2 Wash. Terr. 286 | Wash. Terr. | 1884
Opinion by
By this record there are presented to. us but two questions which we deem worth while to consider. They are questions as to the validity of the game law, upon which this indictment was framed, and as to the validity of the indictment found by a Grand Jury composed in part of married women.
The game law in question restricted hunting in five counties only. It is contended that, for this reason, it is inconsistent with that inhibition in the Organic Act which forbids the Legislature from granting special privileges. But the provisions of this game law fall without distinction upon all inhabitants of the Territory. All are forbidden to hunt at certain seasons within the counties named. There is no special privilege, unless it be in favor of the brute life of the specified area, or those of human kind who are so happy as to be alive at the hunting .season.
We think the law to be a sensible police regulation, entirely within the power of the Territorial Legislature to enact.
Upon the question of eligibility of married women to Grand Jury duty, we have but a word to say. This Court, circling ill rough its four phases like the moon, has already once, when differently constituted, passed and thrown its light upon that question. What it then saw it sees now. Its views are unchanged. But as the question has revolved somewhat, so as to
It is contended that the provisions of the Federal Constitution, preserving to the citizens the right of juries, grand and petit, as known to the common law, are incompatible with any legislation by our Territorial Legislature that would make it ■the right or duty of women to serve as petit jurors in any case, or as grand jurors in cases capital or infamous ; and that therefore the legislation which, interpreted as this Court interprets it, admits without discrimination women to jury duty as freely as men, cannot rightly be given any such interpretation or effect.
The definition and touchstone of qualification for jury duty, .at the time of the adoption of the Constitution and its amendments, was the ancient phrase, “ Liber el legalis homo.” It rested the qualification on a threefold basis — freedom, law, and humanity; in other words, the juror must be free, lawful, and ■of the human race. This definition was rigid as far as freedom .■and humanity were concerned, but elastic as to lawfulness. -Custom and statute prescribed the lawfulness. For a jury to try one sort of an issue, males were not Liber el legalis homines, and females were ; for a jury to try another sort, both men and women were ; for the trial of other and all ordinary issues, males only were competent. But all this depended upon law and custom, and was liable to change as the conditions of society or new cases might demand.
This elasticity of the common law respecting jury qualifications was preserved in, and flows to us through, the Federal Constitution. We are free to change by statute the legal qualification of jurors so long as we do not transgress limitations Imposed by acts of Congress, and so long as we do not put on juries those who are under duress of servitude, or who are monkeys or angels; but do put on them those only who are free beings, sympathetic, and schooled in the lot of human kind.
We find no error in the record, and the judgment of the Court below will therefore be affirmed.
I concur : S. C. Wingaed, Associate Justice.
George Turner, Associate Justice.