18 Johns. 187 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1820
delivered the opinion of the Court. A motion has been made to discharge the defendant, on the ground that it appears by the return to the certiorari, that he has been once tried, and therefore cannot legally be tried again. He was indicted in the Sessions in New-Yorlc for manslaughter ; the trial continued for five days, and the jury, after having received the charge of the Court, retired to con. sider of their verdict; were kept together 17 hours, and declaring there was no probability of their agreeing on their verdict, were discharged after 11 o’clock at night, on the last day in which the Court could sit. It appears that the jury had, in the mean time, between their receiving the charge of the Court, and their discharge, come into Court, and on being asked if they had agreed on their verdict, answered, through their foreman, that they had agreed, and that they found the prisoner guilty, but .recommended him to mercy; but on being polled, the third juror called upon, declared his disagreement to the verdict. These are all the facts material be noticed in considering the present motion.
The defendant’s counsel rely, principally, on the. 5th article of*'the amendments to the Constitution of the United Stales, which contains this provision : “ Nor shall any person be subject for the same offence, to be twice put in jeopardy
The expression, jeopardy of limb, was used in reference to the nature of the offence, and not to designate the punishment for an offence ; for no such punishment as loss of limb was inflicted by the laws of any of the states, at the adoption of the constitution. Punishment by deprivation of the limbs of the offender, would be abhorrent to the feelings and opinions of the enlightened age in which the constitution was adopted, and it had grown into disuse in England, fora long period antecedently. We must understand the term, “jeopardy of limb,’’ as referring to offences which In former ages were punishable by dismemberment, and as intending to comprise the crimes denominated in the law, felonies. The crime of manslaughter is, undoubtedly, a felony ; and therefore, the prisoner is entitled to the protection afforded by the article of the constitution, whether we regard it as binding upon us by its own force, or as an acknowledged axiom of the common law.
In the case of the People v. Olcott, (2 Johns. Cases, 301) all the authorities then extant upon the power of the Court to discharge a jury in criminal cases, and the consequences of such discharge, were very ably and elaborately examined by Mr. Justice Kent; and it would be an unpardonable waste of time to enter upon a re-examination of them. In that case, the jury, after having remained out from 8 o'clock on Saturday evening, until near two o’clock the next day, and having, in the mean while come into court two or three times for advice, declared there was no prospect of their agreeing in any verdict, and where discharged, without the consent of the prisoner: One of the questions was, whether the discharge of the jury entitled the defendant to be discharged, or whether he could be re-tried ? After examining and commenting on all the authorities, the position of the learned judge was this: “ If the court are satisfied that the jury have made long and unavailing efforts to agree, that they are so far exhausted as to be incapable of further discussion and deliberation, this be-corr. ‘S a case of necessity, and requires an interference.’’ He observed, “ all the authorities admit that when any
Upon full.consideration, I am of opinion, that although the power of discharging a jury is a delicate, and highly important trust, yet, that it does exist in cases of extreme and absolute necessity; and that it may be exercised without operating as an acquittal of the defendant; that it extends as well to felonies as misdemeanours; and that it exists, and may discreetly be exercised in cases where the jury, from the length of time they have been considering a cause, and their inability to agree, may be fairly presumed as never likely to agree, unless compelled so to do from the pressing calls of famine or bodily exhaustion. And, in the present
Much stress has been placed on the fact, that the defendant was in jeopardy during the time the jury were deliberating. It is true, that his situation was critical, and there Was, as regards him, danger, that the jury might agree on a verdict of guilty; but, in a legal sense, he was not in jeopardy, so that it would exonerate him from another trial. He has not been tried for the offence imputed to him ; to render the trial complete and perfect, there should have been a verdict, either for or against him. A literal observance of the constitutional provision would extend to and embrace those cases where, by the visitation of God, one of the jurors should either die, or become utterly unable to proceed in the trial. It would extend, also, to a case where the defendant himself should be seized with a fit, and become incapable of attending to his defence; and it would extend to a case where the jury were necessarily discharged in consequence of the termination of the powers of the Court. In a legal sense, therefore, a defendant is not once put in jeopardy, until the verdict of the jury is rendered for, or against him | and if for or against him, he can never be drawn in ques-Jñon again for the same offence. I entirely concur in re-probating the proceeding of withdrawing a juror, and attempting to subject a person to a second trial, because the public prosecutor was not prepared with his proofs. In the Case of the People v. Barrett & Ward, (2 Caines’ Rep. 304.) this Court considered it equivalent to an acquittal.
The only remaining inquiry is, whether the power of discharging the jury in this case could be exercised by the Sessions ?
The Court of General Sessions for the city of New-York, is clothed with powers not entrusted to the General Sessions of any other county. It has power to try for all crimes, (cases affecting life only excepted,) in as full and complete a manner as any Court of Oyer and Terminer and Gaol Delivery, for the said city and county, andean hear3
In this opinion my brethren entirely concur, and the consequence is, that Goodwin must be tried at the next Sittings, and his recognizance, and that of his sureties, will be re-spited until the next January term.
Motion to discharge denied.