United States v. Callender

25 F. Cas. 239
CourtU.S. Circuit Court for the District of Virginia
DecidedJuly 1, 1800
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 25 F. Cas. 239 (United States v. Callender) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
United States v. Callender, 25 F. Cas. 239 (circtdva 1800).

Opinion

CHASE, Circuit Justice.

—My construction of the law is quite the contrary. I have always seen triers sworn to decide these questions. How is this done in your country? Challenges for favour must be decided by triers. I suppose there must be triers sworn.

Mr. Nicholas.—I believe the books lay down this distinction. Challenges to the array are either principal challenges, or challenges for favour;—causes for principal challenges are always tried by the court; challenges for fa-vour are always tried by triers.

CHASE, Circuit Justice.—Well, sir, your challenge is for favour, because you state the juror to be unfavourable to the traverser.

.Mr. Nicholas.—This book states it as a cause of principal challenge.

CHASE, Circuit Justice.—Show me that book: it is not the best authority. Have you Coke upon Littleton in the house? If I had it we would see the whole doctrine at once. I am.persuaded that Coke upon Littleton states, that challenges for favour must be decided by triers. The oatlf of the triers is laid down there. Challenges to the array are for partiality in the sheriff.

Coke upon Littleton being produced, and the judge having examined it, observed, the case is dear. Principal challenges to the array, or the whole jury at once, are always for partiality in the sheriff, and not in the jurors.

Mr. Nicholas said, that the law might perhaps consider the return of a partial juror, as sufficient to ground a challenge to the array, on the principle of partiality in the sheriff, and wished to know if he was correct in this idea of the law.

CHASE, Circuit Justice.—No sir, the law is not so. You must proceed regularly. You may bring in proof if you can, that any juror has delivered his opinion upon that case heretofore; or you may examine the juror himself, upon oath, to this effect. You may do either, but not both; and this alternative offered, you must consider not as a strict right.

The counsel chose to rely on the jurors themselves.

The first juror was sworn, and the judge put the following question to him: “Have you ever formed and delivered an opinion upon the charges contained in the indictment?” The juror answered, that he had never seen the indictment, nor heard it read. The judge then said, he must be sworn in chief.

Mr. Hay asked permission to put a question to the juror before he was sworn in chief. The judge desired to know what sort of a question he meant to put, and told him he must first hear the question, and if he thought it a proper one, it might be put.

Mr. Hay.—The question which, with the permission of the court, I meant to have asked, is this: "Have you ever formed and delivered an opinion on the book entitled. ‘The Prospect Before Us,- from which the charges in the indictment are extracted?”

CHASE, Circuit Justice.—That question is. improper, and you shall not ask it. The only proper question is, “Have you ever formed and delivered an opinion upon this charge." He must have delivered as well as formed the opinion. Such a question as you propose, would prevent the man from ever being tried —the whole country have heard the case, and very probably, formed an opinion. You might mislead men by your ingenuity, and if you were indulged in putting the question, the traverser might never be tried. He has answered, that he never saw the indictment, nor heard it read, and if he has neither read nor heard the charges, I am sure he cannot have formed or delivered an opinion on the subject.

Mr. Hay then asked, that the indictment might be read to the juror, because, perhaps. [245]*245when he heard and understood the charges, he would answer, that he had both formed and delivered an opinion upon them.

The judge replied, that the court had already indulged him as far as they could. That the answer of the juryman was explicit —that they could not go further than they had gone, and that he ought to be satisfied.

The juryman was then sworn in chief, and the issue was explained, that it must be proved that the traverser wrote or published the book—that the charges were false, scandalous and malicious, and that he wrote them with intent to defame, and that if he could prove the charges he must be acquitted. The same question, “whether they had formed and delivered an opinion on the charges against the traverser,” was put by the judge, to eight of the other jurymen successively, before they were sworn in chief, and they all answered in the negative.

The counsel for the traverser said, that it was unnecessary to put this question to the other three jurymen, and they were accordingly sworn in chief immediately. The eighth juror answered, when the previous question was put to him, that though he had never read or heard the charges in the indictment, and knew not what the traverser had published, yet he had formed an unequivocal opinion, that such a book as “The Prospect Before Us,” came within the sedition law. But no objection was made to him, and he was sworn like the rest.

The indictment was then read by the clerk.

Mr. Nelson, the district attorney, then said: I shall not attempt, gentlemen of the jury, to excite your passions or inflame your feelings. I shall endeavour to be cautious, and avoid uttering what ought not to be said, which may in any manner influence your judgment, upon your oath; for in that office which I hold, which is that of the people of United America, it is more than a common duty, to take care not to step beyond that line which leads to justice. To that state in which your passions shall be; to such feelings as you shall possess, after hearing the charge contained in the indictment, the evidence in support of it, and a fair statement and representation of the case, X shall leave and entrust the case. In the present state of the business, it will be proper for me to call your attention to the statute or act of congress, which relates" to this case.

Here Mr. Nelson read the second and third sections of the sedition law. [Lyon’s Case, Case No. 8,646, and note.]

Upon this statute James Thompson Callen-der is now indicted, and the indictment charges that, maliciously designing and intending to defame the president, he, James Thompson Callender, did publish the libel set forth therein, with intent to bring him into contempt and disrepute, and to excite the hatred of the good people of the United States towards him. It will be for you, gentlemen of the jury, in this case to determine whether the traverser has, or has not, been the publisher of this paper. This point being ascertained, it will be for you to consider with what view, and for what purpose, a paper like this has been composed and published. If you believe it to be a candid and fair discussion of constitutional subjects, of real grievances, or of political opinions and principles generally, you will not consider -it to be a libel within the statute. If you believe the facts and allegations averred in the paper are true, you will consider that the trav-erser hath defended himself according to the statute; but if, from internal evidence in the paper itself, you do not think so, you do not believe it to be a candid evidence and fair discussion of constitutional subjects, real grievances, or political opinions and principles, and that it does not contain the truth in all- parts, you must find the traverser guilty.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
25 F. Cas. 239, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-callender-circtdva-1800.