State v. Bolitho

136 A. 164, 103 N.J.L. 246, 1927 N.J. Sup. Ct. LEXIS 441
CourtSupreme Court of New Jersey
DecidedJanuary 26, 1927
StatusPublished
Cited by23 cases

This text of 136 A. 164 (State v. Bolitho) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of New Jersey primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Bolitho, 136 A. 164, 103 N.J.L. 246, 1927 N.J. Sup. Ct. LEXIS 441 (N.J. 1927).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Kalisch, J.

The plaintiff in error was convicted in the Morris County Court of Oyer and Terminer on an indictment charging him with malfeasance in his office of prosecutor of the pleas for the county of Morris. The indictment contains *248 eleven counts. These counts differ from each other in the nature of the malfeasance alleged to have been committed by the accused, and in that they charge separate and distinct acts of malfeasance .to have been committed by him on different days of the years 1923 and 1924. The jury found him guilty on the first, fifth, sixth, seventh and tenth counts, and not guilty on the eighth and eleventh counts. The second, third, fourth and ninth counts were eliminated by the court from consideration by the jury. On each of the counts under which the plaintiff in error was convicted, it was adjudged that he be confined in the state prison at hard labor for a maximum term of three years and a minimum term of two years, and that the sentences should run concurrently.

The case is brought here for review on a strict writ of error and bills of exceptions, and also by virtue of the one hundred and thirty-sixth section of the Criminal Procedure act. Under the former there are one hundred and eleven assignments of errors for a reversal of the judgment, and under the latter there are ninety-six specifications of causes for reversal set forth to the same end. Many of the specifications of causes are repetitions of the assignments of errors. The assignments and specifications have been grouped and argued together, in an elaborate brief of three hundred and thirty-one pages, submitted by counsel of plaintiff in error, and these will now be considered in the order in which they are presented.

The first point in the brief argued and relied on by counsel of plaintiff in error for a reversal of the judgment invokes consideration of assignments of errors, 1, 2, 12, 13, 14, 47, 48, 49 and 50, and specifications of causes, 1, 2, 63, 64, 65 and 66. These raise the question as to the legal propriety of the judicial action of the trial judge in denying a challenge on behalf of the plaintiff in error upon the ground that the court was disqualified, in law, to hear and determine the issues involved under the indictment.

The challenge is in writing. It states, in substance, that it is made because the interest of the presiding Justice Charles W. Parker, “as shown by the following enumerated acts, is *249 such as to indicate a state of mind and an opinion contrary to the impartial administration of justice towards this defendant, to wit:

“1. Without authority in law, he ordered an investigation upon a petition signed by a less number of taxpayers anti-freeholders of the county of Morris than required by law, said petition not setting up any facts constituting reason for such investigation, and containing merely a conclusion, namely, that there were 'deplorable conditions’ in the county of Morris.”

2. That Mr. Justice Parker, without authority in law, appointed Wilfred Jayne, Jr., to prosecute and conduct the investigation without authority in law, &c.

3. That notwithstanding the law of May 29th, 1913, known as the "Chancellor-Sheriff Jury act,” Mr. Justice Parker ordered and directed that the sheriff of the county of Morris be removed and thereby William 0. Sweeny, the other jury commissioner, was prevented from acting as such, and that the said justice appointed two elisors, namely, Yictor A. Weiss and Joshua R. Salmon, to select and impanel an elisor grand jury, &c. That the said Salmon is licensed to practice law in the State of New Jersey, and that under the “Chancellor-Sheriff Jury act” of 1913 he was not eligible to be appointed a jury commissioner; that the said justice was interested in and took part in the selection of the elisor grand jury, in that he furnished to the Elisor Joshua R. Salmon three different lists of names of grand juries previously selected at previous times in the Court of Oyer and Terminer; that the list supplied to the elisor was not a list from which a grand jury could be legally drawn under the Chancellor-Sheriff Jury act; that the said elisors added twenty or more different persons to the list given to them by the justice, and chose from those added names in making up the grand jury; that Nathaniel C. Toms, clerk of the grand jury, and under civil service, at the request of Mr. Justice Parker, resigned, and one J. Donald Masterton, a non-resident of the county was appointed by the justice as temporary clerk, though he was not selected from the civil service list nor an employe of the office of the prosecutor of the pleas of Morris *250 county; that the said justice ordered and permitted the said Masterton to take the testimony of witnesses appearing before the elisor grand jury, &c.; that the said justice knew that there were only twenty-two persons sworn in as grand jurors, whereas the law requires that a grand jury shall consist of twenty-three jurors.

To this challenge there was a demurrer filed on behalf of the state, the legal effect of this pleading being an admission of such facts as are properly stated as a ground of challenge, but a denial of their sufficiency, in law, to disqualify the trial judge to hear and determine the issues involved in the case.

The avowed basis of the challenge, plainly stated therein, is that the interest of the trial judge, as shown by his acts enumerated in the challenge, is such as to indicate a state of mind and an opinion contrary to the impartial administration of justice towards the accused.

Proceeding upon the theory that the acts of the trial judge complained of in the challenge are accurately stated, re is quite obvious that they fall far short from showing that he had any personal or private interest apart from a duty, which he, as a judicial officer, owed to the general public, namely, to protect the people of Morris county against corruption and misconduct of its public officers in the administration of the county’s business; and in order to achieve the end in view, he ordered, under the statute, an investigation, so that offenders betraying the public trust may be unveiled and brought to condign punishment.

The regularity of the procedure which invoked the investigation is not properly subject to a collateral attack, and, moreover, was, as aptly said by the trial judge, wholly irrelevant to the subject-matter of the challenge. The other matters spread out in the challenge do not indicate any such personal and private interest in the cause, as would legally disqualify the trial judge from hearing and deciding the issues involved under the indictment.

The proper function of a challenge to the competency of a judge to sit in a cause on the ground of interest and bias has been, apparently, misconceived by the challenger, for in considering the import of the other matters set forth in the *251

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
136 A. 164, 103 N.J.L. 246, 1927 N.J. Sup. Ct. LEXIS 441, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-bolitho-nj-1927.