United States v. Wan Lee

44 F. 707, 1890 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 57
CourtDistrict Court, D. Washington
DecidedDecember 15, 1890
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 44 F. 707 (United States v. Wan Lee) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Washington primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
United States v. Wan Lee, 44 F. 707, 1890 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 57 (washd 1890).

Opinion

HaneoRd, J.

The defendant was indicted at the present term of this court for the crime of concealing smuggled opium, under section 3082, Rev. St. Having entered his plea of not guilty to the indictment, the case was brought on for trial,' and thereupon, when the jury was called, the defendant interposed a challenge to the array on the ground that all the petit jurors in attendance at this term had been drawn and summoned from the northern division of this district, and not from the district at large. The court hawing denied this challenge, and the jury having been sworn to try the case, the defendant now objects to the introduction of any testimony, on the ground that the indictment is illegal and void upon its face, for that it does not purport to have been found by a lawful grand jury. The point of the objection is that the grand jurors were drawn exclusively from the northern division of the district, and they are described in the indictment ns—

“The grand juiors of the United States of America, in and for the northern division of the district of Washington, duly impaneled, sworn, and charged to inquire of all offenses against the laws of the United States committed within the northern division of t.he district of Washington aforesaid.”

Ji has been the practice, as the records show, to draw the jurors for each term of court from a jury-box prepared for each division of the district, containing names selected from inhabitants only of that division of the district lor which the box is used; and the grand juries at each term have, under the instructions of the court, confined their inquiries to offenses committed within the division, or upon the high seas outside of the limits of any judicial district of the United States. It is claimed that this practice is erroneous, and is founded upon a misconstruction of the act of congress providing for the terms of the United States circuit and district courts in this district. By the act of congress fixing the times and places of holding the United States courts in the state of Washington, (26 U. S. St. p. 45,) the stale is declared to constitute one judicial district. For the purpose of holding terms of court, this district is subdivided into four divisions. Certain named counties constitute the northern division so denominated in the act, and the courts [708]*708for said division are to hold their terms at Seattle. It is perfectly apparent on the face of the act that its only object is to bring the seat of justice near to the people. In a district so large as this, it would be a grievous burden upon the people to require litigants, jurors, and witnesses to leave their homes and occupations and travel to a remote place ■in the state to attend the court, as would be necessary in numerous instances if but one place in the state were provided for the sitting of the court. To relieve the people of this burden, the act was passed, and the only possible construction that can be given to it is the one that limits the jurisdiction of the court, when holding a term, to the territorial limits of the division for which that term is provided; and by a necessary implication the grand jury summoned to attend each term is a gjand jury of the district for that division in and for which the term is held, just as the grand jury is denominated in this indictment. The court can only bring to trial at any term persons accused of committing offenses'Within the division; and the jurors, grand and petit, should, to acconlplish the purpose of .this act, be summoned only from that part of the district. This construction is in harmonj’’ with the provisions of section 802 of the Revised Statutes, and with the ancient customs and laws of our parent nation, as well as the constitutional guaranties of our own country. At common law, grand juries were convened in each county to attend the sessions of peace, and of oyer and terminer, held therein by the court of king’s bench, and it was a grand jury of the county, and the sessions of court were held for the county, although the court was ordained and established for the entire kingdom. Under the act of congress, as a mere matter of convenience, several counties are grouped together, and a term of court is provided to be held at one place for all, and to answer the same purpose as to each, as if held in each. By analogy to the practice under the common law, the grand jury should be made up of qualified men residing in the division-, and when organized it constitutes a grand-jury for the division, just as it would be a grand jury for a single county if the term of court were for a single county. There is therefore nothing to be found in the princi-pies of the common law to support the idea that a United States grand jury in this district must be drawn from the body of the district in its entirety, or that it must be denominated a grand jury of the district. There is no statute prescribing such a practice, and, with all due deference to the arguments of the learned counsel for the defendant, not a single reason has been suggested why it should be so. On the contrary, it would be utterly unreasonable and absurd to hold that, notwithstanding the manifest purpose of congress in enacting this law, we must still bring men from Spokane county to serve as jurors at Seattle, and take King county men to serve at Spokane Falls, and have the rights of citizens of Tacoma passed upon by men of Seattle; or that this defendant, a Chinaman, cannot have justice meted out to him in a lawful way without having jurors to try his- case brought from Tacoma. In other districts it is often necessary for the expeditious dispatch of business to secure jurors from localities near the places where the courts are held. [709]*709This mode of procedure is quite common, and is authorized by section 802, Rev. St. I cannot believe that the validity of such procedure depends upon the fiction maintained in the record by describing the jurors as if they were drawn irom the body of the district.

The northern district of New York is not subdivided, but terms of court are held at Buffalo, Albany, Rochester, and several other places in the district. I am reliably informed that it is the practice in that district to draw the jurors from the lists of qualified persons prepared for the state courts by county officers, so that the entire panel of jurors to serve fora term may he, and often is, composed of men all of whom are residents of a single county; and such juries have not heretofore been supposed to be unconstitutional or illegal, although the truth as to the territory from whence they come has not been covered by even a fiction in the record. All that the defendant can claim as a constitutional right is to have a jury of the district to try his case; that is, a jury every member of which resides within the district. He has no right to insist that every part of the district shall be represented in the make-up of the jury by residents of each place or locality. That would be impossible in any case.

The position taken that the act of 1890 was intended only to provide terms of court for the trial of civil cases is in my opinion untenable. The sixth section of the act repeals the only other statute; relating to terms of this court, and we are without any law prescribing the times or places of holding terms for the trials of criminal cases, unless the terms provided for by the act of 1890 are general terms, for the transaction of all business <>t the court.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
44 F. 707, 1890 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 57, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-wan-lee-washd-1890.