16 How. Pr. 106 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1858
S. B. Strong, Justice. The defendants have moved that the place of trial in these actions should be changed, on the ground that a fair and impartial trial cannot
It is of course, desirable that trials in criminal cases should be had where the offences are alleged to have been perpetrated. Witnesses for the prosecution often attend reluctantly, and generally without compensation, and if they should be called upon to travel far from their homes, they would be subjected to great hardship, or would abstain from attending, to the great obstruction of public justice. I do not, however, urge that the vicinage, as it is called, is the best adapted for a fair and impartial trial. There is often some personal feeling or local prejudice, which sadly interferes with the due and impartial administration of justice, and sometimes induces strange verdicts, or what is becoming a serious evil, final disagreements among the jurors. But for the trouble, delay and expense, caused by trials at distant or remote places, it would be well that they should take place before jurors to whom the parties, their interests and their feelings are unknown. It might sometimes subserve the ends of justice that the parties and their witnesses are personally known to the jurors, but the advantage is more than balanced by the undue influence of personal or local considerations, which is often imperceptible to him whom it controls.
A party who moves to change the place of trial from where the law primarily establishes it, must fail unless he satisfies the court that the ends of justice require, or at all events will be promoted by it. That a fair and impartial trial by any means within the reach of the law cannot be had in the county where the venue is laid, is undoubtedly a sufficient reason for the change. The people, all men, whatever may be their character or standing, have when litigating, a right to a trial by an
Still the court should not lightly adopt or act upon the opinion that a fair and impartial trial cannot be had in the county where the events which gave rise to the complaint are alleged to have happened: Facts, and not the mere impressions and" conclusions of the parties or their witnesses, should be considered and should control. Parties generally, and their friends frequently, imbibe strong opinions from inconsiderable causes, and it" is unsafe to place much reliance upon them. But there cannot well be any serious misapprehension as to the existence of facts, especially when they are of a public nature. The principal question is as to the inferences to be drawn from them.
It was Said -in Messinger agt. Holmes, (12 Wend. 203,) that the place of trial should not be changed by reason of popular excitement or prejudice, until after an ineffectual trial in the county where the venue had been originally laid. But in a Subsequent case, (The People agt. Webb, 1 Hill, 179,) it was decided that the venue might be changed in a criminal case where the evidence of public excitement against the applicant was strong, although there had been no actual experiment made by way of trying the cause, or even impannelling a jury in the county where it had been originally laid. The learned judge who gave the opinion of the court in that case, remarked, and I think correctly, “ To make such an experiment essential would
The main allegation,in the case under consideration, is, that there is a strong and controlling excitement against the defendants, upon the principal question involved in these controversies, in the city of Brooklyn, caused principally by those who have been instrumental in procuring the indictments. It is not averred, or so far as the papers go, even supposed, that it prevails in the rural parts of the county. According to the census of 1855, the population of the city of Brooklyn was 205,250, while that of the other towns in the county was 11,105. Comparatively the number of jurors from the rural districts must be very small. In an ordinary panel there would not probably be enough to constitute a single jury. Even if a jury could be selected from the county, there ctiuld not be more than one from the entire panel, and the other cases would have to be tried by Brooklyn jurors or go .over to another term. If, therefore, the objection to the jurors extends no further than to the residents of Brooklyn, still if it prevails generally as to them, it is enough to call upon us to change the place of trial. Several facts have been stated to show that there is a strong excitement, and a hostile feeling
Taking into consideration all the circumstances, it seems to me, that the defendants ought not to be tried by a jury, consisting as it must, if taken from the body of the county, principally of citizens of Brooklyn. I have every confidence in the intelligence and devotion to justice of the jurors of that city. But they may, and probably have, imbibed strong prejudices upon a subject of great public interest, and no one is willing to be tried by jurors prejudiced against himself or his interest, however respectable and well informed they may be. That the residents on a long and populous street, extending from the South Ferry to Bedford, are warmly and actively opposed to the defendants in this controversy, and are thus disqualified from acting as jurors, there can be no doubt. A feeling operating through such an extended locality is apt to prevail much further through the influence of business connections, family ties and friendly intercourse. That it has extended itself through a large portion of the city, is apparent from the large public meetings, the action of the common council, composed as it is of representatives of the whole city, and, possibly, the multiplied action of the grand jury. I do not mean to say that in all this the citizens or the common council, or the grand jury have erred, but it does seem to me, with the greatest respect for all of those bodies, that the conduct of the public meetings and the people’s representatives indicates a foregone conclusion against the defendants, which renders it proper that the questions to be tried in these cases, should be submitted to jurors to be selected from another community.
The district attorney objects principally on the ground that a trial in another county would subject the witnesses for the prosecution, who he says are numerous, to great inconvenience, and yet he states in his affidavit, that the cases will be decided principally, if not wholly, upon a question of law. If he is
It is so well understood, that I think we may take judicial notice of the fact, that the inhabitants of our cities generally suppose that the use of steam in propelling locomotives through their streets is so far noxious that it is unjustifiable. If that should be the ground of complaint, or if in addition to that, it should be contended that tunnelling a street for railway purposes was illegal, but few witnesses would be necessary. These are the only questions of law, which so far as I understand the cases, will be probably involved on the trial.
The district attorney objects to sending the cases for trial to either of the other counties on the island, on the ground that the popular feeling there is in favor of the use of steam on the railroad in Brooklyn. The evidence to prove the existence of such favorable feeling among the inhabitants of those counties, is inferior to that going to show the prevalence of hostile feelings in the citizens of Brooklyn, but still I am not inclined to change the place of trial to either Suffolk or Queens county. It is better that the cases should be tried where there is clearly no popular bias or prejudice which might interfere with the due administration of justice.
The court-house in the county of Westchester is not distant from Brooklyn, and with the present conveniences of travel-ling furnished by the railroads, there can be no great inconvenience or heavy expense incurred in taking the witnesses to White Plains. For the reasons which I have assigned, but certainly from no distrust of the intelligence or ordinary impartiality of the jurors of the county of Kings, I am inclined to change the place of trial in the cases under consideration, into the county of Westchester. Liberty should, however, be given to the public prosecutor and the defendants to select any other county by mutual consent.