1 Woods 499 | U.S. Circuit Court for the Southern District of Georgia | 1873
A motion is made to quash the indictment in this case on the ground that the grand jury, by which it was found, was illegally selected and impaneled. The process and procedure of the courts of the United States are, of course, subject to the sole regulation of congress and of those courts. They are entirely independent of state laws and usages, except so far as these may be adopted, or followed as a matter of convenience. There is no fundamental principle which requires a conformity thereto. Undoubtedly the convenience of the legal profession. and the habits of the people will be best consulted by a general conformity as far as circumstances will admit. That is all. On the subject of selecting and impaneling jurors in the United States courts, congress at its first session, in the twenty-ninth section of the judiciary act, directed that they should be designated by lot, or otherwise, in each state, according to the mode therein practiced at that time, so far as practicable: and that they should have the same qualifications as required for jurors in the highest courts of the state; and should be returned from such parts of the district as the court should direct. This rule was subsequently modified and, in 1S40, it was so framed as to adapt it to the changes which might, from time to time, be made by state legislation. By the act of July 20th, ot that year, which is the law now in force (5 Stat. 394). it was provided ‘‘that jurors to serve in the courts of the United States in each state respectively, shall have the like qualifications, and be entitled to the like exemptions as jurors of the liighest court of law of such state now have and are entitled to, and shall hereafter from time to time have and be entitled, and shall be designated by ballot, lot, or otherwise, according to the mode of forming such juries, now practiced and hereafter to be practiced therein, in so far as such mode may lie practicable by the courts of the United States, or the officers thereof; and for this purpose the courts shall have power to make all necessary rules and regulations for conforming the designation and impaneling of juries, in substance, to the laws and usages now in force in such state,” with power to make such changes in these respects as the legislature of the state may adopt.
It is pertinent to observe that congress does not adopt the respective state laws, but only requires conformity to them in certain respects, and then gives the courts power to make rules for the attainment of such conformity, in substance as far as practicable, in their different circumstances. The question now to decide is, whether the rules which
The question then recurs, whether the rules adopted by this court in reference to jurors accords with the act of congress, in adopting the state practice, so far. as the courts of the United States and the officers thereof, independent of the aid of the state courts and officers, can practicably conform to such practice in the respects required by the act. Conformity is required by the act in two respects: First, in reference to the qualifications and exemptions of jurors: secondly, in reference to the mode of designating and impaneling jurors, as by ballot, lot or otherwise, which mode is to be conformed, in substance, to that pursued in the highest court of the state. It will be observed that the act does not require the court to make any rules with regard to the qualification of jurors, but only with regard to the mode of selecting them. Qualifications have respect to the juror personally, and may relate to his age, his property, citizenship, or anything else belonging to his personal character or standing. In the state of Georgia the only qualifications of jurors, expressly required by the constitution and laws, are that they shall be upright and intelligent jurors between the ages of 21 and 60. There is an implied qualification that they shall be tax payers, and therefore citizens, as the statute of February 15, 1869, requires that they shall be selected for the state courts in each county from the book of the receiver of tax returns. Of course, the placing of a man’s name on the receiver’s book is not a qualification; for it is the act of another man. It implies a qualification, however, namely, that of being a tax payer, or a person liable to pay taxes and to have his name placed on said book. Now all these qualifications are required in jurors by the rule of this court. The officers appointed for the purpose are to select from the body of the district five hundred upright and intelligent persons,. citizens of the district (and of course tax payers), between the ages of 21 and 60 years, without regard to race, color, or previous condition, to serve as jurors. As before remarked, it was not necessary that the rule should have specified these qualifications. Jurors not having them could be objected to by a challenge to the polls without any rule of court on the subject. But the rule has specified them, and in do- ' ing so has adopted the qualifications which the state laws require. On this point the objection to the rules cannot be sustained.
The next question is, whether the rules of this court have in substance adopted the mode of designating and impaneling jurors, which is prescribed by the state laws, as by ballot, lot. or otherwise. The act of eon-gress requires that they shall “be designated by ballot, lot, or otherwise, according to the mode of forming such juries,” practiced in the highest court of law of the state, “in so far as such mode may be practicable by the courts of the United States, or the officers thereof, and for this purpose” (that is, for the purpose of securing the designation of jurors by ballot, lot, or otherwise, according to the mode practiced in the state courts), the courts of the United States “shall have power to make all necessary rules and regulations for conforming the designation and impaneling of juries, in substance, to the laws and usages” of the state. From this language of the act it is obvious that all that is required is. that the mode of designating and impaneling be substantially the same: not that the officers to carry it into effect shall be the same either in rank or in number; nor that the same kind of jury boxes, or material of which the boxes are composed, whether wood or iron, shall be the same; nor that they shall be kept and guarded in the same manner; nor that the same number of names shall be placed in the box; nor that in any other matter of detail, a minute imitation of the state practice is to be observed. In these matters the courts of the United States may . exercise their discretion as to the best mode of securing the main object of the law, which is, to secure the service of properly qualified juries, selected and impaneled substantially according to the mode pursued in the state courts. Now, what is the mode pursued in these courts? The constitution of the state (article 5, § 13, par. 2) simply declares that “the general assembly shall provide by law
Now with these regulations let us compare the rules adopted by this court. They are as follows: “Order of Court Amending Jury Rules.—The court shall appoint three of the United States commissioners residing in the Southern district of Georgia, and the said commissioners with the marshal for the district of Georgia, and the clerk of the court shall, within thirty days after the adjournment of this court, select from the body of the Southern district of’ Georgia, five hundred upright and intelligent persons, citizens of said district, between the ages of 21 and 60 years, without regard to race, color, or previous condition, to serve as jurors. And the clerk of the district and circuit courts for said district, and marshall, shall place the names of the persons so selected in a box, from which they shall draw within ten days after said names are so deposited, not less than forty-five nor more than fifty names, unless otherwise ordered by a judge, to serve as jurors in the circuit court, and not less than forty-five nor more than fifty names, unless otherwise ordered by the judge, to serve as jurors in the district court. And the first twenty-three names so drawn for each court shall be the grand jurors for such court, unless the court or a judge shall otherwise order. And within thirty days after each succeeding term of said courts respectively, unless previously drawn by the court, it shall be the duty of the marshal and clerk to draw from said box in the manner before stated, the same number of jurors to serve at the next succeeding term of said courts respectively, unless the number is changed by order of the judge. And if from any cause they are unable to procure from the body of the district, as before required, the names of the requisite number of qualified jurors, then in that event, the names of those they have been able to obtain shall constitute the list from which said jurors shall be taken, and the names of those so drawn shall be placed in another compartment of said box, there to remain until all the names shall have been drawn from the first compartment. The said box shall be kept locked, except when opened for the-purpose of drawing or revising the list, and the clerk shall keep the box and the marshal the key. If from failure to draw, as herein-before directed, or from any other cause,, there shall be a deficiency in whole or in part of regular jurors, the court may order that' upright and intelligent persons from the body of the district shall be forthwith summoned, as jurors or talesmen as the case may be. If the court should not sit at any term, the jurors drawn for that term shall stand over for the next term that shall be held. The marshal shall summon jurors by delivering-to each personally, or by leaving it at his usual residence, a written or printed summons. The marshal, the clerk, and any one of said commissioners shall constitute a quorum for the purpose of carrying into effect this rule. And a deputy marshal may, in any case, whether in selecting or drawing jurors, or otherwise in the premises embraced in this rule, do whatever the marshal may himself do.”
It seems to me very difficult to perceive any substantial difference between the mode of designating and impaneling jurors prescribed by these rules, and that prescribed by the state statute, after making due allowance for the different circumstances of the two juris
But it is objected that the marshal is substituted for the ordinary in the constitution of the board of commissioners, and that the ordinary is a judicial officer, whilst the marshal is not. There can be nothing in this objection. The conformity required is in substance only, and only as far as practicable for the courts of the United States and the officers thereof. The United States have no such officer as the ordinary. No officer could be more appropriately appointed than the marshal. But the comparison need not be minutely made between the officers. A board of responsible and suitable officers is constituted for the purpose of making the selection of jurors from the body of citizens. This is in substantial conformity to the state law. The disposition of the names when selected is the same. They are placed in a bos on separate pieces of paper, and from that box the panels of grand and petit jurors are drawn from time to time as occasion requires, substantially in the same manner as in the state courts, due regard being had to the convenience of the court and the circumstances of the case. The objection that the drawing is to be made by the marshal and the clerk, within thirty days after each term, and not as in the state court. on the last day of term in open court, goes to a matter of practice and detail, and not to the substantial mode, of designating, or empaneling the juries, in the respects demanded by the act of congress. The mode adopted is the same. It is the drawing of the names by lot. The designation of the officers by whom it shall be done is left to the discretion and judgment of the court.
It seems to me, after a careful consideration of the objections which have been so ably urged, that the regulations adopted by this court are in substantial compliance with the act of congress. As it may be doubtful whether the question raised by this motion can be carried to the supreme court, and as the matter is one of great interest to this and other states, I shall avail myself on the first opportunity, of consulting the views of my associates on the supreme bench, and if any different result should be arrived at, this court will cheerfully modify its rules. As they now stand, whilst they seem to us entirely unobjectionable in point of law, they are in the most practicable and convenient form for the due administration of justice and the performance of the business ot the courts.
The motion to quash the indictment for the cause now alleged is overruled.
In another case which came up after the foregoing decision was made—being the case of Rich v. Campbell—the panel of petit jurors was challenged on the ground taken in the previous case, and on the further ground that the officers appointed to designate and impanel the jurors for the United States courts had not complied with the rule, but had selected jurors from improper motives and for a special purpose. Evidence was taken on the challenge.
Before BRAD LET, Circuit Justice, and WOODS, Circuit Judge.
The array of jurors in this case is challenged by the defendant for several causes. One class of causes assigned consists of objections to the legality of the mode, adopted by this court by its general rule of the Tth of December last, of designating and impaneling jurors. This question has already been examined in the case of U. S. v. Collins [Case No. 14,837], and the objection was decided to be without foundation.
The other causes of challenge assigned are,, that the jurors were not designated, selected and drawn in accordance with the rule, but that contrary thereto, they were designated with reference to their race, color and condition; and that they were selected, not by the persons appointed by the court for that purpose, but upon private information from irresponsible persons; and not from the body of citizens of the district, but from certain classes thereof, under private instructions from some of the persons appointed to make the selection as to the status, color and political bias of the .persons whose names were to be furnished to make up the panel.
The challenge being traversed, evidence was adduced for the purpose of sustaining the charges made in the challenge. Amongst other witnesses the defendant called to the stand the marshal of the United States for this district, who is one of the officers appointed by the court to select and make up the list of jurors for the district, according to the rule made on the 7th of December last, and whose official conduct in that matter is impeached by the challenge. We refused to compel him to testify, for the following reasons: Where a charge of misconduct is made against an officer, whether amounting to an indictable offense, or only to his discredit as such officer, which might furnish grounds for his removal or impeachment, he is not bound to be a witness against himself. To compel him to be so
Applying these principles to this case, it is apparent that the conduct of the officers concerned in the designation and impaneling of jurors is seriously impeached by the challenge, and that to subject them to an examination under oath upon the matters charged would be, in effect, to compel them to testify on a criminal charge against, themselves, and would, therefore, be a subversion, not only of their rights, but an invasion of the rights of all good citizens.
The other evidence offered by the defendant was in substance as follows: He proved by Elijah Bond, the postmaster at Macon, that at the request of the marshal he made out a list of names for jurors from the county of Bibb, which was partially adopted by the officers as a part of their list for the district; that he conferred with one or two other gentlemen on the subject, one of whom was the ordinary of the county; that he tried to get good men, and thought he did; that he received no instructions from the marshal as to the manner in which he should select, except a request to furnish the names of good and substantial citizens; that he endeavored to do so without regard to color; that he avoided those who had been engaged in the late election riots, it is true, and tried to select men who were not extreme men either way, but fair men; that he had lived in Macon since 1S39, and was an officer in the Presbyterian church in that place; that Mr. Swayze, one of the commissioners appointed by the court to select jurors, and who resided in Macon, was absent at the time out of the state, and he had no conference with him on the subject. This was the substance of his testimony as far as it was material.
From this testimony the defendant’s counsel argued, that the officers appointed by the court to select jurors did not make the selection themselves, but left it to others; and that this rendered the list illegal. But it was very pertinently answered by the counsel for the officers, that the giving of information was very different from official action. Four of the officers—the marshal, the clerk of the court, and two commissioners, Messrs. Wilson and Wade—on the 9th and 10th of January last, met in Savannah (the clerk, marshal and commissioner Wilson having held a preliminary meeting about a month previous) and proceeded to execute the powers conferred upon them by the court, and formed a list of five hundred names of persons selected from the body of citizens of the district, and certified and returned the same to the court, as directed by the rule. This they did officially, on their official responsibility; and in their return they certify that the names designated and returned by them, were the names of upright and intelligent persons, citizens of the district, between the ages of twenty-one and sixty, selected from the body of the district without regard to race, color or previous condition. This official certificate of these officers must be regarded by the court as conclusive evidence that they have properly performed their duty, unless the contrary be clearly proven. The only effect of Mr. Bond’s evidence is, to show that they took proper means to get the requisite information as to the proper persons to select, by applying to the most competent and reliable persons for such information. It was conceded that a more upright and reliable man than Mr. Bond, the witness, could scarcely be found. What other means the officers may have employed to corroborate the information received from Mr. Bond does not appear. It could not be expected that the officers should be personally acquainted with the entire male population of the district, consisting of more than eighty counties. They were necessarily obliged, in many cases to rely on information derived from others. If they acted in good faith in getting the best information they could, and made their selection accordingly (and nothing appears to the contrary, but that they did this), their action cannot be impeached or held invalid. Impossibilities cannot be required of any officers. We see nothing in the evidence of Mr. Bond to impeach the jury list; but the contrary.
Some further evidence of a very unimportant character was adduced, which it is unnecessary to notice.
The defendant’s counsel, however, produced and read an article published' by Mr. Swayze, one of the commissioners appoint
It seems to us that the challenge has not a shred of evidence to support it; and so far as appears from the characters of the persons composing the grand and petit juries of the present term, the selection has been eminently judicious and proper. The challenge is not sustained.
At the March term, 1873, of the United States circuit court for the Northern district of Georgia, several of the same questions decided in the foregoing cases were argued before ERSICINE, District Judge, in the case of U. S. v. Gardner upon a challenge to the array of petit jurors.
Before the perusal of the panel, comprising six white persons and six colored, defendant challenged the array on the ground that the jury was illegally constituted, and moved that the array be quashed: “First. Because the United States jurors are required to be selected by the United States statutes, according to the laws of each state where said United States courts are held. Second. Because there is no authority of law for the United States court to appoint commissioners to select jurors. Third. Because the rules of court under which said jury was selected and impaneled limits the number of jurors to five hundred. Fourth. Because the manner of selecting jurors heretofore practiced by the United States courts in this state has not been repealed by competent authority. Fifth. Because the rule of court, under which the said panel of jurors was drawn, selected, summoned and impaneled, is without sanction of law, and contrary to the statutes of the United States in such case made and provided. Sixth. Because said panel of jurors was not drawn, selected and summoned according to law.” Other objections—corollaries from the foregoing—were advanced during the arguments. These authorities were cited and relied upon by counsel for challenger: Code, §§ 3842, 3838, 3839; article 5, § 13, State Const.; Act Feb. 13, 18(59; Judiciary Act, § 29 (1 Stat. 88); Act July 20, 1840 (5 Stat. 394); U. S. v. Woodruff [Case No. 16,758]; Same v. Wilson [Id. 16,737]; Clinton v. Englebrecht, 13 Wall. [80 U. S.] 434; Act June 1, 1872 (17 Stat 196). The second paragraph of section 13, art. 3, of the state constitution of 1868 says: “The general assembly shall provide by law for the selection of upright and intelligent persons to serve as jurors. There shall be no distinction between the classes of persons who compose grand and petit juries.” The third sentence refers to the compensation of jurors.
On the 15th of February, 1869, the general assembly passed an act to carry this clause into effect. [Laws Ga. (1869) p. Í39.] This act contains eighteen sections—I will give the substance of so much of it as is applicable to the subject now before the court. It makes it the duty of the ordinary of each county, together with the clerk of the superior court, and three commissioners appoint
By a rule of the United States district court (having circuit, court jurisdiction) for this district, adopted at the March term. 1871, the marshal was instructed to procure from the superior court clerk for each county, comprising this district, a certain number of names of the “most upright and intelligent persons,” between the ages of twenty-one and sixty years, to be taken from the jury lists of the county, without regard to race or color. Comment was made by counsel on both sides, during argument on the insertion of the word “most” before and iu connection with, “upright and intelligent,” in the rule of the district court. Whether the word “most” was in the draft of the rule which I wrote, I do not now remember; if so, it was unadvisedly there. But what impediment would it have been to justice? Can either side complain? Was not the word, by fair intendment, to be applied to each class, white and colored? At most the word but expressed moral fitness as necessary to the end proposed. But to return; nearly seventeen hundred names were forwarded to the marshal (before the abrogation of this rule) by these clerks who responded to his request, and for which the government paid them. While this rule was of force, more than two hundred and fifty names were drawn from the jury box by the court, or its officers; but strange as it may appear, every ballot drawn from the box contained the name of a white person. Now, as the ratio of the classes in this judicial district has been for years past, as eight white to five colored, or nearly so, it is obvious to the common mind that this mode of designating or select1 ing the jurors cast the entire burden of jury service in the federal court upon one of the classes only—white citizens; thus releasing colored citizens, who possessed the qualifications for jurors, from the performance of a duty which they, equally with the qualified white citizens, owed to their country. Not only tire constitution of this state, but the recent amendments to the national constitution have made the colored man a citizen; habilitating him with all the rights, privileges and immunities enjoyed by the white citizen; therefore, he should perform his part of the public labor. On the first of June, 1872, congress passed an act taking away the circuit court powers from the district court for this district, and establishing a separate circuit court. At the first term a rule of court was adopted, and it was under this rule that the persons now in the traverse jury box were designated, summoned and impaneled. But, before passing to'this rule, it may not be wholly amiss to mention that-it is a copy—mutatis mutandis—of the rule which met the sanction of, and was adopted by the United States circuit court for the Southern district of this state, at the last November term. The court was composed of WOODS, Circuit Judge, and ERSKINE, District Judge.
Attention will be directed to the act of July 20, 184.0 (5 Stat. 39-4): (1) “Jurors.” says the1 act, “to serve in the courts of the United States, in each state respectively, shall have the like qualifications, and be entitled to the like exemptions, as jurors of the highest court of law of such state now have and are-entitled to. and shall hereafter, from time to time, have and be entitled to, (2) and shall be designated by ballot, lot or otherwise, according to the mode of forming juries now practiced and hereafter to be practiced therein; in so far as such mode may be practicable by the courts of the United States or the officers thereof; (3) and for this purpose the said courts shall have power to make all nee-
Objection to the rule was urged for the challenger, “because the rule of court under-which the jury was selected and impaneled limits the number of jurors in this district to five hundred.” I have looked into this question, and I find nothing in any of the laws of congress as to what number shall be designated or selected. The acts of 1789 and 1840 apply only to the mode of selecting jurors and not to the number.
Counsel relied on the ">th section of the act of congress of June 1, 1872 (17 Staff 196). This section declares (in substance) that the United States courts shall conform, as neni-as may be, to the practice, pleadings and modes and forms of proceeding in other than equity and admiralty causes as they may exist in like causes in the courts of record in the state at the time of holding the United States court therein. The act has no reference to the designating or selecting of jurors; nor. in my opinion, has it any application to the practice, pleadings or mode of proceeding in criminal eases as practiced in the state courts.
The ease of U. S. v. Wilson [supra], was read and earnestly discussed. Two questions were before the court for decision in that case. The first wat the construction of the act of July 20. 1S40. Speaking of the first clause of the act. Wilson. .T., said: “So far as relates to the qualifications and exemptions of federal jurors, the courts have no discretion.” And the learned judge also said: “Tile courts from necessity were to exercise a discretion as to the practicability of desig
Counsel also relied on Clinton v. Englebrecht, 13 Wall. [80 U. S.) 434. This case arose exclusively under a law of the territory of Utah. The court there, proceeding on the theory that it was a court of the United States, issued an open venire to the marshal, acting apparently on the hypothesis that it was to be governed in the selection of jurors. by the acts of congress. Chief Justice Chase, in delivering the opinion of the court, held that the territorial court erred both in its theory and in its action; and that the making up of the lists and all matters .connected with the designation of the juries were subject to the territorial laws.
Reliance was likewise placed by counsel for the challenger in the case of U. S. v. Woodruff [Case No. 10,758]. The defendant ■objected to a trial, on the ground that the jurors had not been selected conformably to the act of congress of July 20, 1840. The court. Hr. Justice McLean. in delivering the judgment, said: ‘‘By an early rule of this court, the clerk is required to issue a venire facias, commanding the marshal to summon twenty-four persons to serve as traverse jurors. * * * By the act of Illinois of the 3d of March. 1845, for the selection of jurors. it is made the duty of the county commissioners to select jurors. Now this court cannot call upon the officers of the state to do this duty, but we are bound to conform, as nearly as may be. to the state practice. The venire under the above rules leaves the selection of the juries to the marshal as his convenience shall permit. This does not, therefore, conform to the state practice. The jurisdiction of this court extends throughout the state, consequently the jurors should be selected from the state at large, and their names should be inserted in the venire. The court will therefore adopt a rule requiring the clerk and marshal to select the jurors from the state at large, previous to each term, and to conform in doing so. as near to the state practice as may be practicable.”
The ease of U. S. v. Wilson, instead of showing that the rule is not in conformity, to the laws of congress, is to my mind, an authority which sustains its legality. The case-of U. S. v. Woodruff is so directly applicable, so fully covers the whole question, and so clearly supports the rule that no other authority need be adverted to, or invoked.
The motion to quash the array is overruled.