Leary v. North Jersey Street Railway Co.

54 A. 527, 69 N.J.L. 67, 40 Vroom 67, 1903 N.J. Sup. Ct. LEXIS 116
CourtSupreme Court of New Jersey
DecidedMarch 9, 1903
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 54 A. 527 (Leary v. North Jersey Street Railway Co.) 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
Leary v. North Jersey Street Railway Co., 54 A. 527, 69 N.J.L. 67, 40 Vroom 67, 1903 N.J. Sup. Ct. LEXIS 116 (N.J. 1903).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Pitney, J.

It appears from the bill of exceptions that upon the trial of this action, while the clerk was administering the oath to the jury, defendant’s counsel interrupted for the purpose of challenging one of the jurymen. The trial judge refused to permit the administration of the oath to be interrupted for that purpose, giving as a reason that the defendant had already interposed three challenges. As the request for leave to challenge was not accompanied by the suggestion of any cause for the proposed challenge, it will be presumed that a peremptory challenge was intended, and it is upon this basis that the cause has been argued in'this court, the insistment being that under the act concerning jurors, [68]*68approved April 9th, 1902 (Pamph. L., p. 640), the defendant was entitled to- six peremptory challenges. That act was approved shortly before the trial of this action and took effect immediately. The plaintiff in error further insists that, in view of the supplement of 1881 to- the revised act concerning juries, approved March 21th, 1814 (Pamph. L., p. 132; Gan. Stat., p. 1855, § 54), which provides that “all challenges to jurors for any cause whatever in any kind of a suit, civil or criminal, may be made at any time before the jury is actually sworn,” the right of challenge was seasonably asserted in the present case.

In our opinion this contention must be overruled, for two reasons, viz.:

Fwsl. By the act of 1902 the right of peremptory challenge in civil actions is conditioned upon its being exercised as the names of the jurors are drawn from the box.

At common law there was no right of peremptory challenge in civil actions. Thomp. & M. Jur., §§ 152, 154; 1 Thomp. Tr., § 42; Creed v. Fisher, 9 Exch. 472; 23 L. J. Exch. 143; 18 Jur. 228; 2 W. R. 196; 15 Eng. Rul. Cas. 54; Pearse v. Rogers, 2 Fost. & F. 137; Marsh v. Coppock, 9 Car. & P. 480.

What Siy William Blaekstone says in 3 Bl. Gom. 359, 363, concerning the procedure in civil actions, relates wholly to challenges for cause. But in Iris fourth book'(at p. 353), in discussing the criminal procedure, he draws the distinction between a challenge for cause and a challenge “without showing any cause at all, which is called a peremptory challenge.” See, also, 1 Bouv. L. D., tit. "Challenge."

■ In this state the practice of returning a general panel of jurors at each trial term and of placing their several names, written on separate pieces of paper, into a box, and drawing therefrom a jury of twelve for the trial of a civil action, was given a statutory basis by “An act relative to juries,” passed March 9th, 1836. Pamph. L., p. 323. This act was repealed, and a somewhat different procedure established on the same general lines bjr a supplement passed November 9th, 1836, to the act of 1191, relative to juries and verdicts. Pamph. L. 1836, p. 11.

[69]*69The right of peremptory challenge in civil causes originated in a siipplement passed March 13th, 1844 (Pamph. L., p. 236), by which it was enacted that upon the trial of any issue in any civil action in any court except the courts for the-trial of small-causes and other cases before justices of the peace, each party should be entitled to challenge peremptorily, as their names luere drawn from the box, six of the general panel of jurors summoned and returned by the sheriff or other officer.

In the revised act of 1846, relative to juries and verdicts, similar provisions were embodied in sections 19, 23 and 24, except that the number of peremptory challenges in civil actions was reduced to three. Rev. Stat., p. 965.

When the right of peremptory challenge was extended to civil causes before justices of the peace, in whose courts there was no general panel, the form of the enactment was “that the right of each party in any civil suit to challenge peremptorily three jurors as their names are called, be and the same is hereby extended to* trials in the courts for the trial of small causes and other actions before justices of the peace.” Pamph. L. 1869, p. 619.

In the revised act concerning juries, approved March 27th, 1874 (Gen. Stat., p. 1847), the above provisions of the act of 1846, with respect to the summoning of a general panel and the drawing of a jury therefrom, are substantially reproduced. Section 23 appears in the new revision as section 27. The provisions of the former section 24 and of the supplement of 1869 were made a part of the new section 40, and with them was combined a provision for peremptory challenges upon the trial of indictments' for the less serious crimes. Again the privilege of peremptory challenge -was required to be exercised “as their names are drawn from the box.” By the revised Criminal Procedure act of 1874, approved on the same day with the Jury act just mentioned (Gen. Stat., p. 1119), the matter of defendant’s right to peremptory challenges upon trial of an indictment for crime of a high grade was taken care of in section 71. Twenty such challenges were allowed, and there was no language requiring them to be [70]*70interposed as the names of the jurymen were drawn from the box. Therefore they might, of course, be taken, as at common law, at any time before the swearing of the juror.

By an act approved April 4th, 1878, and probably intended as a supplement to- the revised act concerning juries, approved March 27th, 1874 (this, however, is left in doubt by a defect in the title, Pamph. L. 1878, p. 284), it was enacted that upon the trial of any indictment, where twenty peremptory challenges are not allowed, the defendant shall be entitled to challenge peremptorily, at any time before the jury is sworn, six of the general panel, and that upon the trial of any indictment, the attorney-general or prosecutor of the pleas shall be entitled to challenge peremptorily, at any time before the jurors are sworn, six of the general panel. This act, if valid (see Moschell v. State, 24 Vroom 503), had the effect of rendering the practice uniform with respect to the time allowed for interposing the peremptory challenge in criminal cases, irrespective of the grade of the crime.

By a supplement approved April 1st, 1887 (Pamph. L., p. 132; Gen. Stat., p. 1855), it is enacted “that from and after the passage of this act, all challenges to jurors, for any cause ivhatever, in any kind of a suit, civil or criminal, in all courts of this state, may be made at any time before the juror is actually sworn.”

It is this sup]Dlement that is invoked by the plaintiff in error in the present case. The act shows on its face, however, that it has reference only to challenges for cause.

The defective act of 1878, just alluded to> and an act of 1891 that was intended in part to supersede it (Pamph. L. 1891, p. 24), were repealed in 1898 in the revision of the acts relative to criminal procedure. Pamph. L., p. 930 (at p. 939).

By the revised Criminal Procedure act of that year (Pamph. L. 1898, p.

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54 A. 527, 69 N.J.L. 67, 40 Vroom 67, 1903 N.J. Sup. Ct. LEXIS 116, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/leary-v-north-jersey-street-railway-co-nj-1903.