State v. Price

11 N.J.L. 204
CourtSupreme Court of New Jersey
DecidedFebruary 15, 1830
StatusPublished

This text of 11 N.J.L. 204 (State v. Price) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of New Jersey primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Price, 11 N.J.L. 204 (N.J. 1830).

Opinion

The Chief Justice delivered the opinion of the court.

Zachariah Price was found guilty upon an indictment for the burning of a barn, not parcel of a dwelling house, and *208] was sentenced *to imprisonment at hard labor. By writ of error, the record of the conviction and j udgment was removed here, and divers reasons have been assigned for the reversal of the judgment.

1st. The first error assigned is, that “ it does not appear how, by whom, or by what authority; the persons sworn, affirmed and charged, as members of the grand jury, -were summoned and appeared for that purpose.”

In respect to these matters, the caption follows strictly the course of approved precedents, both ancient and modern. [247]*247No caption to be found in any book of authority, or heretofore in use in our criminal courts, sets forth more fully than is hero done, how, by whom, or by what authority, the grand jurors were summoned or appeared, nor states that they were summoned by the sheriff of the county, or by his authority, or appeared at his command under a precept or writ directed to him for that purpose; or as now prescribed by our statute, under the requisition of the law without writ or precept; 2 Hale, 165; 1 Sound. 248; Cro. Cir. Comp. 25, 73, 76, 81, 294; Foster 3; 2 Burn’s just. tit. indict, edit. of 1793, 663; Edit, of 1797, 499; 4 Chitty, cr. law, 190, 192, 194; Arch, cr. pl. 6; Starkie cr. pl. 258; 2 South. 746. The essential points of a caption, according to Hawkins, 4 Hawk. 72, B, 2; Ch. 25, see. 118, are to set forth, with proper certainty, the court in which, the jurors by whom, the time when, and the place at which the indictment was found. In a very small number of the precedents, the grand jurors are stated to have been “impannelled, sworn and charged;” though it has been held that the word “impannelled is unnecessary; 3 Salk. 191. Few, if any captions state the grand jurors to have been summoned.

2d. The second error assigned is, “ that it does not appear that the persons sworn, affirmed and charged, as members of the grand jury, were citizens of this state, and resided within the county of Sussex; nor that they were respectively above the age of twenty-one, and under the age of sixty-five years; nor that each of them had a freehold in lands, messuages or tenements in said county.” In other words, the caption does not set out the specific qualifications required by law, and aver that they were possessed by the grand jurors.

*The qualifications of the grand jurors are uniformly [*209 expressed, in the manner of the caption before us, by the terms “ good and lawful men.” Bo are all the precedents just now referred to. In a matter of this nature, the proper form is shewn, beyond controversy, by a long and unvarying usage.

[248]*248The language of one of the judges of this court, who says in The State v. Gibbons, 1 South. 46, describing a caption, that it sets forth “the names of. the grand jury and their qualifications,” has been cited in support of the objection under consideration. But though the learned judge requires the qualifications to be stated, he does not say that each shall be specifically enumerated, or that the ancient and accustomed mode “good and lawful men” is insufficient; and that he did not by his remark intend anything more, is abundantly shewn from the fact that he sanctioned the precedent in the case of the State v. Gustin, 2 South. 746; in which that method of expressing the qualifications of the grand jurors is used.

Our statute, Rev. Laws 658, directs that the sheriffs of the respective counties shall cause to come before the Courts of Oyer and Terminer and General Gaol Delivery, twenty-four good and lawful men, to serve as grand jurors, without any writ or precept being issued for that purpose. Now the caption is clearly sufficient when, in language equally explicit as the statute, it sets forth that the grand jufors are “ good and lawful men.”

The counsel of the plaintiff in error insisted that the statute just now referred to, dispensing with the writ or precept to summon grand jurors, had rendered a new form of caption and of panel or certificate of the sheriff, necessary. Before that statute say they, the writ or precept specified the qualifications of the jurors, and hence the return of the sheriff to such writ, that he had, by virtue thereof, summoned the persons named in the panel, was equivalent to a certificate that they were of the requisite qualifications. But since that statute; as no writ or precept is used, the qualifications of the jurors ought now to be specified in both the certificate annexed to the panel and in the caption. Admitting, argumenti gratia, that the writ or precept did specify the qualifications, a proposition not easily maintained by reference to the precedents, the conclusion supposed does [249]*249.by do means follow. The writ or precept formerly commanded the sheriff to summon the jurors. The statute now .stands in the place of the writ and ^directs the per- [*210 form anee of this duty. The qualifications of the jurors are also prescribed by statute. When therefore the sheriff now returns a panel, and certifies that he lias summoned the persons therein named to serve as grand jurors, the inference or. certificate, if it may be so called, that they are duly .qualified, is equally strong as formerly, from his return to the writ or precept; which according to the form given in 4 Chitty cr. law 179, neither specified their qualifications .nor averred them to be qood and lawful men. In the one case, the writ, it is said, required the sheriff to summon men of prescribed qualifications. In the other case, the statute makes a like requisition. If the panel returned with the writ served as a certificate that the persons summoned were thus qualified, the panel returned under the statute must, by the same process of reasoning, perform the like service.

In this assignment then there is no ground for reversal.

3d. The third error assigned is that by the record and proceedings it does not appear when, where, by whom, and before whom, the said persons supposed to be the said grand jury were sworn, affirmed and charged.” This objection was, on the argument, pointed at the omission of the words then and there ” in the caption which reads “by the oaths of, &c., and the solemn affirmation of, &c.; sworn, affirmed and charged to enquire,” &c.

The caption in this particular is according to the form given in the case of The State v. Gustin; a precedent deliberately settled and publicly sanctioned by this court; which has been since followed generally, perhaps universally ; and the record of almost every sentence in force at this hour exhibits, it may be presumed, a similar caption. A precedent thus set, thus sanctioned, and thus pursued, ought in a matter of this nature, obviously of no very deep interest or importance, to receive our unhesitating acquiescence and [250]*250support. Let us, however, examine the caption without reference to this authority. In grammatical construction there is no incongruity and can be as little doubt.

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Bluebook (online)
11 N.J.L. 204, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-price-nj-1830.