Ex parte Chase

43 Ala. 303
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedJune 15, 1869
StatusPublished
Cited by25 cases

This text of 43 Ala. 303 (Ex parte Chase) 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
Ex parte Chase, 43 Ala. 303 (Ala. 1869).

Opinion

PETEES, J.

Under the protection of the constitution of the State, a person charged with an offense, punishable as a crime, in the civil tribunals, is entitled to a speedy trial, by an impartial jury of the county or district in which the offense was committed.” This is an important provision, granted to him by the highest law. And it was deemed of such necessity, by the people, that it has been placed above repeal or denial; and every civil officer of the State, who has been regularly inducted into his office, has solemnly sworn, honestly and faithfully, to support and defend it. It is the duty of the legislative department to pass the proper laws to carry it into effect; it is the duty of the courts to refuse to proceed without its observance ; and it is the duty of the executive to arrest the execution of a sentence, which has been procured in violation of its solemn prohibition; else the official oaths of these high [308]*308functionaries are a mere form of words and no more. It is the sworn duty of every “ civil officer of this State,” “ honestly and faithfully to support and defend the constitution” of the State. No article, no section, no clause can be omitted. All are comprehended in the oath of office ; and all are equally binding and imperative. No one can “ be deprived of his life, liberty or property, but by due course of law.” And in the trial of one charged with an indictable offense, “ an impartial jury” is as necessary as the copy of the accusation, or the opportunity to be confronted by the witnesses against tbe accused. Each of these rights stands upon the same section of the constitution ; all are equally imperative and equally necessary for “ a fair and impartial triaV’ And such a trial is the great purpose of the whole remedial law. An unfair and partial trial is a trespass and a wrong, and can not be justified upon any principles of criminal jurisprudence, whatever may be the guilt of the party accused. Trial by an impartial jury is a great fundamental right, and it is not to be presumed, that the people ever intended that its security should depend upon the mere discretion of the wisest and the purest judge. It is one of the great, general and essential'principles of liberty and free government,” and it can not be too sedulously guarded. — Const. Bill of Rights, Art. I, § 8, 13 ; ib. Art. XY, § 1.

Certainly, a person accused could not be tried, without his consent, out of the county or district in which he committed the offense ; certainly, he could not be tried without an indictment, for an indictable offense; and he could not be tried without being confronted by the witnesses against him. Yet each of these important privileges, so well secured and understood, rest upon the same section of the constitution, in which it is said, he “ has a right” to “ a speedy public trial by an impartial jury of the county or district in which the offense was committed.” For, unquestionably, the word “ right,” in the beginning of the section, has as much application to, and connection with, the description of the character of the jury, as it has with any other of the great pre-requisites for a fair and impartial trial, required in a regular proceeding, in due course of [309]*309law. — Constitution of Alabama, Bill of Eights, Art. I, § 8. This seems perfectly clear, when the elipses of the sentence are supplied, and the governing verb and its expletives are repeated, in their proper places throughout the section.

In accordance with this view, and for the purpose of giving this important right its proper support and protection, the legislature have provided by law, that the accused shall have a fair opportunity to obtain such a jury, as the constitution has secured for his defense. They have required the court, as a part of the instrumentality tending to procure an impartial jury, to grant an order removing the trial to another county, where a fair and impartial trial may be had, through the means of such a jury as the constitution entitles the accused to have. The enactment for this purpose is in the following language: “ Any person charged with an indictable offense may have his trial removed to another county, on making application to the court, setting forth specifically the reason why he can not have a fair and impartial trial in the county in which the indictment is found ; which application must be sworn to by him, and must be made as early as practicable before the trial, or may be made after conviction, on a new trial being granted.” — Eevised Code, §4206.

There is no other marked purpose that can be secured by a change of venue, save the opportunity it affords for a trial “ by an impartial jury.” This is the sole object of the removal of the trial to another county. All the other requisites for a fair and impartial trial may be had in any county or district of the State. But this one of an impartial jury can not, as the history of such trials, and the policy of the law, which authorizes the removal, everywhere attest. If the removal were never a necessity, for the sake of justice, it would never be granted at all. The constitution gives the right of trial by an impartial jury, and the legislative enactment directs how this right shall be enforced. In all cases, wherein an impartial jury can not be procured in the county where the indictment is found, this right must fail, unless a removal of the trial is allowed. If the main right — the right to have a trial by an impartial jury — is peremptory, as it certainly is, then the means by [310]*310which it is to be enforced and defended are also peremptory; otherwise the main right might fail, for want of the proper means to sustain it. No wise construction aims at such result. No wise legislation will permit it. The legislative enactment, then, must be construed so as to support and defend the constitutional grant. To do this, the right to a change of venue, in a proper case, must be peremptory.

To place a great right, like this, upon judicial discretion, if it is not sometimes a mockery of justice, it is at least to disregard the history of judicial decisions. If all judges, or, indeed, if any judge, were perfect, then the people might safely rely upon judicial discretion for a perfect administration of the law. But, unfortunately, it is but too well known that such an assumption is not true, and that the wisest and the best, commit grave errors and make mistakes. Upon the truth of this assumption, this solemn and high tribunal is erected; for this is a court for the correction of errors and mistakes of inferior jurisdictions. — Const. Ala., Art. YI, § 1, 2. •

To be satisfied of the insecurity of mere judicial discretion as a power to enforce the due administration of the laws, as this power is sometimes understood, we have but to look to what is declared in books of authority upon this subject. It is said, “ the discretion of a judge is the law of tyrants ; it is always unknown; it is different in different men; it is casual and depends upon constitution and passion. In the best it is often, at times, capricious ; in the worst it is every vice, folly and madness, to which human nature is liable.”—1 Bouv. Law Dict., vide Discretion, p. 473. This may be, to some extent, an extreme statement of the objection, but every practioner of experience well knows, that it is not without much truth.

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Bluebook (online)
43 Ala. 303, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ex-parte-chase-ala-1869.