State v. Boatwright

44 S.C.L. 407
CourtCourt of Appeals of South Carolina
DecidedMay 15, 1857
StatusPublished

This text of 44 S.C.L. 407 (State v. Boatwright) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of South Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Boatwright, 44 S.C.L. 407 (S.C. Ct. App. 1857).

Opinion

Tbe opinion of tbe Court was delivered by

GrLOVER, J.

Tbe Court bas examined tbis case with that careful and anxious consideration wbicb its importance demands. Not only tbe character of tbe offence and tbe nature of tbe punishment wbicb follows conviction, but tbe points submitted, both constitutional and legal, require that tbe prisoner’s appeal shall be decided on mature deliberation.

Tbe first ground alleges “that tbe presiding judge erred in overruling tbe motion made by defendant to call over tbe jury for challenge, in tbe order in wbicb they appear in tbe panel.” Tbis is almost in terms tbe same ground wbicb was taken and overruled in tbe State vs. Sims, (2 Bail. 29 ;) but we presume from tbe whole tenor of tbe argument, (so fully and earnestly pressed upon tbe attention of tbe Court, both in this and in tbe case of tbe State vs. Price,) that tbe error wbicb it was intended to specify is — that tbe jurors were not presented for challenge according to tbe method prevailing before tbe adoption of tbe late regulation on tbe subject.

Tbe mode pursued by tbe circuit judge in presenting tbe jurors for challenge, was in conformity to tbe 97tk Bule of Court, adopted at November Term, 1856, wbicb directs, that " Hereafter in tbe formation of a jury for tbe trial of a felony, when tbe right of peremptory challenge is claimed and allowed, a child under ten years of age, shall, in tbe presence of tbe Court, draw one from tbe names of all tbe jurors in attendance, wbicb one having answered, shall be presented to tbe accused, and so on until in regular course tbe panel may be exhausted or a jury be formed.”

[409]*409Two objections have been taken in tbe argument against tbis regulation:

1. Tbat it violates tbe 6tb Sec., 9tb Art., of tbe Constitution of tbis State, and

2. Tbat if constitutional, provision bas been made in Acts of Assembly, ordering in wbat manner jurors shall be presented for challenge, and tbat tbe 97th Eule, prescribing a different mode, is illegal.

1. Tbe import of tbe words, “trial by jury as heretofore used in tbis State,” in tbe article and section of tbe Constitution referred to, was elaborately considered in the case of Cregier vs. Bunton, (2 Strob. 487;) and in answer to tbe ground taken here, it would be fruitless to attempt to add to tbe able opinion of Evans, J. Having applied tbe rules of construction necessary to ascertain tbe meaning of tbe framers of tbe Constitution, and having shown tbat tbe Legislature, since tbe adoption of it, bad sustained tbe views which be, as tbe organ of tbe Court expressedj be concludes, tbat tbe Constitu • tion intended to preserve inviolably tbe trial by jury as an institution — as a tribunal for tbe trial of issues of fact; but tbat tbe framers of it did not intend to prohibit all changes in tbe mode of selecting tbe jury. Tbe manner of drawing, tbe qualification, tbe right of challenge, tbe mode in which, they shall be presented for challenge, &c., are preliminary to tbe trial, “and do not enter essentially into tbe idea of a jury trial.” To tbe conclusive reasons on which tbe decision in Cregier vs. Bunion rests, a single remark may be added. It is insisted tbat tbe late rule violates tbe Constitution, and tbat tbe practice prevailing before was conformable to it. When tbe Constitution was adopted, only one jury, a petit jury, was empannelled at tbe Court of General Sessions, for tbe trial of all criminal causes; yet tbe Legislature in 1791, (7 Stat. 271, Sec. 6,) directed tbat two juries shall always be formed to try [410]*410all issues with wbicb they maybe charged. If “trial by jury, as heretofore used in this State,” means as it was regulated by the various Aets of Assembly to 1790, then not only the Act of 1791, but the practice before the late Eule of Court and the Eule also, are in violation of the Constitution. As a tribunal to determine all issues of fact, the trial by jury is forever inviolably preserved by the paramount law; but all the steps necessary to prepare and to organize it, are regulated either by statute or rule of Court.

2. It is insisted that the 97th Eule prescribes a mode of presenting each juror to the prisoner, contrary to the provisions of the Acts of Assembly.

At various times the Legislature has authorized the judges to make rules either for the general dispatch of business, or to carry out the provisions of some special Act. The 4th Sec. of the Act of 1791, (7 Stat. 262,) provides, “ that the said Courts may, from time to time, make such just and reasonable rules and orders for the more regular and convenient conducting and effectual dispatch of business therein, as to them shall seem necessary and proper.” It is only where the law is silent that rules are adopted to regulate the procedure of the Court; and if the mode in which each juror is required to be presented to the prisoner for challenge, by the 97th Eule, violates an Act of Assembly prescribing a different mode, the rule cannot be enforced.

The Act of 1781, (1 Brev. Dig. 447, Sec. 15,) directs that from the names of the persons who shall have been duly summoned, and shall appear to serve as petit jurors, the chief justice shall cause twelve persons to be drawn by a child, under the age aforesaid,” (ten years,) “and the persons so drawn shall serve on all trials at such Court; but in case any of the jurors so drawn shall be challenged, and the challenge allowed, or shall absent themselves or neglect to attend, that [411]*411then tbe names of other persons shall be drawn out of the said box or glass, to fill up and complete the said jury.” When the Constitution was adopted, this was the mode in which jurors were drawn and presented to the prisoner for rejection; but the Act of 1791, (7 Stat. 271,) introduces material changes in this respect. The 6th section provides, that “ out of the whole number drawn and summoned for each of the said County or Circuit Courts, two juries shall always be formed, whose duty it shall be well and truly to try all the issues with which they may be charged, and to execute all the writs of inquiry which may be delivered to them respectively.” Instead of one petit jury to serve on all criminal trials at each Court of General Sessions, and one Common Pleas jury to serve in the trial of all civil causes, this Act requires that two juries shall be empannelled to try all issues, criminal and civil; omitting the provision in the Act of 1731, that in case any of the jurors so drawn shall be challenged, and the challenge allowed, &c., the names of other persons shall be drawn out of the box, &c. Neither the Act of 1791, nor any subsequent Act, has directed that any particular order shall be pursued in drawing the names of the jurors to be presented to the prisoner for challenge. The practice prevailing before the late rule of Court was adopted, was to present juries No. 1 and 2 successively, beginning with the foreman of each, and having exhausted them before completing a jury, then to call the other jurors in attendance in the order in which their names were drawn on the first day of the term. This cannot be said to be conformable to an Act which provides but one jury, and when that is exhausted, directs that the names of the other jurors shall be presented as they ■ are drawn out of the box or glass. In support of the appeal, we are referred to the case of the State vs. Sims, (2 Bail.

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Bluebook (online)
44 S.C.L. 407, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-boatwright-scctapp-1857.