89 N.J.L. 16 | N.J. | 1916
The opinion of the court was delivered by
The power of the Court of Quarter Sessions to punish contempts of court is derived wholly from the common law, which has been neither altered nor enlarged by statute in this state.
IVhat the common law of England was at the lime at which we derived it from the parent country is thus stated by Blackstone, who wrote at about that period: “If the contempt be committed in the face of the court the offender may be instantly apprehended and imprisoned at the discretion of the judges without any further proof or examination. But in matters that arise at a distance and of which the court cannot have so perfect a knowledge unless by the confession of the party
This accurately states the common law of England just prior to the American Revolution. That this immemorial usage underwent no change in its transplanting to the American states is shown by a decision of the Supreme Court of Hew York, while Kent was still Chief Justice. The court said: “The attachment by virtue of which he had been arrested, was nothing more than a process'to bring him into court
Before leaving the common law rule it may be well to advert to a matter that must occur to everyone who considers the subject, viz., the mildness, not to say ineffectiveness, of, the manner in which contempts were dealt with in the law courts of England as compared with the severity of its criminal law in other respects. That this arose from any special sympathy with this particular offence is not to be thought of; on the contrary, of all criminal offences, this is probably the very one that the judges would have liked to punish in the most effective manner. The course pursued by the common law judges was evidently therefore not from choice but from compulsion and the nature and sources of such compulsion are not far to find. Contempt was a criminal offence and Magna Charta expressly forbade that any person should be tried for a criminal offence unless upon the indictment of the grand inquest. In the face of this prohibition there could be no trial by the court. The unwritten constitution of England likewise provided that no man could be compelled to give testimony against himself and it likewise prohibited one accused of crime from testifying in his own behalf. The net result of these fundamental restrictions was that in the summary proceeding for contempt there could be no trial and hence no witnesses, from which it followed that if the defendant was to be convicted in such summary proceeding it must be upon facts admitted by his own oath, the taking of-which was justified upon the somewhat sophistical ground that the taking of such an oath by the defendant was not the giving of testimony, because if there was no trial there
In this state our earlier cases prior to the enactment of the statute permitting an appeal to this court uniformly recognize this common law rule by their references to it. State v. Fisler, 6 N. J. L. 305; State v. Doty, 32 Id. 403; State v. Ackerson, 25 Id. 209. There arose, however, no occasion for its formal restatement.
However, shortly after the passage of the act of 1884, the case In re Cheesman, 49 N. J. L. 115, was before this court, in which Mr. Justice Dixon, stating the procedure in contempt cases in the courts of law, concluded by saying, “the accused, on being brought in, should be either held to bail or committed to answer interrogatories; then that the interrogatories be exhibited and answered; and thereupon according as his answers confess or deny his guilt he should be punished or discharged.” Cheesman, by affidavit, declared the truth of the charge against him before interrogatories were filed and they therefore were not filed, and this irregularity is condoned in the opinion upon the ground that “the appellant never intimated * * * that he was entitled to have an attachment issue or interrogatories filed.” This opinion therefore accurately apprehends and states the common law rule that obtains in courts of law in this state. If it be said that this statement of the common law was dictum,
Sncli was the state of our decisions when the ease In re Gonzales was decided by this court, Mr. Justice Parker delivering the opinion (88 N. J. L. 536). In that case the answers made by Gonzales to interrogatories exhibited to him by the court were not accepted as conclusive because of a contradiction between such answers and certain testimony that had been taken by the court as the basis for the issuance of: a writ of attachment. Gonzales was found guilty of contempt by the Hudson Over and in reversing this judgment Mr. Justice Parker said : “On the whole, therefore, we think that appellant fully and fairly purged himself of any contempt, legally implied in the interrogatories, and which was testified io hv the grand jury clerk. If his denial was adequate it must he taken as true. We think, therefore, that the finding that the appellant was guilty of contempt necessarily, and from a reading of the decision of the Oyer we should say confessedly, was based on the allegations in the testimony of the grand jury .clerk, which were contradicted by appellant, and in the face of such contradiction. But the court had no right to weigh the evidence, as has just been .pointed out. If the contradiction was full and adequate the appellant was entitled to his discharge.” This decision, which accords full common law force to the defendant’s answer to the interrogatories, cannot ho reconciled with the proposition that the court may withhold the filing of interrogatories, and, against the protest of the accused, proceed to convict him upon evidence that would have been both inadmissible and nugatory if the court were proceeding to exercise its summary jurisdiction in the legitimate way.
Such })reposition is in effect an assertion of the right of the Quarter Sessions to try one accused of a criminal offence at special sessions without his consent, and as such is open to all of tlie constitutional objections pointed out by Mr. Justice Depue in Edwards v. State, 45 N. J. L. 419. In
The unbroken line of decision by which the rule of the common law has been preserved and handed down to us coupled with the insurmountable constitutional objections to the radical departure therefrom essayed in the present case compel the reversal of the judgment now before us, unless such a result is obviated by any of the following considerations submitted in behalf of the state:
The first of these is that the common law procedure was a mere rule of practice and not one of substantive law. This has already been disposed of both upon historical and constitutional grounds.
The second is that the proceedings of courts of equity in matters of contempt being more efficacious than the procedure in courts of law should be adopted by the latter. This rests upon the same footing as would the contention that because specific performance was more efficacious than a judgment for damages, the courts of law should adopt the former remedy in preference to its own. The difference between courts of law and courts of equity is in nothing more marked than in their methods of remedial redress, which in courts of equity were administered from the earliest period largely, if not wholly, by the process of contempt. This resulted from the fact that equity acted only in personam; hence, if a personal decree were not obeyed the only remedy was by a process of
lienee, there arose a practice unknown to the courts of law, which became by long usage inveterate in the courts of equity in which it subsisted side by side with the totally different practice that we have been discussing in the courts of law during the same period. This distinction has been pointed out by every writer and by every decision dealing with the subject.
The continued maintenance of this practice in courts of equity in dealing with contempts that are in their essence not remedial but criminal, trenches upon debatable ground on which we should not enter—first, because it in nowise concerns the question before us; and secondly, because it concerns matter respecting which dictum of any sort would be ill advised. Enough has been said to show that courts of law can no more at their will adopt the chancery proceeding respecting matters of contempt than they can in any other matters respecting which the two courts radically differ.
Third, and lastly, it is said that there are decisions in other jurisdictions holding that the court may dispense with the exhibition of interrogatories or may treat the answers thereto as inconclusive.
Such of the decisions cited as I have examined were either equity cases, or decisions of courts in which law and equity were intermingled, or else arose under constitutional or statutory alterations of the common law. If, however, it were otherwise it would not affect the question in hand, since it is not our judicial habit to ignore decisions of our own courts
Binding nothing in the matters submitted for our consideration that in anywise militates against the conclusion we have reached, the judgment of the Hudson County Quarter Sessions convicting the appellant of contempt of court is reversed, and for nothing holden.