People v. Hates

1 Edm. Sel. Cas. 582
CourtCourt Of Oyer And Terminer New York
DecidedSeptember 15, 1848
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 1 Edm. Sel. Cas. 582 (People v. Hates) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court Of Oyer And Terminer New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
People v. Hates, 1 Edm. Sel. Cas. 582 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1848).

Opinion

Edmonds, J., in delivering the decision of the court on the challenge, said he was glad that this question had been submitted to the court rather than to triers, as it would enable them to lay down a rule on this much vexed question, which would serve for a guide in this and other cases.

The doctrine as to what bias would disqualify a juror, as recently understood, had worked very disastrously on the administration of public justice. In one case (that of Mary Bodine) over 6,000 jurors had been summoned, and more than 4,000 had been examined on challenges to the favor and set aside on account of bias. That bias was nothing more than having read a newspaper account of a former trial, and on that formed an opinion or imbibed an impression. The effect had been to allow hundreds to swear themselves out of the jury box, in order to avoid the burden of the jury duty in that case, and there was good reason to believe that very many, in order to disqualify themselves, had taken pains to read the case and express an opinion, in order to produce that result. And even where that was not the case, the stringency of the rule excluded from the jury men of reading and intelligence, and drove the court to seek for its aid in the administration of justice only among the ignorant and uninformed. These evils, operating in a community where people are so much engaged in business, and where almost every one who can read does read the daily papers, were of an alarming nature, inasmuch as it afforded to the real criminal, one whose [584]*584guilt has been attended with features of peculiar atrocity, an additional and unmerited chance of escape.

These evils had arisen, not so much from the application of the rule which the court made in the case of Bodine as from the sanction there given to the ruling in the case of Mather. That case grew out of the anti-masonic excitement which raged with such violence in the western part of the State. A juror challenged for principal cause testified that he had no fixed opinion as to the defendant’s guilt, other than such impressions as are formed on history and common reports. He referred to printed statements in the newspapers, never having had any information from persons acquainted with the transaction. If the evidence should support the circumstances he had heard, he had a fixed belief as to guilt, if they should not be proved, his belief would be removed. The challenge for principal cause was sustained, and the juror set aside. On exceptions by the public prosecutor, the Supreme Court sustained the ruling below, and in doing so used the language quoted by the prisoner’s counsel here, and they went further and ruled that they who believe on the slightest evidence, or no evidence at all, were more disqualified than a grand juror.who had patiently listened to all the evidence on which an indictment was found, or one who had witnessed the commission of the offense.

The bias, in this regard, that disqualifies, is the having a fixed and definite opinion. When that exists it is a ground for principal challenge, and is to be passed upon by the court. An opinion or belief short of that is not a ground for principal challenge, but to the favor, when it becomes a question of fact for the triers to determine. Is there no rule of law to guide the triers in the discharge of this duty? Is it not the duty of the presiding judge, in submitting the case to them, to furnish them some light to their path? Or must he sit supinely by and suffer them to run wild with some such impossible idea as that the mind of the juror must be, in respect to the case in hand, “like a blank piece of paper,” or be governed by some such unintelligible maxim as this, that the [585]*585juror “must stand indifferent as he stands unsworn?” Or must he he an indifferent spectator to the scene of hundreds of jurors discharging themselves from a disagreeable duty, and feel himself powerless to arrest so grievous an evil ? He had not, in the Bodine ease, so understood the duty of a presiding judge. When, therefore, he submitted the question to the triers, he advised them not to reject a juror unless he had a fixed and definite opinion, which it would require evidence to remove. In this he was held to have erred, and when a juror under examination had stated that he had formed no opinion, he excluded the inquiry -whether what he had read had made any impression on his mind, or had produced any belief there, for two reasons—first, because it was converting a direct into a cross-examination, and next, because it was immaterial whether it had or not, and he had always understood it to be a rule not to admit testimony which the court would afterward be bound to instruct a jury to disregard. In this also he was held to have erred, and it was distinctly announced that every question might be asked which tended to show the state of „• the juror’s mind.

When he afterward came to apply the rule thus laid down, he found the court placed in this position:

He who had formed an opinion as to the guilt or innocence of the prisoner was excluded from the jury;

As was he who had formed an opinion as to the truth or falsehood of any of the facts which went to establish the guilt or innocence, for it was so held by Chief Justice Mabshall in Burr’s case •

He who had formed such opinion from a personal knowledge of the facts;

Or like the grand juror or committing magistrate, from hearing an ex parte statement by the witnesses, though in the absence of cross-examination or defense;

Or like the great mass of the reading public, from newspaper reports, the truth or falsehood of which they could not know, and did not inquire into, were alike excluded, and were not to be trusted, with the effort to decide according to the [586]*586evidence, because, in the language of the- Mather -case, “ the law held them incapable of doing so.” ■

And the juror, himself might be examined, .though he by his evidence proclaimed his own infamy, in prejudging-a fellow creature in a matter of life, and death, upon a mere, newspaper report.

And in his examination any question might -be asked him which .tended, to show the state of .his mind, even though he had already declared that he had formed no opinion in- the matter.

Under such circumstances he could discover. nothing that was left for the court, but to give to the triers the vague and indefinite, advice not to reject a juror for slight causes. ■

This, it was immediately apparent, was not enough -to. -prevent the .designing from relieving themselves from an unpleasant, task, or to prevent the exclusion from the jury box of almost every juror of intelligence,, information, and .character.

He rejoiced, however, now to perceive that better, views were taken of .this question, and that the decision of the Supreme Court, in the eases of Mather and Bodine, were “ misunderstood.”

In the ease of Bodine (1 Denio, 285), he charged the -triers that “ in order to form such opinion as disqualifies, two things are necessary—a belief in the truth-of the facts. upon which the opinion is founded, and a. conclusion .founded on such belief.

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Related

Greenfield v. People
6 Abb. N. Cas. 1 (New York Court of Appeals, 1878)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1 Edm. Sel. Cas. 582, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-hates-nyoytermct-1848.