Due process of law does not require the state to adopt any
particular form of procedure in criminal trials, so long as the
accused has had sufficient notice of the accusation and adequate
opportunity to defend.
Rogers v. Peck, 199 U.
S. 425.
The want of a formal arraignment to a second information of the
same offense does not deprive the accused of any substantial right,
and where the course of the trial, otherwise fair, was not in any
manner affected to his prejudice, there is no denial of due process
of law.
Technical objections, originating in the early period of English
history when the accused was entitled to but few rights, are
passing away and should not be allowed as to unimportant
formalities where the rights of the accused have not been
prejudiced.
This Court is reluctant to overrule its former decisions, and it
only does so in this case because it appears that the right
sustained in a former case involving criminal procedure is no
longer required for the protection of the accused.
Crain v.
United States, 162 U. S. 625,
overruled so far as not in accord herewith.
65 Wash. 666 affirmed.
The facts, which involve the validity, under the due process
provisions of the Fourteenth Amendment, of a conviction and
sentence, are stated in the opinion.
Page 232 U. S. 643
MR. JUSTICE DAY delivered the opinion of the Court.
The plaintiff in error was convicted in the Superior Court of
King County, Washington, upon an information charging him with
larceny of "a check payable for the sum of $1,000 in money." Upon
appeal, the conviction was affirmed by the Supreme Court of
Washington (65 Wash. 666), and the case comes here upon writ of
error.
It appears that a previous information had charged the accused
with the larceny of "one thousand dollars ($1,000) in lawful money
of the United States." Upon that information he was arraigned,
entered a plea of not guilty, was tried and convicted. A new trial
was awarded, and
Page 232 U. S. 644
thereafter the second information was filed, making the charge
as above stated. Before trial, the plaintiff in error filed a
"motion directed to second information," containing a motion to
quash, a motion to strike out, and a motion to make more definite
and certain, all of which were denied. No arraignment or plea was
had upon that information. The case having been called for trial
and the jury having been impaneled, the plaintiff in error, by his
counsel, objected to the introduction of any evidence upon the
ground that the state had no right to try the plaintiff in error on
the information then before the court. This general objection was
overruled. No specific objection was taken before the trial to the
want of formal arraignment upon the second information. The jury at
the conclusion of the trial upon the second information, returned a
verdict of guilty, and sentence was passed upon the plaintiff in
error.
It is apparent that the accused was tried and convicted upon an
information charging an offense against the law; that he had a jury
trial, with full opportunity to be heard, and that he was in fact
deprived of no right or privilege in the making of his defense,
unless such deprivation arises from the fact that he was not
arraigned and required to plead to the second information before
trial. The object of arraignment being to inform the accused of the
charge against him and obtain an answer from him was fully
subserved in this case, for the accused had taken objections to the
second information, and was put to trial before a jury upon that
information in all respects as though he had entered a formal plea
of not guilty. In this view, the Supreme Court of Washington,
following its former decisions, held that the failure to enter the
plea had deprived the accused of no substantial right, and that
having failed to make objection upon that ground before trial, it
was waived and could not be subsequently taken. This ruling, it is
contended, deprived the plaintiff in error of his liberty
Page 232 U. S. 645
without due process of law within the meaning of the Fourteenth
Amendment of the Constitution.
Due process of law, this Court has held, does not require the
state to adopt any particular form of procedure, so long as it
appears that the accused has had sufficient notice of the
accusation and an adequate opportunity to defend himself in the
prosecution.
Rogers v. Peck, 199 U.
S. 425,
199 U. S. 435,
and previous cases in this Court there cited. Tried by this test,
it cannot for a moment be maintained that the want of formal
arraignment deprived the accused of any substantial right, or in
any wise changed the course of trial to his disadvantage. All
requirements of due process of law in criminal trials in a state,
as laid down in the repeated decisions of this Court, were fully
met by the proceedings had against the accused in the trial court.
The objection was merely a formal one, was not included in the
general language in which the objection to the introduction of
evidence was interposed before the trial, and was evidently
reserved with a view to the use which is now made of it, in an
attempt to gain a new trial for want of compliance with what in
this case could have been no more than a mere formality.
It is insisted, however, that this Court, in the case of
Crain v. United States, 162 U. S. 625,
held the contrary. In that case, the question was specifically made
as to the necessity of a plea before trial, duly entered of record.
The learned justice who spoke for the majority of the court
announced its conclusion approving a number of early cases in the
state courts which had held that such form of arraignment entered
of record was essential to a legal trial, and holding that in a
federal court no valid trial could be had without the requisite
arraignment and plea, and that such must be shown by the record of
conviction. If a legal trial cannot be had without a plea to the
indictment, duly entered of record before trial, it would follow
that such omission in the present case requires a reversal
Page 232 U. S. 646
of the judgment of conviction, because the prisoner has been
deprived of due process of law.
Technical objections of this character were undoubtedly given
much more weight formerly than they are now. Such rulings
originated in that period of English history when the accused was
entitled to few rights in the presentation of his defense, when he
could not be represented by counsel, nor heard upon his own oath,
and when the punishment of offenses, even of a trivial character,
was of a severe and often of a shocking nature. Under that system,
the courts were disposed to require that the technical forms and
methods of procedure should be fully complied with. But with
improved methods of procedure and greater privileges to the
accused, any reason for such strict adherence to the mere
formalities of trial would seem to have passed away, and we think
that the better opinion, when applied to a situation such as now
confronts us, was expressed in the dissenting opinion of Mr.
Justice Peckham, speaking for the minority of the court in the
Crain case, when he said (p.
162 U. S.
649):
"Here, the defendant could not have been injured by an
inadvertence of that nature. He ought to be held to have waived
that which, under the circumstances, would have been a wholly
unimportant formality. A waiver ought to be conclusively implied
where the parties had proceeded as if defendant had been duly
arraigned, and a formal plea of not guilty had been interposed, and
where there was no objection made on account of its absence until,
as in this case, the record was brought to this Court for review.
It would be inconsistent with the due administration of justice to
permit a defendant under such circumstances to lie by, say nothing
as to such an objection, and then for the first time urge it in
this Court."
Holding this view, notwithstanding our reluctance to overrule
former decisions of this Court, we now are constrained to hold that
the technical enforcement of formal
Page 232 U. S. 647
rights in criminal procedure sustained in the
Crain
case is no longer required in the prosecution of offenses under
present systems of law, and so far as that case is not in accord
with the views herein expressed, it is necessarily overruled.
The other objection to the procedure in the state court which it
is alleged deprived the plaintiff in error of due process of law
upon his trial, rests in the contention that he was put to trial
upon two informations, containing different charges, without notice
as to which charge he would be required to meet, and sentenced upon
a general verdict of guilty. We think that the record discloses
that there is nothing in this objection of substantial merit, and
that it appears that the accused was put to trial and convicted
upon the second information, with every opportunity to defend
himself against the offense therein charged.
Judgment of the Supreme Court of Washington is accordingly
Affirmed.