State v. . Driver

78 N.C. 423
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedJanuary 5, 1878
StatusPublished
Cited by50 cases

This text of 78 N.C. 423 (State v. . Driver) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of North Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. . Driver, 78 N.C. 423 (N.C. 1878).

Opinion

Reade, J.

“ Excessive bail should not be required, nor excessive fines imposed, nor cruel or unusual punishment inflicted.” Const. Art. I § 14. This is a provision in our State Constitution and in the Constitution of the United States, and is a copy of the English Dill of Rights.

*425 The defendant was indicted for . an assault and battery upon his wife, and was convicted and sentenced to imprisonment in the County jail for the space of five years, and at the expiration thereof, to give security to keep the peace-for five years in the sum of $500 with sureties. Being unable from poverty to appeal, he files his petition in this Court for a certiorari 'to bring up the case for review, upon the-ground that the sentence was violative of the Constitution, in that, it imposes upon him,“cruel and unusual punishment.”

"We have no information of the particulars of the charge against him except what he states in his petition. He states that while in a passion and under the influence of drink,, he whipped his wife with a switch with such severity as to leave the marks for two or three weeks, and that he kicked her once, and that he had whipped her before, but not with the same severity, and that when brought to trial he pleaded guilty and submitted.

Taking that statement to be true, it would seem that he is a bad man, and not likely to have much of the public-sympathy. And it is not unnatural that Iiis Honor should have been moved to some severity against him. But still there are two questions for us to determine, — first, is the sentence of the Court unconstitutional; and, second, is it a matter which we can review ?

In State v. Miller. 75 N. C. 73, which was an assault with intent to kill, the defendant w^as sentenced to five years imprisonment in the County jail. A new trial was given on other grounds, and it was not necessary that we should decide whether the punishment was lawful, but we dearly intimated our opinion that it was not. We stated that the oldest member of this Court did not remember an instance-where any person had been imprisoned five years in a County jail for any crime however aggravated. And no instance was cited at the Bar, in the argument of that case,. *426 or this, although inquiry was made of the Bar, of such a term of imprisonment. We have examined our Rev. Code which was prior to our penitentiary system and to our Constitution of 1868, when imprisonment was altogether in the County jails, and unless we have inadvertently overlooked some crime, there was none, the punishment whereof was for so long a time. In many cases the punishment was specified; in others, it was not to be less than so and so ; in others, not exceeding so and so; and in others, at the discretion of the Court; these last being generally small offen-ces where it was not usual to punish much; and to cover all cases of felony where the punishment was not specific, there was the following provision: “ Every person who shall hereafter be convicted of any felony for which no specific punishment shall be prescribed by statute, and which is now allowed the benefit of clergy, shall be imprisoned at the discretion of the Court not exceeding two years; or if the offence be infamous, the Court may also sentence the convict to receive one or more publig whippings, to stand in the pillory, or pay a fine, regard being had to the circumstances of each case.” Rev. Code, ch 34, § 27.

And in regard to misdemeanors, where the punishment was not specific, they were to be punished as at common law. Rev. Code, ch. 34, § 120:

So it appears that in clergyable felonies however aggravated, imprisonment was limited to two years in all cases where the punishment was not specific; and it has escaped our attention if in any case imprisonment was prescribed exceeding two years, except in • the cases of embezzlement by the State Treasurer, and in counterfeiting and forgery, where it might be three years. It would seem to be clear that what is greater than has ever been prescribed or known ,or inflicted, must be “ excessive, cruel and unusual.”

Now, it is true, our terms of imprisonment are •much longer, but they are in the Penitentiary, where a man may live and be made useful; but a County jail is a *427 close prison, where life is soon in jeopardy, and where the prisoner it not only useless, but a heavy public expense-

Taking it to be, that the sentence is unlawful, is it subject to review, or is it entirely discretionary with the Judge below? An unlawful, unconstitutional judgment of an in" ferior Court affecting the liberty of the citizen, not the subject of review by the Court of appeals, where every order or judgment involving a matter of la*w or legal inference is reviewable! There cannot be a doubt about it. There is no such anomaly.

It is true that we find very little authority about it, which is probably owing to the fact that the administration of our criminal law is so uniformly humane that there is seldom occasion for complaint: Mr. Justice Story, in commenting on this provision of the Constitution of the United States, says: The provision would seem to be wholly unnecessary in a free government, since it is searcety possible that any department of such a government should authorize or justify such atrocious conduct. It was however adopted as an admonition to all Departments of the National Government to warn them against such violent proceedings as had taken place in England in the arbitrary reigns of the Stuarts. In those times a demand of excessive bail was ofoen made against persons who were odious to the Court and its favorites, and on failure to procure it, they were committed to prison. Enormous fines and amercements were also sometimes imposed, and cruel and vindictive punishments inflicted. Upon this subject Mr.' Justice Black STONE has wisely remarked, that sanguinary laws are a bad symptom of the distemper of any State, or at least of its weak Constitution.” 3 Story, Com. on Const. § 1896.

It is true that there never has been anything in our government, State or National, to provoke such provision, yet it was thought to jbe so appropriate, that it was adopted into our Bill of Rights, and has ever been preserved in our *428 fundamental law, as a “ warning.*’ Nor was it intended to-warn against merely erratic modes of punishment or torture, but applied expressly to “ bail,” “ fines” and “ punishments.” And the earliest application of the provision in England was in 1689, the first year after the adoption of the Bill of Rights in 1688, to avoid an excessive pecuniary fine-imposed upon Lord Devonshire, by the Court of King’s Bench. 11 State Trials, 1354.

His Lordship committed an assault and battery on CoL Culpepper in Whitehall and was .tried before the King’s-Bench, and fined 30,000 pounds. It does not appear that there was any appeal, but the case was considered in the House of Lords, and is very valuable for what was said and done. There were three objections considered by the House of Lords to the judgment of the King’s Bench. 1. That it was a breach of privilege. 2. That the fine was excessive. 3. The commitment till paid.

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Bluebook (online)
78 N.C. 423, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-driver-nc-1878.