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Cases citing this case: Supreme Court
Cases citing this case: Circuit Courts
U.S. Supreme Court
SCHICK v. U S, 195 U.S. 65 (1904)
195 U.S. 65
FREDERICK J. SCHICK, Plff. in Err.,
v.
UNITED STATES.
No. 222.
WILLIAM BROADWELL, Plff. in Err.,
v.
UNITED STATES.
No. 223.
Nos. 222, 223.
Argued December 2, 1903.
Decided May 31, 1904.
Messrs. William D. Guthrie and Francis J. Kearful for plaintiffs in
error.
Solicitor General Hoyt for defendant in error.
[195 U.S. 65, 66]
Mr. Justice Brewer delivered the opinion of the court:
The constitutionality of the oleomargarine legislation hav-
[195 U.S. 65, 67]
ing been settled in McCray v. United States (just decided), 194
U. S. --, ante, 769, 24 Sup. Ct. Rep. 769, there is in these two cases
only a single question. The plaintiffs in error were severally
prosecuted by information in the district court of the United States
for the northern district of Illinois, under 11 of the act of August
2, 1886 (24 Stat. at L. 209, chap. 840, U. S. Comp. Stat. 1901, p.
2228), which reads: 'That every person who knowingly purchases or
receives for sale any oleomargarine which has not been branded or
stamped according to law shall be liable to a penalty of fifty dollars
for each such offense.'
In each case the parties in writing waived a jury, and agreed to
submit the issues to the court. Judgments were entered in favor of the
United States, and their collection ordered by only the civil process
of execution. That the defendants had failed to comply with the
section was proved. Indeed, it was not seriously disputed; the defense
resting only on the alleged unconstitutionality of the act. The waiver
of a jury was not assigned as error, nor referred to by counsel at the
hearing before us, either in brief or argument. The question of its
effect upon the judgment was suggested by this court, and briefs were
called for from the respective parties. Such briefs have been filed,
and both agree that the waiver of a jury did not invalidate the
proceedings. Notwithstanding this, the fact of the waiver appears in
the record.
We entertain no doubt that the parties could rightfully make such a
waiver and that the judgments are in no way invalidated thereby. It
will be noticed that the section characterizes the act prohibited as
an offense, and subjects the party to a penalty of $50. So small a
penalty for violating a revenue statute indicates only a petty
offense. It is not one necessarily involving any moral delinquency.
The violation may have been the result of ignorance or thought-lessness
and must be classed with such illegal acts as acting as an auctioneer
or peddler without a license, or making a deed without affixing the
proper stamp. That by other sections of this statute more serious
offenses are described, and more grave punishments provided does not
lift this one to the [195
U.S. 65, 68] dignity of a crime. Not infrequently a
single statute in its several sections provides for offenses of
different grades, subject to different punishments, and to prosecution
in different ways. In some states, in the same act are gathered all
the various offenses against the person, ranging from simple assault
to murder, and imposing punishments, from a mere fine to death. This
very statute furnishes an illustration. By one clause the knowingly
selling of adulterated butter in any other than the prescribed form
subjects the party convicted thereof to a fine of not more than $1,
000 and imprisonment for not more than two years. An officer of
customs, violating certain provisions of the act, is declared guilty
of a misdemeanor, and subject to a fine of not less than $1,000 nor
more than $ 5,000, and imprisonment for not less than six months nor
more than three years. Obviously, these violations of certain
provisions of the statute must be classed among serious criminal
offenses, and can be prosecuted only by indictment, while the
violations of the statute in the cases before us were prosecuted by
information. The truth is, the nature of the offense, and the amount
of punishment prescribed, rather than its place in the statutes,
determine whether it is to be classed among serious or petty
offenses,-whether among crimes or misdemeanors. Clearly, both indicate
that this particular violation of the statute is only a petty offense.
In such a case there is no constitutional requirement of a jury. In
the 3d clause of 2, article 3, of the Constitution, it is provided
that 'the trial of all crimes, except in cases of impeachment, shall
be by jury;' and in article 6 of the Amendments, that 'in all criminal
prosecutions the accused shall enjoy the right to a speedy and public
trial by an impartial jury of the state and district wherein the crime
shall have been committed.' If there be any conflict between these two
provisions, the one found in the Amendments must control, under the
well-understood rule that the last expression of the will of the
lawmaker prevails over an earlier
[195 U.S. 65, 69] one. But that in the body
of the Constitution does not include a petty offense like the present.
It must be read in the light of the common law. 'That,' said Mr.
Justice Bradley, in Moore v. United States,
91 U.S. 270, 274 , 23 S. L. ed. 346, 347, referring to the common
law, 'is the system from which our judicial ideas and legal
definitions are derived. The language of the Constitution and of many
acts of Congress could not be understood without reference to the
common law.' Again, in Smith v. Alabama,
124 U.S. 465, 478 , 31 S. L. ed. 508, 512, 1 Inters. Com. Rep.
804, 809, 8 Sup. Ct. Rep. 564, 569, is this declaration by Mr. Justice
Matthews: 'The interpretation of the Constitution of the United States
is necessarily influenced by the fact that its provisions are framed
in the language of the English common law, and are to be read in the
light of its history.' In United States v. Wong Kim Ark,
169 U.S. 649, 654 , 42 S. L. ed. 890, 892, 18 Sup. Ct. Rep. 456,
459, Mr. Justice Gray used this language:
'In this, as in other respects, it must be interpreted in the
light of the common law, the principles and history of which were
familiarly known to the framers of the Constitution. Minor v.
Happersett, 21 Wall. 162, 22 L. ed. 627; Ex parte Wilson,
114 U.S. 417, 422 , 29 S. L. ed. 89, 91, 5 Sup. Ct. Rep. 935;
Boyd v. United States,
116 U.S. 616, 624 , 625 S., 29 L. ed. 746, 748, 749, 6 Sup. Ct.
Rep. 524; Smith v. Alabama,
124 U.S. 465 , 31 L. ed. 508, 1 Inters. Com. Rep. 804, 8 Sup.
Ct. Rep. 564.' See also Kepner v. United States, 194 U. S. --, ante,
797, 24 Sup. Ct. Rep. 797; 1 Kent Com. 336.
Blackstone's Commentaries are accepted as the most satisfactory
exposition of the common law of England. At the time of the adoption
of the Federal Constitution, it had been published about twenty years,
and it has been said that more copies of the work had been sold in
this country than in England; so that undoubtedly, the framers of the
Constitution were familiar with it. In this treatise, vol. 4, p. 5. is
given a definition of the word 'crimes:'
'A crime, or misdemeanor, is an act committed, or omitted, in
violation of a public law either forbidding or commanding it. This
general definition comprehends both crimes and misdemeanors; which,
properly speaking, are mere synonymous terms; though in common usage
the word 'crimes' is made to denote such offenses as are of a deeper
and more atrocious [195
U.S. 65, 70] dye; while smaller faults and omissions of
less consequence are comprised under the gentler name of
'misdemeanors' only.'
In the light of this definition we can appreciate the action of the
convention which framed the Constitution. In the draft of that
instrument, as reported by the committee of five, the language was
'the trial of all criminal offenses . . . shall be by jury,' but by
unanimous vote it was amended so as to read 'the trial of all crimes.'
The significance of this change cannot be misunderstood. If the
language had remained 'criminal offenses,' it might have been
contended that it meant all offenses of a criminal nature, petty as
well as serious; but when the change was made from 'criminal offenses'
to 'crimes,' and made in the light of the popular understanding of the
meaning of the word 'crimes,' as stated by Blackstone, it is obvious
that the intent was to exclude from the constitutional requirement of
a jury the trial of petty criminal offenses. But we need not go beyond
the express rulings of this court. In Callan v. Wilson,
127 U.S. 540 , 32 L. ed. 223, 8 Sup. Ct. Rep. 1301, reference was
made to many decisions of state courts, holding that the trial of
petty offenses was not within any constitutional provision requiring a
jury in the trial of crimes, and on page 557, L. ed. p. 228, Sup. Ct.
Rep. p. 1307, it was said:
'Except in that class or grade of offenses called petty offenses,
which, according to the common law, may be proceeded against
summarily in any tribunal legally constituted for that purpose, the
guaranty of an impartial jury to the accused in a criminal
prosecution, conducted either in the name, or by or under the
authority, of the United States, secures to him the right to enjoy
that mode of trial from the first moment, and in whatever court, he
is put on trial for the offense charged.'
By 563, Rev. Stat. (U. S. Comp. Stat. 1901, p. 455) the district
courts are given jurisdiction 'of all crimes and offenses cognizable
under the authority of the United States, committed within their
respective districts, or upon the high seas, the punishment of which
is not capital.' There is no act of Congress requiring that
[195 U.S. 65, 71]
the trial of all offenses shall be by jury, and a court is
fully organized and competent for the transaction of business without
the presence of a jury. There is no public policy which forbids the
waiver of a jury in the trial of petty offenses. On the contrary, by
44 of the Code of Law for the District of Columbia, Congress provided,
in respect to the police court, that--
'In all prosecutions within the jurisdiction of said court, in
which, according to the Constitution of the United States, the
accused would be entitled to a jury trial, the trial shall be by
jury, unless the accused shall, in open court, expressly waive such
trial by jury, and request to be tried by the judge, in which case
the trial shall be by such judge, and the judgment and sentence
shall have the same force and effect in all respects as if the same
had been entered and pronounced upon the verdict of a jury. In all
cases where the accused would not, by force of the Constitution of
the United States, be entitled to trial by jury, the trial shall be
by the court without a jury, unless in such of said last-named cases
wherein the fine or penalty may be $50 or more, or imprisonment as
punishment for the offense may be thirty days or more, the accused
shall demand a trial by jury, in which case the trial shall be by
jury.'
And it is a well-known fact that in many territories organized by
act of Congress the legislature has authorized the prosecution of
petty offenses in the police courts of cities, without a jury.
But if there be no constitutional or statutory provision or public
policy requiring a jury in the trial of petty offenses, upon what
ground can it be contended that a defendant therein may not
voluntarily waive a jury? Can it be that a defendant can plead guilty
of the most serious, even a capital, offense, and thus dispense with
all inquiry by a jury, and cannot, when informed against for a petty
offense, waive a trial by jury? Article 6 of the Amendments, as we
have seen, gives the accused a right to a trial by jury. But the same
article gives [195 U.S.
65, 72] him the further right 'to be confronted with the
witnesses against him . . . and to have the assistance of counsel.' Is
it possible that an accused cannot admit, and be bound by the
admission, that a witness not present would testify to certain facts?
Can it be that if he does not wish the assistance of counsel, and
waives it, the trial is invalid? It seems only necessary to ask these
questions to answer them. When there is no constitutional or statutory
mandate, and no public policy prohibiting, an accused may waive any
privilege which he is given the right to enjoy. Authorities in the
state courts are in harmony with this thought. In Com. v. Dailey, 12
Cush. 80, the defendant in a misdemeanor case waived his right to a
full panel, and consented to be tried by eleven jurors; and this
action was sustained by the supreme court of Massachusetts. Chief
Justice Shaw, delivering the opinion of the court, said (p. 83): 'He
may waive any matter of form or substance, excepting only what may
relate to the jurisdiction of the court.' The same doctrine was laid
down in Murphy v. Com. 1 Met. (Ky.) 365; Tyra v. Com. 2 Met. (Ky.) 1,
and in State v. Kaufman, 51 Iowa, 578, 33 Am. Rep. 148, 2 N. W. 275.
In Connelly v. State, 60 Ala. 89, 31 Am. Rep. 34, a statute
authorizing the waiver of a jury was sustained. The same rule was made
in State v. Worden, 46 Conn. 349, 33 Am. Rep. 27, which was a case of
a felony. See also People v. Rathbun, 21 Wend. 509, 542.
We are of opinion that the waiver of a jury by the defendants in
these cases, and the consent to trial by the court, was not in
conflict with law, and the judgments are, therefore, affirmed.
The CHIEF JUSTICE, Mr. Justice Brown, and Mr. Justice Peckham
concur in the views expressed in this opinion, although they dissent
from the judgments on the ground of their dissent in No. 301.
Mr. Justice Harlan dissenting:
These are criminal prosecutions based on the act of Con-
[195 U.S. 65, 73]
gress of August 2d, 1886, entitled 'An Act Defining Butter,
Also Imposing a Tax Upon and Regulating the Manufacture, Sale,
Importation, and Exportation of Oleomargarine,' supplemented by the
act of October 1st, 1890, and amended by the act of May 9th, 1902. 24
Stat. at L. 209, chap. 840, (U. S. Comp. Stat. 1901, p. 2228); 26
Stat. at L. 621, chap. 1244, 41 (U. S. Comp. Stat. 1901, p. 2235); 32
Stat. at L. 193, chap. 784.
The informations against Schick and Broadwell were substantially of
the same character. Each charged that the defendant, a retail dealer
in oleomargarine, unlawfully and knowingly purchased and received for
sale certain oleomargarine which had not been stamped according to
law.
The parties, in writing, waived a jury, and agreed to submit the
issues to the court. The accused, in each case, pleaded not guilty.
Evidence having been introduced, the defendant in each case moved the
court to render a verdict and judgment of not guilty, and that he be
discharged, upon the ground that the above act of Congress, as
amended, was in contravention of the Constitution of the United States
in that it deprived the defendant and the oleomargarine manufacturers
and dealers in the United States of their liberty and property without
due process of law; was an unwarranted encroachment upon, and
interference with, the police powers reserved to the several states
and to the people of the United States; invested an inferior executive
officer with the power finally and arbitrarily to determine judicial
questions concerning property rights; and so arbitrarily discriminated
against oleomargarine in favor of butter as to be repugnant to the
fundamental principles of equality and justice that were inherent in
the Constitution.
In each case the motion was overruled, the defendant excepting.
Motions for a new trial and in arrest of judgment having been
severally overruled, the court, no jury having been impaneled, found
the defendant, in each case, guilty, and adjudged that he pay a fine
of $50 and costs, and that execution issue therefor. From those
judgments the present writs of error were prosecuted.
[195 U.S. 65, 74]
The assignments of error here present the same questions of
constitutional law that were raised on the motion to render judgment
for the defendant; and, in addition, they question the action of the
trial court in striking out and refusing to consider certain evidence.
Upon the face of the record the question arises whether the court
below, without the aid of a jury, had jurisdiction to ascertain the
facts, and, finding the defendants severally guilty of the offense
charged, to impose upon each the fine prescribed by the statute.
I. That this is a criminal prosecution, and that the mode of
procedure must be determined by the established rules governing the
conduct of trials in criminal cases, is, in my judgment, not to be
doubted. The record itself describes the information as a criminal
information, and the case was tried as if it were a criminal
prosecution. It never occurred to the trial court that it was a
prosecution of any other kind. It is true that the act provides that
all fines, penalties, and forfeitures imposed by it may be recovered
in any court of competent jurisdiction. 19. But it is evident from the
entire act that it makes all the violations of the provisions imposing
a fine, or fine and imprisonment, or fine or imprisonment, criminal
offenses, to be punished in such mode as was appropriate or allowable
by the law of criminal procedure. Throughout the act, when a fine is
imposed, the doing of the thing forbidden is described as an
'offense.' If a person carries on the business of a manufacturer of
oleomargarine, without having paid the special tax, he is subject,
besides being liable to pay the special tax, to be fined not less than
$1,000, and not more than $5,000; if he carries on the business of a
wholesale dealer in oleomargarine without having paid the special tax
therefor he is subject, besides being liable for the special tax, to
be fined not less than $500, nor more than $2,000; and if he carries
on the business of a retail dealer in oleomargarine, without having
paid the special tax, he may be fined not less than $50, nor more than
$500 for each and every
[195 U.S. 65, 75] offense. 4. Every person who knowingly
sells or offers for sale, or delivers or offers to deliver, any
oleomargarine in any other form than in new wooden or paper packages,
as described, or who packs in any package any oleomargarine in a
manner contrary to law, or who falsely brands any package or affixes
any stamp on any package denoting a less amount of tax than that
required by law, 'may be fined for each offense not more than $1, 000,
and be imprisoned not more than two years.' 6. Every manufacturer of
oleomargarine who neglects to affix the required label to a package
containing oleomargarine made by him, or sold or offered for sale by
or for him, and every person who removes any label so affixed may be
'fined $ 50 for each package in respect to which such offense is
committed.' 7. Every officer of customs who permits imported
oleomargarine 'to pass out of his custody or control without
compliance by the owner or importer thereof with the provisions of
this section relating thereto, shall be guilty of a misdemeanor, and
shall be fined not less than $1,000, nor more than $5,000, and
imprisoned not less than six months, nor more than two years.' 10. Any
person who wilfully neglects or refuses, when emptying a stamped
package containing oleomargarine, to utterly destroy such stamps,
'shall for each such offense, be fined, not exceeding $50, and
imprisoned not less than ten days, nor more than six months. And any
person who fraudulently gives away or accepts from another, or who
sells, buys, or uses for packing oleomargarine any such stamped
package, shall, for each such offense, be fined not exceeding $100,
and be imprisoned not more than one year.' 13. Any person who wilfully
removes or defaces the stamps, marks, or brands on packages containing
oleomargarine taxed as provided, is guilty 'of a misdemeanor, and
shall be punished by a fine of not less than one hundred dollars, nor
more than two thousand dollars, and by imprisonment for not less than
thirty days, nor more than six months.' 15. Whenever any person
engaged in carrying on the business of manufacturing oleomargarine,
defrauds, or attempts to defraud,
[195 U.S. 65, 76] the United States of the
tax on oleomargarine produced by him, or any part thereof, he forfeits
the factory and manufacturing apparatus used by him, and all
oleomargarine and all raw material for the production of oleomargarine
found in the factory and on the factory premises, and 'shall be fined
not less than five hundred dollars nor more than five thousand
dollars, and be imprisoned not less than six months, nor more than
three years.' 17.
These sections are to be looked at in connection with 11, on which
this prosecution is based. That section provides: 'That every person
who knowingly purchases or receives for sale any oleomargarine which
has not been branded or stamped according to law, shall be liable to a
penalty of fifty dollars for each such offense.'
It is true that the word 'penalty' is used in several sections of
this act. But it is not to be conclusively inferred therefrom that the
offense described was not a crime, within the strictest meaning of
that word. Referring to the words 'penalty,' 'liability,' and
'forfeiture,' this court has said: 'These words have been used by the
great masters of Crown law and the elementary writers as synonymous
with the word 'punishment,' in connection with crimes of the highest
grade. Thus, Blackstone speaks of criminal law as that 'branch of
jurisprudence which teaches of the nature, extent, and degrees of
every crime, and adjusts to it its adequate and necessary penalty.'
Alluding to the importance of this department of legal science, he
says: 'The enacting of penalties to which a whole nation shall be
subject should be calmly and maturely considered.' Referring to the
unwise policy of inflicting capital punishment for certain
comparatively slight offenses, he speaks of them as 'these outrageous
penalties,' and frequently refers to laws that inflict the 'penalty of
death." United States v. Reisinger,
128 U.S. 398, 402 , 32 S. L. ed. 480, 481, 9 Sup. Ct. Rep. 99,
101. So, in Huntington v. Attrill,
146 U.S. 657, 667 , 36 S. L. ed. 1123, 1127, 13 Sup. Ct. Rep. 224,
227, after referring to the maxim of international law (The Antelope,
10 Wheat. 66, 123, 6 L. ed. 268, 282), that 'the courts of no country
execute the penal laws of another,' and observ-
[195 U.S. 65, 77]
ing that there was great danger, when interpreting that maxim,
of being misled by the different shades of meaning allowed to the word
'penal' in our language, this court said: 'In the municipal law of
England and America the words 'penal' and 'penalty' have been used in
various senses. Strictly and primarily, they denote punishment,
whether corporal or pecuniary, imposed and enforced by the state for a
crime or offense against its laws. . . . Penal laws, strictly and
properly, are those imposing punishment for an offense committed
against the state, and which, by the English and American
Constitutions, the executive of the state has the power to pardon.'
Besides, the act throughout uses the words 'fine,' and 'fined,'-words
which, in their primary sense, import the punishment of a person
convicted of crime.
I cannot doubt, after a scrutiny of the entire act, that every
offense prescribed by it, and for which a fine is imposed, was
intended to be made and is a criminal offense,-a crime against the
United States,-to be punished as such. Certainly the offenses
prescribed in 4, 6, 7, 10, 13, 15, and 17 are crimes against the
United States. If that be so, surely the offense prescribed in 11 is a
crime, and not a mere penalty, recoverable only by some form of
proceeding of a civil nature. This view is substantially conceded by
the Solicitor General when he says that 'in view of the word 'offense'
in 11 of the oleomargarine act, there is ground for saying that the
penalty which it provides was imposed as a fine for the violation of
what is made a misdemeanor.' If the United States could have proceeded
in some form of civil action to recover the fine imposed by that
section, it has not done so. It chose to proceed by criminal
information, and the accused pleaded not guilty of the crime charged.
II. So far it has been my object only to show that the offense
charged was a crime against the United States. I now inquire as to the
mode in which it may be legally ascertained whether an accused,
pleading not guilty, has committed the
[195 U.S. 65, 78] crime charged against him?
Has the law designated any particular tribunal, or prescribed any
special mode, for trying the issue as to his guilt? The words of the
Constitution upon this subject are clear and explicit. They leave no
room for interpretation. Its express mandate is that 'the trial of all
crimes, except in cases of impeachment, shall be by jury.' Const. art.
3. When the Constitution was placed before the people for adoption or
rejection, many deemed those words, explicit as they were, inadequate
to secure all the benefits of a jury trial as it existed at common
law.
It is suggested that if any conflict exists between the absolute
requirement in the original Constitution (art. 3, 2), that the 'trial
of all crimes, except in cases of impeachment, shall be by jury,' and
the provision in the 6th Amendment, that the accused, in every
criminal prosecution, 'shall enjoy the right to a speedy and public
trial, by an impartial jury,' etc., the latter, having been last
adopted, must control. But there is no such conflict. Those who
opposed the acceptance of the Constitution said, among other things,
that the words of that instrument, strictly construed (art. 3, 2),
admitted of a secret trial, or of one that might be indefinitely
postponed to suit the purposes of the government, or of one taking
place in a state or district other than that in which the crime was
committed. The framers of the Constitution disclaimed any such evil
purposes; but in order to meet the objections of its opponents, and to
remove all possible ground of uneasiness on the subject, the 6th
Amendment was adopted, in which the essential features of the trial
required by 2 of article 3 are set forth. In other words, the trial
required by that section is the trial referred to in the 6th
Amendment. And the jury referred to in both the original Constitution
and in the Amendments was, the authorities all agree, the historical
jury of the common law, consisting of twelve persons, no more and no
less, whose unanimous verdict was necessary to conviction. Thompson v.
Utah,
170 U.S. 343, 349 , 42 S. L. ed. 1061, 1066, 18 Sup. Ct. Rep. 620;
2 Hale P. C. part 2, 161; 1 Chitty Crim.
[195 U.S. 65, 79]
Law, 505; King v. St. Michael, 2 W. Bl. 719; Clyncard's Case,
Cro. Eliz. part 2, p. 654. Mr. Justice Story said: 'The Constitution
of the United States has exhibited great solicitude on the subject of
the trial of crimes and has declared that the trial of all crimes,
except in cases of impeachment, shall be by the jury; and has, in some
cases, prescribed, and in others required Congress to prescribe, the
place of trial. And certain amendments of the Constitution, in the
nature of a Bill of Rights, have been adopted, which fortify and guard
this inestimable right of trial by jury.' United States v. Gibert, 2
Sumn. 19, 37, Fed. Cas. No. 15,204. See also Capital Traction Co. v.
Hof,
174 U.S. 1 , 43 L. ed. 873, 19 Sup. Ct. Rep. 580; Natal v.
Louisiana,
139 U.S. 621, 624 , 35 S. L. ed. 288, 289, 11 Sup. Ct. Rep. 636; 4
Bl. Com. 280; 1 Stephen's History of the Criminal Law, 123.
The contention in the present prosecutions is that, although the
positive constitutional injunction that the trial of all crimes shall
be by jury furnishes an inflexible rule that may not be ignored in
cases of felony, that rule, even where the accused pleads not guilty,
may be disregarded altogether in a trial for a misdemeanor, provided
he consents to be tried by the court without a jury. Plainly, such an
exception is unauthorized by the Constitution if its words be
interpreted according to their ordinary meaning. Nor, in my opinion,
is it consistent with the fundamental rules of criminal procedure, as
established and enforced at common law. In determining the meaning and
scope of the words 'due process of law,' as used in the Constitution,
the established rule is that 'we must examine the Constitution itself,
to see whether this process be in conflict with any of its provisions.
If not found to be so, we must look to those settled usages and modes
of proceeding existing in the common and statute law of England before
the emigration of our ancestors, and which are shown not to have been
unsuited to their civil and political condition by having been acted
on by them after the settlement of this country.' Den ex dem. Murray
v. Hoboken Land & Improv. Co. 18 How. 272, 277, 15 L. ed. 372, 374.
So, in ascertaining whether, under any circumstances, a criminal case
may be tried in a Federal court
[195 U.S. 65, 80] without a jury,-the
accused pleading not guilty,-we must inquire whether the Constitution
forbids such an exercise of authority by the court, without a jury. If
it does, that is the end of the matter; if it does not, then, and then
only, may we look to such usages and modes of proceeding as existed at
the common law for the trial of crimes before the adoption of the
Constitution.
Proceeding on that basis, we have seen that the Constitution
expressly requires that the trial of all crimes, except impeachment,
shall be by jury; and I assert, with confidence, that no precedent can
be found at common law for the trial by the court, without a jury, of
any crimes except those described in adjudged cases and by elementary
authorities as minor or petty offenses involved in the internal police
of the state, and those could be tried summarily by some court or
officer, without the intervention of a jury, only when thereunto
authorized by an act of Parliament. Except in cases of contempt, the
common law, Blackstone says, was a stranger to the summary proceedings
authorized by acts of Parliament. Bank 4, chap. 20, p. 280. I am not
aware of, nor has there been cited, any case in England in which,
after Magna Charta, and prior to the adoption of our Constitution, a
court, tribunal, officer, or commissioner has, without a jury, even in
the case of a petty offense, determined the question of crime or no
crime, when the defendant pleaded not guilty, unless the authority to
do so was expressly conferred by an act of Parliament. The exceptions
to the rule at common law that all crimes must be tried by a jury were
in the mind of this court when, in Callan v. Wilson,
127 U.S. 540, 557 , 32 S. L. ed. 223, 228, 8 Sup. Ct. Rep. 1301,
1307, it said: 'Except in that class or grade of offenses called petty
offenses, which, according to the common law, may be proceeded against
summarily in any tribunal legally constituted for that purpose, the
gauranty of an impartial jury to the accused in a criminal
prosecution, conducted either in the name, or by or under the
authority of the United States, secures to him the right to enjoy that
mode of trial from the first moment, and in what-
[195 U.S. 65, 81]
ever court, he is put on trial for the offense charged. In such
cases a judgment of conviction, not based upon a verdict of guilty by
a jury, is void.'
If, in analogy to the powers exercised by the Parliament of England
prior to the adoption of our Constitution, it should be held that
Congress could treat the particular crime here in question as a petty
offense, triable by the court, without a jury, or with a jury of less
than twelve persons, it is sufficient to say that Congress has not
legislated to that effect in respect of the offense charged against
these defendants, or of any other offense defined in the acts relating
to oleomargarine. If it has the power to do so, Congress has not
assumed, directly or indirectly, to withdraw such offenses from the
operation of the constitutional provision that the trial of all
crimes, except in cases of impeachment, shall be by jury. And the
question is whether, in the face of that explicit provision, and in
the absence of any statute authorizing it to be done, the court, a
jury being waived, has jurisdiction to try the accused for the crime
charged.
In this connection we are confronted with the broad statement,
found in some adjudged cases as well as in elementary treatises, to
the effect that a person is entitled to waive any constitutional
right, of whatever nature, that he possesses, and thereby preclude
himself from invoking the authority of the Constitution for the
protection or enforcement of that right. It is suggested that even
when charged with murder he may plead guilty, and that the court
thereupon, without the intervention of a jury, may pronounce such
judgment as the law permits or authorizes. And it is confidently asked
by those who make that suggestion, Why may not one charged with a
misdemeanor, and pleading not guilty, waive a jury altogether, and
consent to be tried by the court? This argument will not stand the
test of reason. It proceeds upon the ground that jurisdiction to try a
criminal case may be given by consent of the accused and the
prosecutor. But such consent could have no legal efficacy. Undoubtedly
one accused of [195 U.S.
65, 82] murder may plead guilty. But in doing so he
renders a trial unnecessary. The Constitution does not prohibit an
accused from pleading guilty. His right to do so was recognized long
before the adoption of that instrument; and it was never supposed that
such a plea impaired the force of the requirement that a trial for
crime, under a plea of not guilty, shall be by jury. It is not to be
assumed that the Constitution intended, when preserving the right of
trial by jury, to change any essential rule of criminal practice
established at the common law, before the adoption of that instrument.
When the accused pleads guilty before a lawful tribunal he admits
every material fact well averred in the indictment or information, and
there is no issue to be tried; no facts are to be found; no trial
occurs. After such a plea nothing remains to be done except that the
court shall pronounce judgment upon the facts voluntarily confessed by
the accused. What the Constitution requires is that the trial of a
crime shall be by jury. If the accused pleads not guilty, there must,
of necessity, be a trial; for by that plea he puts 'himself on his
country, which country the jury are;' he contests, by that plea, every
fact necessary to establish his guilt; he is presumed to be innocent;
nothing is confessed; and the facts necessary to show guilt must be
judicially ascertained, in the mode prescribed by law, before any
judgment can be rendered. But the vital inquiry is, In what way, when
the defendant pleads not guilty, are the facts to be ascertained, and
the plea of not guilty overcome? Under the express words of the
Constitution the answer must be: By trial before a jury of twelve
persons, organized to determine whether the charge of guilt be true;
the function of the court being simply to conduct the trial, and
render a judgment in accordance with the verdict of the jury as to the
facts. The court and the jury, not separately, but together,
constitute the appointed tribunal which alone, under the law, can try
the question of crime, the commission of which by the accused is put
in issue by a plea of not guilty.
There are some things so vital in their character that they
[195 U.S. 65, 83]
may not be legally done or legally omitted in a criminal
prosecution, even with the consent of the accused. This is abundantly
established by authority. The grounds upon which the decisions rest
are, upon principle, applicable alike in cases of felonies and
misdemeanors, although the consequences to the accused may be more
evident as well as more serious in the former than in the latter
cases. Certain it is, that felonies and misdemeanors are equally
crimes within the meaning of the constitutional provision that the
trial of all crimes shall be by jury, and there is no warrant to
construe that provision as if it read, 'the trial of all crimes,
except in cases of impeachment and in misdemeanors, shall be by jury.'
Let us look at some of the authorities in cases both of felonies
and misdemeanors, and ascertain whether the consent, express or
implied, of the accused can have the effect to dispense with the mode
of trial appointed by law for criminal cases. As the question here
presented has never been decided by this court, and is of importance,
a somewhat extended reference to authorities is justified.
The first case to which I call attention is Hopt v. Utah,
110 U.S. 574, 579 , 28 S. L. ed. 262, 265, 4 Sup. Ct. Rep. 202.
That was a case of murder arising in Utah while a territory. It
appeared that the trial, by triers appointed by the court, of
challenges of proposed jurors, was not had in the presence of the
accused. It was there argued that his presence at the trial of such an
issue was a privilege which he was entitled to waive, and that the
entire proceedings against him should not fail because he chose not to
exercise that privilege. This court, however, held that the trial of
challenges could not legally take place except in the actual presence
of the accused. In dealing with the suggestion that the right of the
accused to be present before the triers was waived by his failure to
object to their retirement from the court room, or to the trial of the
several challenges in his absence, it was said: 'We are of opinion
that it was not within the power of the accused or his counsel to
dispense with the statutory requirement as to his personal presence at
the trial. [195 U.S. 65,
84] The argument to the contrary necessarily proceeds
upon the ground that he alone is concerned as to the mode by which he
may be deprived of his life or liberty, and that the chief object of
the prosecution is to punish him for the crime charged. But this is a
mistaken view as well of the relations which the accused holds to the
public as of the end of human punishment. The natural life, says
Blackstone, 'cannot legally be disposed of or destroyed by any
individual, neither by the person himself, nor by any other of his
fellow creatures, merely upon their own authority.' 1 Bl. Com. 133.
The public has an interest in his life and liberty. Neither can be
lawfully taken except in the mode prescribed by law. That which the
law makes essential in proceedings involving the deprivation of life
or liberty cannot be dispensed with or affected by the consent of the
accused, much less by his mere failure, when on trial and in custody,
to object to unauthorized methods.' 4 Bl. Com. 11.
In Thompson v. Utah,
170 U.S. 343, 353 , 42 S. L. ed. 1061, 1067, 18 Sup. Ct. Rep. 620,
624, which was a case of grand larceny, charged to have been committed
while Utah was a territory (the trial occurring after Utah became a
state), one of the questions was whether the trial by a jury composed
of eight jurors, as authorized by the statutes of the state, was a
legal trial for a crime committed when Utah was a territory under the
exclusive jurisdiction of the United States. It was contended that, as
the accused did not object, until after verdict, to a trial by a jury
of eight persons, he should not be heard to say that the trial was in
violation of his constitutional rights. This court overruled that
contention, saying: 'It is sufficient to say that it was not in the
power of one accused of felony, by consent expressly given or by his
silence, to authorize a jury of only eight persons to pass upon the
question of his guilt. The law in force when this crime was committed
did not permit any tribunal to deprive him of his liberty, except one
constituted of a court and a jury of twelve persons.' After referring
to Hopt v. Utah,
110 U.S. 574, 579 , 28 S. L. ed. 262, 265, 4 Sup. Ct. Rep. 202,
the court proceeded: 'If one under trial for a felony
[195 U.S. 65, 85]
the punishment of which is confinement in a penitentiary could
not legally consent that the trial proceed in his absence, still less
could he assent to be deprived of his liberty by a tribunal not
authorized by law to determine his guilt.'
'The infirmity,' says Cooley, 'in case of a trial by a jury of
less than twelve, by consent, would be that the tribunal would be
one unknown to the law, created by mere voluntary act of the
parties; and it would in effect be an attempt to submit to a species
of arbitration the question whether the accused has been guilty of
an offense against the state.' Const. Lim. 319.
A leading case is that of Cancemi v. People, 18 N. Y. 128, 136. Its
doctrines have been widely accepted as based upon a sound
interpretation of constitutional provisions relating to criminal
prosecutions. The court of appeals of New York said: 'These
considerations make it apparent that the right of a defendant in a
criminal prosecution to affect, by consent, the conduct of the case,
should be much more limited than in civil actions. It should not be
permitted to extent so far as to work radical changes in great and
leading provisions as to the organization of the tribunals or the mode
of proceeding prescribed by the Constitution and the laws. Effect may
justly and safely be given to such consent in many particulars; and
the law does, in respect to various matters, regard and act upon it as
valid. Objections to jurors may be waived; the court may be
substituted for triers to dispose of challenges to jurors; secondary
in place of primary evidence may be received; admissions of facts are
allowed; and in similar particulars, as well as in relation to mere
formal proceedings generally, consent will render valid what without
it would be erroneous. A plea of guilty to any indictment, whatever
may be the grade of the crime, will be received and acted upon if it
is made clearly to appear that the nature and effect of it are
understood by the accused. In such a case the preliminary
investigation of a grant jury, with the admission of the accusation in
the indictment, is supposed
[195 U.S. 65, 86] to be a sufficient
safeguard to the public interests. But when issue is joined upon an
indictment, the trial must be by the tribunal and in the mode which
the Constitution and laws provide, without any essential change. The
public officer prosecuting for the people has no authority to consent
to such a change, nor has the defendant. Applying the above reasoning
to the present case, the conclusion necessarily follows that the
consent of the plaintiff in error to the withdrawal of one juror, and
that the remaining eleven might render a verdict, could not lawfully
be recognized by the court, at the circuit, and was a nullity. If a
deficiency of one juror might be waived, there appears to be no good
reason why a deficiency of eleven might not be; and it is difficult to
say why, upon the same principle, the entire panel might not be
dispensed with, and the trial committed to the court alone. It would
be a highly dangerous innovation, in reference to criminal cases, upon
the ancient and invaluable institution of trial by jury, and the
Constitution and laws establishing and securing that mode of trial,
for the court to allow of any number short of a full panel of twelve
jurors, and we think it ought not to be tolerated.'
Upon the general question whether the consent or silence of the
defendant can excuse the failure of the court at the trial to enforce
such essential rules as are prescribed by law for the trial of
criminal cases, the case of Hill v. People, 16 Mich. 351, 356-358, is
instructive. That was a case of murder. The defendant was found
guilty, and after the trial it was discovered that one of the jurors
was disqualified under the statutes of Michigan. But that fact was
unknown to the accused and his counsel until after the rendition of
the verdict. It was contended by the state that by neglecting to
challenge that juror, the accused lost the right to avail himself of
the objection; and was to be deemed to have thereby waived all
objections to the juror or to a trial by eleven qualified jurors. It
should be here observed that the Constitution of Michigan preserved
the [195 U.S. 65, 87]
right, in all criminal prosecutions, to 'a speedy and public
trial by an impartial jury, which may consist of less than twelve men
in all courts not of record.' Looking at the case as one in which the
trial had been by eleven competent jurors only, the court considered
the general question of waiver as applicable to criminal cases.
Speaking by Judge Christiancy, and observing that under the state
Constitution there could be no reasonable doubt of the competency of
parties in civil cases to waive such an objection, or to stipulate for
a trial by jury of less than twelve, the court said: 'But a criminal
prosecution, in which the people in their sovereign capacity prosecute
for a crime against the laws of the whole society, and seek to subject
the defendant to punishment, must, it seems to us, be considered as a
proceeding in invitum, against the will of the defendant throughout,
so far as relates to a question of this kind, or any question as to
the legal constitution of the court or jury by which he is to be
tried. It would be adding materially to the generally recognized force
of the obligation of contracts to hold that a defendant charged with a
crime might, without a trial, enter into a building contract with the
prosecuting attorney (representing the state) to go to the
penitentiary for a certain number of years in satisfaction for the
offense. And yet it would approximate such a position, to hold that he
might be bound by a contract providing for a trial before a court or
jury unknown to the Constitution or the laws, the result of which
trial might be to place him in the same penitentiary. The true theory,
we think, is that the people, in their political or sovereign
capacity, assume to provide by law the proper tribunals and modes of
trial for offenses, without consulting the wishes of the defendant as
such; and upon them, therefore, devolves the responsibility, not only
of enacting such laws, but of carrying them into effect, by furnishing
the tribunals, the panels of jurors, and other safeguards for his
trial, in accordance with the Constitution, which secures his rights.'
The court added some general observations which may well
[195 U.S. 65, 88]
be heeded by every one charged with the administration of the
criminal laws. It said: 'But independent of all theories, and as a
practical question, we think there would be great danger in holding it
competent for a defendant in a criminal case, by waiver or
stipulation, to give authority which it could not otherwise possess,
to a jury of less than twelve men, for his trial and conviction; or to
deprive himself in any way of the safeguards which the Constitution
has provided him, in the unanimous agreement of twelve men qualified
to serve as jurors by the general laws of the land. Let it once be
settled that a defendant may thus waive this constitutional right, and
no one can foresee the extent of the evils which might follow; but the
whole judicial history of the past must admonish us that very serious
evils should be apprehended, and that every step taken in that
direction would tend to increase the danger. One act or neglect might
be recognized as a waiver in one case, and another in another, until
the constitutional safeguards might be substantially frittered away.
The only safe course is to meet the danger in limine, and prevent the
first step in the wrong direction. It is the duty of courts to see
that the constitutional rights of a defendant in a criminal case shall
not be violated, however negligent he may be in raising the objection.
It is in such cases, emphatically, that consent should not be allowed
to give jurisdiction.'
In State v. Carman, 63 Iowa, 130, 131, 50 Am. Rep. 741, 742, 18 N.
W. 691, which was the case of an assault with an attempt to commit
murder, the supreme court of Iowa said: 'In our Code of Civil Practice
it is provided that 'issues of fact in an action in an ordinary
proceeding must be tried by a jury, unless the the same is waived.'
2740. In our Code of Criminal Procedure there is no provision for the
waiver of a jury. On the other hand, it is provided that 'an issue of
fact must be tried by a jury of the county in which the indictment is
found, unless a change of venue has been awarded.' 4350. We regard
this provision as excluding the jurisdiction of the court, without a
jury, to try such issue. The question presented is not as to the
waiver of [195 U.S. 65,
89] mere statutory privilege, but an imperative
provision, based, as we view it, upon the soundest conception of
public policy. Life and liberty are too sacred to be placed at the
disposal of any one man, and always will be, so long as man is
fallible. The innocent person, unduly influenced by his consciousness
of innocence, and placing undue confidence in his evidence, would,
when charged with crime, be the one most easily induced to waive his
safeguards. There is no resemblance between such a case and that of a
person pleading guilty. In the latter case there is no trial but mere
judgment upon the plea. If the language of the statute were less
imperative than it is, the adjudications would support us in reaching
the same conclusion.'
In State v. Mansfield, 41 Mo. 470, 476, which involved the question
of the right of the accused in capital crimes and felonies to waive
his right to a jury of twelve persons, after referring to Cancemi v.
People, 18 N. Y. 128, the supreme court of Missouri, speaking by Judge
Wagner, conceded that in cases of misdemeanor, created by statute, the
legislature, under the laws of that state, might provide for their
prosecution in a summary way, without the formality of an indictment,
and that the accused could waive a jury, or agree on a certain number.
But there was no such statute in Missouri, and the court, in respect
of the general question of the waiver of a jury, said: 'Another good
and sufficient reason, it occurs to us, is, that the prisoner's
consent cannot change the law. His right to be tried by a jury of
twelve men is not a mere privilege; it is a positive requirement of
the law. He can unquestionably waive many of his legal rights or
privileges. He may agree to certain facts, and dispense with formal
proofs; he may consent to the introduction of evidence not strictly
legal, or forbear to interpose challenges to the jurors; but he has no
power to consent to the creation of a new tribunal unknown to the law,
to try his offense. The law, in its wisdom, has declared what shall be
a legal jury in the trial of criminal cases; that it shall be composed
of twelve; and a defendant,
[195 U.S. 65, 90] when he is upon trial,
cannot be permitted to change the law, and substitute another and a
different tribunal to pass upon his guilt or innocence. The law as to
criminal trials should be based upon fixed standards, and should be
clear, definite, and uniform, and absolute. If one juror can be
withdrawn, there is no reason why six or eight may not be, not thus
the accused, through persuasion or other causes, may have his life put
in jeopardy, or be deprived of his liberty, through a body constituted
in a manner unknown to the law. Aside from the illegality of such a
procedure, public policy condemns it. The prisoner is not in a
condition to exercise a free and independent choice without often
creating prejudice against him.'
In Wilson v. State, 16 Ark. 601, 608, which was a case of larceny,
the supreme court of Arkansas said: 'Hence there would seem to be no
other mode for the trial of a criminal issue than that by jury. The
difficulty is not obviated by any waiver of this mode of trial,
because the legislature has provided no other mode, in lieu of it, in
such an event, as it has in civil cases. Nothing short of a confession
of the facts, or the finding of them by the verdict of the jury, can
regularly authorize the judgment of the court. If the accused would
not only waive his right to a trial by jury, but go further, and
withdraw his plea, and then confess the facts charged against him in
the indictment, the court would be authorized to render a judgment
against him; but so long as his plea of not guilty is in, there is no
mode by which the court can dispose of it, although the accused may
waive a trial by jury, with all its attendant privileges, and desire
ever so much that the issue may be disposed of by a reference of it to
the judge, or any other referee or arbitrator, and the prosecuting
attorney may desire the same, and act in concert with the accused; for
the simple reason that the law makes no provision for any such referee
or arbitrator in criminal cases. The only provision is for a
confession of the facts, or a trial by jury to determine them.'
A leading case upon the subject of trial by jury is that of
[195 U.S. 65, 91]
Work v. State of Ohio, 2 Ohio St. 296, 302, 305, 59 Am. Dec.
671, 672, 674. That was an information charging the defendant with
assault and battery. The trial took place under an act of the Ohio
legislature, which permitted a trial in such a case by a jury of six
men, notwithstanding the Constitution of Ohio provided that the right
of trial by jury should be inviolate. The defendant pleaded not
guilty, but was found guilty, and sentenced to pay a fine of $100 and
costs. In discussing the history of trial by jury, the court, speaking
by Judge Ranney, said: 'In what does the privilege of this great
bulwark of personal liberty consist? The Constitution furnishes no
answer, nor was it necessary that it should. If ages of uninterrupted
use can give significance to language, the right of jury trial and the
habeas corpus stand as representatives of ideas as certain and
definite as any other in the whole range of legal learning. The
institution of the jury, referred to in our Constitution, and its
benefits secured to every person accused of crime, is precisely the
same in every substantial respect, as that recognized in the great
charter, and its benefits secured to the freemen of England, and again
and again acknowledged in fundamental compacts as the great safeguard
of life, liberty, and property; the same, brought to this continent by
our forefathers, and perseveringly claimed as their birthright, in
every contest with arbitrary power, and finally, an invasion of its
privileges prominently assigned as one of the causes which was to
justify them in the eyes of mankind in waging the contest which
resulted in independence. . . . We are of opinion it was this very
tribunal, thus constituted, that those who framed and adopted the
Constitution of this state intended to perpetuate, and make the
safeguard of innocence, by securing its benefits to every person
accused of crime, in any of its courts. there is certainly nothing in
our history which points to a different conclusion. For half a century
before its adoption, similar provisions had been so considered and
acted upon. Until the passage of this law, no person had ever been
convicted of crime, by less than the
[195 U.S. 65, 92] concurring assent of
twelve of his peers; and no law has ever attempted to authorize it to
be done. If the power exists to diminish the number of the jury, it
may be applied to all cases, and it may be reduced to two as well as
to six. The same constitutional provision that secures the right in a
charge involving the life of the accused, secures it also in every
other criminal case. It is no answer to say that this would not likely
be done. If it had been deemed safe to leave it to the discretion of
the general assembly, no constitutional provision was needed; but,
whether needed or not, it has been ordained by a power which both the
general assembly and this court are bound to obey.' Again: 'But,
without pursuing these considerations further, our opinion is, that
the essential and distinguishing features of the trial by jury as
known at common law, and generally, if not universally, adopted in
this country, were intended to be preserved, and its benefits secured
to the accused in all criminal cases, by the constitutional provisions
referred to. That it is beyond the power of the general assembly to
impair the right, or materially change its character; that the number
of jurors cannot be diminished, or a verdict authorized, short of a
unanimous concurrence of all the jurors. It follows that the act under
which this conviction was obtained, in so far as it provides for a
jury of six only, and authorizes a conviction upon their finding, is
unconstitutional and void.'
In United States v. Taylor, 3 McCrary, 500, 11 Fed. 470, which was
a criminal prosecution by information for the offense of carrying on
the business of a retail dealer in liquors without having paid the
special taxes required by law, the main question was as to the
authority of the court to direct a verdict of guilty under the
evidence. It was held by Judge McCrary that no such power existed in
the court. In the course of his opinion he said that the
constitutional guaranty of a jury in a criminal case was a right that
could not be waived, and that such a trial before the court, by the
prisoner's consent, was erroneous. It appears from the report of that
case that Mr. [195 U.S.
65, 93] Justice Miller was consulted by Judge McCrary,
and concurred in the latter's views.
Among the cases cited by Judge McCrary was State v. Maine, 27 Conn.
281, which was a criminal information for placing a nuisance in a
highway. The defendant pleaded not guilty. The case, by agreement of
the parties, was tried by the court, which found the facts, and
reserved the questions of law arising thereon for the advice of the
supreme court of errors. The judges of the latter court unanimously
held that, 'as no statute conferred on the superior court the power to
try this or any other criminal charge, excepting through the
intervention of a jury, the court below could not legally try the case
in the manner in which it had done, and would not be able to render a
legal judgment on the facts, if the advice of this court was given
upon them. They therefore refused to entertain the case.'
In Neales v. State, 10 Mo. 498, which is an indictment for
unlawfully carrying on the business of a dram-shop keeper without
having a license therefor, it appears that the defendant pleaded not
guilty, and neither party requiring a jury, the case was submitted to
the court, who found him guilty, and assessed a fine of $30 against
him. The supreme court of Missouri, in which state there was a
constitutional provision providing that the right of trial by jury
should remain inviolate, said: 'Another objection, equally fatal to
the judgment, was the trial of the cause by the court, on the plea of
not guilty. It has heretofore been virtually decided by this court, in
two cases, that unless the defendant pleads guilty to the charge
contained in the indictment, the court cannot try the issue and assess
a fine against him. Thomas v. State, 6 Mo. 457; Ross v. State, 9 Mo.
687. It is exclusively the province of a jury to try the issue of not
guilty and the consent of the defendant for the court to try the same
cannot confer such power on the court.'
A case directly in point is that of State v. Stewart, 89 N. C. 563,
564. That was an indictment for an assault and battery.
[195 U.S. 65, 94]
The defendant pleaded not guilty. A jury trial was waived, the
court found the facts, and adjudged the accused guilty. The judgment
was arrested and the state appealed. The supreme court of North
Carolina said: 'It is a fundamental principle of the common law,
declared in 'Magna Charta,' and again in our Bill of Rights, that 'no
person shall be convicted of any crime but by the unanimous verdict of
a jury of good and lawful men, in open court.' Art. 1, 13. The only
exception to this is where the legislature may provide other means of
trial for petty misdemeanors, with the right of appeal,-proviso in
same section. This is not one of the petty misdemeanors embraced in
the proviso; and if it was, no such means of trial as that adopted in
this case has been provided by the legislature. The court here has
undertaken to serve in the double capacity of judge and jury, and try
the defendant without a jury, which it had no authority to do, even
with the consent of the prisoner.'
Later, in State v. Holt, 90 N. C. 749, 754, 47 Am. Rep. 544, 548,-
which was an indictment for cruelty to animals,-the same court, after
observing that it was the province and duty of the judiciary to watch
over and protect the fundamental rights, in all matters that come
before them, said: 'There was not the remotest purpose in this case,
we are sure, to infringe the right of trial by jury in a criminal
action, but for convenience sake and to save time (because the facts
were not disputed) the facts of the case were agreed upon by the state
and the defendant, and submitted to the judge, instead of letting a
jury hear the evidence, and render a verdict upon the issue, or find a
special verdict. In our judgment, this was not only irregular, but
wholly without the sanction of law. There is no statute that
authorizes such procedure, and the Constitution forbids it. 'No person
shall be convicted of any crime but by the unanimous verdict of a jury
of good and lawful men, in open court.' No jury was impaneled to try
the issue; there was no verdict of a jury; there was no conviction.
The judgment of the court had nothing to warrant it, and there was
nothing upon [195 U.S.
65, 95] which it could properly rest. The defendant could
not consent to a conviction by the court. It had no authority to try
the issue of fact raised by the pleadings. The defendant did not plead
guilty; he did not enter the plea of nolo contendere, or submit; he
pleaded autrefois convict, and a jury must try the issue raised by
that plea. State v. Stewart, 89 N. C. 563; State v. Moss, 47 N. C. (2
Jones L.) 66; 1 Bishop, Crim. Pl. 759, and cases there cited; Cancemi
v. People, 18 N. Y. 128. The legislature has not provided a means for
the trial of cases like this, different from the ordinary method
provided by law. The court erred in passing upon the facts agreed upon
and submitted to it without the finding of a jury, and for such error
the judgment must be reversed and the court proceed to dispose of the
case according to law.'
Running through the adjudged cases is the thought that the facts
necessary to be proved in order to sustain the charge of crime, where
the plea is not guilty, must be ascertained in the mode ordained by
law for such purpose. 'When, therefore,' says Blackstone, 'a prisoner
on his arraignment hath pleaded not guilty, and for his trial hath put
himself upon the country, which country the jury are, the sheriff of
the county must return a panel of jurors, liberos et legales homines,
de vicineto.' Book 4, chap. 27, *350. Now, all will agree that when
the crime charged is a felony, a trial in a circuit or district court
of the United States, even with the consent of the accused, without a
jury composed of twelve persons, would be unauthorized and unavailing
for any legal purpose. Why? Because, and only because, the law, the
supreme law of the land, has declared that the trial of all crimes
shall be by jury. And, perhaps, all will agree that the constitutional
injunction applies with like force to such misdemeanors as by statute
are punishable with imprisonment, and that a circuit or district court
of the United States is without jurisdiction, under a plea of not
guilty, no jury being impaneled, to try any crime against the United
States involving life or liberty. The consent of the accused in such a
case certainly cannot confer upon the court
[195 U.S. 65, 96]
authority to try the crime in a mode inconsistent with the one
prescribed by the law.
In my judgment, the same principle must apply in the present case,
although a fine only can be imposed. The case is embraced by the very
words of the Constitution; for the offense charged is a crime,-none
the less a crime because only a fine is involved,-and the
constitutional mandate is that the trial of all crimes, except
impeachment, shall be by jury. By what authority can a Federal court
except from the operation of the constitutional mandate a crime
punishable by fine? It is said that only the property of the accused
can be affected, and, therefore, to his consent in this criminal case
should be accorded the same effect as is given to his consent in a
purely civil case to which he might be a party, and which involved no
element of crime. In this view I cannot concur. Something more than
property is involved in a criminal case, although the penalty imposed
may be simply a fine. Whether the accused has violated the laws of his
country, and whether he shall be branded by the judgment of a court as
a criminal, are things of more consequence to the public than property
the value of which is to be measured in money. What shall constitute a
crime, how that crime shall be tried, and in what way the guilt of the
accused shall be manifested when he pleads not guilty, are exclusively
for the government to declare and regulate, and it is not for the
accused and the prosecutor, by the device of an agreement between
them, to evade the requirements of the Constitution and provide a
tribunal for the determination of the issue of crime or no crime
different from that designated by the law. Crime or no crime, if the
plea be not guilty, can be established in a court of the United States
only by the verdict of a jury.
Undoubtedly, as already indicated, there were petty or minor crimes
which, at common law, could be tried without a jury, and it may be
assumed for the purposes of this case, that the constitutional
provision that all crimes except im-
[195 U.S. 65, 97] peachment shall be tried
by jury is to be interpreted in the light of that fact. But, it may be
repeated, that the trial, even of such cases, without a jury, was
contrary to the genius of the common law, and was allowed by the
courts only in obedience to acts of Parliament, which was not bound by
a written constitution, and whose authority in matters of legislation
was omnipotent, and, therefore, not to be disputed by any English
court. An enumeration of all crimes against the United States which
may be reasonably declared to belong to the class known at the common
law as petty offenses, punishable under legislative sanction without
the intervention of a jury, need not here be attempted. Nor is it
necessary to express any final judgment upon the question whether the
particular crime here involved might, by statute, be placed in that
class and tried without a jury. It is enough to say that, even if
Congress could place it in that class, and authorize its trial by
summary proceedings, without a jury, or with a jury of less than
twelve, it has not done so. The case, therefore, is controlled by the
express constitutional injunction that all crimes, except in cases of
impeachment, shall be tried by a jury. The agreement of the accused
and the prosecutor cannot confer jurisdiction, much less have the
effect to displace the mode of trial established by the fundamental
law, and substitute for it one inconsistent with the principles of the
common law, as unmodified by any valid statute.
It is said that the nature of the offense and the amount of
punishment prescribed must determine whether it is to be classed among
serious or petty offenses. This, I take it, means that it is for the
court, in the exercise of its inherent powers, to determine whether
the offense is a serious one, to be tried alone by a jury, or a petty
one, which may be tried without a jury. But the judiciary had no such
function at common law. No court at common law assumed, without a
jury, to try any offense, however trivial or petty, except under the
authority of a statute conferring authority to that end. If the
offense is punishable only by a fine of $50,
[195 U.S. 65, 98]
as is the case here,-is it to be deemed a petty offense? And
yet is one punable by a fine of $500 to be deemed a serious one? Must
there not be some fixed rule or limit on the subject? In my judgment,
the Constitution establishes a rule which must be respected by every
branch of the government. Yet, under the principles now announced, an
offense punishable by a fine of five or ten thousand dollars may be
regarded-if the court so wills-as a petty offense, triable without a
jury. I cannot understand where the judiciary derives its authority to
prescribe any rule on the subject, in face of the absolute
constitutional requirement that all crimes, except in cases of
impeachment, shall be tried by a jury, and in face of the further
significant fact that no court at common law ever assumed to regard
any crime, however trivial, as triable without a jury, except under
express legislative sanction.
Again, it is said that in the original draft of the Constitution
the words were 'the trial of all criminal offenses . . . shall be by
jury,' and that these words were changed in the Convention so as to
read 'the trial of all crimes.' Strangely enough, it is supposed that
this change of words justifies the conclusion that the framers of the
Constitution intended to dispense with a jury in such criminal
offenses as the courts, uncontrolled by statute, deemed petty, as
contrasted with those that they deemed serious. To say that 'crimes'
means something different from 'criminal offenses' is something that I
cannot comprehend. A crime is a criminal offense and a criminal
offense is a crime. But the contention of the prosecution, even if
sound, does not answer the suggestion that, at common law, it was
never the province of a court, by any inherent power it possessed, to
prescribe what criminal offenses or crimes were triable, and what need
not be tried, by jury. My point is that no criminal offense or crime
against the United States can be tried except by jury, if the plea be
not guilty, unless it be a petty offense or crime, and unless the
legislative department declares that it may be so
[195 U.S. 65, 99]
tried. If the offense or crime be, in reality, in its essence,
a petty one, then Congress may authorize it to be tried without a
jury. But Congress has not so declared in respect of the offense or
crime charged against the present defendant. The trial by jury is not
one of form, but of the very substance of the mode prescribed for the
trial of crimes. It may not be waived merely by the consent of the
accused and the prosecutor. In the present case the court, as I think,
entrenches upon the domain of the legislative department of the
government. It assumes, without authority, to prescribe a rule of
criminal procedure which Congress has not, in its wisdom, undertaken
to prescribe. It has made, not declared, law. There is no tendency, in
these latter days, more dangerous than the assumption by one
department of the government of powers that belong to another
department.
It is contended that this mode of trial, at least in misdemeanors
involving only a fine, ought to be sanctioned,-indeed, encouraged,-as
convenient both for the government and the accused. What was said by
Blackstone when referring to summary proceedings authorized by acts of
Parliament in particular cases may well be repeated, at this day,
whenever it is proposed, upon grounds of convenience, to dispense with
juries in criminal prosecutions, and thereby introduce a new mode for
the trial of crimes. He said: 'And, however convenient these may
appear at first (as doubtless all arbitrary powers, well executed, are
the most convenient), yet let it be again remembered, that delays and
little inconveniences in the forms of justice are the price that all
free nations must pay for their liberty in more substantial matters;
that these inroads upon this sacred bulwark of the nation are
fundamentally opposite to the spirit of our Constitution; and that,
though begun in trifles, the precedent may gradually increase and
spread, to the utter disuse of juries in questions of the most
momentous concern.' Book 4, chap. 27, p. 350.
I insist that, as the offense charged in each of these cases
[195 U.S. 65, 100]
was a crime against the United States; as the Constitution
expressly declares, without qualification, that the trial of all
crimes, except impeachment, shall be by jury; as Congress has not
assumed to declare that this case and like ones may be tried without a
jury, the parties assenting; and as the trial of these cases by the
court alone, without a jury, has no other sanction than the consent of
the accused and the District Attorney, the judgment in each case
should be reversed, and each case remanded, with directions to set
aside the judgment, grant a new trial, and take such further
proceedings as may be in conformity with law.
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