People v. O'loughlin

3 Utah 133
CourtUtah Supreme Court
DecidedJune 15, 1881
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 3 Utah 133 (People v. O'loughlin) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Utah 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. O'loughlin, 3 Utah 133 (Utah 1881).

Opinion

TwiSS, J.:

The indictment in this case charges the defendants, and divers other persons, whose names are unknown to the grand jurors, to the number of about two hundred and fifty, of the crime of riot on the first day of February, 1881, at the county of Washington, in the territory of Utah; that by the use of force and violence, and by threats to then and there use force and violence, accompanied by the immediate power of execution, and acting together without authority of law, did then and there feloniously disturb the public peace, etc., “ and did take unlawful and forcible possession of the property of the Stormont Mining Company, * * * and did by the use of force and violence, and threats to use force and violence, accompanied by the immediate power of execution, unlawfully, forcibly, and feloniously drive away from the possession of the said property, to wit, the Buckeye and Savage mines, one W. I. Allen, and other employees of said company, having charge and control of said property and mines, and engaged at work thereon, and did feloniously and unlawfully, by the use of force and violence as aforesaid, compel and force said Allen and said employees to stop and quit work thereon, and leave the same, and then and there took forcible possession of the same, to the great damage of said company, [140]*140and bo the terror and disturbance of said employees, and of the public peace, contrary to the form of the statutes of Utah territory in such case made and provided, and against the peace and dignity of the people aforesaid.”

Each of the defendants pleaded not guilty. No one of the defendants requiring a separate trial, they were jointly tried, and the jury found a verdict of guilty as to all of them. A motion for a new trial was overruled, and the case appealed to this court.

The error first alleged is the overruling of the challenge on the part of the defendants, of John Lowder, one of the jurors, who upon his voire dire said he had heard a report of the facts of the case, from which he had formed an opinion, which he believed to be true, but he did not know that he had ever expressed it; that it would take evidence to overcome such belief; I believe it like other reports I hearthat it was a conditional and not an unconditional opinion; the condition was as to the truth of the story he had heard; “ it was unconditional if the report was true;” when “ I heard the story, I believed there was something in it, of course,” and the conditions about it were, in case the transaction did really take place,” that he would require proof in the case before he would be willing to act. That he had no opinion, bias, or prejudice, or belief as to the guilt or innocence of either of the defendants, that would prevent him from acting impartially as a juryman. The challenge was made under the statutory provision disqualifying a juror who has “ formed or expressed an unqualified opinion or belief that the prisoner is guilty or not guilty of the offense charged.”

We are of the opinion that there was no error in overruling the challenge. The condition of this juror’s mind was such as would usually or naturally be formed by any person, upon hearing a report of an alleged commission of crime. He had heard a story; he believed it; he says, “I believed there was something in it, of course.” “Nobody disputed it; I believed it like other reports I hear.” It is obvious that this opinion or belief was liable to be changed by the statements of the next person he might meet; this is not a conviction of the mind, a fixed conclusion, “an unqualified opinion or belief.”

[141]*141Impressions, or qualified or conditional opinions, formed upon the mere hearing of a report, which, in the mind of an honest man capable of acting as a juror, easily yield to the testimony of witnesses under the sanction of an oath, having personal knowledge of the facts, constitute no objection to a juror; but an unqualified opinion or belief which closes the mind against the testimony presented in opposition to it, resists its force, and perverts the judgment, does constitute a good and valid objection; an unqualified opinion or belief is fixed and certain, and is incompatible with reasonable doubt and uncertainty, and is not dependent upon the existence or non-existence of any extrinsic fact. The defendants were entitled to a trial by an impartial jury. This provision of our statute is a simplification of the common law, and the opinions of the state courts, where no statute exists, or where the same or similar statutes are in force, are authority with us in applying the facts of this case to the law, and deducing conclusions. The question at issue is, Do the statements of the juror upon his voire dire show him to have had, at the time, an unqualified opinion or belief as to the guilt or innocence of the defendant ? In Commonwealth v. Webster, 5 Cush. 297, Shaw, C. J., said: “ The opinion or judgment must be something more than a vague impression formed from casual conversations with others, or from reading abbreviated newspaper reports. It must be such an opinion upon the merits of the question as would be likely to bias or prevent a candid judgment from a full hearing of the evidence.” This is clearly the law: State v. Wilson, 38 Conn. 126; Curley v. Commonwealth, 84 Pa. St. 151; Staup v. Commonwealth, 74 Id. 458 ; People v. Reynolds, 16 Cal. 128; Gardner v. People, 3 Scam. 83. In closely balanced cases the appearance of the juror, the manner in which he is examined by the counsel, and its effect upon him, sometimes justly have great weight with the trial judge. In view of this, the court in Ortwein v. Commonwealth, 76 Pa. St. 414, said: “ Much weight, therefore, is to be given to the judgment of the court below, in whose presence the juror appears, and by whom his manner and conduct, as well as his language, are scrutinized.”

The defendant Murphy for himself alone, and not for himself and the other defendants, peremptorily challenged the [142]*142juror Parry, which challenge was objected to by the prosecution, and the objection was sustained by the court. In support of this challenge, it was claimed under the act of congress, June 23,1874 (known as the Poland bill), providing that “ each party, whether in civil or criminal cases, shall be allowed three peremptory challenges, except in capital eases, where the prosecution and defense shall each be allowed fifteen challenges,” that each individual defendant had the right to three peremptory challenges; and in support of this claim, the counsel urged that in criminal cases, each defendant must plead for himself in person, each makes a separate issue with the people on the question of his guilt; if convicted, each must suffer punishment for himself, or each may be pardoned on his own merits; one can appeal without affecting another. In all this, it is claimed there is a distinction between criminal and civil cases. In a civil case one judgment only is recorded, one satisfaction pays for all, and therefore in a criminal case the trial is necessarily separate to a certain extent; in other words, the word “party,” as used in the statute, means each individual defendant. This reasoning, although plausible and ingenious, is not good. If it is, these thirteen defendants had the right to make in the aggregate thirty-nine peremptory challenges.

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3 Utah 133, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-oloughlin-utah-1881.