state or territory to receive a vote from a person not
legally qualified or entitled to vote; or interferes in any manner
with any officer of such election in the discharge of his duties;
or by any such means, or other unlawful means induces any officer
of an election or officer whose duty it is to ascertain, announce,
or declare the result of any such election, or give or make any
certificate, document, or evidence in relation thereto, to violate
or refuse to comply with his duty or any law regulating the same;
or knowingly receives the vote of any person not entitled to vote,
or refuses to receive the vote of any person entitled to vote; or
aids, counsels, procures, or advises any such voter, person, or
officer to do any act hereby made a crime, or attempts to do so, he
shall be punished by a fine of not more than five hundred dollars,
or by imprisonment not more than three years, or by both, and shall
pay the costs of the prosecution."
The indictment charged that on the 4th day of November, 1890 at
the County of Arapahoe, State of Colorado, the accused, James
Connors,
"did unlawfully interfere with the judges of election of the
eighteenth voting precinct in said County of Arapahoe, in the
discharge of their duties, which said judges of election were then
and there officers of the election for representative in the
Fifty-Second Congress of the United States, in accordance with the
laws of the State
Page 158 U. S. 410
of Colorado and of the United States, and did then and there
unlawfully and with force and arms seize, carry away, and secrete
the ballot box containing the ballots of said eighteenth voting
precinct, which on said 4th day of November, in the year aforesaid
at said election, had been cast for said representative in
Congress, and did then and there knowingly aid and assist in the
forcible and unlawful seizure, carrying away, and secreting of said
ballot box, and did then and there counsel, advise, and procure
divers other persons, whose names are to the grand jurors unknown,
so to seize, carry away, and secrete said ballot box, thereby, as
aforesaid, interfering with said judges of election of said
eighteenth voting precinct, and hindering and preventing them, the
said judges of election, from counting the votes which had been
cast at said election, and from declaring and certifying the result
thereof."
Motions to quash the indictment, to arrest the judgment, and for
a new trial were made and overruled, and there was a verdict of
guilty, upon which the court sentenced the accused to imprisonment
in the house of correction at Detroit, in the State of Michigan,
for the period of fifteen months, to be fed and clothed there as
the law directs.
1. The first assignment of error questions the sufficiency of
the indictment in that it charges the accused, as he insists, with
three distinct offenses in one count, namely, with having
unlawfully and with force and arms seized, carried away, and
secreted the ballot box containing the ballots cast at the election
named, with having aided and assisted in the forcible and unlawful
seizure, carrying away, and secreting of such ballot box, and with
having counseled, advised, and procured the seizure, carrying away,
and secreting of the ballots at said election.
This objection to the indictment is not well taken. The offense
charged was that of unlawfully interfering with the officers of the
election in the discharge of their duties. Their duty was to
ascertain and disclose the result of the election. That duty could
not be performed without inspection of the ballots. Seizing,
carrying away, and secreting the ballot box containing the ballots
cast for representative in Congress
Page 158 U. S. 411
necessarily interfered with the discharge of that duty. The
indictment describes -- perhaps with unnecessary particularity --
the mode in which the crime charged was committed. If the accused
himself unlawfully seized, carried away, and secreted the ballot
box, or if he knowingly aided and assisted others in doing so, or
if he counseled, advised, and procured others to do so, in either
case he was guilty of the crime of having unlawfully interfered
with the officers of election in the discharge of their duties. The
verdict of guilty had reference to that crime, whether committed in
one or the other of the modes specified in the indictment.
Undoubtedly it was in the discretion of the court to compel the
prosecutor to state whether he would proceed against the accused
for having himself seized, carried away, and secreted the ballot
box or for having assisted or procured others to do so. But there
was no motion to require the prosecutor to make such a statement.
If the objection now urged could have been taken by motion to quash
the indictment, it is sufficient to say that although the record
shows that there was such a motion, the grounds of it are not
stated. So far as the record discloses, the specific objection now
urged was made for the first time after verdict by a motion in
arrest of judgment. But such an objection, not made until after
verdict, would not justify an arrest of judgment, and is not
available on writ of error. 1 Bish.Crim.Pro. §§ 442, 443;
Wharton's Crim.Pl. & Pr. § 255. Nor, if made by demurrer
or by motion and overruled, would it avail on error unless it
appeared that the substantial rights of the accused were prejudiced
by the refusal of the court to require a more restricted or
specific statement of the particular mode in which the offense
charged was committed. Rev.Stat. § 1025. There is no ground
whatever to suppose that the accused was taken by surprise in the
progress of the trial, or that he was in doubt as to what was the
precise offense with which he was charged.
2. Another assignment of error relates to the refusal of the
court to permit certain questions to be propounded to jurors on
their
voir dire.
It appears from the bill of exceptions that, upon the
examination
Page 158 U. S. 412
of jurors as to their competency to serve on the trial jury,
this question was propounded to one Stewart, called as a juror: "To
what political party do you belong, and what were your party
affiliations in November, A.D. 1890?" The court would not permit
this question to be propounded, and announced that the proposed
juror could not be called upon to answer any question of similar
import, touching his political beliefs or attachments.
At a subsequent stage of the proceedings, the counsel for the
accused prepared and submitted in writing a number of questions
they desired to propound to jurors. Those questions were as
follows:
"Q. Did you take an active part in politics in the general
election of A.D. 1890; and, if so, on which side?"
"Q. Did you take an active part in politics in the general
election of A.D. 1890, and if so, with which of the parties did you
affiliate, and where?"
"Q. Have you been heretofore or are you now strongly partisan in
your political belief?"
"Q. Would your political affiliations or party predilections
tend to bias your judgment in this case either for or against this
defendant?"
"Q. Were you ever at any time a member of what was and is known
in the City of Denver, County of Arapahoe, and State of Colorado as
the 'Committee of One Hundred?'"
"Q. Were you ever at any time a judge or clerk of an election,
and if so, when and where and by what party were you named and
appointed?"
"Q. Are you a member of any political club organized for the
advancement of the interests of any political party, and if so,
what party?"
These questions, and each of them, were excluded by the court,
and an exception duly taken.
The bill of exceptions also states that the questions last above
given were submitted to the court while the examination of jurors
was in progress; that the presiding judge did not observe the
character of the fourth question, and that, "if attention had been
directed to that question, it would have
Page 158 U. S. 413
been allowed." We suppose the particular question thus referred
to was "Would your political affiliations or party predilections
tend to bias your judgment in this case either for or against this
defendant?"
It is quite true, as suggested by the accused, that he was
entitled to be tried by an impartial jury -- that is, by jurors who
had no bias or prejudice that would prevent them from returning a
verdict according to the law and evidence. It is equally true that
a suitable inquiry is permissible in order to ascertain whether the
juror has any bias, opinion, or prejudice that would affect or
control the fair determination by him of the issues to be tried.
That inquiry is conducted under the supervision of the court, and a
great deal must, of necessity, be left to its sound discretion.
This is the rule in civil cases, and the same rule must be applied
in criminal cases.
In
Mima Queen & Child v.
Hepburn, 7 Cranch 290,
11 U. S. 297,
in which the plaintiffs asserted their freedom as against the
defendant, who claimed them as his slaves, a juror was examined on
his
voir dire as to his fitness to serve on the jury.
Being questioned, he avowed his detestation of slavery to be such
that, in a doubtful case, he would find a verdict for the
plaintiffs, and had so expressed himself with regard to that very
case. He also stated that if the testimony were equal, he should
certainly find a verdict for the plaintiff. The court rejected him
as a juror, and an exception was taken. Chief Justice Marshall,
speaking for this Court, said:
"It is certainly much to be desired that jurors should enter
upon their duties with minds entirely free from every prejudice.
Perhaps on general and public questions it is scarcely possible to
avoid receiving some prepossessions, and, where a private right
depends on such a question, the difficulty of obtaining jurors
whose minds are entirely uninfluenced by opinions previously formed
is undoubtedly considerable. Yet they ought to be superior to every
exception -- they ought to stand perfectly indifferent between the
parties, and, although the bias which was acknowledged in this case
might not perhaps have been so strong as to render it positively
improper to allow the juror to be sworn on the jury, yet it was
desirable to submit the
Page 158 U. S. 414
case to those who felt no bias either way, and therefore the
court exercised a sound discretion in not permitting him to be
sworn."
Does the record show that the court below did not exercise a
sound discretion in rejecting the above questions propounded or
proposed to be propounded to jurors? We think not. It is true that
the court below informs us by the bill of exceptions that if its
attention had been called to the matter at the time, it would have
allowed the inquiry whether the political affiliations or party
predilections of the juror would in anywise bias his judgment. But
the court certainly did not believe that the rejection of that
question, in itself, prejudiced the substantial rights of the
accused. If it had so believed, a new trial, we may assume, would
have been granted. We cannot, therefore, permit the recital in the
bill of exceptions on this subject to control our determination of
the question presented by the record.
We are of opinion that the court correctly rejected the question
put to the juror Stewart as to his political affiliations. The law
assumes that every citizen is equally interested in the enforcement
of the statute enacted to guard the integrity of national
elections, and that his political opinions or affiliations will not
stand in the way of an honest discharge of his duty as a juror in
cases arising under that statute. So also, active participation in
politics cannot be said, as matter of law, to imply either
unwillingness to enforce the statutes designed to insure honest
elections and due returns of the votes cast or inability to do
justice to those charged with violating the provisions of those
statutes. Strong political convictions are by no means inconsistent
with a desire to protect the freedom and purity of elections.
Particular stress is laid upon the refusal of the court to allow
the question to jurors, "Would your political affiliations or party
predilections tend to bias your judgment in this case either for or
against this defendant?" In the absence of any statement tending to
show that there was some special reason or ground for putting that
question to particular jurors called into the jury box for
examination, it cannot be said that the
Page 158 U. S. 415
court erred in disallowing it. If the previous examination of a
juror on his
voir dire, or the statements of counsel, or
any facts brought to the attention of the court had indicated that
the juror might, or possibly would, be influenced in giving a
verdict by his political surroundings, we would not say that the
court could not properly, in its discretion, if it had regarded the
circumstances as exceptional, have permitted the inquiry whether
the juror's political affiliations or party predilections would
bias his judgment as a juror. But no such exceptional circumstances
are disclosed by the record, and the court might well have deemed
the question, unaccompanied by any statement showing a necessity
for propounding it, as an idle one that had no material bearing
upon the inquiry as to the qualifications of the juror, and as
designed only to created the impression that the interests of the
political party to which the accused belonged were involved in the
trial. The public should not be taught, by the mode in which trials
of this character are conducted, that the prosecution of a crime
against the laws securing the freedom and integrity of elections
for representatives in Congress will be regarded by the court as in
effect a prosecution of a political party to which the accused
belongs. If an inquiry of a juror as to his political opinions and
associations could ever be appropriate in any case arising under
the statute in question, it could only be when it is made otherwise
to appear that the particular juror has himself, by his conduct or
declarations, given reason to believe that he will regard the case
as one involving the interests of political parties, rather than
the enforcement of a law designed for the protection of the public
against frauds in elections.
In respect to the question referring to the Committee of One
Hundred in the City of Denver, it is only necessary to say that
there is nothing in the record showing any such connection between
that committee and this prosecution as would disqualify a member of
that organization from sitting as a juror. If that committee was in
fact behind the prosecution of the defendant, actively supplying
the government with information to convict him of the crime
charged, the court,
Page 158 U. S. 416
without abuse of its discretion, might have allowed the
question. But the record shows no such State of case.
Other questions have been discussed by counsel, but they are not
of sufficient gravity to require notice at our hands.
We perceive no reason to doubt that the accused was fairly
tried. No error of law having been committed by the court below,
the judgment is
Affirmed.