State v. Howard

17 N.H. 171
CourtSuperior Court of New Hampshire
DecidedJuly 15, 1845
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 17 N.H. 171 (State v. Howard) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of New Hampshire primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Howard, 17 N.H. 171 (N.H. Super. Ct. 1845).

Opinion

Parker, C. J.

The first exception was settled substantially in the case of Pierce v. The State, 13 N. H. Rep. 556. We have no doubt of the right of the court and the corresponding duty of the court to permit an inquiry to be made whether persons, returned to serve as jurors, are capable of discharging (and, we might add, willing to discharge) the duty which the law imposes upon all jurors, under the sanction of a solemn oath. If we should find, upon such an inquiry, that any juror was determined to disregard his duty and violate his oath, it would be clear that he was unfit to sit in the jury-box; and if, instead of a determined disregard of his duty, he imagines that he is conscientiously opposed to the discharge of that duty, and therefore cannot perform it, the mischief which would be done to the administration of justice is the same as if he was determined wantonly to disregard it. His motive may be better, but his conscience, or what he imagines to be such, which in some instances is perhaps but another name for his will, cannot be set in opposition to the law of the land, at the same [179]*179time that he is intrusted by that law with the enforcement of the law, and engages, under the most solemn sanction knowm to our law and to our religion, that he will faithfully perform the service required of him. There is no statute provision upon the subject, perhaps because the legislature did not originally imagine such a case could occur, and, when it did occur, it was found that legislation was unnecessary. Various cases may be put, showing that it is the duty of the court, aside from any statute provision, to see that a jury is impannelod capable of performing the duty of a jury. See 13 N. H. Rep. 556, before cited.

The statute of this State provides for the punishment of murder, and it divides that crime into two degrees; murder under certairt specified circumstances being murder in the first degree, punishable with death ; and all other murder being murder in the second degree, and punishable by imprisonment. It is as much the bounden duty of the jury, if the facts clearly sustain a case of murder in the first degree, to find the prisoner guilty of murder in that degree, without regard to the punishment awarded to that species of crime, as it is to find the prisoner guilty of murder in the second degree, vdien the offence committed has not been attended with the circumstances which constitute murder in the first degree. The law has not intrusted the jury, or the consciences of particular jurors, with any discretion upon this point.

The next exception relates to the ruling of the court, that it was not a sufficient legal objection to a juror that he had heard about the ease, if he had formed no opinion and was sensible of no bias. This ruling was made after other jurors, who had answered to the same effect, had been passed by, without any determination upon the sufficiency of the objection.

We are entirely clear that this forms no legal exception to a juror. There is nothing in the statute which indi[180]*180cates that it is a cause of challenge to a juror that he “ had heard about the case.”

In order not only to secure, as far as possible, a jury without bias, but one which even the prisoner should be satisfied stood impartial, the court has, in several instances, where the juror, upon his examination, said that he had heard much said respecting the case, ordered that he should be passed by; not because that was ground of challenge, but to give the pi’isoner the greatest possible chance of an impartial jury. That is what was done in this case, and the fact that some jurors had been passed by in this way did not preclude the court from subsequently ruling that it was not a cause of challenge. If this position needed support it might be found in the opinion of Williams, J., 3 Vt. 577, Boardman v. Wood. If the court erred it was in admitting the objections of the defendant to too great an extent, of which he cannot complain.

Upon the trial, the defendant excepted to the admission of certain evidence, tending to show his acts and confessions.

It appeared that, soon after the arrest of the defendant, he was asked where he was the day before, and told that they wanted him to give an account of himself through the day, and to tell it quick; and, on his giving a general answer that he supposed he was at Meaderborough, he was asked, “where there?” and, when he replied, “at Mr. Hanson’s,” the inquiry was, “what Hanson’s?” It is undoubtedly true that the defendant was not only pressed to state particularly where he was the day previous, but that he was urged to make his statement expeditiously. The design seems to have been to induce him to make his statement without taking time to consider, and frame one for the occasion. We can make no more of it, upon-the evidence. There is nothing to show that threats were used; that he might have been induced to make a false statement through fear; and we fail to discover in these [181]*181circumstances any tiling to justify the court in ruling out the evidence. It may be that the defendant was thereby induced to make a confession which he would not have made if he had taken more time to consider the matter, and to frame a statement. But this is not enough. It is not a sufficient exception to the admission of a confession that the prisoner was urged to make & statement, with no promises of favor and no circumstances of intimidation. It is not within the ingenuity of counsel to point out any thing in the circumstances which should have led the defendant to state that he was at Meaderboi’ough, if he was not there, nor to say that he was at Jacob Hanson’s, if he had not been at that place.

The next question was, whether he committed the murder ? and the magistrate who issued the warrant then said to him that he “ had better tell the truth.” For this reason the court ruled out the defendant’s answer. The evidence having been thus rejected, there is no exception to this ruling, and it does not come before us directly for revision. As, however, evidence was subsequently admitted upon the ground that any supposed influence of hope upon the mind of the defendant, from this declaration, must have been dispelled by the intervening circumstances, we take occasion to say, that while the ruling has certainly very respectable authority to support it, we are by no means satisfied that judges, in their anxiety to preserve all the rights of the accused, have not gone farther in excluding confessions than the principle required them to do. It is unquestionably true, that there have been some lamentable convictions based upon the confessions of the accused, which suggest the necessity of great caution in weighing such confessions, and in considering how far they are supported or rendered doubtful by other evidence. But the entire exclusion of the evidence is quite another thing. The principle of admission and exclusion is well settled, and founded upon a most satisfactory basis. [182]*182Confessions, obtained by the hope of favor, or by fear of punishment, are inadmissible. , It is the hope of escape from temporal punishment which excludes, and the-hope 'must be derived from the inducements. Jebb’s C. C. 15, The King v. Gibney; 1 Moody’s C. C. 186, Rex v. Gibham. The evidence is rejected, because the inducements may have led to a false statement, and the confession is therefore not entitled to credit; and not because the public faith is pledged by means of the promise. 1 Leach 263, Rex v. Warickshall.

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Bluebook (online)
17 N.H. 171, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-howard-nhsuperct-1845.