People v. Cummings

3 Park. Cr. 343
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedMay 15, 1857
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 3 Park. Cr. 343 (People v. Cummings) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
People v. Cummings, 3 Park. Cr. 343 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1857).

Opinion

Harris, J.

Before the Revised Statutes went into operation, there was no such thing as a bill of exceptions in a criminal case. If a question arose upon the trial, in respect to which the court entertained doubt, it might suspend judgment until the advice of the Supreme Court should be obtained. Whether or not this should be done was a question entirely within the discretion of the court. When it was deemed proper thus to obtain the opinion of the Supreme Court, the questions upon which advice was sought were presented by a case agreed upon by the parties, or settled by the court. It was no uncommon thing to review the decisions of criminal courts in this mode. (The People v. Vermilyea, 6 Cow., 555.)

Since, by the Revised Statutes, the defendant has been allowed to make a bill of exceptions, as in civil cases, and to have the exceptions examined upon a writ of error, the former practice has for the most part fallen into disuse, although I believe there have been instances, since the adoption of the Revised Statutes, in which the advice of the Supreme Court has been thus sought. This is probably the first instance, however, in which sentence has been suspended for the purpose of taking the opinion of the Supreme Court upon questions of mere regularity, arising not upon the trial, but upon proceedings preliminary to the trial, and [345]*345presented, not by a case, but upon affidavits read in the Court of Oyer and Terminer for the purpose of setting aside the verdict. Such a practice is not, in my judgment, to be recommended, for the reason that questions of mere regularity, in no way affecting the merits of the case, and nothing else, are presented for the consideration of this court.

But I proceed to consider the questions presented by the affidavits. The first is, that no precept was issued by the district attorney in conformity with the requirements of the statute on that subject. (2 R. S., 206, §§ 37, 38.) This question has already been examined in the case of McCann v. The People, just decided. If the requirement is to be regarded as at all applicable to stated terms of the Court of Oyer and Terminer, appointed and held in the manner prescribed by the provisions of ihe Code on that subject, it is merely directory; whether or not the precept is issued is a matter which does not concern the defendant, or, indeed, anybody else. The most that can be said of it is, that it is a venerable ceremony which has accidentally outlived its associates, and is as harmless in the breach as it is useless in the observance. Its omission is not an irregularity of which anybody can take advantage.

The second ground of irregularity upon which the defendant relies is, in the form of the order made by the court for summoning additional jurors. The stated term of the Oyer and Terminer was held on the third Monday of September. On the twenty-third of that month the court made an order adjourning the term until the tenth day of November, and also directing the sheriff to summon, “for the adjourned term of the court, sixty additional jurors, to be drawn by the clerk in the usual way.” This order was obeyed; sixty jurors were drawn and summoned; at the adjourned term a part of the number so drawn and summoned, and also a part of the panel which had been drawn and summoned for the regular term in September, appeared. No objection was made to the regularity of the proceedings. The names of the [346]*346jurors in both panels, and who were in attendance, were placed in the box by the clerk, and the jurors who composed the jury in this case, and in the case of McCann, who was tried at the same session, were drawn from both panels' promiscuously.

It is undoubtedly true that the order in question was technically informal. Having determined to hold an adjourned session of the Court of Oyer and Terminer, it would have been competent for the court, pursuant to the twenty-fourth section of the Code, to direct that a panel of jurors be drawn and summoned as if such court were to be held by original appointment. But then such panel would consist of thirty-six jurors. This number might have been increased by an order of the judge, not the court, that additional jurors, not exceeding twenty-four, be drawn. (2 R. S., 417, §§ 41, 42.) Thus a judge, who is to hold a court for jury trials, may always, if he think fit, have a panel of sixty jurors drawn and summoned to attend such court.

But it is probable that the court intended to proceed under another provision of the statute, by which it was authorized to direct the sheriff to summon from the bystanders, or the county at large, so many persons, qualified to serve as jurors, as might be sufficient to form a jury. The informality consists in directing that the jurors to be summoned “be drawn by the clerk in the usual way,” instead of directing that they be summoned from the county at large. It has been the uniform policy of the legislature to secure, in all cases, both grand and petit jurors possessing the requisite qualifications, and free from all suspicion of partiality or prejudice, by having them drawn by lot from the entire body of citizens liable to jury duty. For this, provision is made by statute in all practicable cases. The order in this case, though not in form authorized by the section of the statute under which it was made, is in conformity with the spirit of the law.

[347]*347In the case of The People v. Colt (3 Hill, 432) an order was made that the sheriff summon three hundred persons from the county at large. The sheriff selected the persons so to be summoned by copying their names from the jury list in the clerk’s office. This was regarded as unobjectionable. Ordinarily, where jurors are to be summoned for the purpose of completing a panel, there is not time to have the jurors drawn. The sheriff is obliged, from the necessity of the case, to summon such as he can most readily find. The necessity of resorting to this mode of selecting a jury, in any case, has uniformly been deprecated. The jurors in this case were, as the statute requires, summoned “ from the county at large,” and the fact that the court directed that such jurors should be selected by lot from the whole body of qualified jurors, instead of allowing the officers by whom they were summoned to select them at pleasure, is not in my judgment such an irregularity as should, after a trial upon the merits, be allowed to affect the validity of the proceedings. I regard the irregularity, if such it may be called, as similar in effect to that of allowing a juror who does not possess the requisite qualifications to sit upon the trial without objection. This often happens, and yet no one ever imagined that it could be made the ground for setting aside a verdict.

I am unable to see anything in the proceedings which should prevent the Oyer and Terminer from proceeding to pass sentence according to the verdict of the jury.

Gould, J.

regard to the two points raised in this case, it is no doubt well to have the true rule understood, as following it will be a very easy matter whichever way it may be settled. And, first, is it true that there really was no regular jury attending the Oyer, by reason of the district attorney’s not having issued the precept spoken of? (2 R. S., 271, §§ 43, 44, 3d ed.) It certainly has been so held in the case of McGuire v. The People (2 Park. Cr. R., 148), but [348]

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Bluebook (online)
3 Park. Cr. 343, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-cummings-nysupct-1857.