State v. Keeran

5 R.I. 497
CourtSupreme Court of Rhode Island
DecidedSeptember 6, 1858
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 5 R.I. 497 (State v. Keeran) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Rhode Island primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Keeran, 5 R.I. 497 (R.I. 1858).

Opinion

*500 Ames, C. J. 1

This is the second time that the constitutional validity of chapter 73 of the Revised Statutes, entitled “ Of the suppression of certain nuisances,” has been judicially before us, at the instance of the same counsel, and in the same mode; to wit, by a motion in arrest of judgment filed in the court of common pleas, after conviction, by an offender against the provisions of this chapter, and certified to us by that court. The questions raised in the former case were argued principally by the submission of a brief of points on the part of the defendant; the attorney-'general having been stopped by the court. The court, soon after the argument, delivered an opinion, sustaining the act in the particulars in which it had been impeached ; and the present argument, suggesting that there had before been no full hearing of the questions, and that the court hastily formed its opinion upon them, comes to us somewhat in the form of a criticism upon, and an answer to, that opinion. We have gladly availed ourselves of an opportunity to re-hear the same counsel, in full, upon these questions, and with every desire to correct any error into which, from any cause, we may have fallen. Having acted, and been obliged to act before, only with such light as was afforded to us, we have not come to the new hearing of these questions, as seems to be supposed by the counsel for the defendant, with a predetermination to support this statute. Like all other statutes of the general assembly, it is regarded by us as an act of a coordinate branch of the same government, with every presumption in favor of its constitutional validity; and only when its repugnancy to the constitution is made plainly to appear to us, shall we hold it, or any part of it, to be void, in obedience to the higher and controlling law of the constitution, which is alike obligatory upon the general assembly and upon ourselves. Seeking no collision with the legislative branch of this government, we shall shrink from none which is forced upon us; but endeavor, whilst we sit here, according to our oaths, “to support the constitution of the United States, and the constitution and laws of this state, and to administer justice, without respect of persons, and do equal right to the poor and to the rich.” Nor shall we, on the other *501 hand, be deterred from supporting a statute limiting or suppressing the sale of liquors, if, in our judgment, constitutionally enacted, from any fear that we shall be suspected of interested motives under the circumstances in which we are placed. For once, and for all, and everywhere, we desire it to be understood, that we look upon the highest judicial station as a station of infamy and disgrace, if it does not elevate us above every fear but that of doing wrong, and above every inclination but that of doing right.

With these remarks, which we deemed that the occasion •called for, we propose to consider the fresh argument which has been addressed to us on the part of the defendant; resolved to give him the benefit of every constitutional restriction Upon the legislative power, avoiding the statute under which he has been convicted, and to refuse to him every demand which he urges against that power, when exercised within the limits of the constitution.

1st. This statute is said to be void, because it conflicts with the constitutional presumption of the innocence of one accused of crime, and with his constitutional rights of trial, by setting up against the defendant, in relation to the offence with which he is charged, an artificial standard of primá facie proof, unknown to the common law. At the argument, we suggested, that this objection could not be urged in the case before us, unless, which was not claimed, it was contended, that the provision of the statute relating to proof avoided all of it that was necessary to a conviction in every possible state of the evidence, and although the proof was wholly of the kind and degree required by the common law. The ground of this suggestion was, that the record before us, which alone we could consider upon a motion in arrest, did not show upon what evidence the defendant was convicted, and therefore did not raise the objection which we were asked to consider. The counsel for the defendant, after arguing the point of practice, acquiesced in the suggestion of the court; but as we were desired specially to reconsider our judgment upon this point, we propose, shortly, to do so.

The record certified to us contains nothing but an indictment *502 in the usual form, charging the prisoner with having kept a building, place, or tenement used for the illegal sale and keeping for sale of intoxicating liquors; the verdict, which, upon trial of the defendant in the court of common pleas for this county, under the indictment, was returned against him ; and a motion in arrest of judgment, which avers, generally, as the ground upon which it is filed, that the act under which the indictment was found, being chapter 73 of the Revised Statutes, “ is repugnant to and inconsistent with the provisions of the constitution and laws of the United States, and repugnant to and inconsistent with the provisions of the constitution of' Rhode Island.” The kind or degree of proof exhibited against the accused upon his trial, which was admitted by the court, and upon which the conviction proceeded, nowhere appears upon the record, as it might and should have been made to do by a proper bill of exceptions, if the accused had desired to contest before us its constitutional character or adequacy as evidence. As a court of error, we have, and can have, no knowledge of the testimony admitted in the court below; and, as it is the duty of him who objects error in legal proceedings properly to present and point it out to the court upon which he calls to correct it, and as upon a motion in arrest no errors can be considered but those apparent upon the record, it would seem to be a necessary inference, that if no statement of the improper admission of, or rulings upon, testimony were brought upon the record by the defendant, it was because there were none for him to state.

It is now contended, that however this may be in general, the rule is the reverse in application to the case before us; and that if the statute, though it allows all evidence admissible by the rules of common law, permit the offence created by it to be proved by a kind or degree of evidence short of the supposed constitutional standard, we are bound to presume, in every case, upon a motion in arrest, that the conviction was procured upon objectionable rather than unobjectionable evidence. If we were to act upon such a notion, the consequence might be, that we should send back a case for a new trial upon a presumed objection which never existed; and for aught that we see, as often *503 as a verdict was rendered, must continue to reverse it, and to send the case back, upon a like false presumption. No reason is given why, in such a case, the plain and sensible rule of general practice, which requires Mm who would avoid a verdict for error first to point it out, should be reversed, or why a motion in arrest should go farther than to errors upon the record.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
5 R.I. 497, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-keeran-ri-1858.