A bill of indictment having been found against the three prisoners during the present session of this Court, for the murder of Samuel Alwine, they put in a plea, supposed by them to be of the same import as a plea of autrefois acquit, to which the attorney for the Commonwealth
Before I enter on the question, I think proper to declare, that I have no doubt of the integrity of the learned Court by which this jury was discharged. And however my opinion-may differ from theirs, it must be confessed, that as to the general discretionary power of discharging juries, they are not without countenance from Judges of high charаcter in other States.
In considering this matter, I shall confine my opinion to the case before the Court, which is a case of murder, a crime of which one species, viz: of the first degree, is punishable by our laws with death.
Concerning the power of the Court to discharge a jury in a capital case, Judges have not always agreed. It is one of those questions which remained long unsettled, nor even yet has any general rule been established which embraces all eases. Indeed, from the nature of the thing, such a rule is
I will now take notice of the decisions in the Courts of other States, and it will be found that not one of them was in a caPltal case. The counsеl for the Commonwealth has contended for the broad principle, that the Court has a discretionary power to discharge the jury in all cases. But this is expressly contradicted by the Supreme Court of New Tork, on whose decisions, as to the power of discharging juries, the counsel for the Commonwealth relies, for that Court decided, in the case of The People v. Barrett & Ward, 2 Caines’ Cases, 100. 304, that where the jury were discharged against the consent of the defendants, (in a case of misdemeanor only,) because the district attorney was not prepared with evidence to support the prosecution, such discharge was equivalent to an acquittal, and the defendants could never 'be brought to trial again for the same offence. The case of The People v. Olcott, 2 Johns. Cases, 301, was a misdemeanor. The opinion of the Court was delivered by Kent, J. who considered the subject thoroughly, and went through all the cases at that time reported. He was clear in opinion, that the Court had a right to discharge the jury when satisfied that they never could agree. But he confined his opinion to the case bеfore him, and I remark the following expressions: “ If the question in capital cases be doubtful, there is nothing to render it so in cases of misdemeanor.” The case of The People v. Denton, 2 Johns. Cases, 275, was also a misdemeanor. The, Court said, “ That the power of discharging a jury in cases of 'misdemeanor, as in civil cases, rests in sound discretion, and’-is to be exercised with great caution. Where every reasonable endeavour has been used to obtain a verdict, and it is found that the jury cannot, or will not, agree, they must, of necessity, be discharged.” The case in 2 Day. 504, (Connecticut,) was a misdemeanor. The People v. Goodwin, 18 Johns. 187, was a case oifelony, (manslaughter,) butit did not touch the life of the prisoner. Spencer, C. J. delivered the opinion of the Court, and cited, with approbation, the case of The People v. Olcott. His argument, it must be confessed, reached to all cases of felony, but still he confined his opinion to the case before the Court, in which there was an ingredient of some weight, not found in any other case ; and that was, that the legal termination of the Sessions was to be
Upon the whole, then, this is a case which affects the lives of the prisoners ; and the jury were discharged without, and against the consent of the prisoners, merely because they had not agreed, and said they never could agree as to the case of one of the prisoners, though, as to two of them, they had agreed, and were ready to give their verdict, if the Court would receive it. In such a case, I may be permitted to doubt whether the Judges who have discharged juries in other States, (for whose characters I entertain the most un
After the very clear and elaborate opinion we have just heard, in which I entirely concur, nothing but the importance of the general question, would require from me more than a silent concurrence; but the importance of the principle, and the supposed difficulty of the point in question, render'it proper that I should publicly give the reasons on which my opinion is founded. The subject has been already so much exhausted, the dеcisions of the Courts, and the opinions of elementary writers so fully reviewed and considered, • that entering again into a minute examination of them would be superfluous, and an unwarrantable consumption of time. Whether it be only a general tradition of the law, founded, as some suppose, on a mistake of the authorities, or a sound, legal principle, I will not undertake to say ; as a general rule, it has received the sanction of the most eminent Judges, and the recognition of the ablest writers on the criminal law, that “ a jury, sworn and charged, in a case of life or member, cannot be discharged by the Court or any other, but ought to give a verdict.” It is clear, that the rule is not now received as a universal one; but there is, at this day, a settled and uneontroverted rule, “that in a case of life or member, a jury sworn and charged, cannot be discharged before they give a verdict, unless with the consent of the prisoner, and where it is for his benefit, or in cases of extreme necessity and if a jury is otherwise discharged, it clearly amounts to an acquittal of the prisoner. I will pursue the order taken by Judge Foster, in the admired argument in the Kinlocks’ cash, which is constantly appealed to by the advocates of the power of the Court, and which, on the present question, I may safely consider as the text of this branch of the law, by first stating what the question is not.
This is not a question, whether, after evidence given, the Court may discharge the jury, where undue practices have been used to keep material witnesses on the part of the prose
But the present question is, whether, in a case of life, the Court can discharge the jury, after the cause is closed, and jury retired to consider of their verdict, solely because they come into Court and declare they cannot agree, and that there is not the least probability they ever will; not only without the consent, but against the consent of the prisoner-—and this is the general question on which I give an opinion.
The discharge of a jury for this reason, is not one of those unforeseen casualties which could not be defined, and, thereforе, could not have been provided for. It is an occurrence which frequently must arise, and, if the Court possesses the. power, there would be no want of precedents, and a principle so very important in the administration of justice, would
The Judge who dissented, and denied the pow¡ r of the Court in any case, and who considered the rule as universal, to which it was safer to adhere, than on any account to establish a power in the Court which is admitted to have been grossly abused, and might be so again, reprobated the conduct of the Judges in terms of unusual severity. The asking the prisoners’ consent, plainly betrayed a consciousness in the Judges, that the thing was wrong ; and Sir Michael Foster, (p. 31,) says( “ Nor is the present question, whether the bare consent of the prisoner, unassisted by counsel, and consenting to his own prejudice, will render the Court quite blameless in discharging a jury after evidence;” and then proceeds, “ this was done in Mansell’s Case, which hath been cited at the bar, but I think it ought not to have been done; for, notwithstanding what the record saith of the uncertainty and insufficiency of the verdict, the truth of the case was no moie than this; the jury was not agreed on any verdict at all, and, therefore, nothing remainеd to be done by the Court but to send them back, and keep them together until they had agreed on such verdict as the Court could have received and recorded; and the prisoner ought not to have been drawn into any consent at all, for, in capital cases, the Court is so far of counsel with the prisoner, that it should not suffer him to consent to any thing so manifestly wrong and to his own prejudice.” Here, then, is the opinion of Judge Foster, declaring that, in a capital case, the Court have nothing to do with the jury after they have retired to consider of their verdict, but to keep them together until they have agreed; that
But Judge Kent gives no opinion further than on the case before him ; he decides it on the analogy between the power of the Court in civil cases and misdemеanors. If the question, he observes, in capital cases be doubtful, there is nothing to render it so in misdemeanors. The People v. Denton was before the same Court a few months before, which was an indictmentfor a misdemeanor, and the jury were discharged because they could not agree, and the Court then drew aline of distinction between capital cases and misdemeanors. They
In England, we have seen, the Courts have not this authority. In Pennsylvania, from its first settlement, it has neither been claimed nor exercised, and yet no inconvenience has been experienced. Even in civil cases, it was doubted whether the Court possessed the inherent power. The Legislature vested it in them, and accommodated the oath or affirmation of the jury to this change. They are now sworn or affirmed to give a true verdict according to the evidence, unless dismissed by the Court, or the cause be withdrawn by the parties. How different is the course in capital cases ! Before the jury is sworn, the prisoner is solemnly called, and informed that the good men then сalled are to pass upon him for his life or death ; and the jury are sworn or affirined well and truly to try, and true deliverance make, between the Commonwealth and the prisoner, whom they have in charge. This affords the strongest evidence of legislative understanding, and of legislative intention to give the Court the power in civil cases by law ; and when it is not given in capital cases, it shews the will of the Legislature, that it was not proper to grant it. For my own part, I would regret to see the Court vested with a power which has so often been abused, and so liable to abuse. In the language of the Constitution, I would desire, that “ the trial by jury shall be as heretofore, and the right thereof remain inviolateIf the Court decide that they possess this discretionary power, it requires not the spirit of a prophet to predict, there will be few verdicts of
When I speak of the abuse of this power, I am far, very far, from supposing that the Court intended to oppress the prisoners. They had the general reasoning-of Judges, distinguished for their profound knowledge, and the sanction of the recent decision of the Supreme Court of New York, in the case of Goodwin, to support the discharge of the jury in this case.
Prisoners discharged.
