2 Tyl. 380 | Vt. | 1803
The Court, in delivering sentence, observed, That there was no statute against the crime, as the Legislature never could have contemplated its commission in an enlightened age, and amongst a free people. That if such statute had existed, it would probably have been in the power of the Court to award a punishment more adequate to. the enormity of the ofi fence.
That the indictment is founded on the common law, and must be followed by a common law punishments
But it is unnecessary to enlarge. The 10th article of the Declaration of the Rights of the inhabitants of the State of Vermont, declares, “ That in all prosecutions for criminal offences, a person hath a right to be heard by himself and his counsel; to demand the cause and nature of his accusation; to be confronted with witnesses; to call for evidence in his favour, and a speedy public trial by an impartial Jury of the country ; nor can he be compelled to give evidence against himself, nor can any person be justly deprived of his liberty, except by the laws of the land, or the judgment of his peers.”
In this concise and luminous disp of the rights of the citizens of this State, especially the penultimate clause, all compulsory process to enforce an acknowledgment of guilt is for ever excluded, not only from our judicial proceedings, but all attempts of individuals to extort confession by bodily suffering is reprobated. For it may be observed, that if the trial by torture might be essayed for the discovery of truth, it certainly would be more safe and proper, that it should be regulated by law and administered by the officers of government, than to be indiscriminately applied, and restrained only by the moderation or caprice of individuals.
The Court sentenced the culprit to pay a fine to the State treasury.
Tamen, illa tormenta gubernat, dolor moderatur natura, cu-jusque turmn animi tum corporis, regit quæsitor, ƒleclit libido, cor-rumpit sƥes, infirmat metus ; ut in tot rerum angustiis nihil veritati loci relinquatur. M. T. C.
Omnium quidem incertorum suspiciones pessime semper à corporibus ; nec bene de cujusquam moribus illam partem corporis interroges, quæ non animo sed dolore respondet. Quintilian.
In a note under the preface to the second edition of the State Trials, there are several quotations from the fragments of Julius Paulus, lib. 5. sentent. recept. tit. 14. de questionibus ha
See also Beccaria on Crimes and Punishments. Judge Blackstone, in his Commentaries, quotes from this author what he styles an exquisite piece of raillery. He says the Marquis has proposed this problem with a gravity and precision that are truly mathematical. “ The force of the muscles and sensibility of the nerves of an innocent person being given, it is required to find the degree of pain necessary to make him confess himself guilty of a given crime.”
This article in the Declaration of Rights may be traced as ab ovo from the English Magna Charta, although the rights of
For the more especial clause we are indebted to the common law maxim, Memo teneatur seipsam accusare-..,.Reporter.