In all three divisions of the Southern District of California, women are excluded from both Grand Jury and Petit Jury service. The practice is not traceable to any lack of proper accommodations for mixed juries. It is merely that the Court has continued the practice which obtained before the adoption of the Nineteenth Amendment to the Constitution of the United States (August 26, 1920), which forbade the denial or abridgement of the right to vote, by the United States or any state “on account of sex”.
Back of the policy is also the conviction of many that as the federal jury is the com
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mon law jury, it must, of necessity, consist of men only. See: Patton v. United States, 1930, 281. U.S. 276,
Before us is an indictment in nineteen counts, the first eighteen charging violation of the Mail Fraud Statute, 18 U.S.C.A. § 338, and the last charging violation of the Conspiracy Statute, 18 U.S.C.A. § 88.
Fourteen men and ten women are named as defendants. The ten women defendants have moved to quash the indictment upon the ground that the Grand Jury which found it was composed of members drawn from a group of men. The exclusion of women is challenged as an arbitrary act of the Jury Commissioner and the Clerk of the Court, discriminatory, and in violation of due process and equal protection clause of the Fifth Amendment to the Constitution of the United States. U. S. Constitution, Amendment V.
The same women defendants have moved to quash the array of the panel of petit jurors, summoned for the term of court, upon the same ground — exclusion of women therefrom.
These challenges call for the determination of the legality of the practice which obtains in this court. ' The wisdom or the unwisdom of the practice is not involved, nor is the individual opinion of any individual member of the court. For, if the practice be legal, the polity behind it cannot be questioned by one accused of crime. If it be not legal, the polity becomes unimportant, and cannot save it from condemnation.
In the matter of the personnel of Grand Juries and Petit Juries, the Congress of the United States has seen fit to take into consideration the differences inhering in a vast, diversified continent, by accepting the qualifications prescribed by each state, for both Grand and Petit jurors, as the qualifications for like service in the courts of the United States. 28 U.S.C.A. §§ 411, 412, 419; St. Clair v. United States, 1894,
The cardinal principle determining the legality of the selection is that, excepting illegal discriminations on racial grounds (Carter v. Texas, 1900,
The question, then, is:
Do the laws of the State of California, which govern the qualifications of jurors in this court, make the inclusion of women mandatory?
The statutory provisions material to the discussion are found in Sections 190, 191, 192, 193 and 198 of the California Code of Civil Procedure. They read:
“§ 190. Jury defined. A jury is a body of persons temporarily selected from the citizens of a particular district and invested with power to present or indict a person for a public offense, or to try a question of fact.”
“§ 191. Different kinds of juries. Juries are of three kinds:
“1. Grand juries;
“2. Trial juries;
“3. Juries of inquest.”
“§ 192. Grand jury defined. A grand jury is a body of persons, nineteen in number, returned in pursuance of law, from the citizens of a county, or a city and county, before a court of competent jurisdiction, and sworn to inquire of public offense committed or triable within the county or city and county.”
“§ 193. Trial jury defined. A trial jury is a body of persons returned from the citizens of a particular district before a court or officer of competent jurisdiction, and sworn to try and determine by verdict, a question of fact.”
“§ 198. Persons competent to act as jurors. A person is competent to act as juror if he be:
“1. A citizen of the United States of the age of twenty-one years who shall have been a resident of the state and of the county or city and county for one year immediately before being selected and returned ;
“2. In possession of his natural faculties and of ordinary intelligence and not decrepit;
“3. Possession of sufficient knowledge of the English language.”
*107 These sections are part of the original Code of Civil Procedure adopted on March 11, 1872.
They have undergone slight changes which do not concern us here.- By an amendment to the Constitution of California, effective October 10, 1911, Constitution of California, Article 2, Section 1, women were given the right to vote and hold office.
Following the adoption of this amendment, and before the ratification of the Nineteenth Amendment to the Constitution of the United States, the Legislature of California made the most fundamental change in these sections. This was done in 1917, California Statutes, 1917, page 1282 et seq., by substituting the word “persons” now in these sections for the word “men”.
Legislation of this character was needed in order to bestow upon women the right to serve on juries. Neither the Woman Suffrage Amendment of California nor the Nineteenth Amendment to the Constitution of the United States automatically conferred it. United States v. Wood, 1936,
Did this substitution of words make the use of women on juries in California, and, consequently, in the federal district courts of California, obligatory?
The Supreme Court of California, in a single sentence in the latest case on the subject (People v. Parman, 1939,
Thus, in People v. Manuel, 1919,
In Re Mana, 1918,
In People v. Shannon, 1928,
The rulings in these cases are in accord with the views expressed by our Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals in Tynan v. United States, 1924,
These two decisions were approved expressly by the Supreme Court in United States v. Wood, 1926,
There is nothing in the provisions of federal statutes relating to the duties of the Commissioner and the Clerk in making up the list of names, 28 U.S.C.A. § 412, which calls for a different interpretation. On the contrary, they strengthen the conclusion that the selection of members of one sex is a part of that discretionary power which is vested in them. The only test to which they are held in strict accountability is that of impartiality. Brown v. New Jersey, 1899,
As tersely put by the Supreme Court of .California, in People v. Shannon, 1928,
The practice of exclusion being thus warranted by law, the moving defendants cannot complain.
The motion to quash the indictment and the motion to quash the array are therefore denied.
