State v. Robinson

14 Del. 401
CourtDelaware Court of Oyer and Terminer
DecidedNovember 15, 1885
StatusPublished

This text of 14 Del. 401 (State v. Robinson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Delaware Court of Oyer and Terminer primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Robinson, 14 Del. 401 (Del. Super. Ct. 1885).

Opinion

Comegys, C. J.

In the argument of the prisoner’s counsel in support of his reasons for a new trial, he stated that his chief reliance was upon the validity of the first of them ; in fact, the whole scope of it was confined almost entirely to the consideration of it.

Before treating of the reasons, I think it proper to remark that the books from which we derive our knowledge of the unwritten law governing new trials before courts and juries—I mean the English treatises and reports with respect to common law proceedings—not only contain no example of a new trial in a capital ease, but they are emphatic that none can be granted. The practice in England is now, as it always has been—when the prisoner is [402]*402wrongfully convicted, in the opinion of the Court, by reason of some fact or circumstance which, if the trial had been a civil one would have been ground for a new trial—to respite the sentence in order to give time for application for pardon, which the Court under such a state of things always recommends. As the usage of the Crown is to act favorably on such recommendation, pardon may be said to follow thereon, of course. In cases called criminal in some of the authorities, new trials are granted as in civil cases; but such sor-called criminal cases are cases not capital. This distinction will be found expressed in 1 Leving, page 9. And an examination of this authority, and that of Sir Thomas Jones’ Reports, page 355, will also show that the remark of the learned Justice Blackstone in the 4th Vol. of his Commentaries at page 455, when treating of the subject of verdicts by juries—that “in many instances where contrary to evidence the jury have found the prisoner guilty, their verdict hath been mercifully set aside and a new trial granted by the Court of Kings Bench”—applies to cases alone criminal in the sense I have mentioned; that is, not capital. The evidence of this is, that this citation in support of his language, is the very cases referred to in Leving and Jones.

The subject of granting a new trial in a capital case was much discussed by counsel and Court in the case of Commonwealth v. Green, 17 Mass., page 515, et. seg. It was admitted in that case, on all hands, that in England there was no warrant for a new trial in a capital case, but the Court felt itself warranted in deciding for one in that case, relying for authority upon two decisions, one the the case of The United States v. Fries, in 3 Dallas, 515, and the other that of The State v. Hopkins, 1 Bay., 372. The first of these was, undoubtedly, a capital case, and was tried in the Circuit Court of the United States for the Pennsylvania District before Justice Iredell and Judge Peters. The Court were divided upon the question, the former Judge being in favor of the motion for new trial, and the latter against it; he, however, yielded to avoid a division. The Court were, perhaps, influenced somewhat in [403]*403granting the motion for a new trial by the concession of Rawle, the District Attorney, who, evidently, was misled by the supposition, as a subsequent paragraph of his argument shows, that what was ground for a new trial in an ordinary jury case, was ground in a capital case. The case from Bay was a conviction on a count in an indictment for knowingly uttering a forged paper. This would seem not to have been a capital case; and the report is silent whether it was or not; it is, however, treated as capital in the case under consideration.

The other cases which I have examined—those submitted in the briefs of counsel—have either the authority of a statute warranting a new trial, or some practice which has prevailed to authorize the grant of a motion. All, I think, but one, are supported by statutory authority ; the grant of which is, at least, negative testimony that it was necessary, to give the Court power.

A search among our own records has been made for a precedent for the present motion. There is no sign of any proceeding like the present until the year 1857, in the case of the State, an indictment for murder, Patrick Shay. At a session of the Court in November, 1859, a motion for new trial was made in the State v. Turner, an indictment for rape; also at the same term in the case against John Bowen, for murder. At the November session, 1862, similar motion was made in the indictment for rape against Abel Riggs. Fifteen years afterwards in a like indictment against Samuel Chambers and George Collins, in May, 1880, in the case of the State v. Wm. Neal, for rape; in September, 1881, in the indictment for murder against Jeremiah Harrigan;

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Bluebook (online)
14 Del. 401, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-robinson-deloyerterm-1885.