13 Ga. App. 700 | Ga. Ct. App. | 1913
The plaintiff in error excepts to the judgment overruling his motion for a new trial. The accusation was based upon an affidavit made before a justice of the peace, who issued the warrant for the defendant’s arrest. On the panel put upon the prisoner this justice of the peace appeared as a juror. Immediately after the panel was put upon the accused, .and before the jury was stricken or sworn, the accused objected to the justice of the peace, upon the ground that he was not a competent juror, because of the facts stated above, and, in substantiation of this objection, submitted to the court the affidavit of the prosecutor and the warrant issued by the justice, commanding the arrest of the defendant, and the entry of the arrest (from which it appears that the prosecutor was also the arresting officer). The court overruled the objection and held that the juror was competent, and this ruling is the subject of the first assignment of error.
Nothing is better settled than that no man can be a judge in his own case, and the disqualification dependent upon this rule has very naturally been extended, in the interest of fair jury trials, to include any and every case in which the trior in question does not possess an exclusive interest but may be affected by a partial interest in the subject-matter. The principle that a juror should not sit on a cause in which he is eventually interested is founded in wisdom and justice, and has no regard to the degree of pecuniary interest. Hnder our law, the justice of the peace who issues a warrant in a criminal case has a pecuniary interest in the result of the trial; for if the accused is convicted and is~ sentenced to pay a fine and the costs, and does pay it, the fees for issuing the warrant and for other services legally performed by the justice must be included in the costs and be paid as a part of the costs before the de
In a South Carolina case the court, in discussing the interest- of jurors (Horry’s case, 1 Bay, 229), adopts the following notable quotation from Blackstone: “The smallest degree of interest is a decisive objection to a witness, and much more so to a juror” (2 Bl. Com. 480). In this State the interest of a witness is no longer ground for objection, but as to a juror there has been no relaxation of Blackstone’s rule, so far as we are. able to discover. No right has been more sacredly guarded by the courts in this State than that accorded to every litigant of having his case tried by jurors not only fair, impartial, and disinterested, but even beyond suspicion of bias. In Anderson v. State, 63 Ga. 675, the surety upon the defendant’s bond was.held to be disqualified for interest upon objection by the State, and certainly such a surety’s pecuniary interest in the defendant is not ordinarily greater than would be the interest of a committing magistrate in his costs. In Johnson v. Americus, 46 Ga. 81, and Mayor &c. of Cartersville v. Lyon, 69 Ga. 577, the Supreme Court held that citizens of a municipality were disqualified, because of interest, to sit as jurors in causes in which the municipality was a party; and it required a statute to abrogate this rule. Inasmuch as the right of liberty is more .precious than, the possession of mere worldly goods, it would seem, certainly in the absence of a statute and in criminal prosecutions, that the rule of Blackstone should be strictly adhered to. It is true the qualification of a juror, when he is put upon the court as a trior, is a
Not only on account of pecuniary interest, but also for other reasons, the justice of the peace who binds over one accused of crime ■should not be held qualified to pass upon his guilt or innocence. In the first place, the act of taking the affidavit is not purely ministerial. Gillett v. Thiebold, 9 Kansas, 431. The magistrate determines judicially to order an arrest. And even if it be true that every citizen has a right to have a warrant issued when he is willing to swear that another has committed a crime, still the warrant can not be issued until the prosecutor has sworn to the charge; and the crime to which the prosecutor swears can not be properly designated in the warrant until there has been a statement of at least enough of the facts to enable the justice of the peace to determine the offense for which the warrant should be issued. Under such circumstances it would be unreasonable to suppose that an intelligent man would not form some kind of an opinion with reference to the case which has been stated and verified in his hearing by the affidavit of the prosecutor. Not only is this so, but as an officer of the State the justice of the peace who issues the warrant sets in motion the entire criminal machinery of the State, from the operation of which the trial of the defendant results; and human nature is of such fashion that the justice of the peace will generally feel such interest in his handiwork as not to desire to be held blamable for issuing a warrant without sufficient cause, or without any cause.
Upon grounds of public policy, if for no other reason, and in order that one accused of crime may have no semblance of cause for complaint, an officer of the State who, in the discharge of his duty, lias taken an affidavit charging a citizen with crime, and thereupon has issued the warrant upon which he was arrested, should not be put upon the accused as a juror on his trial for that crime. The ■safety of every social institution worth preserving depends upon the integrity of our jury system. If there be possibility of error either way, it is far better to err by being overcautious in adhering
Judgment reversed.