48 Ill. 145 | Ill. | 1868
delivered the opinion of the Court:
It appears from the record that plaintiffs in error were indicted for an assault and battery. It is not described as an aggravated assault, declared to be a misdemeanor in the fifty-second section of the criminal code. JSTor does it describe a riot, as defined in the one hundred and fourteenth section of the same code. The usual language employed to describe either of these offences is not used in this indictment.
It is insisted that the court below erred in refusing to allow the challenges of plaintiffs in error, to a number of jurors, comprising a part of the panel that tried them. These jurors stated, that they had heard of the circumstances of the difficulty ; that they believed the statements, and upon these statements had fixed opinions as to the merits of the case, such as would require evidence to remove or change, but that the opinion could be changed by sufficient evidence; but that they had no prejudice against the accused, and they believed they could render a fair and impartial verdict, according to the evidence. These are substantially the statements of some five of the jurors who tried the case, and were the ground of challenge by plaintiffs in error, but which was disallowed by the judge trying the cause in the court below, and that ruling is assigned as one of the errors in the record brought to this court.
It has been repeatedly held by this court, that if a juror has a decided opinion respecting the merits of the controversy, either from a personal knowledge of the facts, from the statements of witnesses, from the relation of the parties, or from rumor, he is disqualified from trying the case, if challenged for cause. Gardner v. The People, 3 Scam. 83; Smith v. Eames, ib. 76 ; Vennum v. Harwood, 1 Gilm. 659 ; Baxter v. The People, 3 Gilm. 368, Neeley v. The People, 13 Ill. 685 ; Gray v. The People, 26 Ill. 344. These cases must govern this case. A prisoner should never be required to encounter a pre-existing opinion deliberately formed, which the juror believes is true, and which the prisoner would be obliged to overcome. When tried by such jurors, he cannot be said to have had a fair trial, unless he choose to permit them to act in his case. He has a right to be tried by men who are wholly impartial, without prepossessions or prejudice against him or his case. Tested by these rules, these jurors were incompetent when objected to by the accused, and the court below erred in not allowing the challenges to these jurors.
The second and fourth instructions given for the people are erroneous, in so far as they assume that Jeremiah Collins was beating the prosecuting witness. It is the province of the jury to find facts, and not the court. That was the question which was being tried by the jury, and the instructions should have left it to them to determine upon the evidence before them.
The judgment of the court below is reversed, and the cause remanded.
Judgment reversed.