An actual discrimination by the officers charged with the
administration of statutes unobjectionable in themselves against
the race of a negro on trial for a crime by purposely excluding
negroes from the grand and petit juries of the county will not be
presumed, but must be proved. An affidavit of the persons under
indictment, annexed to a motion to quash the indictment on the
ground of such discrimination, stating that the facts set up in the
motion are true "to their best knowledge, information and belief"
is not evidence of the facts stated.
Smith v. Mississippi,
162 U. S. 592,
followed;
Carter v. Texas, 177 U.
S. 442, distinguished.
Under the decisions of the Supreme Court of Florida, objections
to the panels of grand juries not appearing of record must be taken
by plea in abatement of, and not by motion to quash, the
indictment.
The case is stated in the opinion of the Court.
MR. JUSTICE BREWER delivered the opinion of the Court.
Plaintiffs in error were convicted in the Circuit Court of
Escambia
Page 188 U. S. 520
County, Florida, of the crime of murder, and sentenced to
fifteen years in prison. The supreme court of the state having
affirmed this sentence, 30 So. 685, the case was brought here on
writ of error.
The contention of plaintiffs in error is that they were denied
the equal protection of the laws by reason of an actual
discrimination against their race. The law of the state is not
challenged, but its administration is complained of. As said by
their counsel:
"We do not contend that the colored men are discriminated
against by any law of this state in the selection of names for jury
duty, nor do we contend that a negro being tried for a criminal
offense is entitled to a jury composed wholly or in part of members
of his race, but do claim that, when a negro is tried for a
criminal offense, he is entitled to a jury selected without any
discrimination against his race on account of race, color, or
previous condition of servitude, and when this is not the case, he
is denied the equal protection of the laws as guaranteed by the
Fourteenth Amendment to the Constitution of the United States."
Such an actual discrimination is as potential in creating a
denial of equality of rights as a discrimination made by law. But
such an actual discrimination is not presumed. It must be proved or
admitted. The record discloses these facts: on December 3, 1900, a
grand jury was impaneled, and on December 5 returned an indictment
charging the defendants with the crime of murder. On December 5,
they filed a motion to quash the venire and the panels of the grand
and petit jurors. In the motion it was stated that there were in
the county as many colored citizens of sound judgment, approved
integrity, fair character, and fully qualified for jury duty as
white, and stated as grounds for the motion that
"the county commissioners, in selecting the lists of names for
jury duty for and during the present year, discriminated against
all colored men of African descent, on account of their race,
color, and previous condition of servitude, and from said lists
were drawn the grand jury which found the indictment against these
defendants and the petit jury which is to try them."
And that,
"for many years,
Page 188 U. S. 521
all colored men of African descent have been discriminated
against, and none have been selected or drawn or summoned as grand
or petit jurors in this or in any of the courts of this county,
although there are more than one thousand four hundred colored men
in said county, a large number of whom are taxpayers, and of
approved integrity, fair character, sound judgment, and
intelligence, well known to the county commissioners to be such,
and this discrimination is based entirely on race, color, and
previous condition of servitude."
On December 6, the state's attorney moved the court to strike
out the defendants' motion on the grounds that it was impertinent,
submitted nothing for the court's determination or consideration,
was not such a motion as the court could consider, and set up no
state of facts which, if true, would justify the quashing of the
venire. On the same day, this motion of the state's attorney was
sustained, and the motion of the defendants to quash was stricken
out. On the same day, they filed a motion to quash the indictment
on substantially the same grounds. This motion was overruled.
Special venires were issued before the trial jury was finally
impaneled, and as one by one these venires were returned the
defendants challenged the array of jurors on the ground that the
sheriff, in the selection of jurors, knowingly discriminated
against all colored men, and refused and failed to select any to
serve on the jury, although knowing that there were more than five
hundred colored men in the county fully qualified to serve. No
evidence was received or offered in support of any of these several
motions except an affidavit of the defendants attached to the
motion to quash the indictment, stating that the facts set up in
the motion were true "to their best knowledge, information, and
belief."
In respect to all these motions, except the one to quash the
venire and panels of the grand and petit jurors, it is sufficient
to refer to
Smith v. Mississippi, 162 U.
S. 592,
162 U. S. 600;
Carter v. Texas, 177 U. S. 442. In
the first case, the motion to quash was supported by an affidavit
similar to the one here presented, and it was held no evidence of
the facts stated, and that therefore the denial of the motion was
not erroneous. In the second case, the bill of exceptions showed
that the defendant asked
Page 188 U. S. 522
leave to introduce witnesses, and offered to introduce
witnesses, to prove the allegations in his motion, but that the
court refused to hear any evidence in support of the motion, but
overruled it without investigating into the truth or falsity of the
allegations therein, and this was adjudged error.
We pass, therefore, to a consideration of the ruling on the
first motion. No evidence was received or offered in its support,
but the motion itself was stricken out, and it is contended that
the motion to strike out was equivalent to a demurrer which
admitted the truth of the allegations challenged thereby, and in
support thereof,
Neal v. Delaware, 103 U.
S. 370, and
Mitchell v. Clark, 110 U.
S. 633, are cited. But, in the former case, the court
held that an agreement by the attorney general, appearing for the
state, was to be regarded as an admission of the truth of the facts
stated in the motion, and therefore waived the necessity for
further evidence, and in the second case, there was only a distinct
ruling upon a demurrer to a plea.
In reference to the action of the trial court in this matter,
the supreme court of the state said:
"The first motion filed by defendants was to quash the venire
drawn for the term, and the panels of grand and petit jurors. The
venire drawn for the term at that time consisted only of the grand
and petit jurors then in attendance. Insofar as the panel of petit
jurors was concerned, the defendants had no right to move to quash
that. It was summoned for the first week of the term only, and had
and could have no connection whatever with defendants' case,
because their case was not to be tried until a subsequent week,
when another and different panel of petit jurors would be in
attendance. The petit jury objected to had not been called to try
defendants' case and would not be, as their term of service would,
under the law, expire long before defendants' case would be called
for trial. The defendants had no right to challenge the array of
petit jurors until their case was called for trial, and it was
proposed to impanel upon the jury to try them some member of the
objectionable panel."
"As to the grand jury, the defendants had. no right at that time
to move to quash the panel. If defendants could properly
Page 188 U. S. 523
move to quash the panel or challenge the array of grand jurors
for the reasons stated in this motion, it could only be done before
the grand jury was impaneled, or at least before the indictment was
found. Whether it could be done in that way, we do not now decide.
We are clear, however, that a motion to quash the panel of grand
jurors by one who has been indicted by such jurors is not proper
practice.
Gladden v. State, 13 Fla. 623. As we shall show
further on, a plea in abatement of the indictment is the proper
remedy. We regard the ruling sustaining the motion to strike, as
equivalent to holding that the motion to quash was not the proper
method of raising the question sought to be raised, and while we do
not approve of the practice of moving to strike a motion, we do not
see that the defendants have been injured by the form of the ruling
complained of."
"
* * * *"
"We are of opinion that the proper method of presenting the
question sought to be presented by this motion is by plea in
abatement of the indictment, and not by motion to quash, and that
the ruling upon the motion can be sustained upon that ground. It
has for many years been the practice in this state, sanctioned by
repeated rulings of this Court, that all objections to the
competency of, and to irregularities in selecting, drawing, and
impaneling grand jurors, not appearing of record, must be taken
advantage of by plea in abatement of the indictment, and not by
motion to quash it.
Woodward v. State, 33 Fla. 508;
Kitrol v. State, 9 Fla. 9;
Gladden v. State, 13
Fla. 623;
Tervin v. State, 37 Fla. 396.
See also State
v. Foster, 9 Tex. 65."
The authorities cited in this opinion sustain the propositions
laid down. In
Kitrol v. State, 9 Fla. 9, 13, it was
said:
"We are therefore of the opinion that the incompetency of the
grand jurors, by whom indictment is preferred, may be pleaded by
the defendant in abatement."
In
Gladden v. State, 13 Fla. 623, 630, the court uses
this language:
"In Massachusetts, New York, and other states, it has been held
that objections to the legality of the returns of grand
Page 188 U. S. 524
jurors cannot affect an indictment found by them after it has
been received by the court and filed; that such objection must be
interposed before indictment found, and even before the grand jury
is sworn. But it seems to be now settled that such objection may be
made by plea in abatement to the indictment at any time before
pleading in bar. This is substantially the rule announced by the
Supreme Court of this state in
Kitrol v. State, 9 Fla. 9.
The opinion of the Supreme Court of Mississippi in
McQuillen v.
State, 8 S. & M. 587, delivered by Chief Justice Sharkey,
announces what we consider the true and correct practice in such a
case. Such matters are reached by plea in abatement only (though in
some states a challenge to the array is treated, we do not say
properly so, as a substitute for a plea in abatement), and matters
in abatement in criminal as well as in civil cases must be pleaded
before pleading in bar."
In
Burroughs v. State, 17 Fla. 643, 661, where the
validity of the composition of the jury was sought to be challenged
on a motion in arrest of judgment, the court said:
"Aside from the fact that there is no such bill of exceptions as
is required to present any question of that character to this
court, if it had been properly raised, we are of the opinion that
all objections to the legality of grand jurors must be made by plea
in abatement to the indictment before pleading in bar. Such is the
rule as announced by this court in
Gladden v. State, 13
Fla. 623."
The force of this decision is not weakened by what was said by
the same court in
Potsdamer v. State, 17 Fla. 895,
897:
"The rule is that such objections must be taken by motion or
plea in abatement before pleading to the indictment. It is not
proper ground of a motion for a new trial,"
for
Gladden v. State and
Burroughs v. State
are both cited as authority. What kind of a motion the Chief
Justice had in mind when he spoke of "motion or plea in abatement"
is not disclosed. At any rate, such a general statement cannot be
considered as overruling prior decisions.
Page 188 U. S. 525
In
Tervin v. State, 37 Fla. 396, the ruling of the
court was expressed in these words (p. 403):
"On the 25th of October, 1895, the defendant moved to quash the
indictment and for his discharge upon the ground that"
"there is nothing upon the records of this Court to show that
the grand jurors who found the indictment were drawn in accordance
with chapter 1015 of the acts of the legislature of A.D. 1891."
"This motion was overruled, and such ruling constitutes the
fourth assignment of error. There is no merit in this assignment.
If there was any such irregularity in the drawing or impaneling of
the grand jury that found the indictment as would render such
indictment void or illegal, the proper way to make it appear was by
plea in abatement, instead of by motion to quash."
Neither is there anything in the cases referred to by counsel
for plaintiff in error against this ruling. So we have not merely
the declaration of the court in this particular case as to the
practice to be observed, but a declaration supported by many prior
decisions. Obviously it is the settled rule in the state.
These are all the matters called to our attention by counsel,
and in them appearing no error, the judgment of the Supreme Court
of Florida is
Affirmed.
MR. JUSTICE HARLAN did not hear the argument or take part in the
decision of this case.