State v. McDonnell

32 Vt. 491
CourtSupreme Court of Vermont
DecidedJanuary 15, 1860
StatusPublished
Cited by37 cases

This text of 32 Vt. 491 (State v. McDonnell) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Vermont primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. McDonnell, 32 Vt. 491 (Vt. 1860).

Opinion

Eedfield, Ch. J.

I. The first objection made to the fairness of the trial in the court below, and which seems to be regarded by the prisoner’s counsel as showing, to some extent, that the animus of the whole was unfavorable to their client, is the alleged terms of disrespect in which the judge made allusion to that rule of law now recognized in this State, that the jury may judge of the law as well as the fact, in criminal cases. Any attempt on the part of ¿x judge, in the trial of an important criminal case, to prejudice the jury against- an established rule of law applicacable to all cases, or to the particular case, would very justly expose him to severe criticism. But we do not feel that such is precisely the present case.

The rule of law referred to is strikingly peculiar, as applicable to jury trials. Where the judge and jury are both required to assume their distinct and proper functions, the one of the law, and the other of the fact, it will scarcely be claimed to have any just application to ordinary cases. It surely will not be claimed that the object and purpose of the rule is to enable ingenious and eloquent counsel to procure the acquittal of guilty persons, by inducing juries to put a misconstruction upon the law, in opposition to the charge of the court. Nor that the jury are really more competent judges of the law than the court are.

The most which can fairly be claimed in favor of the rule is, that it is one of those great exceptional rules intended for the security of the citizen against any impracticable refinements in the law, or any supposable or possible tyranny or oppression of the courts. It has always been regarded as belonging rather to the department of governmental polity than to that of jurisprudence, in the strict sense of that term, and in that view is more justly considered a political than a legal maxim.

It has indeed been claimed, as one of those great landmarks, defining, and intended to secure the enforcement of English liberty, which, although always more or less in conflict and dispute, between the advocates of prerogative on the one hand, and of the largest liberty of the subject on the other, in that country, from which we in fact derive the principle of the rule; and which, because it is an exceptional rule, will always be likely to be characterized as an absurdity by the mere advocates of logical sym[532]*532metry in the law, will nevertheless he sure, in the long run, to constantly gain ground, and become more and more firmly fixed in the hearts and sympathies of those with whom liberty and law are almost synonymous, and may therefore be regarded rather as an instinct, or a sentiment, than a mere logical deduction. It is therefore not a thing to be much reasoned about. It is a power, perhaps, more strictly than a right, in its primitive existence, but such a power as would be less likely to be wrongly exercised by juries when it was conceded, than if kept in perpetual conflict by occasional and sometimes acrimonious denials on the part of the court.

It is upon this ground that I, for myself, long before the dis-i tinct recognition of the rule by this court, in State v. Croteau, 23 Vt. 14, came to the conclusion that it was best, as a matter of prudence, not to allow the question to be brought into contest between the court and juries. Let juries feel that they have the power and the right to judge of the law in criminal cases, over the heads of the court, and that they may do this in all criminal cases, if they choose to take the responsibility, and in practice it will be found 'that they will not do it, except in extreme cases. And in such cases it is perhaps proper enough that they should do it. Judges are liable to their full share of infirmity and error, and courts of the last resort will sometimes fall into errors of so grave and serious a character as to require the modification of the common sense instincts of the more unsophisticated. This, in civil cases, is well enough left to the interference of the legislature, but in criminal cases, affecting life, or character, or liberty, such a resort would come too late.

But we see no objection, where the interference of a jury is directly invoked in a criminal case, to the judge stating to the jury, in his own way, that this rule is not intended for ordinary criminal cases; that it is matter of favor to the defendant, and should pot be acted upon by the jury, except after the most thorough conviction of its necessity and propriety ; that any departure by the jury from the law laid down by the court, must be taken solely upon their own responsibility ; and that the safer, and better, and fairer way, in ordinary criminal cases, is to take the Jaw from the court, and that they are always justified in doing so.

[533]*533This is substantially what was done by the court below, and we see no just ground of exception to the mode in which it was done. The declarations of the judge were explicit, and characterized by directness and plainness of speech, and this is, in general, a desirable quality in a charge to the jury. It may be carried too far, and thus become objectionable, like every good thing in excess, but it does not occur to us that this portion of the charge was specially objectionable on that ground. Men will differ in their views as to the best manner of dealing with such delicate questions between the court and jury. Perhaps the surest mode of keeping the jury within their proper functions is for the court not to trench upon their own peculiar province, and not to evince any suspicion that they will not reciprocate the courtesy. I think the more common fault of juries is to strive, by disagreements, or in some other mode, to escape the necessity of taking their own just share of the responsibility, rather than to usurp the proper province of the court This is undoubtedly the more common fault with us all in important trials.

II. The mode in which the defendant’s confession was })ut to the jury might be liable to misconstruction, no doubt. The jury were told that it must “ go to the jury as evidence, and they might give such credence to the different parts of it, under all the circumstances attending the whole case, as they saw fit.” It is claimed that this last expression might, naturally enough, be understood by the jury as giving them an arbitrary discretion to use only that portion of it, in making up their verdict, which made against the defendant. It is certainly not probable the jury would have so understood the charge. And as we are bound now, while revising the case upon error, to make all reasonable intendments in favor of the proceedings below, we shall hardly feel justified in opening the case upon this ground alone. We may refer to this subject again.

But, to guard against possible misapprehension, it is proper to add here, that in cases of such magnitude, where the State resort to the confessions of the defendant, as evidence against him, it rc\ -ires that considerable care be used by the court, lest, either In node of obtaining or the use made of such confessions injusti- .*■<' inflicted upon the accused. The general public senti[534]*534ment upon the subject, that there is no danger of one suffering from his own confession, although natural and commendable, as ' evincing a desire not to have the guilty go unpunished, is certainly not based either upon sound logic or wise experience.

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Bluebook (online)
32 Vt. 491, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-mcdonnell-vt-1860.