28 F. Cas. 550 | U.S. Circuit Court for the District of District of Columbia | 1836
Lead Opinion
The CouRT,
absent,) refused to permit the defendant’s counsel to bring evidence to prove that Fisk perjured himself on the trial of- Drew by swearing that he did not know Finch; and to contradict his assertion, upon cross-examination in this cause, that he did not at-that time know him; it being a collateral matter brought out by the cross-examination.
The Court also said that the only question as to the character of the witness, proper to be asked, is, “ Are you acquainted with the general reputation of the witness as to veracity; and from your knowledge of that general reputation would you believe him upon his oath ? ”
Mr. R. J. Brent, for the defendant, prayed the Court to instruct the jury “ that there is no evidence before the jury that the defendant fled from justice ; or that if the Court should be of opinion that there is some evidence of that fact, then to charge the jury that if they should be of opinion from the evidence that the defendant did not flee from the United States, or conceal himself to avoid process, he is entitled to the benefit of the limitation of the statute.”
The defendant’s counsel contended that “ fleeing from justice ” meant fleeing from process. That no person can be said to flee from justice until process has been issued against him; and that such is the meaning of the Constitution of the United States, Art. 4, § 2, and of the Act of Congress of the 12th of February, 1793, [1 Stat. at Large, 302,] and of the Act of March-3, 1801, § 6. [2 lb. 115.] He might have been arrested as well in one district of the United States as another; so that mere removal from one district to another cannot be called fleeing from justice, unless it be done with intent to evade process. Act of Congress, 24th Sept. 1789, § 33. [1 lb. 91.] Besides, he appeared openly and publicly in this city in March, 1834. Fowler v. Hunt, 10 Johns. 464.
It is not necessary that the United States should have known that the defendant committed the offence, to entitle him to the benefit of the limitation.
Mr. Key, contra:, contended that the defendant could not avail himself of the limitation unless the United States knew that he had committed the offence, or had the means of knowing it, as in Watkins’s case, where the means of knowing the fraud were in the treasury department.
If the defendant once fled from justice he is forever barred of the benefit of the statute. Hysinger v, Battgells, 3 Gill & Johns. 158.
Mr. Brent, in reply, contended, that Although he might have fled at first, if he afterwards returned and appeared so publicly in Washington that he might have been arrested, the statute began to run in his favor from the time of such return. Faw v. Roberdeau, 3 Cranch, 176.
The Couet refused to give the instruction as prayed, but instructed them that if they “ believe from the evidence that the departure, from this district, by the traverser, on the evening of the 30th of March, 1833, or at any time afterwards within two years thereafter, was for the purpose,or with the view to avoid punishment for the offence of burning the Treasury building, or
Dissenting Opinion
dissented; and his reasons were understood to be, that if the defendant once fled from justice, no subsequent return would enable him to avail himself of the limitation; and that he could in no event avail himself of the limitation unless the United States knew that he had committed the offence. He was also understood to be of opinion, that there was not sufficient evidence of the defendant’s return, &c., to justify an instruction upon that point.
said that if the defendant (as his counsel had intimated,) was willing to agree to the instruction, he should not object to it; but he was not entirely satisfied with it. He said there were two modes of fleeing from justice, namely, departing from the jurisdiction of the offended government, and concealing himself within it. The removing from one place to another in the same jurisdiction, unless clandestinely, or with intent to escape from justice, would not be a fleeing from justice; nor would his return to Washington be necessary to enable him to avail himself of the limitation, if he had not concealed himself, but appeared openly in New York, his usual place of residence. The offence was against the government of the United States, and the offender was as liable for arrest in New York as in Washington. However, as the defendant’s counsel had agreed to the instruction as it was drawn up, he should not object to it. He observed also, that he did not think it necessary that the United States should have known that the defendant had committed the offence, in order to his availing himself of the bar, by limitation of time.
Mr. Brent, for the defendant, then prayed the Court to instruct’ the jury, “ that if they believe, from the evidence, that the tra-verser was not personally present at the time of applying the fire to the Treasury building, or not sufficiently near, at the time, to be aiding and abetting in the applying of the fire, although the jury should believe that he was concerned in the design of burning said building, then the traverser is but an accessory before the fact, and is entitled to be acquitted under the present indictment.”
This instruction did not seem to be opposed by the Attorney
Dissenting Opinion
dissented, and his reason was understood to be,
that there was no evidence that the defendant was not present at the burning.
The jury retired on Saturday, 24th December, at 3 o’clock, P. M., and were kept in their room until Tuesday the 27th, at 2 o’clock, P. M., when they were discharged by consent of the parties, as they could not agree.
On the 6th of January, Mr. Brent, for the defendant, moved the Court to continue the cause to the next term, upon the defendant’s affidavit that Willard Carpenter, of Troy, would testify that the general character of Mrs. Baldwin, and of William Hicks, is such that they cannot be believed on bath, and that he has used due diligence, &c.
Mr. Key, for the United States, admitted that Mr. Carpenter would testify as stated in the affidavit.
As this cause stood upon the docket before that of Henry H. White, the Court ordered it to be first tried, although Henry requested to be tried first, and offered himself ready, but refused to be tried with Richard.
Mr. Brent, for the defendant, Henry PI. White, contended that according to the practice of this Court, a cause, once tried, cannot be tried again at the same term, unless by consent; and must be put at the end of the docket.
Cranch, C. J., said that that rule was applicable only to causes which had been tried, and a verdict found, and a new trial granted. This cause cannot be said to have been tried until a verdict shall have been found. The jury was discharged by consent because they could not agree; so that no verdict has yet been found in this cause.
The cause came on again for trial on the 6th of January, 1837.
The objection was again taken to the admission of William Hicks as a witness; but as Thruston, J., was absent, and Cranch, C. J., was in favor of admitting the witness, it did not prevail, and the witness (Hicks,) was sworn and examined.
Mr. Key, for the United States, offered to read Hicks’s affidavit, made as a foundation for the arrest of the defendant, in corroboration of Hicks’s testimony, which had been impeached by showing that he had made contradictory statements; and to show that there was no combination with Mrs. Baldwin, one of the witnesses for the United States.
The Court, (Thruston, J., contrd, or doubting,) rejected the affidavit.
The CouRT, (Thruston, J., contrd,) again gave the instruction respecting the defendant’s being an accessory only, unless present, aiding, and abetting, &c.
The Court also gave the same instruction to the jury which they had before given respecting the limitation of time, and the fleeing from justice.
Thruston, J., contrd, delivered the following opinion :
The question presented for the consideration of the Court is on the following prayer [omitted]. My opinion, at the former trial of the traverser, was different from that of a majority of the Court; having assented only to the first branch of the instruction prayed, and dissented most explicitly from the last; that is to say, I was of opinion that if the jury should believe, from the evidence, that the traverser was guilty of having burnt the Treasury building and fled from justice, that his return within this district afterwards (in the manner, and under the circumstances proved by the witnesses,) conferred no right on him to claim the benefit of the limitation provided in the latter part of the 31st section of the Act of Congress, entitled, “ An Act for the punishment of certain crimes against the United States.” I was of opinion, and still am, that this benign indulgence in favor of the accused, of exemption from prosecution after a lapse of two years from the - commission of the offence to the time of finding a presentment or indictment against him, admitted of no latitude' or extension of construction in favor of the accused, from any supposed analogy between criminal and civil prosecutions. That if, in civil cases, a return into the State, or jurisdiction of the court, or into the place where the cause of action accrued, of the debtor or party liable to the action, after having absented himself therefrom, rendered it incumbent on the party having the cause of action against him, to bring his suit within the period provided by law after such return, or be liable to be barred by the act of limitation ; that this was so ordained by positive enactment of law, namely, Laws of Maryland, 1765, c. 12, § 8, or even without any positive statutory enactment, the Court should have given this free construction to the law of limitation in civil cases, yet that it could not warrant any such construction of the clause of limitation in the aforesaid act of Congress. In civil cases a cause of action cannot exist, or *at least it is difficult to conceive a case where the person liable to the action is unknown to the
But I view this clause of limitation differently from my brothers. The exemption from liability or prosecution, after a lapse of two years, is a free and spontaneous and generous privilege, accorded to offenders by the bounty of the legislature ; it is a mere act of grace, growing out of no meritorious or equitable claim on the part of the transgressor, but from the characteristic benignity of our laws ; it can be forfeited but in one way, by fleeing from justice; if he flees, he forfeits the privilege; it is a penalty which, once incurred, cannot be relieved against; we have no equitable jurisdiction over it.' It. cannot be in the power of the offender, by any act of his, to restore himself to the situation he was in before fleeing. The' language of the proviso is certain, positive, and absolute; exhibiting no doubt as to its interpretation; affording no ground for an equitable extension.
I, therefore, do not agree with the majority of the Court in giving this instruction to the jury.
As to the second instruction, that if the jury believe, from the evidence, that the traverser was not present at the burning of the treasury, aiding and assisting therein, but was at a distance therefrom, however guilty he may have been of procuring others to do the deed, that he is an accessory only, and they must acquit him on this indictment. I question much the propriety of giving this instruction ; instructions not warranted by the law and the evidence are mischievous, as having a tendency to perplex the jury, and to divert their minds from the true objects of their consideration. This instruction would be a very proper one, if the facts proved by the evidence afforded'any just grounds for granting it. Unless the evidence furnishes matter to warrant the instruction, it is irrelevant to the inquiry; a mere abstract proposition, having no connection with the facts in the case. Now there is not a particle of evidence, either of living witnesses, or of circumstances, which involves any other human being in the transaction, than the traverser and his brother; no evidence of the slightest character which furnishes a suspicion even, that the agency of any other than the traverser and his brother were concerned in it; and if they did it not, nobody did it, for de non apparentibus et non ezistentibus eadem ratio est; the traverser’s counsel might as well have prayed an instruction that if the jury believed, from the evidence, that the treasury building was fired by lightning, that they must acquit the tra-verser ; would the Court grant such an instruction in the absence
The traverser, then, must have been a principal, or he is innocent of the crime. There is no evidence whatever that he could have stood in the relation of an accessory. It ought to be proved against him. The whole evidence in the case negatives the possibility of his having been an accessory. I have too often seen these kind of lures thrown out like a tub to the whale, to draw the jury’s attention from the main object of their inquiry, and
thought there was evidence enough to justify the prayer of the defendant’s counsel for the instruction as to the question of principal or accessory.
said, that the absence of evidence that the defendant was present at the burning, was sufficient to justify the prayer.
This verdict was recorded ; and on 18th of January, 1837, Mr. J. R. Key, for the United States, moved for a venire de novo, and the defendant’s counsel moved for judgment in favor of the defendant, upon the verdict.
In support of the motion for a venire de novo, Mr. J. R. Key contended that the verdict was argumentative, and imperfect, in not finding the matter in issue, which, if the limitation of time had been specially pleaded, and the pleadings made up at full length, would have been, either whether the defendant fled from justice, or whether, after fleeing, he returned, &c., so that he might have been arrested. Upon this point he cited the opinion of this Court in Watkins’s case, published in the National Journal of 29th July, 1829. Co. Lit. 227 a, and United States v. Patterson, 2 Wheat. 221, 225.
(MoRsell, J., suggested a query whether the finding of the defendant not guilty upon the plea of limitations, if it stood alone, would not be a sufficient finding of the issue joined upon the plea of limitations; and if so, whether the words “ more than two years having elapsed,” &c. might not be considered and rejected as surplusage. t
Thhuston, J., thought that if an issue had been joined upon the plea of limitations, it would have been upon the fleeing from justice; or upon the return of the defendant within two years.)
Mr. J. R. Key, if the issue before the jury had been whether he fled, or returned, &c. Some of the jurors may have been of one opinion, and some of another, upon those points, but all may have agreed that the two years had expired, &c., for that fact was not disputed. It is like the case upon the issue of solvit ad diem, cited in 8 Wheeler, 312, from 6 New Hampshire Rep. 104. Mr. Key also cited Rowe v. Huntington, Vaughan, 75, 76; 5 Burr. 2662; Evans’s Harris, Ent. 335; Coffin v. Jones, 11 Pickering, 45; Triplett v. Micon, 1 Randolph, 269.
Mr. R. J. Brent, for the defendant, contra,. This is not an argumentative verdict, the words “ more than two years having elapsed,” &c., may be rejected as surplusage. The jury have found that more than two years had elapsed, &c. which is a bar; and the pleadings do not show that the fleeing from justice was in issue; nor that the United States would have so replied. It
In pleading a statute, it is not necessary to show that the defendant is not within the proviso. The verdict, therefore, is not imperfect. Every thing not found in favor of the plaintiff is negatived. 2 Lord Raym. 1585; 1 Wils. 55, 56; 1 T. R. 141; Worley v. Isbel, 1 Bibb, 250; 2 Burr. 698; Hobart, 54. Verdicts are to be favored. 3 T. R. 659; Garland v. Bugg, 1 Hen. & Mun. 377.
The jury could not have found the defendant not guilty on the plea of limitations, if the United States had proved the fleeing from justice. Surplusage does not vitiate. Com. Dig. 252, Pleader, §. 28; 2 Com. Dig. 258, s. 41; Thompson v. Betton, 14 Johnson, 86.
Even if the clause of limitation had been specially pleaded, and the pleadings had run on to the issue whether the defendant openly returned after fleeing from justice, and. the verdict had been that they find for the defendant upon the plea of limitations, it would, in effect, have been a finding of the issue for the defendant.
The defendant’s counsel offered to read the affidavits of some of the jurors as to their intention in finding the verdict, but the Court, nem. con. refused to hear them. (See Woodfall’s case, 5 Burr. 2665.)
Mr. F. S. Key, in reply. The issue upon the plea of limitation would have been, whether the defendant fled or returned, &c. The verdict does not find the fact one way or the other, but has found a fact notin issue. It is therefore imperfect; and it gives a reason for that finding; it is therefore argumentative and void.
The United States were not bound to aver, in the indictment, that the offence was committed within the two years; but the defendant must plead, or allege it affirmatively, namely, that more than two years had elapsed, &e. Com. Dig., Pleader, s. 22; Hobart, 54, note 2, to the American edition.
The CouRT, (CRanch, C. J. contrd,) awarded a venire de novo.
Morsell, J., was of opinion thaf the verdict was argumentative, and therefore bad.
Cranch, C. J., delivered the following opinion: “ This is an indictment against Richard H. White, for burning the treasury building on the 30th of March, 1833. The indictment was not found until the 30th of March, 1836.
Upon this verdict the defendant has moved for judgment in his favor; and the attorney for the United States, has moved for a venire de novo, upon the ground that the verdict is imperfect.
In criminal cases, the pleadings subsequent to the indictment are generally considered as ore terns.
If they had, in this case, been reduced to writing, so far as they relate to the limitation of time, the defendant would have pleaded in substance that the indictment was not found within two years from the time of committing the supposed offence; to this the United States would have replied that the defendant was a person “ fleeing from justiceto this replication the defendant might have put in a general rejoinder, upon which an issue might have been joined; or he might have replied (according to the opinion of the Court given on the trial) that, after so fleeing, he returned, and appeared openly, publicly, and notoriously in this district, or elsewhere in the United States, so that with reasonable diligence he might have been arrested; to which the United States would have put in a general surrejoinder, upon which the issue might have been joined, so that the plea of limitations would have resulted in an issue upon the fact of flight, or the fact of return, &c. There would then have been two issues for the jury to try. 1st. The general issue of not guilty; and 2dly, The issue raised upon the plea of limitations. If the jury had found either issue for the defendant, it would have been sufficient for judgment in his favor. If the jury had said that upon the first issue they find the defendant guilty, and upon the second they find for the defendant, their verdict would, in such a state of the pleadings, have been good.
I think this case must be considered as if such had been the pleadings upon the record, and such the verdict. A verdict is not subject to the nice criticisms which may be applied to
As to the first issue the jury say, they “ are of opinion that the offence, as charged, was committed by the prisoner.” This seems to be a clear finding the defendant guilty upon the general issue. As to the 2d issue, they “ find him not guilty upon the plea of limitations.” This, I think, is substantially a finding of the issue upon the plea of limitations, for the defendant. It is perhaps informal to say that they find the defendant not guilty on the plea of limitations, but I have no doubt that their meaning was that they found the issue, upon that plea, for the defendant. And the issue upon that plea, according to the conduct and argument of the parties before the jury, and the instructions given by the Court, was either, whether the defendant was a person fleeing from justice, or whether, after fleeing, he returned openly, &c., so that with reasonable diligence he might have been arrested.
This, certainly, is not a special verdict purporting to state all the facts proved to the satisfaction of the jury, and referring the matter of law to the Court: nor is it a partial verdict, finding the defendant guilty of part, and acquitting him of the residue of the charge; nor do I think it an imperfect verdict, for it answers substantially to the whole issue, or issues in the case.
And I think that the latter words, “ more than two years having elapsed,” &c., may be rejected as surplusage. They only state a fact admitted by the pleadings if made up in form, and do not purport to be the only fact upon which their finding is founded. They create no repugnancy in the verdict; and “ if the jury find the point in issue, and also another matter out of the issue, the latter finding,” (says Mr. Justice Story in the case of Stearns v. Barrett, 1 Mason, 153,) “is void and may be rejected as surplus-age.” The fact, that two years had elapsed, was a matter out of the issue, for it was admitted in the pleadings.” So if they find a matter within the issue, if it be not contradictory, it may be rejected as surplusage. Sufficient is found to enable the Court to collect the point in issue out of the verdict; and if so, the same learned judge, in the same case, says, “ it will be sufficient.” I think the verdict is “ expressed substantially in the terms of the issue,” and is therefore sufficient ground of a final judgment for the defendant.
The Court, however, is of a different opinion, and a venire de novo is awarded.
On a subsequent day, Judge Thruston read in court the following paper:
In the following remarks I am furnished with an occasion of noticing certain charges which have been exhibited against me of arguing to the jury on matters of fact, charges founded either in malice or a want of a due understanding of the true lines of demarcation between matters of law and matters of fact: this instruction affords, I say, a fair occasion to give my views of the distinction between matters of law and matters of fact, because it is one of my main objections to the instruction that it involves both matters of law and matters of fact. I take matters of fact to be, in a legal sense, such, as by competent testimony, either written, oral, or circumstantial, go to prove the allegations or averments, in any plea, on which an issue is made to be tried by a jury. I take matters of law to be the judgment of the law upon those facts, if proved to the satisfaction of the jury.
If a court give an instruction to a jury, or charge a jury, such instruction or charge must necessarily be hypothetical, because the court cannot assert any fact to be true, or proved by the evidence, but must leave such truth or proof to be judged of exclusively by the jury; but they may inform the jury what the rule or principle of law is, if they shall be satisfied of the truth of the facts attempted to be proved; therefore, an instruction by a court to a jury is always in this hypothetical form : “ If the jury believe from the evidence so or so, then the law is so or so,” and so must be a charge by the court to the jury.
Of all nice questions, and among those the least understood, is that of what is matter of law and what is matter of fact.
I cannot, perhaps, illustrate this question bettor, than by taking for example the instruction given by the Court to the jury in Richard White’s case, transcribed below, on which I think it will be made apparent, to any intelligent mind, possessing the faculty of rational discrimination, that in that memorable instruction the Court did so confound law and fact, that in the hypothetical part of the instruction matter of law is stated as matter of fact, and that on the legal inference or rule of law, as laid down by the Court, drawn from the supposed matter of fact, they have based the rule upon both matters of law and matters of fact.
As no objection was made to the instruction on this ground, it seems clear, that the Attorney for the United States did not discern this valid objection to the instruction, or was deceived by the want of clear perceptions of the distinction between matter of law and matter of fact. The instruction was in these words, namely:
“ If the jury believe from the evidence that the departure from this district by the traverser, on the evening of the 30th of March, 1833, or at any time afterwards within two years, was, for the purpose or with a view to avoid punishment for the offence of burning the treasury building, or for any other offence, this was a fleeing from justice,
Now the Court heard all the evidence which the jury did, relating to the traverser’s return, and of its openness and publicity, and all the circumstances attending such return, and what was that evidence 1 as follows :
The traverser came to this city on Sunday evening in the stage, as he said, from Baltimore, an'd lodged at Mrs. Howard’s, a boarding-house in rather a retired part of the city, where he breakfasted the next morning, and after breakfast walked, in company with Mr. Howard, to the capítol, Congress being then in session, and went into the Congress library there, and left this city before dinner the same day, to go (as he said) to Leesburg, in Virginia.
This was all the evidence of the openness and publicity of the traverser’s return and the circumstances attending it, except that the circumstances, as proved by the prosecutor’s witnesses, very much impaired the force of the circumstances, as bearing in favor of the traverser; because competent evidence was offered to the jury that the tra-verser was, at the time of such return, travelling under a feigned name ; and moreover the testimony of another witness, Mr. Eaton, rendered it questionable whether the tra-verser did actually return, as stated by Howard and wife, at the time alleged by them; but that some other person, by the name of White, and not the traverser, was the person supposed to be the traverser by said Howard and wife.
I have thus stated all the evidence as to the traverser’s return, and the 'circumstances attending it, upon which, and which alone, the Court ought to have instructed the jury as to the inferences of law upon those facts; but what did they do 1 They left the jury to draw inferences of law themselves, from those facts; and then, upon the jury’s first being satisfied with the truth of those facts, and drawing such inferences of law from those facts as the instruction declares, they were then to be governed by the Court’s inferences of law, from the jury’s inferences of law, drawn from the facts.
When the court inform the jury that the statute of limitations is a bar, if the jury believe from the evidence that the traverser’s return and the circumstances attending it were “so open and public, and under such circumstances, that opportunity was afforded, by the use of ordinary diligence and due means, to have arrested him'’ let me ask if these underscored words are any part of the evidence, or facts in the case; or are they not rather matters of law arising out of the facts ? The facts are stated in full above, all which the Court heard, and every circumstance connected with the traverser’s return, as fully as the jury. Is it not upon those facts only that the instruction of the Court should have been given, and not upon the jury’s opinion of the legal inferences from those facts 1 Why should the Court, possessed as they were of every word of the evidence, leave it to the jury to say what constituted openness and publicity 1 Surely they were as competent to judge of this as the jury ? Is it the exclusive province of the jury to say how much exposure of one’s person, in this or that place, and for what length of time, amounts, in the eye of the law, to openness and publicity ? But this is not all; the jury are empowered also to determine other more clear questions of law, as inferences from the facts of which evidence was offered by the witnesses ; they are to say that the traverser’s return, &c., was not only open and public, but under such circumstances that opportunity was afforded, by the use of ordinary diligence and due moans, to have arrested him. Arrested! by whom 1 Opportunity also was to be inferred from the facts stated in evidence; of this opportunity the jury were to be the exclusive judges. Now, opportunity means “ suitableness of circumstances to any end;” then opportunity, in the instruction, means that the traverser was in circumstances suitable to be arrested, for that was the end contemplated in the instruction,
Let us now take a view of this instruction in another aspect. Let us suppose the evidence of Howard and wife to have been given, stating all the circumstances
I have been utterly in the dark, as to the grounds upon which the aforesaid instruction was given to the jury, inasmuch as the Court have assigned no reasons for having given it. It cannot be from any analogy drawn from the statutes of limitation in civil cases, because it is an express provision of the statute, that if the debtor returns to the county after absconding, that the creditor must sue him within the time mentioned in the law after such return, or the debtor shall have the benefit of the limitation ; if he do not so sue, there would be laches without excuse, because the debtor is not only in such case within reach of process, but is known to his creditor, and the law expressly declares that the time limited for bringing suit shall commence from the date of the debtor’s return. But the government did not know that the traverser was the offender, and therefore it was morally impossible to have arrested him. Here the analogy fails. It fails also in this : the law of Maryland expressly gives the benefit of the limitation to the returning debtor, and dates the commencement of the running of the time from the period of the debtor’s return. But the Act of Congress dates the commencement of the two years from the time of the commission of the offence ; but the Court have amended the statute, and declared that the time for the commencement of the running
Again; admitting for argument’s sake that the Court were right in annexing this supplement to the Act of Congress, and .in leaving also to the jury to draw the questionable inferences above descanted on from this supplementary extension of the act, yet is it not a rigorous and severe construction of this supplement, to subject the government to the penalties consequent upon laches, for having omitted one occasion only of arresting the offender, where the time of his stay in this county was so short, and his exposure of his person so limited, that it would have been an uncommon accident if he should have been seen by any of those executive officers of the government whose peculiar province it is to arrest offenders, and would have required uncommon industry to have obtained the due means of arresting him ? Some one must be found to charge the offender on oath. It cannot be presumed, that he could have been known to everybody either to have been the offender or that he was in the county. Suppose he was known to the President and cabinet to have been the offender. Did any of them see him, or know that he was here ? Suppose the marshal had this knowledge; did he see him, or know that he was here ? Did any deputy marshal or constable see him, or know that he was here? Did any of these, officers, admitting that Richard White was known to have been the incendiary, know his person ? Now by the Court’s instruction the government had two years from the time of White’s return as aforesaid to have arrested him; is it not a hard, and a rigorous, severe, and unequal interpretation of the Court’s own supplement to the law, to subject them to the forfeiture of their right to prosecute and punish the transgressor, because they did not seize one single and questionable chance of arresting him, only within the possibility of their having done so, within the whole two years ?
Let us again take another view of this instruction. After having been given to the jury, they withdraw to their room; the foreman takes up the instruction and reads it to the jury : suppose, then, one of the jury rises, (and it is a matter of surprise to me that it did not so happen,) and says, Mr. Foreman, if I understand this instruction, we are authorized to say, that if ordinary diligence, and due means were used, White might have been arrested; now, Mr. Foreman, I do not know what due means are, I am not lawyer enough to know this; I therefore cannot say, unless I know what these due means are, that are to be used, whether White’s stay here was long enough to have provided them; I therefore cannot judge whether by ordinary diligence, he could have been arrested or not. Now here is matter of sheer law, that ought to have puzzled any jury, (and that they wore not so puzzled is matter of surprise,) which the Court permitted the jury to pass upon, not as facts to be found by them, as the basis of the Court’s inference of law, but as inferences of law to be drawn by themselves from the facts as detailed by the witnesses. Well, let us suppose the foreman, (and no improbable supposition,) no better lawyer than the juryman who applied to him for information of what due means were, in the contemplation of law ? how could they get on ? The next step would have been, to come into court to ask for explanation of those terms of fine legal import. Suppose them in court; the foreman says, May it please your honors, we are at a stand; we do not know what due means signify according to law; it seems to us that the Court have devolved upon us the duty of drawing inferences of law from facts, and we believe that our province is to find facts, and leave to the court to draw inferences of law; but if we are bound to draw these inferences, we beg your honors to tell us, what those due means, mentioned in the instruction, are ; for we are not learned in the law, and believe that some ceremonies are necessary before an American citizen can be subject to be seized in his person, and we do not know what those ceremonies are. The Court, to satisfy these inquiries of the jury, would say to them: Gentlemen, it is very true, that what constitutes a legal or due arrest of a citizen, is matter of law, and often of nice law; the
It was also said that the verdict is argumentative, and Com. Dig. Pleader, § 22 was cited. " So in all cases, a general verdict which finds the point in issue by way
The case in Bolle is this, “ In an action of debt for £20, if the defendant plead quod solvit le £20, and the issue is an solvit ceo ou nemy, and the verdict is quod debet le £20, this is not good, because it is only by argument. M. 13 Jac. B. B. inter Baugh and Phillips, adjudged on writ of error.” S. C. 1 Bolle, Bep. 257. Here the issue was not directly found, and the fact in issue, (namely, whether the defendanthadpald. the £20,) could only be inferred by the finding that the defendant owes it. But if the jury had expressly found that the defendant had not paid the £20, and added, “ he still owing it to the plaintiff,” the matter in issue would not have been found by inference only, but directly. The fact that he had not paid it, would he no more an inference from the fact that ho owed it, than the fact that he owed it -would be an inference from the fact that he had not paid it. The doctrine of Vaughan cannot be extended beyond the case from which it was drawn. It does not apply to a case where the matter in issue is expressly and positively found, although the jury find something more which was not in issue. In the present case, the jury have, in effect, found the issue upon the plea of limitations, for the defendant, and there is no necessity of resorting to inference to support it, as there was in the case cited by Vaughan. I, therefore, do not think it an argumentative verdict, within the meaning of that ease. See, also, Com. Dig. Pleader, 18, 26, 28; 1-Iob. 54.