People v. Smith

27 F. Cas. 1186, 3 Wheel. Cr. Cas. 100
CourtU.S. Circuit Court for New York
DecidedApril 15, 1806
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 27 F. Cas. 1186 (People v. Smith) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for 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. Smith, 27 F. Cas. 1186, 3 Wheel. Cr. Cas. 100 (circtny 1806).

Opinion

On Tuesday the 8th of April, Messrs. Ogden and Smith, being separately called upon to plead to their indictments, respectively put in their pleas in abatement, verified by affidavit, which pleas were substantially as follows : That the grand jury, by whom the bill of indictment was found, previously to the finding thereof, had before them illegal testimony, and such as, by the laws of the land, ought not to have been before the said grand jury previously to their [101]*101finding the said bill of indictment; and that the said defendant, on the first day of March last past, was arrested by virtue of a warrant issued by the honourable Matthias B. Talmadge, Esq. district judge of the United States for the district of New-York, and thereupon carried before the said judge, and was then and there sworn and examined by the said judge touching the supposed offences charged in the said indictment, and was then and there illegally, and against his will, forced and compelled by the said judge to answer certain questions touching the said supposed offences, in the said indictment contained, which said examination and deposition of the said defendant were reduced to writing by the said judge, and the said defendant was then and there by the said judge illegally, and against the will of him the said defendant, compelled to sign the "same, and to swear to the same as the same were so reduced to writing and signed, and that the deposition in writing of one (the defendant in the other cause) taken before the said honourable Matthias B. Talmadge, Esq. in the absence of the said defendant, together with the aforementioned legal deposition and examination of him the said defendant, were, before the said indictment was found, illegally laid before, and were before the grand jury, who found the said bill of indictment, and this he is ready to verify, &c.

After these pleas had been filed, the district attorney prayed time until the next day to consider what measures he should adopt, which was immediately granted by the court, without any opposition on the part of the defendants.

On the next day, the dislrict'attorney filed his demurrers to those pleas; and the counsel for the defendants prayed time to join in demurrer till the next day, in order that they might be prepared for the argument.

The discussion relative to postponement of the argument on the demurrer, was then renewed. Mr. Emmet stated, that from the nature of the facts set forth in the pleas, he had rather expected the district attorney would have taken issue on them, than admitted them by demurrer; that therefore the whole of his attention, and he believed also of that of his associate counsel, had hitherto been directed to the best manner of supporting the plea before a jury; that therefore the demurrer was a surprise upon him, and he was not prepared to argue it, except on the general principles which first suggested to the defendant’s counsel the propriety of the plea. He observed further, that no objection had been made to indulging the district attorney with time for consideration j'esterday, because the pleas were probably not expected by him; and there was no wish on the part of the defendant’s counsel to obtain an advantage by surprise.

The court then observed, that if the defendant’s counsel were really unprepared, they should be indulged with time till the afternoon, but no longer; and at half past twelve adjourned till three o’clock.

The sitting of the court being resumed, the district attorney began by stating some formal objections to the plea, which it is unnecessary to mention here," as the judgment of the court was founded exclusively on the general objection on the merits, that no such plea would lie.

[102]*102On this general question he argued, in support of the demurrer, that this plea was a perfectly novel experiment, for which no precedent or authority could be found. This very novelty was conclusive evidence that it would not lie; for otherwise it is inconceivable that it should not have been made use of before now. It manifestly appears, from the silence of all the elementary writers, that there can be no such plea in abatement. Lord Hale (2 Hale’s PI. Cr. cap. 30, p. 236) details all those pleas, among which such as this is not to be found. They are, according to him, 1st- Such defects as arise upon the indictment itself, and the insufficiency of it. 2d. Such defects as are in matters of fact, as misnomer or false addition of the prisoner ; and 3d. By matter of record. The acts of grand juries are not to be brought into court and questioned in this way ; they are independent and irresponsible; they judge- for themselves of the testimony upon which they ought to find indictments, and no one has a right to inquire; nor has he, without a violation of the grand juror’s oath, the means of knowing what evidence they may have had before them. Ho injury can result from this ; for it is the duty of the grand jury to decide on ex parte evidence ; and if they decide wrong, or prefer a false charge, the natural and the only remedy is, that the accused will be acquitted on his trial before the petty jury. The object of the grand jury is only to judge whether there is probable cause for putting a party to answer a charge, and therefore it should not be bound down to the same strictness of investigation as the tribunal which is ultimately to decide upon the charge. The counsel for the defendant have probably been led to adopt this step, by Dr. Dodd’s case; (1 Leach’s Cases in Crown Law, 184.) but in truth it is an argument against them; for it is no precedent of a plea in abatement. If such a plea would have lain, why was it not adopted in that case ? On the centrar)', the matter there submitted to the court, was laid before it on a summary application; which clearly shows, that the prisoner’s counsel had no idea it could be taken advantage of in any other way.

The defendant’s counsel replied as follows:

Among the authorities cited on the opposite side, is the arrangement in 2 Hale’s PI. Cr. chap. 30, p. 236, of pleas in abatement of the indictment; and from the circumstance that a plea similar to that now under discussion is not found there, it is inferred, that no. such plea can exist. But it appears that Lord Hale’s arrangement has not been very accurately examined. He classes those pleas as follows: 1st. On such defects as arise upon the indictment itself and the insufficiency of it. 2d. Such defects as are in matters of fact, as misnomer or false addition of the prisoner; and, 3d. By matters of record. How, we do not see why our plea does not come under the second of those heads; for it is a mistake to confine that head merely to misnomer or false addition of the prisoner. The arrangement comprehends pleas from such defects as are on the face of the indictment itself, which perhaps more properly ought to be called demurrers;' 2d. Such as arise from matters dehors the indictment in pais ; and, 3d. From matters dehors the indictment of record—comprehending every possible matter that can arise. Is not the circumstance alleged in our plea, that illegal evidence has. been offered to the grand jury, if it be true matter of fact and dehors [103]

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Bluebook (online)
27 F. Cas. 1186, 3 Wheel. Cr. Cas. 100, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-smith-circtny-1806.