Dunlap v. State

76 Ala. 460
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedDecember 15, 1884
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 76 Ala. 460 (Dunlap v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Dunlap v. State, 76 Ala. 460 (Ala. 1884).

Opinion

STONE, C. J.

— For many centuries, the right of trial by jury has been a cherished bulwark of liberty, with all English-speaking people. Our revolutionary fathers, when they came to form a more perfect union and establish justice, incorporated it as one of the canons in the fundamental law. So, each of the States composing the Federal Union has given the stereotyped phrase a prominent place in its constitution. To be tried by his peers, or equals, was the Englishman’s boasted right. Hence, in that country, where official caste prevails, one of the higher classes could only be tried by jurors belonging to the same caste with himself. In that country, juries were selected and impanelled with due regard to the intelligence and good character of its membership. The illustrious Mansfield, while engaged in giving form and definiteness to the commercial laws, was wont to have summoned a jury of intelligent merchants, to aid him in declaring what were and what were not soitnd usages in commercial transactions.

As early as 1841, it became manifest to the legislature of this State that sufficient care and watchful prudence were not be stowed, in the matter of selecting and drawing juries. It wag [463]*463then enacted that 'jurors, grand and petit, should be a chosen body — a class selected for their honesty, impartiality and intelligence; men esteemed in the community for their integrity, fair character, and sound judgment. And certain named officers were to make the selection from all the resident freeholders and householders in the county, within certain specified ages. Such has been our statutory law ever since; and the statutes are. or should be, the clearest exponents of the State’s policy, upon any subject upon which their voice is heard. And why should not juries be a select body?’ They have large share in the administration of the law, in the redress of grievances, public and private, and in the conservation of good order and good morals. Upon their verdicts depends, in great degree, the security of life, liberty and property; an indispensable condition to a State’s prosperity. The administration of trusts, such as these, should be confided only to those who have capacity to comprehend, and integrity and moral courage to discharge them.

We have said above, that the officers appointed for the service must select jurors from the body of freeholders and householders, with certain exceptions. Of course, there are exceptions. In the multiform wants and relations of society, there are, and must be, members of professions, occupations and callings, the very nature of whose duties and services to the public forbids that they should be impanelled on juries. They are either called to duty at stated times, or subject to be called ^hereto at any moment; and delay in such case would defeat the very end and aim of their vocation. Professors and teachers of colleges and schools, and railroad employees, are of the first class; practicing physicians, certain public officers, and, to some extent, active members of fire-companies, doing service in cities or towns, are of the latter class. These are ministers to the public welfare, and to impanel them on juries, whose deliberations will-be of uncertain duration, would be to imperil and impair their usefulness in their particular vocation. The State, in its broad conservation of the public welfare, excuses them from one public duty, that they may more efficiently discharge another. All this is done, however, not as a concession, or bounty to one class, but as a means of having every public want cared for. The exemption springs out of the necessities of the case, and is, in no sense, intended as a bounty to the exempted.

Considering that all men are liable to become, in some form, suitors before the courts of the country, and to have their rights of person and property passed on by juries, it would seem strange that so large a body of the wisest and best citizens should seek exemption from this service, scarcely less im[464]*464portant than that of having a learned and incorruptible judiciary. Being unwilling to assist in administering justice to another, how can it be expected that that other will be less selfish, or more patriotic, when the State makes requisition for his similar services? All men should regard jury service, not as a trust to be sought after, but as a duty to the public, to be performed when called on.

In Green v. The State, 73 Ala. 26, 40, we said, our statute “fixes a high standard for qualifications of jurors, grand and petit.” They are to be selected from the body of freeholders and householders resident in the county, by certain named officers. All are not eligible, but only such as, in the opinion of the selecting board, “are competent to discharge the duties of grand and petit jurors, with honesty, impartiality and intelligence, and are esteemed in the community for their integrity, fair character, and sound judgment.” This duty of selecting is a delicate trust, but it should be discharged conscientiously and fearlessly. Interests of great magnitude are submitted to the arbitrament of juries, and only such persons should be chosen for the service, as the selecting officers, well-meaning men, would be willing to trust with the settlement of their own disputes of equal magnitude. Less than this is not a compliance with the letter or spirit of our statutes. A disregard of these high qualifications has tended, and is tending largely, to bring the whole system of jury trials into disrepute.

We have said jury service is a trust, not to be sought after, nor declined. This excludes all those, commonly called “professionals,” who loiter about the court-room in the hope they will be placed on the jury, and thereby earn the paltry pittance our statute allows for jury service. Their very desire, and the reason of it, prove their unfitness.

The appellant in this case claims his exemption from jury service, under the act to incorporate the Mobile fire-companies, approved December 9th, 1841. lie claims, and shows that, before he* was summoned as a juror, he had served as a fireman five consecutive years in one of the said fire-companies ; and claims that he is thereby exempted from the “ performance of jury duty as grand or petit juror, in the Circuit or County Court of Mobile county.” Such is the language of that statute, and his claim is made good, if the legislature had power to grant such exemptions, by irrepealable enactment. This statute was expressly repealed, and the exemption taken away, or revoked, by the act approved February 20th, 1883. — Pamph. Acts, 501. The question is, had the legislature power to take away the exemption, after the appellant had performed the five years service, which the former statute had declared should exempt him from further jury duty.

[465]*465Civil government, or municipal regulation, has shorn natural liberty of some of its attributes. The citizen must surrender some rights and immunities he could claim and assert in an unorganized, or natural state, that he may be protected in his essential rights in organized government. The surrender of the one, is the price he pays for the security and protection of the other. Sovereignty is made up of the rig-lit the State has, and can assert, to demand of its constituent citizenship, that, under well-defined regulations and limitations, there shall be surrendered up a guantv/m of its substance and personal service, when demanded for the support, defense, preservation, prosperity, and general welfare of the State.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
76 Ala. 460, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dunlap-v-state-ala-1884.