State v. Kemp

24 N.W. 349, 34 Minn. 61, 1885 Minn. LEXIS 162
CourtSupreme Court of Minnesota
DecidedJuly 23, 1885
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 24 N.W. 349 (State v. Kemp) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Minnesota primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Kemp, 24 N.W. 349, 34 Minn. 61, 1885 Minn. LEXIS 162 (Mich. 1885).

Opinions

BebRV, J.

By the charter of the city of Rochester, (enacted in 1867,) the city justice is invested with the exclusive jurisdiction “to hear all complaints and conduct all examinations and trials in criminal eases within the city, cognizable before a justice” of the peace, subject to certain exceptions not important to be specified here. As we understand it, this gives him exclusive jurisdiction, subject to the exceptions mentioned, to act within the city in hearing complaints and conducting examinations and trials in criminal cases arising within the county, such as are ordinarily cognizable by a justice of the peace.

A law passed in 1878 provides for the selection, from the qualified electors of the city exclusively, of a list of persons to serve as jurors before said justice. The question is whether, upon the trial of an offence against the general laws of the state, a jury impanelled from such list is constitutional? The defendant says not, and relies upon section 6, article 1, of our state constitution, which provides that “in all criminal prosecutions the accused shall enjoy the right to a trial by a jury of the county or district wherein the crime shall have been committed, which county or district shall have been previously ascertained by law.”

We perceive no reason why the word “district” may not properly be held to designate an area larger or smaller than a county. The state of facts appearing in State v. Gut, 13 Minn. 315, (341,) presents an instance of a “district” embracing several counties; and a city, although but part of a county, might by proper legislation be erected into a district by itself. And the meaning of the constitutional provision we take to be that the accused shall have (1) the right of trial by a jury of the county, where his crime was committed, if the criminal jurisdiction of the court before which he is being tried embraces and is confined to crimes committed anywhere in the county; and (2) a right of trial by a jury of the district where his crime was committed, whether such district be larger or smaller than a county, when the [63]*63criminal jurisdiction of tbe court before which he is being tried embraces and is confined to crimes committed anywhere in such district; that is to say, the jury must come from the jurisdictional territory of the court, whether it be a county or district. The jurisdictional territory of the city justice of Rochester is Olmsted county; that is to say, he has jurisdiction to hear all complaints and conduct all trials and examinations for such crimes committed within the county as fall within the ordinary cognizance of a justice of the peace. And hence it follows that the constitutional jury in hearings and trials before him in criminal cases arising under the general laws of the state is a jury of the county of Olmsted.

But what is a jury of a county? Formerly the jury was required to be returned from the vieinetwn, oxvisne, — that is to say, from the neighborhood of the place where the cause of action was laid, or the crime charged to have been committed, — and therefore some of them (two, four, or six, at different periods) were required to come from the hundred in which such place lay, and it was a cause of challenge if they did not. To avoid such vexatious challenges this was changed, as respects civil actions, by 4 Anne, c. 16, and, as respects penal actions, by 24 George II. c. 18, so that it was sufficient that the jurors came from the body of the county at large, though not from the particular hundred. But as respects criminal actions, no statutory change of the kind mentioned appears to have been made until 6 George IV. c. 50, though by general acquiescence, and, perhaps, under the active sanction of the courts, challenges for want of hundredors appear to have fallen into disuse before that time as respects that class of actions. Upon this whole subject see 3 Bl. Comm. 360; Co. Litt. lib. 2, c. 11, § 193, note 2, [191;] 2 Hale, P. C. c. 36.

So far as we can discover, the law of England, as it stood just prior to our revolution, and, of course, irrespective of the act of George IV., was satisfied if the jury was returned from any part of the county where a cause of action was laid or a crime committed. The effect of the changes referred to was simply to remove the necessity of hun-dredors, and the words, “de corpore comitatus,” “from the body of the county,” “of the county,” “of the vicinage,” as they appear in English statutes and in American constitutions and laws, mean no more, [64]*64as applied to jurors, than that they must come from some part of the given county. Sir Matthew Hale says that jurors are “to be de vicineto, but this is not necessarily required, for they of one side of the county are by law de vicineto to try an offence of the other side of the county.” 2 P. C. 264. So, in the definition of a jury, given in the opinion of the justices of the supreme court of New Hampshire, (41 N. H. 550,) jurors are, as respects the place from which they are required to be returned, described simply as men “having their homes within the jurisdictional limits of the court,” and this definition is adopted by the supreme court of Nevada in State v. McGlear, 11 Nev. 39, 60. In accordance with this view, what is now section 802, U. S. Rev. St., must have been passed in 1789. This provides that “jurors shall be returned from such parts of the district, from time to time, as the court shall direct, so as to be most favorable to an impartial trial, and so as not to incur an unnecessary expense, or unduly to burden the-citizens of any part of the district with such services.” This was passed prior to the adoption of the sixth amendment to the constitution of the United States, which declares that “in all criminal prosecutions the accused shall enjoy the right to a speedy and public trial by an impartial jury of the state and district wherein the crime shall have been committed, which district shall have been previously ascertained by law.” But in 1854 it was followed and upheld in United States v. Stowell, 2 Curt. C. C. 153. The opinion in the ease was delivered by Mr. Justice Curtis, (Judge Sprague concurring,) by whom the practice of selecting jurors from particular parts of the district to the exclusion of others is spoken of with approval, and as one of long standing in the district of Massachusetts.

The particular objection that this mode of selecting jurors was obnoxious to the sixth amendment does not appear, in the report of the case, to have been raised; but it is not at all probable that an objection of that magnitude (if an objection at all) would have been overlooked by a jurist of the great learning and acuteness of Mr. Justice Curtis, or that, without observing it, he would have pronounced the section (802) to be “in force.”

In Virginia, a law of 1877-78 requires the venire facias in certain criminal cases of high grade to direct the summoning as jurors of [65]*65persons "residing remote from the place where the offence is charged to have been committed;” that is to say, so as to exclude such parts of the county as are near such place. Poindexter's Case, 33 Grat. 766; Baccigalupo’s Case, Id. 807.

In Colt v. Eves, 12 Conn. 242, a law providing that jurors for the city courts of Hartford should be taken from the free men of the city, although such courts had jurisdiction over the county, was sustained. In Gardiner v. People, 6 Parker, Crim. E.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
24 N.W. 349, 34 Minn. 61, 1885 Minn. LEXIS 162, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-kemp-minn-1885.