60 N.C. 45 | N.C. | 1864
. m looking into the record in this case two errors appear to have been committed on the trial, for one of which, at any rate, the prisoner is entitled to a venire de novo.
On the trial a question anise an to the withdrawal of certain confessions oí the prisoner. The Court declined withdrawing them, hut - remarked to the Solicitor for the State, that, after the other evidence already given in the cause, he,.the Solicitor, might withdraw them if he chose to do so, which -the Solicitor declined. This seems to us to he an expression of opinion, on the part of the
The statute declares-that “ n© Judge in delivering a charge do the petit'jury, shall give an opinion whether'a fact is fully or sufficiently proved, such matters being the true office and prevince of a jury.”
The object is n<j£ to- inform the jury of their province, but to guard them’against any invasion of it.
The division of our Courts of record into two departments, the one, for'the judging of the law, the other, for judging of the facts, isa matter lying on the surface of our judicature, and is known to everybody. It was not information on ibis subject 'the Legislature intended- to furnish ; hut their purpose was to lay down an inflexible rule oí' practice — that the judge of the law should'not undertake to decide the facts. If he can not do so directl-y, he.can not indirectly ; if cot explicitly, he cannot by in— •uendo. What' we take to he the inadvertence of the Judge, therefore, was not cured of its illicit character by the information which .he immediately conveyed.
The provision of the law in question, has been in exist-•nccsincS 1786. On the various .occasions when the law has been-digested and re-enacted, it has been oentinued in the same words ; and the interpretation which we'no w give 'it, is thaf which has been given ft from the beginning. The Judge can not properly express an opinion whether a fact pertinent- to the issue, is sufficiently or insufficiently proved. Many questions of fact, especially inquiries into mental capacity, and frauds, require as much experience, science, and accumen, as the. abstruser questions of law ; and yet their decision is left by law in the hands ’ of the comparatively inexperienced and unlearned.” This, we suppose, has been to maintain undisturbed and invio--late, that popular arbiter of rights, the tidal 'by jury, which was, without some such provisiqji, constantly in danger, -from the will of the Judge acting upon men mostly passive.in their natures, and disposed to shift off responsibility ; and in danger, also; from the over-active principle, 'that power it always stealing from the many to. the few. Wo impute no intentional wrong to the Judge .who tried this case below. The, error is one of those casualties, which may happen to the most circumspect in the progvew* of a trial on the circuit. When once-committed however, it was irrevocable, and the prisoner was entitled to have ,his case tided by another jury.
The second error appearing upon the record is the instruct-icn. given to the jury in relation to the confessions of the prisoner.
It is noticed in order to renew our disapprobation of the course.
For tire first error the prisoner is entitled to a venire dfe novo. ‘ ■
This opinion is to be certified to the Superior Court, tp the end that it may take further proceedings according to law. -> ' > ,