United States v. Blodgett

30 F. Cas. 1157, 35 Ga. 336
CourtSupreme Court of Georgia
DecidedNovember 15, 1867
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 30 F. Cas. 1157 (United States v. Blodgett) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
United States v. Blodgett, 30 F. Cas. 1157, 35 Ga. 336 (Ga. 1867).

Opinion

Erskine, J.

Mr. Foreman and Gentlemen of the Grand Jury : On tbe first day of tbe present Term, (November 7th) you were empannelled and sworn for this Judicial District,— your foreman and éach of you then talcing tbo ancient common law oath of grand jurors, and the Court, at tbe same time, delivering to you its general charge.

The Court feels that it is due to you, as well as to tbe District Attorney and tbe counsel for tbe challenger, Foster Blodgett, tbas such remarks as may be deemed proper to be made, and such decision as may be pronounced, be addressed to you, rather than to tbe learned counsel themselves ; because tbe matters in controversy concern, and are directly against tbe legal status of several members of your body.

Blodgett comes here before tbe Court and demands tbe right to challenge tbe polls; and for this he relies on tbe first section of tbe Act of Congress of June 17,1862, which statute is entitled An Act defining additional causes of challenge, and prescribing an additional oath for grand and petit jurors in tbe United States Courts.” Tbe first section declares that, “ In addition to tbe existing causes of disqualification and challenge of grand and petit jurors in tbe Courts [338]*338of the United States, the .following are hereby declared and established, namely: Without duress and coercion to have taken up arms or to have joined any insurrection and rebellion against the United States ; to have adhered to any rebellion, giving it aid and comfort; to have given, directly or indirectly, any assistance in money, arms, horses, clothes or anything whatever, to or for the use or benefit of any person or persons, whom the person giving such assistance knew to have joined, or to be about to join, any insurrection or rebellion, or to have resisted, or to be about to resist with force of arms, the execution of the laws of the United States, or who he had good ground to believe had joined or was about to join, any insurrection or rebellion, or had resisted, or was about to resist, with force of arms, the execution of the laws of the United States; and to have counselled and advised any person or persons to join any insurrection and rebellion, or to resist with force of arms the laws of the United States.” 12 Stats. 430.

The oath embodied in the second section — and which substantially follows the language of the disqualifying causes enumerated in the first — will be read to you, not that you may take or decline it, for it can be presented under the second section only, and at the suggestion of the prosecuting officer of the Government, but upon hearing it read, you will be better able to conclude whether you are, or are not, vulnerable to any one or more of the disqualifications mentioned in the first section. If you find that you are, you may retire from the panel. And, in my judgment, the defect, in a case of challenge for cause like this, may, in this manner, be shown. United States v. Cornell, 3 Mason, 91. The State of Alabama v. Marshall, 8 Ala., 302.

The following is laid down in a late accurate work on Criminal Procedure:

“The most natural method is to require the witness to declare the matter under oath, on the voir dire. But witnesses are not generally required to answer questions which will tend to their disgrace; therefore, in England, the inquiry [339]*339whether the juror has delivered an opinion adverse to the prisoner cannot he put to the juror himself, hut it must be shown by other evidence. This point has been held the same way in some of our States. But -generally in this country this class of questions is allowed to be put by the parties directly to the jurors; and in some of our States this doctrine is also aided by express statutes. When this is mot done, and even when it is, the Coubt will sometimes, in aid of the general object, and without prejudice to other methods, call upon the jurors, collectively or singly, to declare if they know any impediment to their serving, or if they are obnoxious to a particular objection which may hme been suggested." 1 Bishop Law of Criminal Procedure, sec. 795. And see sec. 768, Id. Cook's case, 13 Howell St. Tr., 311, 337. Respublica v. Dennie, 4 Yeates, 267., McCarty v. The State, 26 Missis. 299.

See concluding sentence in Sec. 2, Act June 17th, 1862— 12 Stats. 430.

The challenger states in his affidavit, that the District Attorney distinetty promised him that he should be permitted on the trial before the grand jury to have the evidence in his defence laid before them.

No such promise or agreement can h-ive the sanction of this Court. To allow evidence — either oral or written — to go before the grand inquest, on behalf of a defendant would he subversive of the ancient and well settled rules of Courts of Justice. McKean, C. J., in Respublica v. Shaffer 1 Dall. 236, said : “It is a matter well known, and well understood, that by the laws of our country, every question winch affects a man’s life, reputation, or property must be tried by t/welve of his peers; and that their unanimous verdict is, alone, competent to determine the fact in issue. If, then, yon undertake to inquire, not only upon what foundation the charge is made, but, likewise, upon what foundation it is denied, you will, in effect, usurp the jurisdiction of the petit jury, you will supercede the legal authority of the Court in judging of the competency and admissibility of [340]*340witnesses, and having thus undertaken to try the question, that question may he determined by a bare majority, or by a much greater number of your body, than the twelve peers prescribed by the law of the land.”

Foster Blodgett does not ask to challenge the entire panel, but he avers that there are individual disqualifications attaching to particular jurors, because of their being within one or more of the clauses of the first section of the statute* In his petition, of file in this Court, and which is before you, he states, among other matters, in substance, that he is informed and believes, that a charge for perjury is now pending before you, but, that as yet, no presentment has been made, nor indictment found and returned into Court; that most of you are, under this statute, incompetent to inquire into his case; that he does not believe he can have a fair and impartial investigation of his case before you, or receive justice at your hands. He sets forth the names of the persons to whom he objects, and interposes a challenge to each.

It was contended by the District Attorney that, under this statute, it is only the Government that possesses the right to challenge. This Court, at the last Term, in the case of the United States v. Cohen, which was an action of debt on bond, ruled that under the first section, the defendant, as well as the United States, was free to challenge the polls. And such is still the opinion of the Court; nor can I perceive any difference in this respect between a grand and petit juror — between a civil suit and a criminal prosecution.

It is the general, if indeed it is not the universal doctrine of the common law, as administered in the Courts of our country, that when a person is charged with crime, and his case is to come before a particular grand jury, he may be present at its organization, and present challenges either to the array or to the polls ; but if he be not held, by process, to answer to an indictment, he is not thus entitled. If Mr.

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Related

Mapp v. State
420 S.E.2d 615 (Court of Appeals of Georgia, 1992)
Beck v. Washington
369 U.S. 541 (Supreme Court, 1962)

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Bluebook (online)
30 F. Cas. 1157, 35 Ga. 336, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-blodgett-ga-1867.