Webster v. Commonwealth

59 Allen 386
CourtMassachusetts Supreme Judicial Court
DecidedMarch 15, 1850
StatusPublished

This text of 59 Allen 386 (Webster v. Commonwealth) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Webster v. Commonwealth, 59 Allen 386 (Mass. 1850).

Opinion

Shaw, C. J.

A petition for the allowance of a writ of error, by a person under conviction and sentence of the law for the aggravated crime of murder, demands, and is entitled to receive, from the court to which it is legally addressed, not only the earliest attention which can be given to it, but the most deliberate, patient, and thorough consideration which a sense of judicial duty can ever require.

This application for the allowance of a writ of error was made at an adjournment of the court held by one judge, but, although within the jurisdiction of one judge, we think it was very properly postponed, to be considered by the whole court, being, it is believed, the first application of the kind under the [394]*394revised statutes, and involving questions of great delicacy and importance. It is made in pursuance of the Rev. Sts. c. 112, § 16, which provides, that “ No writ of error upon a judgment for a capital offence shall issue, unless allowed by one of the justices of the supreme judicial court, after notice given to the attorney-general, or other attorney for the commonwealth.”

The reason for this restraint and qualification of the right of suing out a writ of error, in a capital case, which does not exist in other criminal cases, is, we think, obvious.

Every trial of any person for an offence punishable with death has, from the earliest times, been required by the laws of this commonwealth to be held by the full court, in which a quorum must attend. Until the statute of 1820, c. 14, the entire trial, including the arraignment, was to be before a full court. By that statute, § 8, it was provided that the arraignment might be before a single judge. This was substantially reenacted by St. 1832, c. 130, § 6, and embodied in the Rev. Sts. c. 136, §§ 21, 22. So that, although the law was changed and modified as to the more formal and unimportant part of the proceeding, yet the most essential, that of conducting the trial and passing the judgment, has always been confided to the whole court.

Now, the difference between the results of a trial thus conducted, and the trials for inferior offences conducted by the court of common pleas, or by one judge in this court, is obvious. All those points of law respecting the admission and rejection of evidence, the directions to be given to the jury, and the legal and due course of procedure, which are ordinarily raised, discussed, and made the subject of exception in a trial before a single judge, and reserved for the consideration of a full court, are, in a capital trial, raised, discussed, and decided by a full court on the spot. Sometimes this is done without much discussion; but oftentimes after an elaborate argument on both sides. These decisions in matters of law, though made during the progress of a trial, have the same character, in regard to being final and conclusive, as the decisions of a full court on a bill of exceptions ordinarily have, because they are made by a full court in the first instance, and there i-s no [395]*395other or higher court for whose consideration they can be reserved. But there is this practical difference; that, in the capital trial, the law is ruled first, and has its proper and legal effect upon the verdict of the jury; whereas, in case of exceptions, the verdict must necessarily be taken provisionally, subject to be set aside if any of the exceptions are sustained. In cases of such magnitude, in which as early a final decision as can be had, consistently with fairness, fulness, and impartiality, is so essential to the administration of public justice, and where repeated trials would be attended with injurious consequences, it was, we think, an important consideration with the legislature to require the trial in the first instance to be before a full court, competent to a definite decision of all points and questions of law arising on the trial.

That this object has been to some degree effected, may per haps be inferred from the fact, that, since the adoption of the revised statutes providing for the allowance of a writ of error, this, it is believed, is the first instance in which such an application has been made.

In addition to the power which the accused has, on a capital trial, to take the opinion of the whole court upon every question of law arising in the course of the trial, without the intervention of a bill of exceptions, he has also a right, after verdict and before judgment, by motion in arrest of judgment to take any objection to the form and sufficiency of the indictment, or to any fault or defect apparent upon the record; and time is always allowed for that purpose. And in this particular case, although sentence was passed soon after the verdict, the time for passing that sentence was not fixed, until the court had been authoritatively informed, that it was not the desire or intention of the defendant or his counsel to make any motion in arrest of judgment.

In theory of law, therefore, in ordinary cases of capital trials, before judgment is pronounced, every question of law arising in it has been brought before the full court, — the court of final resort, — and by them decided. And, in order to show how far the theory of law in this respect is practically carried out, I may add, that, in this case, every interlocuto' y decision. [396]*396and every direction and instruction to the jury, in matter of law, were given with the unanimous concurrence of the four judges who sat on the trial; and, upon the deliberations had by all the judges upon this petition and the arguments thereon, and the revision of the trial to which they have given rise, no dissent to the correctness and regularity of the proceedings has been expressed by our associate, who did not personally attend at the trial.

But notwithstanding this extreme solicitude of the law to prevent all error and mistake in legal proceedings, before pronouncing the solemn sentence of death, and the precautions taken, in accordance with the plain dictates of justice and humanity, to prevent so solemn a judgment from being drawn in question for slight causes, still it is not to be overlooked, that, after judgment, some new fact may arise or be disclosed, some important and material requirement of the law may appear to have been inadvertently overlooked or disregarded, which may render it important to the great purposes of justice, that the judgment should be revised, and, if justice requires it, that it should be reversed and set aside ; for the law may be equally defeated of its just purpose, when the innocent are made to suffer, as when the guilty escape.

From this review of the provisions of law providing for the trial of capital cases, and the cautious provision made for their revision by writ of error, it is manifest that the legislature intended that this power should be applied to those cases only, where some error had occurred material to the judgment. With this view of the law, we will proceed to examine the objections made to the judgment sought to be reversed.

The first objection made to the judgment is, that the court acquired no jurisdiction of the indictment. This is a very grave and indeed a decisive objection to the judgment; and, if it can be sustained, the judgment ought certainly to be reversed.

This alleged want of jurisdiction is supposed to arise from a want of compliance with the provisions of law, in transferring the original indictment from the municipal court to this [397]*397court. The objection is spread out into a number of particulars enumerated.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Commonwealth v. Hardy
2 Mass. 303 (Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court, 1807)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
59 Allen 386, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/webster-v-commonwealth-mass-1850.