Cusiter v. City of Silverton

93 P. 234, 50 Or. 419, 1908 Ore. LEXIS 195
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 16, 1908
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 93 P. 234 (Cusiter v. City of Silverton) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Oregon Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cusiter v. City of Silverton, 93 P. 234, 50 Or. 419, 1908 Ore. LEXIS 195 (Or. 1908).

Opinion

[421]*421Opinion by

Me. Commissioner Slater.

The invalidity of the judgment is based upon the charge that plaintiff was tried, over his objection, before a jury summoned by the officer of the court, instead of being drawn and selected from the regular jury list, as demanded by him. The charter of the City of Silverton provides, in substance, that the city recorder shall be ex officio police judge, and the judicial officer of the corporation, and shall hold court, which shall be known as “police court”; that he shall have jurisdiction of all crimes defined by ordinance, and the jurisdiction and authority of a justice of the peace, and he shall be subject to the general laws prescribing the duties of justices of the peace; that in all criminal cases before him, including all violation of city ordinances, he shall be governed by the general laws of the State governing justices of the peace in similar cases, but in the proceedings for violation of city ordinances the trial shall be without a jury, unless the defendant, on demanding a jury, shall deposit a sum sufficient to pay the per diem for the jury for one day. The general laws governing trials and proceedings in criminal actions in justices’ courts provide that upon a plea other than a plea of guilty, if the defendant does not then demand a trial by jury, the justice must proceed to try the issue (Section 2270, B. & C. Comp.), and, if a trial by jury be demanded, a jury must be selected and summoned as in a civil action in a justice’s court (Section 2271, B. & C. Comp.).

In Chapter 5, Title XX, B. & C. Comp., relating to actions and proceedings in justices’ courts in civil actions, it is found that each justice is required to have a jury list to be made by him on the first Monday in each year in the particular manner therein stated, from which juries are to be drawn for one year and until another list is selected; but, if for any reason the making of the jury list is omitted and neglected at the time designated, the same may be done on the first Monday of an3r month following, to serve until the close of the year and until another is made. The justice is also required to keep a jury box, in which is to be placed separate ballots containing the [422]*422name of each person on the jury list. When a right to a selected jury is established, it is to be drawn from this jury box; but Section 2257, B. & C. Comp., provides that

“* * When a jury is demanded in a justice’s court, instead of being selected by the officer as provided in Chapter 6 of this act, such jury must be drawn and selected from the jury list of the precinct if either party require it.”

That section is a part of the original justice’s act of 1864, and Chapter 6 thereof, referred to in this section, provides another and different mode of obtaining a jury by it being selected by an officer on the order of the court, as was done in the case now under review. That chapter, however, was repealed by act of February 17, 1899 (Laws 1899, p. 119); but those provisions relating to the summoning of a jury by an officer were re-enacted by the repealing act and now appear as Sections 2221-2222, in Chapter 3 of the Justice’s Code (B. & C. Comp. §§ 2221-2222).

1. It is contended by appellants that, to entitle a party to a selected jury, he must not only demand, a jury, but, by the provisions of Section 2257, B. & C. Comp., must also at the same time demand that it be drawn and selected from the jury list of the precinct; and the respondent seems to concede that to be the law. Appellants also contend that the demand of defendant, in the action for a selected jury, was not in time, because it is claimed it was not made by him when he demanded a jury, but after the jury chosen and summoned by the officer had appeared. This claim is resisted by the plaintiff in tne writ, who asserts that his demand for a selected jury was made at the time he demanded the jury. This issue must be determined by the return on the writ, which is conclusive. It contains a transcript of the orders of the court and minutes of the trial, which substantially confirm the averments of the petition. It appears therefrom that on December 15, 1906, at the hour of 7 p. m., the time set for the trial, defendant demanded a jury trial and deposited with the court the required amount as jury fee. Immediately succeeding the entry of this fact is the following:

[423]*423“The court had no selected list of jurors in a jury box in accordance with Sections 2251, 2252, 2253, 2254, 2255 or 2256 of said code, or otherwise, or at all. Whereupon the court issued an order to the chief of police of the City of Silverton, directing him to select six men, or a greater number, if any of those already selected should be rejected.”

Then follows a full copy of the. order of the court, by the terms of which the jurors were to appear “at the hour of 7 p. m. of this day,” which order was dated December 15, 1906. After this entry there is recorded the return of the officer, which is without date. Then follows this entry:

“The defendant objected and protested against the above manner of selecting a jury, and filed his motion that a jury be drawn from a selected list of jurors and from a jury box, as required by Sections 2251, 2252, 2253, 2254, 2255 or 2256 of the statutes of the State of Oregon.”

After overruling of defendant’s motion, it is stated in the record that defendant filed his written objections, which are of the same import and are set out in full.

The record shows conclusively both a demand for a jury and for one selected from a jury list; but, because the entry of the order to the officer and his return thereon intervene between the record of the defendant’s demand for a jury and for a selected jury, the conclusion is sought to be drawn that such demands were made at different times, and the latter one after the jury summoned by the officer had appeared. But the order in which these entries have been made is not conclusive that the facts evidenced by them occurred in that order, unless it were so stated in the record. A justice’s record is not made in the precise and formal way and with such accuracy as that of a court of record. There is nothing affirmatively stated in this record to indicate at what precise relative time of the proceedings of that session of the court the above objections and protests of defendant and his demand for a selected jury were in fact made with reference to the other noted or recorded events of that evening. But the subject-matter of the entry would indicate that his demand for a selected jury must have preceded in time the order of the court to its officer to bring in [424]*424a jury, and was coincident with his demand for a jury. If this is not the fact, why is it that the court thought it necessary to state in the record, as i’t did, that the reason for directing the officer to bring in a jury was that the court had no selected list of jurors in a jury box in accordance with certain sections of the code? Is the court not there arguing against the right of a selected jury? The sections of the code there enumerated, being the same sections enumerated by defendant in his demand for a selected jury and recorded later on, is also of some significance.

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Related

Gay v. City of Eugene
100 P. 306 (Oregon Supreme Court, 1909)
Brown v. City of Silverton
93 P. 237 (Oregon Supreme Court, 1908)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
93 P. 234, 50 Or. 419, 1908 Ore. LEXIS 195, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cusiter-v-city-of-silverton-or-1908.