Commonwealth v. Lesher

17 Serg. & Rawle 155, 1828 Pa. LEXIS 9
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedJanuary 25, 1828
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 17 Serg. & Rawle 155 (Commonwealth v. Lesher) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Commonwealth v. Lesher, 17 Serg. & Rawle 155, 1828 Pa. LEXIS 9 (Pa. 1828).

Opinion

[156]*156The opinion of the majority of the court, Rogers, Huston, and Tod, Js., was delivered by

Tod, J.

The court are under obligation to the counsel, who gratuitously, I apprehend, as well as ably, have argued the question. It seems to be admitted that the rules of the common law must govern our decision.' Equally undisputed it appears to be, that in every criminal trial, without exception, there is precisely the same right of challenging a juror for cause, given to the commonwealth or to the prosecutor, which is given to the defendant. The law guards against all the approaches of error and falsehood as much on one side as on the other: and, in challenges for cause, no distinction is admitted between bias and predetermination of a juror against a defendant, and bias and predetermination in favour of a defendant. The law, in every case, is scrupulous to prevent even the possibility of undue bias. It does not deal' with a juror as with a witness; admit him, though it doubts him. The slightest ground of prejudice is sufficient. The prejudice itself need not be.made out — the probability of it is enough. One related, though by marriage only, as remotely as the ninth degree, to the defendant or the prosecutor, may be challenged off the jury for that cause. Any one, who, in any possible way, no matter how honestly, has been warped by any preconceived opinion which may affect his verdict, or has made up his mind what verdict he is to give, and declared it, is excluded. Nothing in the law can well be more extensive than this right of challenge propter affectum. In an attaint a juror was called. . His father had been one of the petit jury — but was then dead — so that there was no possible interest, yet the son was challenged by the pr.osecutor, and excluded from the jury; “for it is a presumption, (says the bools,) that he will not say, against the oath of his father.” 21 Vin. Ab. E. d. 216.

And all these matters of real or supposed taint, upon the fairness of a juror, are not to be left to the discretion of triors. There is to be no inquiry whether the firmness of the man may not enable him to give a true verdict when upon his oath, notwithstanding his previous opinions. The law makes no such experiment; but the moment that any such fact of relationship, of favour, enmity, bias, pr preconceived opinion is made out, it removes the juror without hearing one word further.

Such are the general rules of law', relative to challenges for cause. In this case Isaac W. Morris, being summoned and called as a juror on this trial, on an indictment for'murder, and he declaring a predetérmined opinion, and his inability from the dictates of conscience, to find this defendant, or any other defendant, guilty of murder in the first degree, no matter what the law might direct, or what the evidence and the facts might turn out to be; and he being, for that cause, challenged On the part of the commonwealth, [157]*157the question to be decided is, was the challenge good? My opinion continues the same as upon the trial, that the cause of challenge Is sufficient.

With those scruples of Mr. Morris I am not inclined to meddle. I may say thus far — it was manly and honourable in the juror to declare his sentiments: yet it does not seem to be material that the intimation of his unfitness to c!o justice in the case, came first from himself. If the court had overruled the challenge, and ordered Mr. Morris into the jury box, what degree o.f compulsion would have been necessary to oblige him to take the affirmation, which in his own heart he was determined to disregard, I do not know, nor will inquire. Clearly, if the prisoner has a legal right to a predetermined acquittal, founded on the conscientious scruples of those who may be called as jurors, it must be the business of the law to find out some means of assuring to him the benefit of his just claim.

Stripped of all colouring, the general right claimed in the argument, will, perhaps, be found to be the right of a defendant in the case of murder in the first degree, to evade, or rather to set aside the penalty of the law, by means of force employed by the court itself, coupled with falsehood, or something worse, by the jury; practised under the eye, and with the sanction of the court.

Forcing upon the jury one, two, or half-a-dozen like Mr. 1Mor-ris, and obliging them to .take a solemn affirmation which they must violate, is not the worst part of this doctrine; but, unanimity being necessary, the rest of the jury, who have no scruple, except to say the truth according to their oaths or affirmations, may be thus compelled to give a verdict against their better knowledge, or to some vile equivocation. It may well deserve reflection, by what rule of common justice, men who have no scruples against obedience to the law, but are ready to say the truth in their verdict, whatever may be the consequences, are to be put on a jury, and compelled to concur in one opinion with those who declare themselves to be, and actually are, bound by a tie of conscience, above all oaths, to deny the truth in every case where saying the truth may lead to that punishment which the laws have provided against murder in the first degree.

Opposed, as the claim here set up is to all the general rules of law, yet a distinction is attempted by the prisoner’s counsel, by virtue of which they say Mr. Morris ought to have been permitted to take his seat as a juror, or compelled to do it, if compulsion was necessary — because his purpose toacquit, in spite of all proof, arose not from any special favour to the prisoner — 'but was the consequence of an undistinguishing, abstract opinion, or prejudice, the benefit of which was by no means personal to the defendant, but equally ready for the acquittal of every other defendant in the same situation. Now, it is not alleged that any precedent or authority can be shown for this distinction: nor that any case exists [158]*158where a positive, fixed prejudication has been fully made out, that a challenge for that cause has been overruled, on account of the peculiar nature or cause of the prejudice, abstract or otherwise. The fact of predetermined condemnation, or of predetermined acquittal is all that ever has been, or ever well can be, inquired into. To go beyond that would be an impracticable refinement. Not only is this distinction without authority in the boohs, but it seems to me wholly unsupported by any reason; for, certainly, the mischief is the same whether the prejudice of jurors is general or special: there is the same perversion of truth, the same profanation of oaths, the same farce acted under the show of well and truly trying, the same prostitution of the solemn forms of criminal justice, and the same prostration of the law. If there is any thing in this distinction between abstract predetermination to acquit a criminal in spite of truth and law, and a particular prejudice applicable to one case only, that difference is, in my.opinion, rather against the argument; because he whose judgment is warped by accidental error or misinformation, may, perhaps, give up his prejudices when he comes to know all the circumstances of the case, which it will be utterly hopeless to expect from him whose disregard of law and of truth is founded upon no misrepresentation of persons or of facts; but is rooted in the conscience, and made a part of his religion.

Try this distinction by any test whatsoever, and it is clearly inadmissible. I will make a supposition, not impossible nor very improbable.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Fulton v. Philadelphia
Supreme Court, 2021
Smith, A. v. Cordero, M.
2019 Pa. Super. 340 (Superior Court of Pennsylvania, 2019)
State v. Vick.
43 S.E. 626 (Supreme Court of North Carolina, 1903)
State v. . Bowman
80 N.C. 432 (Supreme Court of North Carolina, 1879)
Williams v. State
1 Morr. St. Cas. 933 (Mississippi Supreme Court, 1872)
Stalls v. State
28 Ala. 25 (Supreme Court of Alabama, 1856)
Gates v. People
14 Ill. 433 (Illinois Supreme Court, 1853)
Clore's Case
8 Va. 606 (General Court of Virginia, 1851)
Commonwealth v. Jolliffe
7 Watts 585 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1838)
Philips v. Gratz
2 Pen. & W. 412 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1831)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
17 Serg. & Rawle 155, 1828 Pa. LEXIS 9, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/commonwealth-v-lesher-pa-1828.