207 Mass. 606 | Mass. | 1911
To the Honorable Senate of the Commonwealth of Massachusetts :
The questions which we are to answer, a copy of which is hereto annexed, concern the right of trial by jury which is secured to all our people by the Federal Constitution and the Constitution of this Commonwealth. U. S. Const. Amendm. art. 7. Declaration of Rights, art. 15. This right, as it was understood by our ancestors, might be exercised in all actions at common*608 law, as distinguished from proceedings in admiralty, in equity, in the ecclesiastical courts and in statutory proceedings not conducted in accordance with the rules of the common law. Trial by jury, at the time of the adoption of our Constitution, included not only the presence of a jury for the determination of facts, but also the supervision and guidance of a presiding judge who should direct the course of the trial, pass upon questions as to the admissibility of evidence and instruct the jury in matters of law, so that the result of the trial might establish the rights of the parties conformably to the law of the land. It included also, as a part of the power of the judge, a right, upon application of an aggrieved party, to set aside the verdict if it was rendered by the jury in disregard of their manifest duty, or under some grave mistake which if not corrected would work a miscarriage of justice. The right of the party to have the exercise of this power of the judge to set aside a verdict does not seem to have existed from the earliest times, the remedy at first having been by a process of attainder against the jury. But so long ago as 1655, Glynne, C. J., said, in Wood v. Gunston, Style, 466, in which a new trial was granted for partiality of the jury and excessive damages for a libel: “ It is in the discretion of the court in some cases to grant a new trial, but this must be a judicial, and not an arbitrary discretion, and it is frequent in our books for the court to take notice of miscarriages of juries, and to grant new trials upon them.” In cases of felony it was the general practice in England to give relief by a recommendation of pardon, and this right to grant new trials was not exercised by inferior courts; but that it was a part of the authorized proceedings in a trial by jury before a court of general jurisdiction was recognized long before the adoption of our Constitution.
Said the Supreme Court of the United States, speaking through Mr. Justice Gray, in Capital Traction Co. v. Hof, 174 U. S. 1, 13, “ ‘ Trial by jury,’ in the primary and usual sense of the term at the common law and in the American constitutions, is not merely a trial by a jury of twelve men before an officer vested with authority to cause them to be summoned and empanelled, to administer oaths to them and to the constable in charge, and to enter judgment and issue execution on their verdict ; but it is a trial by a jury of twelve men, in the presence
We deem it the established law of this Commonwealth that the right of each party to have the assistance and protection of the presiding judge, including the power on the part of the judge to set aside the verdict for good cause, is a part of his right to a trial by jury, secured to him by the Constitution of the Commonwealth. A similar right is secured to litigants in the United States courts by the Federal Constitution. This right continues until a verdict is returned to which no valid objection is made, and which therefore settles the rights of the parties as to all matters included in it. It follows that the Legislature has no authority to enact a statute which limits or impairs this right.
The first and second questions, which relate only to the first section of the proposed act, are answered in the affirmative. In substance the section is in accordance with the general practice to grant a new trial upon the question of damages only, if the verdict is satisfactory in all particulars as a determination of the liability. This is the practice in this court when a new trial is
The last part of this section has no application to a case where the principal and controlling grounds for granting the new trial are that the damages are excessive, and where the statement also shows that, on the question of liability, the judge is of opinion that upon the weight of the evidence the verdict should have been the other way, and that this fact is an additional reason for setting aside the verdict, although in itself alone it might not be a sufficient reason for such action.
The third question, which refers to the second section of the proposed act, requires us to consider whether the Legislature can deprive a defendant, in whose favor a motion for a new trial has been granted, of his right to have the second, or any subsequent trial, conducted to a final result, in accordance with the salutary methods secured to him by the Constitution, which include the presence of a judge who has power to set aside the verdict if justice requires it. This question must be answered in the negative. The constitutional right to a trial by jury in actions at common law continues in every case until a verdict is rendered which is so far supported by the law and the evidence that the court ought not to set it aside. The right of the party in a trial never can be diminished or impaired by the fact that there has been a previous trial of the same case which resulted in nothing that the law could approve.
Affecting this third question, there is an independent consideration under the Fourteenth Amendment of the Constitution of the United States, which we will not consider at length. Under that amendment, every person within the jurisdiction of the Commonwealth is entitled to the equal protection of the laws. Under the second section of the proposed act, there is an attempted limitation upon the power of the court to set aside a second verdict for a plaintiff upon motion of a defendant, when there is no similar limitation upon the power of the court to set aside successive verdicts for a defendant upon motion of the plaintiff. It is at least very doubtful whether the Constitution
Marcus P. Knowlton.
James M. Morton.
John W. Hammond.
William Caleb Losing.
Henry K. Braley.
Henry 1ST. Sheldon.
Arthur Prentice Rugg.