Lead Opinion
delivered the opinion of the court.
. This is a writ of error to the Supreme Court of the State of Kansas. William Baldwin was proceeded against,- in the District Court of the Second Judicial District of Kansas, sitting in and for Atchison County, by an information charging him with the crime of murder. On a trial before a jury, -he was found guilty. A motion for a new trial .was denied; and the
the errprs assigned here are (1) that the jurors were not .sworn according to the form of oath prescribed by the statute of Kansas, and that, therefore, the jury was not a legally constituted tribunal, and so the defendant will, under the judgment of the court, be deprived of his life without due process' of law, and be denied the equal protection of the law; (2) that the evidence on which the judgment' was founded was so inadequate to show that the defendant was guilty of the crime of murder, that the judgment amounts to a denial to the defendant of the equal protection of the law.
As to the question of the -oath administered to the jurors, the journal entry at. the trial states that, issue being joined upon a plea' of not guilty, there came a jury of twelve good and lawful men, whose names are given, “having the qualifications .of jurors, who being duly elected, tried, and sworn well and truly to try the issue joined herein,” the trial proceeded. The bill of exceptions states that “a jury was em-panelled and sworn to. well and truly try the issues joined herein.”
The statute of the State of Kansas provides (Compiled Laws of Kansas, c. 82, art. 11, § 208 ; e. 80, art. 15, § 274,) that “ the jury, shall be sworn to- well and truly try the matters submitted to them in the.case in hearing, and a true verdict give, according to the law and the evidence.” The statute does not give in-words the form of the oath; It is contended that the. record -affirmatively shows that the oath required by the statute of .Kansas was not administered to the jurors, but that
The record does not purport to. give ijpsissimis verbis the form of the oath administered to the jurors. The statement of the oath is entirely consistent with the fact that the oath required by the statute of Kansas was administered, especially in view of the statement in the journal entry that the jurors were “ duly ” sworn. On this subject, the Supreme Court of Kansas says correctly, in its opinion: “ It is highly important.' and necessary that the oath should be administered with due solemnity, in the presence of the prisoner, and before the court, substantially in the manner prescribed by law.. It- may also be conceded that,the record should show that the jury were sworn, and, when the record does purport to set out in full the form of the oath' upon which the verdict is based, it must be in substantial compliance with law; otherwise the conviction cannot stand. The assumption by counsel that the oath as actually administered is set out in full in the record, it seems to us, is unwarranted. What is stated in the record is but a recital by the- clerk of the fact that the jury were sworn. The swearing was, of course, done orally, in open court, and it is no part of the duty of the clerk to place on the record the exact formulary of words in which .the oath was couched. He has performed the duty in that respect when he enters the fact that the jury were duly sworn, and when that" is done the presumption will be that, the oath was correctly administered. The method of examining the jurors as to their qualificatiQns, or whether the oath was taken by them while standing with uplifted hands, according to the universal practice in the State, or otherwise, is not stated. - In making -mention of the impan-elling and swearing of the jury, there is no description of the parties between whom the jury are to-depide; nor, indeed, are there any of the formal parts of an oath' stated. The statement made is only a recital of a past occurrence; and it is manifest that there was no intention or attempt of the. clerk to give a detailed account of the manner of impanelling the jury, or to set out the oath in hose verba. It may be observed that in the form of the verdict returned, and which was pre-'
The form of the verdict thus referred to was in these words: “We, the jury duly empanelled, charged and sworn, in the above entitled action, do, on our oath, find the defendant, William Baldwin, guilty of murder in the first degree, as charged in the first count of information.” .
The Supreme Court of Kansas held that the recitals in the record relative to the swearing of the jury were not to be regarded as an attempt to set out the oath actually administered, but rather as a statement of the fact that the jury had been sworn and acted under oath. We.concur in this view.
That court went on to say: “A still more conclusive answer on, this point is, that no objection was made to the form of the oath when it was administered, or at any other time prior to its presentation in this' court. If there was any irregularity in this respect, it should,.and probably would, have been objected to at the time it occurred. It is quite unlikely that there was any departure from the form' of the oath so well understood, and which is in universal use in all of the courts of the State; but, if the form of the oath was defective, the attention of the' court should have been called to it at the time the oath was taken, so that it might have been corrected. A party cannot sit silently by, and take the chances of acquittal, and subsequently, when convicted, make objections to an irregularity in the form "of thé'oath. Not only must' the objection be made whpn the irregularity is committed, but the form in which the oath was taken, as well as the objection, should be incorporated into the bill of exceptions, in order that this court may see whether or not it is sufficient. This was not done.”
Tiiis statement of the condition of the record shows that no Federal question is presented, in regard to the oath administered to the jurors, of- which this court can take jurisdiction. Section 709: of the Revised Statutes provides, that a final -judgment in any suit in the highest court of a State, in which a decision in the suit could be had, where any title, right, privilege,-or immunity is claimed under the. Constitution, and the decision is against the title, right, privilege, qr immunity
In Spies v. Illinois,
The question whether the evidence in the case was sufficient • to justify the verdict of the jury, and.the question whether the constitution of the State of Kansas was complied with or not in the proceedings on the trial which are challenged, are not Federal questions which this court can review.
The writ of error is dismissed for want of jurisdiction.
Dissenting Opinion
dissenting.
I adhere to the opinion expressed by me in Hurtado v. California,
