The Charge to the Grand Jury by Ch. Justice

1 Super. Ct. Jud. 110
CourtMassachusetts Supreme Judicial Court
DecidedMarch 15, 1765
StatusPublished

This text of 1 Super. Ct. Jud. 110 (The Charge to the Grand Jury by Ch. Justice) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
The Charge to the Grand Jury by Ch. Justice, 1 Super. Ct. Jud. 110 (Mass. 1765).

Opinion

TO relieve the Oppressed, to guard the Innocent, to preserve the Order of Society, and the Dignity of Government is a noble Principle of the Mind. This is the Duty of every Individual of the Community, but is more particularly incumbent, Gentlemen, upon you, as the Grand Inquest for this County.

Our Business, Gentlemen, at this Time, is to distribute Justice, and to punish all Crimes and Offences. It is this latter Part of our Duty that you, Gentlemen, are to assist us in; to point out and bring forward all Crimes and Offences against the Tranquillity and Order of Society which shall by any Means come to your Knowledge.

But before I enter upon the particular Branch of your Duty, I shall observe, that it is a very com[111]*111mon Thing in England to present Offences, when there is no Offender known, for wherever there is the one, there is always the other. Whenever there are any notorious Offences, as I observed before, in England, they always present them. I remember in particular (if it may be called an Offence) that at Middlesex, the Jury presented, that there was unnecessary Multiplication of licensed Houses, which tended greatly to the Destruction of the Health and Morals of the People. I do not mention this as the Case here, but only by Way of Example, to show, that wherever you find any notable Things done that are detrimental, or any Things neglected which ought especially to be done that are beneficial to Society, you have, Gentlemen, a discretionary Power to present them.

I would have you, Gentlemen, to enquire into the State of our Goal, for it has been represented, and I believe it but too true, that it is a moll shocking, loathsome Place. For my own Part, when I have been obliged by the Nature of my Office to commit any of my Fellow Creatures, I could not help feeling for them, when I thought where I was sending them — a dark, damp, and pestilential Room — to such a Place to send our Fellow Creatures must cause the most tender and exquisite Sensations to Men of the least Sensibility or Humanity. I do not think there is such a Place for the Reception of Prisoners anywhere in the King’s Dominions. I do not say this by Way of Reflection on the Gentlemen who have the proper Care of our Goal, nor upon the Sheriff

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1 Super. Ct. Jud. 110, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/the-charge-to-the-grand-jury-by-ch-justice-mass-1765.