Oakes v. State

54 So. 79, 98 Miss. 80
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 15, 1910
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 54 So. 79 (Oakes 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
Oakes v. State, 54 So. 79, 98 Miss. 80 (Mich. 1910).

Opinion

Smith, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

Appellant was indicted and convicted in the court below of libel, and appeals to this court. The indictment alleged that he had published and circulated a handbill, charging the circuit judge of the district with having committed several high crimes and misdemeanors, setting out the particulars thereof, while in the discharge of his official duties. Appellant’s defense was that the statements made by him were true, and were published with good motives and for justifiable ends. One of the instructions ■ given' by the court to the jury, at the request of the state, was as follows: “The court charges the jury that all the law to be considered by them in reaching a verdict in the case is contained in the written instructions given by the- court, and upon these instructions and the evidence alone should their verdict be made.” During the argument of the case appellant’s counsel attempted to read to the jury from certain law books dealing with the law of libel, but, on objection by the state, was by the court prevented from •doing so. These two actions of the court are assigned [86]*86for error, and this assignment necessitates a construction by us of that portion of section 13 of our state Constitution of 1890 which provides that “the jury shall determine the law and the facts, under the direction of the court.”

Section 13, in full, is as follows: “The freedom of speech and of the press shall be held sacred; and in all prosecutions for libel the truth may be given in evidence; and the jury shall determine the law and the facts under the direction of the court; and if it shall appear to the jury that the matter charged as libelous is true, and was published with good motives and for justifiable ends, the party shall be acquitted.” The contention of appellant is that by this section of the Constitution the jury have the right to determine both the law and the facts; that they not only have the right to apply their own knowledge of the law, but may receive information relative thereto from sources other than the instructions of the court; that, consequently,, the court erred in granting instruction No. one for the state, and also in not permitting appellant’s counsel to read to the jury from law books dealing with the law of libel.

In all criminal cases the guilt or innocence of the defendant is a mixed question of law and fact, and the verdict of guilty or not guilty is a compound of, and determines, both. In rendering such a verdict, juries, must act upon the law as given them by the court.. The facts they find themselves, then apply the one to> the other, and from both determine the guilt or innocence of the defendant on’ trial. To this extent, they,, in all criminal cases, determine both the law and the facts. This results, of necessity, from their right to return a general verdict. This right of juries to render a verdict in criminal cases, as broad as the issue involved, was never doubted after the common law became fully developed, except in cases of trial for criminal [87]*87libel, and it was to remove this donbt that this provision of our Constitution was adopted. This doubt arose by reason of the decision of Lord Mansfield in the case of Rex v. Woodfall, 20 How. State Trials, 895, followed later, by the full court, in the celebrated case of Dean of St. Asaph, 3 Term R. 428, and by the disagreement of the judges of the Supreme Court of New York in the equally celebrated case of People v. Croswell, 3 Johns. Cas. (N. Y.) 365. In'these cases, in both of which the defendants were being prosecuted for criminal libel, the juries were not permitted to pass upon the whole matter in issue. The only questions submitted to them were : First, whether the defendant was guilty of publishing; second, whether the innuendoes were justly stated and applied. If both of these questions were answered in the affirmative, then the jury were required to return a verdict of guilty, leaving the construction of the words charged to be libelous and the motive of the defendant in publishing same to be afterwards determined by the court, as a matter of law, upon a motion in arrest of judgment.

The ground of the decision in the case of the Dean of St. Asaph was that all written instruments must be construed, and the meaning and effect of the words used therein settled, as matter of law, by the court, and that consequently, when the words of the alleged libel were copied in the indictment, and the fact of the publication and the truth of the innuendoes were by the verdict of the jury established and placed on the record, the legal character of the words used could then be determined by an inspection of the record, and would be open, after the verdict, to be decided as a question of law by the court. In 1792, after the decision in this case, an act known as “Fox’s Libel Act,” and being chapter 60 of 32 George III, was passed by the English parliament. This act was entitled “An act to remove doubts respecting the functions of juries in cases of libel,” and [88]*88declared that in all such cases the jury might render a general verdict of guilty or not guilty upon the whole matter in issue, and should not be required to render a verdict of guilty merely on proof of publication and of truth of the innuendoes.

The passage of this act was largely the result of the ■argument of Lord Erskine “in support of the rights ■of juries” on the motion for a-new trial in the case of Dean of St. Asaph. In the course of that argument, among other things, he said: “I may affirm with equal •certainty that the general verdict, ex vi termini, is universally as comprehensive as the issue, and that consequently such a verdict on an indictment, upon the general issue, not guilty, universally and unavoidably involves a judgment of law, as well as fact, because the •charge comprehends both, and the verdict, as has been said is coextensive with it. Both Coke and Littleton give this precise definition of a general verdict, for they both say that, if the jury will find the law, they may do it by a general verdict, which is even as large as the issue. If this be so, it follows by necessary consequence that, if the judge means to direct the jury to find generally against a defendant, he must leave to their consideration everything which goes to the constitution of such a general verdict, and is therefore bound to permit them to come to, and to direct them how to form; that general conclusion from the law and the fact, which is involved in the term ‘guilty.’ For it is ridiculous to say that guilty is a fact. It is a conclusion in law from a fact, and therefore can have no place in a special verdict, where the legal conclusion is left to the court.” Erskine’s Speeches (High’s Ed.), vol. 1, p. 329.

In the course of the debates on the bill, while under ■consideration by parliament, it is said by Mr. Pox, the author thereof, that “there was a power vested in a jury to judge the law and fact as often as they were united; and if the jury were not to be understood to [89]*89have a right to exercise that power, the Constitution would never have intrusted it to them;” that this was the case, not of murder only, but of every other criminal indictment; and it was paid by Mr.

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Bluebook (online)
54 So. 79, 98 Miss. 80, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/oakes-v-state-miss-1910.