Donnelly v. State

26 N.J.L. 601
CourtSupreme Court of New Jersey
DecidedNovember 15, 1857
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 26 N.J.L. 601 (Donnelly v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of New Jersey primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Donnelly v. State, 26 N.J.L. 601 (N.J. 1857).

Opinions

Ogden, J.

The case comes before us by a writ of error to die Supreme Court. It appears that the plaintiff in error was indicted in September last, at a Court of Oyer and Terminer and General Jail Delivery, in the county of Monmouth, for (he murder of Albert S. Moses, on the first day of August, 1857, at “the Sea View House,” in the township of Middletown, in said county; was tried by a jury and convicted of murder in the first degree, and sentenced to bo executed on the eighth day of January next.

After the rendition of the judgment a writ of error was allowed by the Chancellor, to remove the proceedings into the Supreme Court, which was returned, with the record, on the 12th day of November last. Bills of exceptions, sealed at the trial, also were returned with the writ.

That court, finding no error in the record or proceedings, on the twenty-first, day of November, affirmed the judgment in all tilings.

Upon an application in behalf of Donnelly, the Chancellor granted a second writ of error to remove the record and proceedings had before the Supreme Court into this court, of-the last resorti The writ lias been returned, together with the record of the judgment and the proceedings of the Supreme Court, and of the Court of Oyer and Terminer, at which the conviction was had.

On the return of the writ the counsel of the prisoner obtained a certiorari, by which an order, made by the Supreme Court, denying an application for the writ of habeas corpus to remove the prisoner before that court, has been brought before us.

The plaintiff, by his counsel, has assigned various errors, alleged to have occurred in the Court of Oyer and Terminer, and also in the Supreme Court. On application of the attorney-general, before joining in error, this court ordered the 4th and 5th assignments of error to be stricken out. The practice is sanctioned by the court in [606]*606the ease of Ward v. Ward, 2 Zab. 710, and by other authorities. Thereupon the attorney-general, in behalf of the state, filed the general joinder in error. As the seventh and eighth assignments of error complain of the action of the Supreme Court upon an application for a habeas corpus, and of the court’s hearing and determining the cause in the absence of the prisoner, it is proper for us to consider those assignments at the outset; because, if material error was thereby committed by the Supreme Court, prejudicial to' the legal rights of the party, the subsequent action and judgment of that court should be for nothing holden; and the case, with a reversal of their judgment, should be remitted, for them to proceed therein according to law. It is not contended that a fatal error in those proceedings of the Supreme Court would affect the judgment of the Court of Oyer and Terminer, but it is conceded that the cause would be re-argued before the Supreme Court, in the presence of the prisoner.

The first and most material inquiry is, whether upon a writ of error sued out by a person convicted of a felony, his personal presence in the appellate court is necessary to give •jurisdiction, or rather, the ability to examine the record of the inferior tribunal.

The argument of the plaintiff’s counsel was drawn entirely, from the ancient practice and precedents in England, whereby it appears that the prisoner always assigned his errors in person. In the English courts, a person indicted for a felony could not at common law appear by attorney or by counsel. His presence was required in the court of trial, and also in the appellate courts, in every stage of the proceedings. Upon 'the return of his writ of error it was necessary for him to follow the record, and at the proper time and place, to assign in person the errors of which he complained. The appellate court could not proceed to review the record of the court below until the issues of error were made up; and unless the plaintiff’ was before them he would lose the whole benefit of his [607]*607writ. Of consequence, a well-established mode prevailed iti those courts of removing the convict from custody in one prison, and placing him in charge of a proper officer at the appellate court, where he was securely kept, and had the opportunity of prosecuting his writ of error to effect.

In these United States a different system prevails in criminal proceedings. By the constitution of the federal government and the constitutions of the several states, in all criminal prosecutions, the accused shall have the assistance of counsel in his defence. In the “ act regulating proceedings and trials in criminal cases,” in this state, the court before whom a person shall be tried upon an indictment is required to assign to such person, if not of ability to procure the same, such counsel as be or she may desire, to whom such counsel shall have free access at all seasonable hours. No authority in this country has been cited showing that a plaintiff in error, under sentence of the court of trial, has been removed into an appellate court by habeas corpus, or has assigned his errors otherwise than by counsel. The practice of errors being assigned by counsel has been uniform in this state, as far as we have reported cases, and a similar practice prevails in our sister states. There is a statute in New York “that no person indicted for any felony shall be tried, unless he be personally present at the trial ;” but the practice under that act shows that the provision has not been construed to apply to an argument on writ of error before an appellate court, which deals only with the law of a case. But if the presence of a prisoner in court, so that he may assign errors in person, be not necessary under our practice, yet it is said that the judgment of the Supreme Court upon the errors assigned could not legally be pronounced in his absence.

This insistment involves the nature and effect of the judgment of an appellate court. If the writ of error per [608]*608se changes the legal efficacy of the judgment below, then a new substantive judgment should be rendered by the appellative court, containing in a capital ease the sentence of execution. But such is not the office of the writ. It removes the record of the judgment below; and the appellate court, in adjudicating upon the record, either affirms or reverses the judgment. In ease of affirmance, it is considered, by them, that the judgment , below do in all things stand in full force and effect. No new sentence is pronounced, but the punishment adjudged by the court of trial is executed by virtue of their judgment as first pronounced. If the executive officer of the inferior court does not receive notice that the judgment is reversed, it will be his duty to execute the culprit according to law. Nor is it necessary that the prisoner should be present in court to receive judgment of reversal. If a discharge from his imprisonment it to follow when such a result (if) can speedily be effected by subsequent proceedings. A controlling reason for requiring the presence of a culprit in court, when a corporal punishment is to be adjudged, is that it may not fail of being executed. We have no process by which a person at large may be arrested, and placed in the sheriff’s hands to undergo a sentence of imprisonment or of execution pronounced in his absence. Upon a careful examination of the alleged error in this aspect of it, we think, in the language of the Supreme Court used in this ease, “it must be considered as settled law in this state, that in proceedings upon writ of error, the personal presence of the prisoner in court is not a

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
26 N.J.L. 601, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/donnelly-v-state-nj-1857.