2 Wis. 22 | Wis. | 1853
The principal question. involved in this case is whether, under the Constitution, the defendant below, who is now plaintiff in error, was entitled to a trial of the issue joined in the case, by a jury of twelve men, when he demanded the same, and paid the usual jury fee into court.
Section 2 of Article VII. of the Constitution, empowered the Legislature to establish inferior courts in the several counties of the State, with limited civil and criminal jurisdiction; and in pursuance of this power, chapter 86 of the Revised Statutes was enacted. ' By this chapter, the County Courts of this State were organized.
Section 16 of this chapter provides: “ If an issue of law be made in the cause, it shall be tried by the court; if an issue of fact, it shall, on demand of either party, as hereinafter provided, be tried by a jury, to consist of not more than six persons, and if no jury be demanded by either party, the issue shall be tried by the court.”
By the twenty-third and twenty-fourth sections, appeals from the judgments of County Courts are prohibited, but the same may be removed to the Supreme Court by writs of error. Under these provisions, a party may have a trial by jury, but this jury can consist of no more than six men, and the question at once presents itself, is this such a trial by jury as is contemplated by section 5 of article 1 of the Constitution? This section declares, “The right of trial by jury shall remain inviolate, and shall extend to all cases at law, without regal’d to the amount in controversy ”
It would be a bootless task to trace the origin of trial by jury, or to ascertain whether it had an exist
Lord Coke, in treating of the different modes provided for the trial of facts under the English law, says: “ Of these, a trial by twelve men is the most frequent and common.” “And in ancient time, they were twelve knights. This trial of the fact per duo-deeim loberos et legales homines, is very ancient.” Again he says : “Albeit the words of the writ be quod facial duodecim liberos et legales homines de vicinetoj &c., “yet, by ancient course, the sheriff must return twenty-four, and this is for expedition of justice ; for if twelve should only be returned, no man should have a full jury appear, or be sworn in respect of challenges, without a tales, which should be a great delay of trials. So, as in this case, usage and ancient course maketh law ; and it seemeth to me that the law in this case delighteth herself in the number of twelve ; for there must not only be twelve jurors for the trial of matters of fact, but twelve judges, of ancient time, for trials of matters of law in the Exchequer Chamber.” Co. Litt. book 3, chap. 9.
In Crabb’s History of English Law, chap. 9, p. 124, we are told that the trial by jury, in its modern sense, was, during the reign of Henry II, in the twelfth century, partially applied to criminal matters, for it was directed by the Constitution of Clarendon, that if nobody appeared to accuse an offender before the archdeacon, the sheriff, at the request of the bishop, “fa. ciat jurare duodecim legales liommes de vicinetoj &g.
“The trial per pais, or by a jury of one’s country, is justly esteemed one of the principal excellencies of our Constitution ; for what greater security can any person have in his life, liberty or estate, than to be sure of not being divested of, or injured in any of these, without the sense and verdict of twelve honest and impartial men of his neighborhood ? And hence we find the conmon lato herein confirmed by Magna Charta." Bacon's Ab., Title “Juries," vol. 5, p. 308. Aud again, on page 314 it is said : “ The grand jury, as has been already observed, must consist of twelve at least; the petit jury of twelve, and can be neither more noo* less ; but it it is said that particular inquests may consist of a more or less number than twelve. But on a writ of error, a judgment out of an inferior court was reversed, because, being by default, the inquiry of damages was only by two jurors, and though a custom was alleged to warrant it, yet it was resolved that there could not be less than twelve, though the writ of inquiry saith only po*o sacramenium proborum et legaUum hominum, and not duodecim, as in a venire. Also, it hath been frequently holden that a custom in an inferior court to try by six jurors is void.”
In the third volume of his Lectures on the Law of Migland, p. 199, Professor Woodesson says of trial by jury: “'Where no challenge is taken either to the
Sir Matthew Hale says (2 Hale's P. C. 161): “But in case of a trial by the petit jury, it can be by no more nor less than twelve;” and (p. 296) “if only eleven be sworn by mistake, no verdict can be taken of the eleven, and if it be, it is error.”
“ The petit jury when sworn, must consist precisely of twelve, and is never to be either more or less on the trial of the general issue.” 1 Chitty's C. L. 505.
In the case of the State vs. Cox, 3 English's Rep. 436, the precise question now under consideration was determined, and we find the subject thus disposed of: “An objection is taken to the eleventh section of the act limiting the number of the jury to six men. The right of trial by jury is a constitutional right. From the earliest period of the common law, the term jury has had a technical and specific meaning, and has ever signified ‘a body of twelve citizens, duly qualified to . serve on juries, empannelled and sworn to try one or more issues of fact submitted to them, and to give a judgment inspecting the same, called a verdict.’ The Constitutional provision, securing the right of trial by a jury, means a jury of twelve men, according to the known technical meaning of the term. Of his right to such a jury, the defendant cannot be deprived, except by his own consent. True, he may waive the right and submit to a decision of six men, even to that of the justice of the peace himself, but in all cases where he may require it, it is the duty of the justice to empannel a legal jury of twelve men for the trial of the cause”
The Supreme Court of .Pennsylvania, in the case of
The same point ha3 been decided in Tillman vs. Ailles, 5 Smedes & Marsh, 373; Wolfe vs. Martin, 1 How. Miss. Rep. 30; Dixon vs. Richards, 2 id. 171; Bone vs. McGinley, 7 id. 671.
We have already said that the meaning of the language used in our Constitution must be gleaned from the common law, and this is because of the peculiarity of the language. “The right of trial by jury shall remain inviolate that is, it shall continue as it was at the time of the formation and adoption of the Constitution by the people of this State.
This right, “according to the course of the common law,” was guaranteed to the people of the Northwest Territory by Article 2, of the Ordinance of July 13th, 1787. While under a territorial form of government, it was the right of the people of Wisconsin, secured to them in common with all others to whom the federal courts were open, under Article 7, of the Amendments to the Constitution of the United States, adopted September 13, 1788.
Now it will be remembered, that at the time of the formation of our Constitution in 1848, the judicial system in existence in Wisconsin Territory was composed of a Supreme Court, in which no questions of fact were tried by a jury ; Distilct Courts, in which grand and petit juries were empanuelled, the latter consisting of twelve men ; Courts of Probate, wherein
So far as the restriction of the jury before a justice of the peace is concerned, we do not feel at liberty to inquire at this time, but may remark that the party aggrieved by the decision before the justice, might, in certain cases, remove the case by appeal to the District Court, where a trial by a jury of twelve men would be available.
But it is certain that when our Constitution was adopted, we had no court of record in existence in Wisconsin, in which the number of the jury for trials of fact in any case, except by consent, could be less than twelve ; so that it cannot be said that when a trial by jury, in a court of record such as the County Court, must be by a jury of six persons and no more, the trial by jury in a court of record which has been enjoyed before the adoption of the Constitution, remains inviolate.
In our view of -the provisions of the Bevised Statutes concerning County Courts, where they restrict the jury to six persons, they conflict with the enjoyment of a constitutional right, secured to every citizen, namely, the right of trial by a jury of twelve men ; and we therefore hold, that when the defendant in the court below was denied a trial by a jury consisting of twelve men, he was deprived of a right secured to him by the Constitution.
This was not the fault of the judge of that court; it is a defect in the law, which afforded him no means of procuring a constitutional jury. It is always a delicate matter for courts to declare a legislative enact
Another question of some interest is presented by the record in this case, namely: can husband and wife join as plaintiffs in an action for the. recovery of the price of goods sold by the wife dum sola, which goods were of “her sole and separate property”? The “act to provide for the protection of married women in the enjoyment of their own property,” approved February 1, 1850, (Session Laws of 1850, chap. 44,) certainly goes far towards clothing one class of females with strange and manly attributes ; yet it is a meritorious statute, designed to remedy a supposed evil of the common law, and therefore it ought to be liberally construed.
Before the passage of this act, marriage deprived the wife of the light to maintain an action in her own name alone, upon contracts made by her before marriage. In some cases, where the law deems her the meritorious cause of action, as in covenant concerning her lands, on bonds given to her during coverture, on promises made to her for her services, and for the wife’s ohoses in action-, not reduced to possession by the husband, the wife may be joined in the action. It is said to be a rule, that in all cases where the cause of action by law survives to the wife, she must be joined in’ the action ; (Clapp vs. Inhabitants of Stoughton, 10 Pick. 463;) but the general rule is, that the. marriage takes away her separate legal existence, so that, except in some cases, she could not sue apart from her husband. Clapp vs. Inhabitants of Stoughton, supra;
But under the act of 1850, the wife is endowed w[th a]]_ -¿he necessary incidents of separate ownership in property, real and personal, which is declared to be neither subject to the husband’s disposal, nor liable for his debts ; and we think.it a necessary consequence that the wife should be equally as independent of her husband in the assertion and maintenance of her rights in courts of justice, when those rights flow from, or pertain to, her separate property, as she is declared to be in its ownership. Any other conclusion might, in many instances,greatly frustrate the beneficent object of the law; for if she were not permitted to sue without joining her husband, in actions concerning her separate estate and property, the husband, by refusing to join in the suit, might greatly control, if not take away, the wife’s rights. We therefore think, that in a case like fhe present, the wife may sue without her husband being joined. But we also think that the action may be brought by husband and wife jointly. In the case of Goodyear vs. Rumbaugh and wife, 13 Penn. R. 480, the Supreme Court of Pennsylvania were called upon to put a construction on a statute similar to ours, relating to the property of married females, where it was objected that the husband and wife could not be joined in an action to recover money belonging to the wife, and lent by her ; Judge Rogers, in giving the opinion of the court, holds that the action might be brought by husband and wife jointly, or by the wife alone. He says : “We can see nothing in the exception of which the defendant can complain. He has two, instead of one, answerable for costs. In construing this statute, which is a just and remedial
The judgment of the County Court must be reversed, with costs, and the cause must be remanded for a new trial.