United States v. Schneider

21 D.C. 381
CourtDistrict of Columbia Court of Appeals
DecidedJanuary 9, 1893
DocketNo. 18,856
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 21 D.C. 381 (United States v. Schneider) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District of Columbia Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
United States v. Schneider, 21 D.C. 381 (D.C. 1893).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Cox

delivered the opinion of the Court:

I am requested to deliver the opinion of the court in the case of the United States vs. Howard J. Schneider, indicted for the murder of his wife, Amanda M. Schneider, in this city, on the 31st day of January, 1892.

[384]*384The defendant having been convicted in the Criminal Court, áppealed to this court.

The record of the trial contains between 100 and 200 exceptions, and the record and brief embrace some 540 pages of printed matter. The case has been argued at great length, with remarkable ability and exhaustive learning, and its proper examination by us has required much time and labor, and has been conducted with an earnest desire, in arriving at a conclusion, to pay a due regard alike to the rights of the prisoner and the demands of public justice.

I shall not undertake to examine the several exceptions in detail, but will confine myself principally to an examination of the questions which are raised by them. The record also presents so many questions that it is impossible to discuss them all at length, and as to some of them, we shall content ourselves with a general expression of opinion, without consuming the time that would be necessary to sustain it by reasoning and authority.

The first question arose on a motion to quash the indictment because there was no averment as to the place where the alleged offence was committed, so as to bring it within the jurisdiction of this court. The caption of the indictment contains the words “ District of Columbia, County of Washington,” and the body of the indictment describes the place as at and in the County and District aforesaid. It is claimed that the caption is no part of the indictment, and therefore the reference does not remedy the omission of a proper description in the body of the instrument.

We think this question depends entirely upon local practice. Where the practice is for the clerk of the court to add the caption, of course the indictment, as it comes from the grand jury, would be defective in the shape which the present one bears. But where, by the practice, the caption is a part of the indictment as it comes from the hands of grand jury, the rule is different. It was so held- in Massachusetts, where the latter practice prevails. See Comm. vs. Edwards, 4 Gray, 1. And such has been the practice here. [385]*385Such was the form of the indictment in the Sickles case and afterwards in the Guiteau case, in neither of which does the present question appear to have been raised.

This objection was raised on a motion in arrest of judgment, as well as on the motion to quash.

The defendant was arraigned on the 15th of February, and the trial set down for the 7th of March. On the latter day a motion was made for a postponement of the trial, principally on the ground that the prisoner’s counsel had not hadi time to (prepare for the defence, and hadl encountered certain difficulties in collecting the information necessary therefor, and because there existed in the public mind a feeling of hostility towards the prisoner that would strongly tend to prevent him from having a fair trial at that time. The motion was overruled and an exception reserved;

The defendant wajs. not called upon to make his defence until the 19th of March, and the trial was not closed by a verdict until April 9th.

A motion of this kind is necessarily addressed to the sound discretion of the court, and it is extremely difficult for a reviewing court to determine when that discretion has been so abused as to amount to error.

The application of the defendant was very general in its averments. It did not show the impossibility of procuring any testimony at that time which was known to defendant; it complained rather of a want of time to search for testimony. In fact, all the witnesses who could be expected to know anything of the facts were to be found within a very narrow circle, and whatever might be the aspect of the case at that time, it is sufficient now to say that the record of the trial shows that the defendant had no difficulty in procuring all the testimony that was available for him and, in that respect, did not suffer from the action of the court.

As to the condition of the public mind towards the prisoner, no special showing was made, nor had the court any reason to suppose that more prejudice existed than in all cases in which a great crime is thought to have been com[386]*386mitted. If the application could have been granted as prayed, i. e,, "for such time as will be reasonably sufficient to allow the prejudice to be allayed,” it would have involved an indefinite postponement of the trial.

While the prisoner is not to be hurried to conviction to satisfy public clamor, it must be remembered, at the same time, that the public interest requires prompt investigation and punishment of crime. The record does not make any showing of such public clamor, in reference to the present case, and unless the court can see that under such influence the jury has been hurried into an unjust verdict, no case is presented for a new trial on this ground. Wharton’s Crim. Plead. & Prac., Secs. 598, 601 and 689, and cases cited.

We cannot discover in the action of the court on this motion any ground for reversal.

Perhaps the most important question involved in the case relates to the qualifications of the jurors summoned and the prisoner’s right of challenge.

The defendant challenged, for principal cause, a number of jurors who were summoned and examined on their voir dire, on the ground that they had formed and expressed an opinion as to his guilt or innocence, and in each case where his challenge was overruled, reserved an exception. He complains that at least two jurors who were thus challenged and were legally incompetent, and certainly objectionable to him, remained on the panel, and that he was unable to remove them, or others whom he might- have been rid of, because he had exhausted his twenty peremptory challenges and had been compelled to use a large proportion of them in getting rid of jurors who ought to have been adjudged incompetent.

After a careful examination of this subject, we are all agreed that if a juror is erroneously adjudged competent over the challenge of defendant for cause, and the defendant is compelled to challenge him peremptorily in order to exclude him from the panel, and when the jury is completed and ready to be sworn, he has exhausted his peremptory [387]*387challenges, the error-is an injury to him, and is ground for reversal of the judgment against him. If he still has peremptory challenges which he does not choose to make use of, he has no ground of complaint. Of course, an error in overruling a challenge for principal cause, of a juror who is actually sworn bn the panel, is necessarily ground for reversal.

This general doctrine is stated in People vs. Casey, 96 N. Y., 116. It is assumed in Burt vs. Panjaud, 99 U. S., 180, and in the case of U. S. vs. Neverson, 1 Mackey, 176.

The same rule is asserted in Hopt vs. Utah, 120 U. S., 430. The court say: “Notwithstanding the peremptory challenges made by the defendant to two of the jurors, he had several such challenges which had not been used, when the jury was completed.

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