United States v. Johns

4 U.S. 354
CourtUnited States Circuit Court
DecidedApril 15, 1806
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 4 U.S. 354 (United States v. Johns) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Circuit Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
United States v. Johns, 4 U.S. 354 (1806).

Opinion

By the Court.

— Upon a habeas corpus, we are only to inquire whether the warrant of commitment states a sufficient probable cause to believe, that the person charged has committed the offence stated. We have heard the evidence ; and cannot doubt of its sufficiency to that extent. We do not think that the prisoner ought either to be discharged or bailed: he must be remanded for trial.

II. When the panel of jurors was called over, the prisoner’s counsel claimed the right of challenging thirty-five jurors peremptorily, as the offence charged in the indictment, had been created, since the act of the 30th of April 1*790 (1 U. S. Stat. 119, § 30); and the right of challenge remained as at common law. (4 Hawk. 389 ; 4 Bl. Com. 352.) The clause, respecting challenges is in these words: “If any person or persons be indicted of treason against the United States, and shall stand mute, or refuse to plead, or shall challenge peremptorily above the number of thirty-five of the jury; or if any other person or persons be indicted of any other of the offences herein-before set forth, for which the punishment is declared to bo death, if he or they shall so stand mute, or will not answer to the indictment, or challenge peremptorily above the number of twenty persons of the jury, the court, in any of the cases aforesaid, shall, notwithstanding, ™ proceed to the *trial of the person or persons so standing mute or L challenging, as if he or they had pleaded not guilty, and render judgment thereon accordingly.”

The Attorney of the District said, he was indifferent which way the court decided the point; but it was proper to remark, that the 2Sth section of the judicial act referred, generally, to the state law, for the rule relating to juries (1 U. S. Stat. 88); that the state law limited the right of peremptory challenge, in cases like the present, to the number of twenty; that the 30th section of the penal act (Ibid. 119) obviously considers the whole law of peremptory challenge provided for, in future, as well as existing, capital cases ; and that it was improper to refer to a common-law rule, if a rule was prescribed by statute.

[356]*356Peters, Justice.

— The words of the penal act when they restrain the common-law right of peremptory challenge, also expressly confine the operation of the restraint, to the offences before set forth in the act. For offences not set forth in the act, the only rule is furnished by the common law; and it is the privilege of the prisoner that it should be applied and enforced.

Washington, Justice.

— The right of challenge was a privilege highly esteemed, and anxiously guarded, at the common law; and it cannot be doubted, but that at the common law, a prisoner is entitled, on a capital charge, to challenge peremptorily thirty-five of the jurors. If, therefore, the act of congress has substituted no other rule (and, in the present instance, it is clear, that none has been substituted), the common-law rule must be pursued. It is not easy, indeed, to assign a reason for introducing the words that confine the provision, respecting peremptory challenges, to offences before set forth in the act; but it is enough to bind our judgments, that the words are actually introduced.

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Bluebook (online)
4 U.S. 354, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-johns-uscirct-1806.