Lead Opinion
The complainant was a member of the Rockland County Planning Board at the time some of the alleged libels were published and a member of the Rockland County Sewer Commission at the time other alleged libels were published. It is conceded that none of the libels concerned his actions as such official; all were made solely with respect to his private conduct. Thus, even if we assume that the complainant was a “ public official ” within the meaning of New York Times Co. v. Sullivan (
During his summation, defendants’ counsel sought to argue to the jury that any citizen is entitled to comment upon the character of a person who is a public official and that a critic of the official’s private conduct should be entitled to the same protection as a critic of his official conduct. The District Attorney objected that such was not the law and that, while counsel could argue what the law is, he could not argue what the law should be. The objection was sustained and exception taken.
The Constitution of the State of New York (art. I, § 8) provides, as does section 418 of the Code of Criminal Procedure in substantially identical language, that in a criminal prosecution for libel, “ the jury shall have the right to determine the law and the fact.” A long and bitter judicial struggle has been fought over the respective functions of court and jury not only in prosecutions for libel but in all criminal cases (Sparf and Hansen v.
In 1805, during this controversy, this State provided by statute (L. 1805, ch. 90) that in prosecutions for criminal libel, the jury shall have the right to determine ‘ ‘ the law and the fact, under the direction of the court, m like maimer as in other criminal cases ” (emphasis added). At the time of this enactment, therefore, and its subsequent unqualified incorporation into the Constitutions of 1821 and 1846, it was generally believed that the jury determined the law and the fact in all criminal cases (People v. Sherlock, supra). The preamble to the enactment of 1805 makes it clear that this legislation was intended to erase “ doubts * * * whether, on the trial of an indictment or information for a libel, the jury have a right to give their verdict on the whole matter in issue ” and to eliminate the practice whereby the court directed or required the jury to find the defendant guilty “ merely on the proof of-the publication by the defendant, of the matter charged to be libelous, and of the sense ascribed thereto, in such indictment or information” (4 Lincoln, Constitutional History of New York, p. 142). The preamble to Fox’s Libel Act (32 Geo. Ill, eh. 60) declares the same intention with but slight differences in language (see Sparf and Hansen v. United States,
It is impossible to review these earlier enactments and the events which surrounded them without observing two points of agreement among those in favor of the right of the jury to determine the law and the fact: (1) that such was the rule in all criminal cases and (2) that questions of law were for the court, questions of fact for the jury and mixed questions of law and fact for the jury on the general issue. Mr. Fox, in moving the introduction of his bill in the House of Commons in 1791, said that ‘ ‘ there was a power vested in the jury to judge the law and fact, as often as they were united-, * * * and this was the case not of murder only, but of felony, high treason, and of every other criminal indictment ”. Mr. Pitt, supporting the bill, said that he ‘‘ saw no reason why, in the trial of a libel, the whole consideration of the case might not go precisely to the unfettered judgment of twelve men * * * as it did in matters of felony
In New York, the enactment of our 1805 statute was preceded by the decision in People v. Croswell (
As noted earlier, the first of these points of agreement was repudiated in Duffy v. People (
The second point of agreement — that questions of law unblended with questions of fact are for the court alone — remains the law. Jurors in a libel case do not decide questions pertaining to the admissibility of evidence or to the sufficiency of the indictment. They decide the law only in the sense that they are empowered to find general verdicts, involving both fact and law (Duffy v. People,
Applying the foregoing to the instant case, we think the trial court properly prevented defense counsel from arguing to the jury his erroneous interpretation of the rule to be derived from the recent decision of the United States Supreme Court in Garrison v. Louisiana (
The judgments should be affirmed.
Dissenting Opinion
(dissenting). I dissent and vote to reverse the judgments of conviction and to direct a new trial.
In his summation, counsel for the defendants openly sought to address argument on the law to the jury, contending that a prosecution for criminal libel would not lie against a person making statements concerning a public official, even though the accusations did not concern official action but private behavior. On objection by the prosecutor, defendants’ counsel was prevented from arguing the law to the jury by the court, to which ruling the defendants excepted.
I think that the court’s ruling was error. Our Constitution (art. 1, § 8) and statute (Code Crim. Pro., § 418) direct that the jury in a criminal libel action shall have the right to determine “ the law and the fact. ” I read these provisions literally, for they affect the fundamental privilege of free speech, and should not be curbed or diminished, for, as has been said rightly in
The historical setting of the jury’s unique prerogative in criminal libel emerges from ££ the struggle that long prevailed between courts and juries as to their respective rights in prosecutions for libel ” (People v. Sherlock,
Certainly, the court may not instruct the jury that it must find a publication to be a criminal libel per se (People v. Yui Kin Chu,
Thus, the instructions of the Judge have been said to be advisory (cf. People v. Walker,
Counsel for the defendants had proposed his argument on the law to the court as a basis for a dismissal of the indictment and as a request for a charge to the jury, in accordance with counsel’s construction of the opinion of the Supreme Court in Garrison v. Louisiana (
Indeed, in Rosenblatt v. Baer (
Essentially, this was the tenor of the argument which counsel for the defendants attempted to make to the jury here and was prevented from making. Whether the argument presented questions of law or of fact or of mixed law and facts seems to me immaterial — in any event the jury was the sole arbiter of these questions under our law and the defendants’ rights were infringed when the right to make the argument was denied them.
Hence, it was error to foreclose the argument of counsel to the jury in this prosecution for criminal libel — an exception to the general rule in criminal cases (cf. Duffy v. People,
Judgments affirmed.
Notes
. Indeed, it should he noted that the author of the annotation concerning “ Constitutional Aspects of Libel or Slander of Public Officials ” in
