95 A. 670 | N.H. | 1915
The defendant, having pleaded that he was guilty murder in the first degree, now claims that this admission on his part took from the state all power to impose upon him the extreme penalty provided by law for the crime he committed. Prior to 1903, the punishment for murder in the first degree was death. P. S., c. 278, s. 5. In that year the statute was changed so as to read as *8 follows: "The punishment of murder in the first degree shall be death or imprisonment for life as the jury may determine. . . . If the jury shall find the respondent guilty of murder in the first degree, the punishment shall be life imprisonment unless the jury shall add to their verdict the words, with capital punishment." Laws 1903, c. 114, s. 1.
It is manifest that if this claim of the defendant is sound, the act of 1903 is in conflict with the constitution. The claim is that the defendant who pleads guilty thereby escapes all possibility of the death penalty, while he who insists upon a jury trial upon the issue of his guilt may be sentenced to death. Neither argument nor the citation of authority is necessary to support the conclusion that no such burden can be placed upon the right of the accused to a jury trial. If it were true, as the defendant contends, that such was the legislative intent, it would follow that the act of 1903 is void, and that upon his plea of guilty of murder in the first degree the court should have sentenced him to death, as provided by the statute theretofore in force. P. S., c. 278, s. 5.
But the act of 1903 is not to be so construed. Its meaning plainly is that the assessment of the penalty for murder in the first degree has been placed in the hands of the jury. It is not contended that such a provision would be beyond the power of the legislature, but merely that it has not been so provided. It is argued that the provision of other statutes (Laws 1901, c. 104, s. 2; Laws 1909, c. 1), that upon a plea of guilty the court "may award sentence against him according to law," and "if he do not plead guilty, the court may assign him counsel and take all other measures preparatory to a trial," precludes all idea of a trial upon a plea of guilty. But if the plea be merely guilty, without specification of degree, a trial before the court must be had upon the question of degree. P. S., c. 278, s. 3. This involves calling witnesses, the argument of counsel, and in general all the incidents of a trial. So far as this question is concerned, the acts of 1901 and 1909 are identical with Public Statutes, chapter 254, section 2. When the earlier statute was in force, there was apparently no thought that it precluded a trial of the question of degree upon a plea of guilty. State v. Almy,
The provision, that upon a denial of guilt counsel might be *9 assigned and steps preparatory to a trial taken, was not deemed to deprive the court of the power to proceed with a trial upon the question of degree, after a general admission of guilt. Of the soundness of this conclusion there is no substantial doubt. That such had been the procedure under the older statute must have been well known to the legislatures of 1901 and 1909. If there had been an intent to alter the practice or abridge the power of the court, the language of the statute would have been changed so as to express such purpose.
Nor has the defendant reason to complain because there was no technical common-law issue tried or triable by the jury in this case. He could have had such a trial had he desired it. But, upon the advice of competent counsel, he chose rather to waive that right by his plea of guilty. "It was entirely for him to say whether there should be an issue and a trial, or not. He knew there would be a trial if he pleaded the general issue, and he also knew that the state would not accept a plea of guilty of murder in the second degree. He preferred to have no issue and no trial, but to have a hearing under the statute in regard to the circumstances of the admitted murder. . . . As we have already seen, the right of the accused to a jury trial was not affected, and we can therefore have no doubt that the proceeding (whether it possesses the essential attributes of a trial in the common sense of the word or not) required by the act to ascertain the degree of the crime where, in an indictment for murder, the defendant enters a plea of guilty, is constitutional and valid." State v. Almy,
The same line of reasoning answers the contention that the defendant is put at a disadvantage when only the question of punishment is tried. Such advantage as might have lain in a trial of both guilt and punishment was his under the law, but he chose to relinquish it and cannot now complain of the result.
It is further urged that in a case like this the proper procedure is to reject the plea of guilty and try the case as upon a plea of not guilty. This is equivalent to saying that the statute has made it impossible for the defendant to concede facts or issues in this class of cases. The law has always been otherwise (State v. Almy, supra, 277), and it is not to be presumed that so radical and useless a change was intended by the lawmaking power.
If such procedure had been undertaken, the plea of guilty, offered and rejected, would have been competent evidence and would have effectively disposed of the reigned issue it is now said should have *10
been tried. Such a proceeding would serve no useful purpose; yet it is claimed to be necessary because of the peculiar wording of one clause of the statute, which is "unless the jury shall add to their verdict the words, with capital punishment." The substance of this enactment is that there is now no capital punishment for murder in this state unless a jury so decrees. The form in which that decree is stated is not material. The theory that the technicality which has been eradicated from procedure in. civil causes still prevails in prosecutions for crimes was long ago abandoned in this state. "The compassion excited by the severity of English statutes enough to account for the strictness of some of the exceptions of criminal pleading and evidence which have been allowed to outlive the cause and reason of their existence. . . . They are, in this state, at the present time, as much out of place as that British mode of conveying traitors to the gallows." Darling v. Westmoreland,
It was the defendant's right to have a verdict of the jury to which the words "with capital punishment" could have been added. He waived that right and cannot now complain because the mere form the finding on the question of punishment was so changed as to be appropriate to the situation created by his plea of guilty. His plea precluded the trial he now claims he should have had. State v. Almy, supra, 277. It is evident that the procedure adopted at the trial in no way infringed any substantial right of the accused, and that is the test of its legality in this case as it would be in a civil suit.
But more than this, the clause in question is not the only provision on the subject. The section of the statute begins with this positive statement: "The punishment of murder in the first degree shall be death or imprisonment for life as the jury may determine." This declaration is all that is needed to authorize the court to proceed with a jury upon this question. The later provision, as to the form of the verdict, is in terms limited to cases where the jury pass upon the issue of guilt, and has no application to a case like the one at bar where guilt is admitted.
It is also argued that the jury trial is the right of the accused and not of the state, and that if he does not desire a jury trial one cannot be had. If it be conceded that this is sound law, it does not alter the situation. If in addition to his plea of guilty of murder in the first degree he had added his assent that a sentence of death be imposed upon him, his waiver would have been complete and no *11 trial of any sort would have been necessary. But since he maintained that no such sentence should be imposed, he in effect pleaded not guilty to the extent indicated; and that, under the statute and his general plea of guilt, put the parties to a jury trial. But this was because the defendant insisted upon it, not because the state maintained that it was entitled to a jury trial in the face of his willingness to submit to the sentence.
2. Subject to exception, several jurors were excused by the court because they stated, in substance, that they could not return a verdict which would involve the imposition of capital punishment. It is argued that it was the defendant's right to have such men sit upon the jury if they chanced to be drawn; that the imposition of the death penalty is now optional with the jury, and therefore those who would not impose it in any case are impartial jurors within the meaning of the law. The argument involves a misconception of what the law is. The legislative question, whether capital punishment shall be abolished, has not been transferred from the lawmakers to the jury. The law still is that the death penalty shall be imposed if the crime be of such a character as to demand it. Upon this issue, the state as well as the accused is entitled to the exercise of the judgment of the jury. A juror who declares that he cannot exercise judgment upon that question is not indifferent and should not be permitted to serve. Instead of going to the jury-room prepared to weigh the evidence and consider argument, he would go with a mind fully made up without regard to what had been put before him during the trial. "No case of unfitness can be more clear than one where the juror holds such opinions, or has such conscientious scruples, that, acting upon those opinions or scruples, he cannot and will not execute the laws of the land, so far as they depend upon the action of the jury." Pierce v. State,
Conscientious scruples which would cause the juror to hesitate to impose the death penalty might not disqualify him, if he still declared that he could and would observe the law. An opinion that capital punishment ought to be abolished might not be cause for excusing the juror who was prepared to enforce the law, although he did not believe in it. But when these limits are passed, and the juror declares his inability to act as the law requires — that is, to exercise some judgment upon the matter to be tried — then he is plainly disqualified.
It was the duty of the court to inquire as to the state of the jurors' *12
minds upon this subject and to excuse such of them as were found to have their minds closed to the matter to be tried. It was not necessary that the answers of the jurors should in every instance demonstrate such mental state beyond all doubt. It was the province of the court to find from the evidence whether the fixed determination in fact existed. March v. Railroad,
But the exception may be said to fairly present the question of the sufficiency of the evidence, and this matter has been considered, although it was not urged by counsel. An examination of the testimony of the eight jurors who were excused for this cause shows that most of them stated in terms that they could not return a verdict for capital punishment in any case. The others stated and reiterated their opposition to capital punishment "in any case" in so positive a form as to warrant a finding that they had a fixed determination touching the matter to be tried. There was no request that these jurors be further interrogated to determine whether, notwithstanding their views, they thought they could still weigh the evidence and pass judgment upon it. Their statements were positive and emphatic, without qualification or suggestion that the jurors could render a verdict for capital punishment in any possible case. It is entirely clear that a finding upon such evidence that a juror was not indifferent cannot be reversed here. This conclusion renders it unnecessary to decide whether the triers of a juror's indifferency might not find him disqualified solely because of his opinion upon the question of capital punishment, even when he declared his ability and purpose to pass an unbiased judgment upon the case presented at the trial.
The exceptions to questions calculated to ascertain the state of the jurors' minds upon the question of capital punishment are disposed of by what has been said upon the matter of disqualification. The subject was one to be tried out by the court, as the triers of the jurors' indifferency, and the testimony of the jurors themselves was admissible evidence. *13
3. Exceptions were also taken to the closing argument for the state. The first is to a statement that the defendant's counsel sought to challenge the jurors' courage. An examination of the record of the trial shows that the statement had abundant basis in fact; and unless the purpose and scope of argument has been entirely misunderstood, it could not be expected that such a challenge would be allowed to go unanswered.
The other exception relates to the part of the argument wherein the defendant was likened to vermin and beasts of prey, and it was urged that he should be executed for the protection of society from himself and his possible progeny. The limitations upon the rights and duties of counsel in argument to the jury have been often discussed in this state and are well understood. Unless there be a misstatement of fact or of law, the matter is not reviewable in this court. Piper v. Railroad,
Exceptions overruled.
All concurred. *14