16 Ga. 600 | Ga. | 1855
By the Court.
delivering the opinion.
By the thirteenth section of the thirteenth division of the ■ Penal Code, it is made a crime for any person to buy or receive, from any slave, “any cotton” as well as various other articles, “ without written permission from the owner, overseer or employer of such slave, or some other person authorized to give such-permission, authorizing such slave to sell and dispose of said money or other article or articles”. (Cobb Dig. 827.)
(1.) According to these words, nothing but written permission can justify the buying or receiving of cotton from a slave.
The charge of the Court, on this point, was not as broad as this law. The charge was, in substance, that what was proved in the case, would not amount to a justification to the defendant for buying the cotton from the slave. The charge might have gone further, and said that there was nothing but a written permission, which would have amounted to such justification. The words of the law would have warranted a charge going that length.
The charge, then, on this point, was according to the words of the law.
But we do not mean to say that the charge, though harmless, was, in itself, wrong. What law does it violate ? I know of •none.
There was no motion in the , Court-below for a new trial, in this case.
It is not true that the Court expressed any opinion,, as to what had or had not been proved in the case.
The Court “charged the Jury that they were the judges of the law and the fact, and were not bound by any instructions the Court might give: but that the fact that they were judges of the law and the fact, did not release them from the obligation to find the fact as they believed it to have been proven, and to declare the law as they knew the law to be; that the Jury were judges of the law, but that they assumed a great responsibility when they undertook to decide the law contrary to the instructions of the Court. When you take the law from the Court your skirts are clear; the Court may be wrong, but you cannot be wrong in taking the law from the Court”.
The latter part of this charge we think to have been erroneous.
What is >the duty of the Jury, with respect to deciding what
We think the Court erred in this part of the charge. This part might be right under the Common Law; which leaves it optional with the Jury to decide the law for themselves, or to take it from the Court — to find a general verdict or a special
Our Statute is different. It says, the Jury shall be the judges of the law and the fact, and shall, in every case, give a general verdict. It cannot," under this Statute, therefore, but be their duty, in every case, to decide, for themselves, what the law is. And this they do, indeed, of necessity, in every general verdict which they render. And they cannot render a special verdict. But if such a charge of the Court as this is right, they might, in substance, render a special verdict. The charge is, you cannot be wrong in taking the law from the Court. If that be so, the Court might say, you cannot be wrong if you simply find the facts, .and leave it to the Court to annex the law to them ; -for what difference can it make whether the act of annexing the same thing is done- by you or done by the Court —done by you in a general verdict, or done by the Court, on your special verdict.
Speaking for myself, therefore, I doubt, exceedingly, whether this is an error of which it may be said that it- could not possibly, under the law, have done the accused any harm-. Still, as this is a case of no great consequence, and as this point was not much argued, I have felt at liberty to yield my doubt to the opinion of the other two members of the Court.
But it is proper to say, that as far as I am concerned, I do -not consider this a closed question.
There is nothing else in the case to be noticed. The judgment ought to be affirmed.
Note — The Reporter is requested, by Judge Starnes, to state, that while he concurs in the judgment of affirmance, on this point, in this case, he does not assent to the reasoning by which that judgment is sustained — it being his opinion that the remark of the Judge below, in his charge, was substantially correct. That while the Jury are the judges, both of law and fact, in criminal cases, yet, when the Court gives them the 'Law correctly in charge, they cannot err in adopting his exposition. — Reporter.