Commonwealth v. Anthes

71 Mass. 185
CourtMassachusetts Supreme Judicial Court
DecidedOctober 15, 1855
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 71 Mass. 185 (Commonwealth v. Anthes) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Commonwealth v. Anthes, 71 Mass. 185 (Mass. 1855).

Opinion

Shaw, C. J.

This case was argued more than a year ago, and the points arising thereon were ably discussed; but as the principal point considered came up in various parts of the Commonwealth, it has been postponed from time to time, in order to give it t,he fullest consideration.

These exceptions directly raise the questions, both of the construction and constitutionality of the jury law of 1855 ; and if it were necessary to consider these questions, so far only as might be necessary rightly to decide the present case, a very brief view only would seem to be necessary. But as there are now many more cases before us, presenting these and other questions of like kind on the same subject, a more enlarged and extended consideration of this statute seems to be required, embracing the two questions: what is the true meaning and interpretation of this statute; and whether it is constitutional.

The statute is short, and to the following effect: “ In all trials for criminal offences, it shall be the duty of the jury to try, according to established forms and principles of law, all causes [187]*187which shall be committed to them, and, after having received the instructions of the court, to decide at their discretion, by a general verdict, both the fact and the law involved in the issue, ox to find a special verdict, at their election; but it shall be the duty of the court to superintend the course of the trials, to decide upon the admission and rejection of evidence, and upon all questions of law raised during the trials, and upon collateral and incidental proceedings, and also to charge the jury, and to allow bills of exception ; and the court may grant a new trial in cases of conviction.” St. 1855, c. 152.

In the case before us, the court instructed the jury, that the jury, by force of this statute, had a right to judge of the meaning of a law, but had no right to judge of its constitutionality. Taking both these clauses together, and considering that the subject was the construction of a statute, it is plain, we think, that the court intended to instruct the jury, that they had a just and full authority to exercise their own reason and judgment, in determining the interpretation of a legislative enactment, and though the court directed them as matter of law, that the enactment bore one meaning and interpretation, and the jury clearly understood such direction, and perceived its application to the facts of the case before them, they might lawfully and rightfully reconsider the reasons and grounds of such decision and come to an opposite decision, on such interpretation, as matter of law. Taking such to be the import and legal effect of the learned judge’s ruling, my own opinion is, that it was incorrect in point of law, and that the statute will not bear that construction. On the contrary, it seems to me that this was a declaratory act, making no substantial change in the law regulating the relative rights and functions of the court and of the jury, in the trial of criminal cases.

On the other point, the court, in this particular case, charged the jury, that, though they might judge of the meaning of a legislative act, they had no authority to judge of its constitutionality. Yet in some other cases, courts, under like circumstances, have charged the jury, that they were judges of the constitutionality of any legislative enactment; and therefore if [188]*188the court judged, and directed the jury, that the act was constitutional, the jury, fully understanding that direction, might, in the exercise of their own reason and judgment, consider the constitutionality of the enactment, upon all the grounds and principles of constitutional law, in the same way in which a superior court of acknowledged appellate jurisdiction would revise the decision of an inferior court in matter of law, and might pronounce it constitutional; or vice versa, if the court directed them that it was constitutional, they might pronounce it unconstitutional.

And we really can perceive no ground, upon which the power of the jury to decide on the question of constitutionality can be distinguished, in principle, from the power to decide on any other question of law, involved in the verdict. Many criminal prosecutions are of such a nature, that they impose a duty on some department of the judicial authority to decide, whether a particular legislative enactment be consistent with or repugnant to the Constitution of the Commonwealth, or of the United States, and it must be definitively adjudicated, on true and just principles, by either judge or jury.

To comprehend this the better, let us analyze a criminal prosecution, and the judgment therein, and inquire of what ingredients it is composed. We are to bear in mind that the purpose, the ultimate end and object of criminal jurisprudence, is the better to secure the peace and good order of society, and to ensure the security of public and private rights, by the punishment of crimes and offences, and all violations of law. These may be either mala in se, such crimes and offences as are in themselves wrong and injurious; or mala prohibita, things not wrong in themselves, but prohibited and made punishable by law, because they tend to injurious consequences, and their prevention is judged necessary by the lawmaking power, to secure the peace and good order of a well regulated community.

Every criminal prosecution therefore necessarily involves two very distinct inquiries: First. Is there such a law as it is alleged in the indictment that the person accused has violated ? Second. Has the person accused done the act or acts, which it is alleged in the indictment he has done ?

[189]*189If both of these are found in the affirmative, according to the Constitution and law, the accused is guilty; if either be negaatived, if there is no such law, or if the accused has not done the acts charged in that indictment, he is not guilty.

It will be at once perceived that, in resolving the first question, the inquiry divides itself into several distinct inquiries, namely:

1. Supposing the prosecution to be on a statute, is there any such legislative enactment?

2. Does the statute, when expounded according to the rules of law, according to the true intent of the legislature, bear the meaning and interpretation put upon it in the indictment, so as to bring the acts charged against the defendant within the true meaning of the statute, and render him liable to the penalty of it?

3. Is it within the constitutional power of the legislature, as fixed and limited by the Constitution of the Commonwealth; or does it exceed those limits, so that, although it has all the forms of a law, it wants the vital energy, which can only be breathed into it by the Constitution, and therefore is inoperative and void ?

4. Does it contravene any law of the United States, made within the scope of their limited powers, as given by the Constitution of the United States, and which, when so made, is the supreme law of the land, and so must exercise a controlling power over all state legislatures ? If it does contravene any such law of the United States, it is inoperative and void. •

Perhaps the matter may be illustrated by supposing a familiar example of a prosecution under a provision of statute, for some act indifferent in itself, but to which a penalty is annexed by statute, say an indictment for selling lottery tickets.

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Bluebook (online)
71 Mass. 185, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/commonwealth-v-anthes-mass-1855.