Dreyer was convicted in a state court of Illinois for having
failed to turn over, as required by statute, to his successor in
office, certain revenues, bonds, funds, warrants, and personal
property that came into his hands as Treasurer of a Board of Public
Park Commissioners. The judgment of conviction was affirmed by the
Supreme Court of Illinois, and the accused was sentenced to the
penitentiary.
By a statute of Illinois, it was provided:
"When the jury retire to consider of their verdict in any
criminal case, a constable or other officer shall be sworn or
affirmed to attend the jury to some private and convenient place,
and to the best of his ability keep them together without meat or
drink (water excepted) unless by leave of court, until they shall
have agreed upon their verdict, nor suffer others to speak to them,
and that, when they shall have agreed upon their verdict, he will
return them into court."
In this case, the statute was not complied with, but objection
on that ground was first made on a motion for new trial.
The accused in this case was sentenced to the penitentiary, and
the warden was commanded to confine him in safe and secure custody
from and after the delivery thereof
"until discharged by the state Board of Pardons, as authorized
and directed by law, provided such term of imprisonment
Page 187 U. S. 72
in said penitentiary shall not exceed the maximum term for the
crime for which the said defendant was convicted and
sentenced."
The sentence was based upon a statute of Illinois, approved
April 21, 1899, and known as the Indeterminate Sentence Act. By
that statute, it was provided:
"Whenever it shall be made to appear to the satisfaction of the
state Board of Pardons from the warden's report or from other
sources, that any prisoner has faithfully served the term of his
parole, and the board shall be of the opinion that such prisoner
can safely be trusted to be at liberty and that his final release
will not be incompatible with the welfare of society, the State
Board of Pardons shall have the power to cause to be entered of
record in its office an order discharging such prisoner for, or on
account of, his conviction, which said order, when approved by the
Governor, shall operate as a complete discharge of such prisoner in
the nature of a release or commutation of his sentence, to take
effect immediately upon the delivery of a certified copy thereof to
the prisoner, and the clerk of the court in which the prisoner was
convicted shall, upon presentation of such certified copy, enter
the judgment of such conviction satisfied and released pursuant to
said order. It is hereby made the duty of the clerk of the Board of
Pardons to send written notice of the fact to the warden of the
penitentiary of the proper district whenever any prisoner on parole
is finally released by said board."
Laws of Ill. 1899, p. 142.
Held:
(1) That the ruling that the objection as to noncompliance with
the statute requiring the jury to be placed in charge of a sworn
officer was not made in time and was to be deemed as waived
presented no question of a federal nature, but was an adjudication
simply of a question of criminal and local law, and did not impair
the constitutional guaranty that no state shall deprive any person
of liberty without due process of law.
(2) The objection that the act of 1899 conferred upon executive
or ministerial officers powers of a judicial nature did not present
any question under the due process clause of the Fourteenth
Amendment. Whether the legislative, executive, and judicial powers
of a state shall be kept altogether distinct and separate, or
whether persons or collections of persons belonging to one
department may, in respect to some matters, exert powers which,
strictly speaking, pertain to another department of government, is
for the determination of the state. And its determination one way
or the other cannot be an element in the inquiry whether the due
process of law prescribed by the Fourteenth Amendment has been
respected by the state or its representatives when dealing with
matters involving life or liberty.
(3) If the jury in a criminal cause be discharged by the court
because of their being unable to agree upon a verdict, the accused,
if tried a second time, cannot be said to have been put twice in
jeopardy of life or limb, whether regard be had to the Fifth or the
Fourteenth Amendment.
Page 187 U. S. 73
By an indictment returned in the Criminal Court of Cook County,
Illinois, on the fourth day of February, 1899, the plaintiff in
error, Dreyer, was charged with the offense of having failed to
turn over to his successor in office, as treasurer of the West
Chicago Park Commissioners, revenues, bonds, funds, warrants, and
personal property that came to his hands as such treasurer, of the
value of $316,013.40 -- said commissioners constituting a board of
public park commissioners appointed by the Governor and confirmed
by the Senate of Illinois, and, as such, having the supervision of
the public parks and boulevards in the Town of West Chicago, and
authority under the law to collect and disburse moneys, bonds,
etc., for their maintenance.
The indictment was based on section 215 of the Criminal Code of
Illinois, which is as follows:
"If any state, county, town, municipal, or other officer or
person who now is or hereafter may be authorized by law to collect,
receive, safely keep, or disburse any money, revenue, bonds,
mortgages, coupons, bank bills, notes, warrants, or dues, or other
funds or securities belonging to the state or any county, township,
incorporated city, town, or village, or any state institution, or
any canal, turnpike, railroad, school, or college fund, or the fund
of any public improvement that now is or may hereafter be
authorized by law to be made, or any other fund now in being or
that may hereafter be established by law for public purposes, or
belonging to any insurance or other company or person required or
authorized by law to be placed in the keeping of any such officer
or person, shall fail or refuse to pay or deliver over the same
when required by law, or demand is made by his successor in office
or trust, or the officer or person to whom the same should be paid
or delivered over, or his agent or attorney, authorized in writing,
he shall be imprisoned in the penitentiary not less than one
nor more than ten years: Provided, Such demand need not be
made when, from the absence or fault of the offender, the same
cannot conveniently be made:
And provided, That no person
shall be committed to the penitentiary under this section unless
the money not paid over shall amount to one hundred dollars, or if
it appear that such failure or refusal is occasioned by unavoidable
loss or accident. Every person convicted
Page 187 U. S. 74
under the provisions of this section shall forever thereafter be
ineligible and disqualified from holding any office of honor or
profit in this state."
Hurd's Revised Statutes, 1901, § 215, p. 630.
A trial was commenced on the 29th day of August, 1899, and a
jury was impaneled and evidence heard. The jury, not having agreed
upon a verdict, were discharged.
A second trial was begun on the 19th day of February, 1900. The
defendant filed a plea of once in jeopardy, which in substance
averred that it was not true, as recited in the order of court at
the previous trial, that the jury were unable to agree upon a
verdict; also, that the discharge of the jury was without the
defendant's assent, was against his objections made at the time,
and was without any moral or physical necessity justifying such a
course on the part of the trial court.
On motion of the state, the plea of former jeopardy was stricken
from the files, the defendant at the time excepting to the action
of the court.
There was a second trial, which resulted in the defendant being
found "guilty of failure to pay over money to his successor in
office, in manner and form as charged in the indictment," the jury
stating in the verdict the amount not paid over to be $316,000, and
imposing the punishment of confinement in the penitentiary.
The defendant, upon written grounds filed, moved for a new
trial, and also moved in arrest of judgment. Both motions were
overruled, and it was ordered and adjudged that the defendant be
sentenced to the penitentiary "for the crime of failure to pay over
money to his successor in office, whereof he stands convicted."
The judgment of the trial court having been affirmed by the
Supreme Court of Illinois, the case is here upon writ of error
allowed by the chief justice of that court.
Page 187 U. S. 75
MR. JUSTICE HARLAN, after stating the facts as above reported,
delivered the opinion of the Court.
It is contended that the judgment of the Supreme Court of
Illinois, affirming the judgment, in the present case, of the
criminal court of Cook County, in that state, denied to the
plaintiff in error certain rights secured to him by the
Constitution of the United States, particularly by the clause of
the Fourteenth Amendment forbidding a state to deprive any person
of liberty without due process of law.
The defendant insists that three questions, involving rights
secured by the Constitution of the United States, are presented by
the assignments of error:
1. The first of those questions, as stated by his counsel,
relates to the alleged
"omission to swear the bailiffs in the manner prescribed by the
common law and the statutes of the State of Illinois before the
jury retired to consider of their verdict."
This point will be first examined.
The Criminal Code of Illinois provides:
"When the jury retire to consider of their verdict, in any
criminal case, a constable or other officer shall be sworn or
affirmed to attend the jury to some private and convenient place,
and to the best of his ability keep them together without meat or
drink (water excepted), unless by leave of court, until they shall
have agreed upon their verdict, nor suffer others to speak to them,
and that, when they shall have agreed upon their verdict he will
return them into court:
Provided, In cases of misdemeanor
only, if the prosecutor for the People and the person on trial, by
himself or counsel, shall agree, which agreement shall be entered
upon the minutes of the court, to dispense with the attendance of
an officer upon the jury, or that the jury, when they have agreed
upon their verdict, may write and seal the same, and after
delivering the same to the clerk, may separate, it shall be lawful
for the court to carry into effect any such agreement, and receive
any such verdict so delivered to the clerk as the
Page 187 U. S. 76
lawful verdict of such jury."
Hurd's Rev.Stat.Ill. 1901, § 435.
Referring to this section the supreme court, in the present
case, said that it was reversible error, in a trial for a felony,
to allow the jury to retire for the purpose of considering their
verdict without being placed in charge of a sworn officer, as
required by the statute, citing
McIntyre v. People, 38
Ill. 514, 518;
Lewis v. People, 44 Ill. 452, 454;
Sanders v. People, 124 Ill. 218, and
Farley v.
People, 138 Ill. 97. In
Lewis v. People, just cited,
the court observed that the provisions of the above section
"show the great care and solicitude of the general assembly to
secure to every person a fair and impartial trial, and it is
eminently proper, as in many cases the accused is imprisoned and it
is not in his power to protect his rights from being prejudiced by
undue influences. It should ever be the care of courts of justice
to guard human life and liberty against being sacrificed by public
prejudice or excitement. The jury should be entirely free from all
outside influences from the time they are impaneled until they
return their verdict and it is accepted and they discharged, and
the legislature have determined that the provisions of this statute
are necessary to accomplish the object. It is a provision easily
complied with, and one member of the court, at least, has never, in
practice, seen it dispensed with except in cases of misdemeanor.
The provisions of the statute are clear, explicit, and peremptory.
We know of no power, short of its repeal, to dispense with this
requirement."
But the court further said:
"The point of controversy in the present case is not, however,
whether it is reversible error to fail to comply with the statute,
but whether the question is properly raised upon this record. No
objection or exception was taken by the defendant at the time of
the retirement of the jury that the officers in charge of it were
not sworn, but the question was raised by him for the first time on
his motion for new trial, one of the grounds of that motion
being"
"that, when the jury retired to consider of their verdict in
said case, no constable or other officer was sworn or affirmed to
attend the jury, in manner and form as provided by the statute of
the State of Illinois. . . ."
Affidavits made by the bailiffs themselves,
Page 187 U. S. 77
and by an assistant of the prosecuting attorney, who
participated in the trial, tend to prove that the oath administered
was in the statutory form, but these affidavits also show that the
only oath administered to them was on the 21st day of February,
immediately after the impaneling and swearing of the jury. It is
shown by the bill of exceptions that the trial was not concluded
and the jury finally sent out until February 28th, so that, even by
the proof made on behalf of the people, the only oath taken by the
bailiffs was some six days prior to their retirement with the jury,
and prior to the introduction of evidence, and the subsequent steps
of the trial. This cannot be held to be a compliance with the
requirement of the statute that "when the jury shall retire to
consider of their verdict," etc., "a constable or other officer
shall be sworn," etc. To swear the bailiffs immediately upon the
jury's being sworn, and prior to the introduction of the evidence,
the arguments of counsel, and instructions of the court -- six or
seven days prior to the retirement of the jury to consider of their
verdict -- would be little less than farcical.
It was, however, held that, under the principles established by
former decisions in Illinois, the requirement of the statute could
be waived by the accused, and that his failure to object at the
time, that the officer having charge of the jury was not sworn when
the jury retired, was equivalent to a waiver of compliance with its
provisions. And it was adjudged
"that the question whether or not, upon the retirement of the
jury to consider of its verdict, it was placed in charge of a
constable, or other officer, sworn to attend it, as prescribed by
statute, is not properly raised by the record [of this case], and
therefore [is] not available as error in this Court."
It thus appears that, while the state court expressly recognized
the rights of the accused under the statute, it adjudged that he
had not properly raised on the record the question, raised for the
first time on motion for a new trial, as to noncompliance with its
provisions. But, manifestly, this decision presents no question of
a federal nature. A ruling to the effect that the accused shall be
deemed to have waived compliance with the statute if the record
does not show that he
Page 187 U. S. 78
objected at the time to the action of the court was an
adjudication simply of a question of criminal practice and local
law, was not in derogation of the substantial right recognized by
the statute, and did not impair the constitutional guaranty that no
state shall deprive any person of liberty without due process of
law. We cannot perceive that such a decision by the highest court
of the state brings the case upon this point within the Fourteenth
Amendment, even if it should be assumed that the due process of law
prescribed by that amendment required that a jury in a felony case
should be placed in charge of an officer especially sworn at the
time to attend and keep them together until they returned their
verdict or were discharged.
We adjudge that, in holding that the record did not sufficiently
present for consideration the question now raised, the state court,
even if it erred in its decision, did not infringe any right
secured to the defendant by the Constitution of the United
States.
2. Another question which counsel for the defendant contends is
raised by the assignments of error relates to the final judgment of
the Criminal Court of Cook County. It was adjudged by the trial
court that the defendant be taken to the penitentiary of the state
at Joliet, and delivered to its warden or keeper, who was required
and commanded to
"confine him in said penitentiary, in safe and secure custody,
from and after the delivery thereof, until discharged by the State
Board of Pardons as authorized and directed by law, provided such
term of imprisonment in said penitentiary shall not exceed the
maximum term for the crime for which the said defendant was
convicted and sentenced."
The judgment was in conformity with a statute of Illinois,
approved April 21st, 1899, entitled "An Act to Revise the Law in
Relation to the Sentence and Commitment of Persons Convicted of
Crime, and Providing for a System of Parole," etc. The statute is
sometimes referred to as the indeterminate sentence act of
Illinois, and as its validity under the Constitution of the United
States is assailed, its provisions must be examined.
That statute provides that every male person over twenty years
of age, and every female person over eighteen years of
Page 187 U. S. 79
age, convicted of a felony, or other crime punishable by
imprisonment in the penitentiary, except treason, murder, rape, and
kidnapping, shall be sentenced to the penitentiary, the court
imposing the sentence to fix its limit or duration, the term of
such imprisonment not to be less than one year, nor exceeding the
maximum term provided by law for the crime of which the prisoner
was convicted, making allowance for good time, as provided by law.
§ 1.
It was made the duty of each board of penitentiary commissioners
to adopt such rules concerning prisoners committed to their custody
as would prevent them from returning to criminal courses, best
secure their self-support, and accomplish their reformation. To
that end, it provided that whenever any prisoner was received into
the penitentiary, the warden should cause to be entered in a
register the date of his admission, the name, nativity,
nationality, with such other facts as could be ascertained, of
parentage, education, occupation, and early social influences, as
seemed to indicate the constitutional and acquired defects and
tendencies of the prisoner, and, based upon these, an estimate of
his then present condition, and the best probable plan of
treatment. And the physician of the penitentiary was required to
carefully examine each prisoner when received, and enter in a
register the name, nationality or race, the weight, stature, and
family history of each prisoner; also a statement of the condition
of the heart, lungs, and other leading organs, the rate of the
pulse and respiration, and the measurement of the chest and
abdomen, and any existing disease or deformity, or other
disability, acquired or inherited. Upon the warden's register was
to be entered from time to time minutes of observed improvement or
deterioration of character and notes as to the method and treatment
employed; also all alterations affecting the standing or situation
of the prisoner, and any subsequent facts or personal history,
brought officially to his knowledge, bearing upon the question of
the parole or final release of the prisoner, and it was the duty of
the warden, or, in his absence, the deputy warden, of each
penitentiary to attend each meeting of the board of pardons held at
the penitentiary of which he was warden, for the purpose of
examining prisoners as to
Page 187 U. S. 80
their fitness for parole. He shall advise with that board
concerning each case, and furnish it with his opinion, in writing,
as to the fitness of each prisoner for parole, whose case the board
considered. And it was made the duty of every public officer to
whom inquiry was addressed by the clerk of the board of pardons
concerning any prisoner, to give the board all information
possessed or accessible to him, which might throw light upon the
question of the fitness of the prisoner to receive the benefits of
parole. § 2.
It was made the duty of the judge before whom any prisoner was
convicted, and also the state's attorney of the county in which he
was convicted, to furnish the board of penitentiary commissioners
an official statement of the facts and circumstances constituting
the crime whereof the prisoner was convicted, together with all
other information accessible to them in regard to the career of the
prisoner prior to the time of the committal of the crime of which
he was convicted, relative to his habits, associates, disposition,
and reputation, and any other facts and circumstances tending to
throw any light upon the question as to whether such prisoner was
capable of again becoming a law-abiding citizen. § 3.
Other sections of the statute are as follows:
"4. The said board of pardons shall have power to establish
rules and regulations under which prisoners in the penitentiary may
be allowed to go upon parole outside of the penitentiary building
and enclosure:
Provided, That no prisoner shall be
released from either penitentiary on parole until the State Board
of Pardons or the warden of said penitentiary shall have made
arrangements, or shall have satisfactory evidence that arrangements
have been made, for his honorable and useful employment while upon
parole, in some suitable occupation, and also for a proper and
suitable home, free from criminal influences, and without expense
to the state:
And provided further, That all prisoners so
released upon parole shall at all times until the receipt of their
final discharge, be considered in the legal custody of the warden
of the penitentiary from which they were paroled, and shall, during
the said time, be considered as remaining under conviction for the
crime of which they were
Page 187 U. S. 81
convicted and sentenced, and subject at any time to be taken
back within the enclosure of said penitentiary, and full power to
enforce such rules and regulations, and to retake and reimprison
any inmate so upon parole, is hereby conferred upon the warden of
said penitentiary, whose order or writ, certified by the clerk of
said penitentiary, with the seal of the institution attached, and
directed to all sheriffs, coroners, constables, police officers, or
to any particular person named in said order or writ, shall be
sufficient warrant for the officer or other person named therein,
to authorize said officer or person to arrest and deliver to the
warden of said penitentiary the body of the conditionally released
or paroled prisoner named in said writ, and it is hereby made the
duty of all sheriffs, coroners, constables, police officers, or
other persons named therein, to execute said order or writ the same
as any other criminal process. In case any prisoner so
conditionally released or paroled shall flee beyond the limit of
the state, he may be returned, pursuant to the provisions of the
law of this state relating to fugitives from justice. It shall be
the duty of the warden, immediately upon the return of any
conditionally released or paroled prisoner, to make report of the
same to the State Board of Pardons, giving the reasons for the
return of said paroled prisoner:
Provided further, That
the State Board of Pardons may, in its discretion, permit any
prisoner to temporarily and conditionally depart from such
penitentiary on parole and go to some county in the state named,
and there remain within the limits of the county, and not to depart
from the same without written authority from said board, for such
length of time as the board may determine, and upon the further
condition that such prisoner shall, during the time of his parole,
be and continuously remain a law-abiding citizen of industrious and
temperate habits, and report to the sheriff of the county on the
first day of each month, giving a particular account of his conduct
during the month, and it shall be the duty of such sheriff to
investigate such report and ascertain what has been the habits and
conduct of such prisoner during the time covered by such report,
and to transmit such report, upon blanks furnished him by the
warden of the penitentiary, to said warden, within five days after
the receipt of
Page 187 U. S. 82
such prisoner's report, adding to such report the sheriff's
statement as to the truth of the report so made to him by the
prisoner. It shall also be the duty of such sheriff to keep secret
the fact that such prisoner is a paroled prisoner, and in no case
divulge such fact to any person or persons, so long as said
prisoner obeys the terms and conditions of his parole."
"5. Upon the granting of a parole to any prisoner the warden
shall provide him with suitable clothing, ten dollars in money,
which may be paid him in installments at the discretion of the
warden, and shall procure transportation for him to the place of
his employment, or to the county seat of the county to which he is
paroled."
"6. It shall be the duty of the warden to keep in communication,
as far as possible, with all prisoners who are on parole from the
penitentiary of which he is the warden, also with their employers,
and when, in his opinion, and prisoner, who has served not less
than six months of his parole acceptably, has given such evidence
as is deemed reliable and trustworthy that he will remain at
liberty without violating the law, and that his final release is
not incompatible with the welfare of society, the warden shall make
certificate to that effect to the State Board of Pardons, and
whenever it shall be made to appear to the State Board of Pardons
from the warden's report, or from other sources, that any prisoner
has faithfully served the term of his parole, and the board shall
be of the opinion that such prisoner can safely be trusted to be at
liberty, and that his final release will not be incompatible with
the welfare of society,
the State Board of Pardons shall have
the power to cause to be entered of record in its office an order
discharging such prisoner for, or on account of, his conviction,
which said order, when approved by the governor, shall operate as a
complete discharge of such prisoner, in the nature of a release or
commutation of his sentence, to take effect immediately upon the
delivery of a certified copy thereof to the prisoner, and the clerk
of the court in which the prisoner was convicted shall, upon
presentation of such certified copy, enter the judgment of such
conviction satisfied and released, pursuant to said order. It
is hereby made the duty of the clerk of the board of pardons to
Page 187 U. S. 83
send written notice of the fact to the warden of the
penitentiary of the proper district, whenever any prisoner on
parole is finally released by said board."
Laws of Ill. 1899, p. 142.
In this connection, we are referred to article 3 of the
Constitution of Illinois, dividing the powers of government into
three distinct departments -- legislative, executive, judicial --
and providing that
"no person or collection of persons being one of these
departments shall exercise any power properly belonging to either
of the others, except as hereinafter expressly directed or
permitted,"
to Section 1 of article 6 of the same Constitution, providing
that
"the judicial powers, except as in this article is otherwise
provided, shall be vested in one supreme court, circuit courts,
county courts, justices of the peace, police magistrates, and in
such courts as may be created by law in and for cities and
incorporated towns,"
and to section 13 of article 5, providing that the pardoning
power shall be in the governor of the state.
If we do not misapprehend the position of counsel, it is that
the indeterminate sentence act of 1899 is inconsistent with the
above provisions of the state constitution, in that it confers
judicial powers upon a collection of persons who do not belong to
the judicial department, and, in effect, invests them with the
pardoning power, committed by the constitution to the governor of
the state.
We will not stop to consider whether the statute is in conflict
with the provisions of the state constitution to which reference is
here made. We may, however, in passing, observe that a similar
statute, previously enacted, was upheld by the Supreme Court of
Illinois.
George v. People, 167 Ill. 447. It is only
necessary now to say that, even if the statute in question were
obnoxious to the objection now urged by plaintiff in error, it
would not follow that this Court would review a judgment of the
highest court of the state, which expressly or by necessary
implication sustained it as constitutional. A local statute
investing a collection of persons not of the judicial department,
with powers that are judicial, and authorizing them to exercise the
pardoning power which alone belongs to the governor of the state,
presents no question under the Constitution of the
Page 187 U. S. 84
United States. The right to the due process of law prescribed by
the Fourteenth Amendment would not be infringed by a local statute
of that character. Whether the legislative, executive, and judicial
powers of a state shall be kept altogether distinct and separate,
or whether persons or collections of persons belonging to one
department may, in respect to some matters, exert powers which,
strictly speaking, pertain to another department of government, is
for the determination of the state. And its determination one way
or the other cannot be an element in the inquiry, whether the due
process of law prescribed by the Fourteenth Amendment has been
respected by the state or its representatives when dealing with
matters involving life or liberty. "When we speak," said Story,
"of a separation of the three great departments of government,
and maintain that that separation is indispensable to public
liberty, we are to understand this maxim in a limited sense. It is
not meant to affirm that they must be kept wholly and entirely
distinct, and have no common link of connection or dependence, the
one upon the other, in the slightest degree. The true meaning is
that the whole power of one of these departments should not be
exercised by the same hands which possess the whole power of either
of the other departments, and that such exercise of the whole would
subvert the principles of a free Constitution."
Story's Const. (5th ed.) 393. Again:
"Indeed, there is not a single constitution of any state in the
Union which does not practically embrace some acknowledgment of the
maxim, and at the same time some admixture of powers constituting
an exception to it."
Id., 395.
The objection that the act of 1899 confers upon executive or
ministerial officers powers of a judicial nature does not, in our
judgment, present any question under the due process clause of the
Fourteenth Amendment.
3. The remaining contention of the defendant is that, under the
circumstances disclosed by the record, the second trial of the case
placed him twice in jeopardy, and therefore the judgment should be
reversed.
Under date of September 1, 1899, the following order was made of
record in the case:
"This day come the said People,
Page 187 U. S. 85
by Charles S. Dencen, State's Attorney, and the said defendant,
as well in his own proper person as by his counsel, also comes, and
also come the jurors of the jury, aforesaid, and the aforesaid
jury, hearing the arguments of counsel and instructions of the
court, retire in charge of sworn officers to consider of their
verdict."
And under date of September 2d, this order appears:
"This day come the said People, by Charles S. Dencen, State's
Attorney, and the defendant, as well in his own proper person as by
his counsel, also comes. And also come the jurors of the jury
aforesaid, being now returned into court, and,
being unable to
agree upon a verdict, are thereupon, by order of this Court,
discharged from further consideration of this cause."
It seems to be undisputed that the case was submitted to the
jury at four o'clock in the afternoon, and that the jury, having
retired to consider of their verdict, were kept together until nine
o'clock and thirty minutes in the morning of the succeeding day,
when they were finally discharged from any further consideration of
the case.
The contention is that, notwithstanding the recital in the
record that the jury were discharged by the court because they were
unable to agree upon a verdict, such discharge was without moral or
physical necessity, and operated as an acquittal of the
defendant.
Upon the face of the question under examination, the inquiry
might arise whether the due process of law required by the
Fourteenth Amendment protects one accused of crime from being put
twice in jeopardy of life or limb. In other words, is the right not
to be put twice in jeopardy of life or limb forbidden by the
Fourteenth Amendment; or, so far as the Constitution of the United
States is concerned, is it forbidden only by the Fifth Amendment,
which, prior to the adoption of the Fourteenth Amendment, had been
held as restricting only the powers of the national government and
its agencies?
We pass this important question without any consideration of it
upon its merits, and content ourselves with referring to the
decision of this Court in
United States v.
Perez, 9 Wheat. 579. That was a capital case, in
which, without the consent of the prisoner or of the attorney of
the United States, the jury,
Page 187 U. S. 86
being unable to agree, were discharged by the court from giving
any verdict. This Court, speaking by Mr. Justice Story, said:
"We are of opinion that the facts constitute no legal bar to a
future trial. The prisoner has not been convicted or acquitted, and
may again be put upon his defense. We think that in all cases of
this nature the law has invested courts of justice with the
authority to discharge a jury from giving any verdict, whenever, in
their opinion, taking all the circumstances into consideration,
there is a manifest necessity for the act, or the ends of public
justice would otherwise be defeated. They are to exercise a sound
discretion on the subject, and it is impossible to define all the
circumstances which would render it proper to interfere. To be
sure, the power ought to be used with the greatest caution, under
urgent circumstances, and for very plain and obvious causes, and in
capital cases especially, courts should be extremely careful how
they interfere with any of the chances of life in favor of the
prisoner. But, after all, they have the right to order the
discharge, and the security which the public have for the faithful,
sound, and conscientious exercise of this discretion rests in this,
as in other cases, upon the responsibility of the judges, under
their oaths of office. We are aware that there is some diversity of
opinion and practice on this subject in the American courts; but,
after weighing the question with due deliberation, we are of
opinion that such a discharge constitutes no bar to further
proceedings, and gives no right of exemption to the prisoner from
being again put upon trial."
If the due process of law required by the Fourteenth Amendment
embraces the guaranty that no person shall be put twice in jeopardy
of life or limb -- upon which question we need not now express an
opinion -- what was said in
United States v. Perez is
applicable to this case upon the present writ of error, and is
adverse to the contention of the accused that he was put twice in
jeopardy.
The principles settled in
United States v. Perez, we
may remark, were reaffirmed in
Ex Parte
Lange, 18 Wall. 175;
Simmons v. United
States, 142 U. S. 148;
Logan v. United States, 144 U. S. 263;
Thompson v. United States, 155
U. S. 274.
Page 187 U. S. 87
The conclusion is that the judgment of the Supreme Court of
Illinois did not deny to the plaintiff in error any right secured
by the Constitution of the United States, and is therefore
Affirmed.