Dyson v. State

1 Morr. St. Cas. 710, 26 Miss. 362
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 1, 1872
StatusPublished
Cited by42 cases

This text of 1 Morr. St. Cas. 710 (Dyson v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Mississippi Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Dyson v. State, 1 Morr. St. Cas. 710, 26 Miss. 362 (Mich. 1872).

Opinion

Handy, J.:

This case has been submitted on the re-argument very fully and elaborately, and we shall confine our present examination to the points therein presented in behalf of the plaintiff in error.

1. It is insisted, in the first place, that it appears by the record that the jury were not properly and legally sworn.

The opinion of the court on this point delivered on the former argument, seems to proceed on the assumption that the full oath, as administered to the jury, is stated in the record, or intended to be stated, a view which we have not been able to take. And had the oath administered been properly and fully shown in the record, and contained nothing more than is embraced in the statement of it in the record, we should be strongly inclined to hold it insufficient. It would not embrace the important duties required of the jury, and would be a wide departure from the just and comprehensive oath so necessary to injoin upon them the faithful discharge of their solemn responsibilities, which, for ages past, has been sanctioned by wisdom and experience, and has received almost universal adoption at the present day. But we cannot think that the oath here was intended to be set out in the form or entire substance in which it was administered, or that it was necessary to set it out for the purposes of the record of proceedings in the court below.

It is not the duty of the clerk, in making up the record of the proceedings in a cause, to set out the oath administered t& the jury. All that is required of him, in this respect, under the law as settled by this court, in reference to courts of general jurisdiction is, that the record should show that the jury were sworn according to law.1 1 How., 24; 3 ib., 497. And we are [727]*727not disposed to extend this rule beyond its strict limit. If he undertakes to state other things connected with the administration of the oath, these additional statements wouid be unofficial and not properly a part of the record. The general rule in relation to acts of this character will be found in the cases referred to in 3 Phil. Ev. (Cow. & H. ed.), 1045, 1046, 1083. The statement of the oath administered, is no more a part of the duty of the clerk, than it is his duty to incorporate it in any document or deposition offered in evidence in the course of the trial. In the case of Barfield et al. v. Impson, 1 S. & M., this court says: “We cannot notice a mere certificate of the clerk that this or that evidence was introduced; the certificate of the court is required.” And in Abbott v. Hackman, 2 S. & M., 510, it is said: “ This court is bound to presume the judgment of the court below correct, unless, from a review of the grounds of such judgment, certified to by the court, manifest error is apparent.” 4 How., 222; ib., 431. If a document offered in evidence in the cause cannot be made a part of the record by the mere act of the clerk, much less could his mere statement of its substance be treated as a part of the record, and that is what is here attempted.

If, then, the swearing of the jurors is improper in any respect, the objection must be presented by bill of exceptions, and unless it is so presented, if sufficient evidence appears of record to show that the jury were sworn, it must be presumed that they were legally sworn. This principle is distinctly held in the cases in this court just cited; and in Barfield et al. v. Impson, the court says : “ That (the bill of exceptions) affords the only evidence which we can recognize, of what takes place upon the trial; and we are bound to presume the proceedings of the court below to be correct, unless by the bill of exceptions we are furnished with evidence to the contrary.” This rule we think altogether applicable to the present objection. It is the true rule in relation to courts of general common law jurisdiction, but it does not apply to courts of special and limited jurisdiction; and for this reason, the case of Holt v. Mills, 4 S. & M., does not sustain this objection. That was a case of unlawful detainer, a matter of special and statutory jurisdiction, in which the oath re[728]*728quired to be administered is prescribed in the statute. Moreover, the oath actually administered is fully set out in the record, and shown not to be in conformity to the statute. And the court says, “ in this proceeding, if the oath is set out, and is not such as the law requires, the verdict cannot stand.”

In the present case, it appears manifest that it was not intended by the clerk, as it was no part of his duty, to set out the oath in the manner and form used in administering it to the jurors. The statement is by way of recital, thus : “ And thereupon came a jury of good and lawful men, to wit,” etc., who being elected, tried, and sworn the truth to speak in the issue joined,” etc., referring to what had previously taken place, in order to show that an oath had been administered, rather than to state its form or substance. It is a memorandum relative to a proceeding in the case, made after the fact had transpired, and not the record of the very thing done at the time, and in the manner and form in which it was done.

Great strength is given to this view of the subject, by referring to the practice and precedents touching it. It is conceded that in England, the form of oath, as contended for by the counsel for plaintiff in error, is adopted. It also prevails in practice in Yirginia and Maryland. 3 Rob. Va. Prac., 174; 2 Harris, Ent., 282. Notwithstanding this, and though this form of oath has been duly administered in empanelling the jury, yet, when the record of the proceedings is being made, the entry of swearing and empanelling the jury is made nearly in the very terms contained in this record. Blackstone has the entry as follows: “ Who being elected, tried, and sworn to speak the truth of and concerning the premises.”. 4 Black. Com. Appendix. Robinson has it thus: “ Who being elected, tried and sworn the truth of and upon the premises to speak.” 3 Rob. Pr., 177. Harris has it thus: “ Who are sworn to say the truth in the premises.” 2 Harris, Ent., 293. The distinction between the fact of the oath actually administered to the jurors, and the reference afterwards made to it as a part of the history of the case by the clerk in making up the record, is clearly shown by these precedents ; and they are certainly authorities of high character.

Justified by these precedents, a practice has grown up in this [729]*729state to make up the records of jury trials after tlie manner of tbe record in this case; a practice in violation of no principle, and in keeping with the proper office of the clerk in making up records of such proceedings. The records of this court show, that this mode of making up such records, has become the established practice of the state. It has ripened into general usuage without objection, and the instances are numerous where men have suffered the extreme penalty of the law under its operation. If it were unsupported by precedents from other states, this court would hesitate long before it would hold, considering the nature and office of such an entry in the record, that for such an inaccuracy, if it should be one, the trial in the court below should be treated as illegal and nugatory. But, sanctioned as it is by precedent, and no right of the accused or rule of law being sufficiently shown to be violated, we cannot hesitate to say that it constitutes no ground for reversing the judgment below.

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Bluebook (online)
1 Morr. St. Cas. 710, 26 Miss. 362, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dyson-v-state-miss-1872.