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the indictment was so far defective that no valid judgment could be rendered upon it, or if by any overruling necessity the jury are discharged without a verdict,2 which might happen from the sickness or death of the judge holding the court,3 or of a juror,4 or the inability of the jury to agree upon a verdict after reasonaable time for deliberation and effort; or if the term of the court as fixed by law comes to an end before the trial is finished; or the jury are discharged with the consent of the defendant expressed or implied; or if, after verdict against the accused, it has been set aside on his motion for a new [328] trial or on writ of error, or the judgment thereon been

arrested, in any of these cases the accused may again be put

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1 Gerard v. People, 3 Scam. 363; Pritchett v. State, 2 Sneed, 285; People v. Cook, 10 Mich. 164; Mount v. Commonwealth, 2 Duv. (Ky.) 93; People v. McNealy, 17 Cal. 333; Kohlheimer v. State, 39 Miss. 548; State v. Kason, 20 La. Ann. 48; Black v. State, 36 Geo. 447; Commonwealth v. Bakeman, 105 Mass. 53.

2 United States v. Perez, 9 Wheat. 579; State v. Ephraim, 2 Dev. & Bat. 166; Commonwealth v. Fells, 9 Leigh, 620; People v. Goodwin, 18, Johns. 205; Commonwealth v. Bowden, 9 Mass. 194; Hoffman v. State, 20 Md. 425; Price v. State, 36 Miss. 533. In State v. Wiseman, 68 N. C. 203, the officer in charge of the jury was found to have been conversing with them in a way calculated to influence them unfavorably towards the evidence of the prosecution, and it was held that this was such a case of necessity as authorized the judge to permit a juror to be withdrawn, and that it did not operate as an acquittal.

72.

3 Nugent v. State, 4 Stew. & Port.

4 Hector v. State, 2 Mo. 166; State v. Curtis, 5 Humph. 601; Mahala v. State, 10 Yerg. 532; Commonwealth v. Fells, 9 Leigh, 613.

5 People v. Goodwin, 18 Johns. 187; Commonwealth v. Olds, 5 Lit. 140; Dobbins v. State, 14 Ohio, N. s.

493; Miller v. State, 8 Ind. 325; State v. Walker, 26 Ind. 346; Commonwealth v. Fells, 9 Leigh, 613; Winsor v. The Queen, L. R. 1 Q. B. 289; State v. Prince, 63 N. C. 529; Moseley v. State, 33 Tex. 671; Lester v. State, 33 Geo. 329; Ex parte McLaughlin,' 41 Cal. 211; s. c. 10 Am. Rep. 272.

6 State v. Brooks, 3 Humph. 70; State v. Battle, 7 Ala. 259; Mahala v. State, 10 Yerg. 532; State v. Spier, 1 Dev. 491; Wright v. State, 5 Ind. 290.

7 State v. Slack, 6 Ala. 676; Elijah v. State, 1 Humph. 103; Commonwealth v. Stowell, 9 Met. 572.

8 And it seems, if the verdict is so defective that no judgment can be rendered upon it, it may be set aside even against the defendant's objection, and a new trial had. State v. Redman, 17 Iowa, 329.

9 Casborus v. People, 13 Johns. 351. But where the indictment was good, and the judgment was erroneously arrested, the verdict was held to be a bar. State v. Norvell, 2 Yerg. 24. See People v. Webb, 28 Cal. 467.

So if the error was in the judgment and not in the prior proceedings, if the judgment is reversed, the prisoner must be discharged. See post, p. 330. But it is competent for the legislature to provide that on reversing the erroneous judgment

upon trial upon the same facts before charged against him, and the proceedings had will constitute no protection. But where the legal bar has once attached, the government cannot avoid it by varying the form of the charge in a new accusation: if the first indictment or information were such that the accused might have been convicted under it on proof of the facts by which the second is sought to be sustained, then the jeopardy which attached on the first must constitute a protection against a trial on the second.1. And if a prisoner is acquitted on some of the counts in an indictment, and convicted on others, and a new trial is obtained on his motion, he can be put upon trial a second time on those counts only on which he was before convicted, and is for ever discharged from the others.2

Excessive Fines and Cruel and Unusual Punishments.

It is also a constitutional requirement that excessive bail shall not be required, nor cruel and unusual punishments inflicted.

Within such bounds as may be prescribed by law, the question what fine shall be imposed is one addressed to the discretion of the court. But it is a discretion to be judicially exercised; and there may be cases in which a punishment, though not beyond any limit fixed by statute, is nevertheless so clearly excessive as to be erroneous in law.3 A fine should have some refer

in such case, the court, if the prior proceedings are regular, shall remand the case for the proper sentence. McKee v. People, 32 N. Y. 239. It is also competent, by statute, in the absence of express constitutional prohibition, to allow an appeal or writ of error to the prosecution, in criminal cases. See State v. Tait, 22 Iowa, 141. Compare People v. Webb, 38 Cal. 467; State v. Lee, 10 R. I. 494.

1 State v. Cooper, 1 Green, 360; Commonwealth v. Roby, 12 Pick. 504; People v. McGowan, 17 Wend. 386; Price v. State, 19 Ohio, 423; Leslie v. State, 18 Ohio, N. s. 395; State v. Benham, 7 Conn. 414.

2 Campbell v. State, 9 Yerg. 333; State v. Kettle, 2 Tyler, 475; Morris v. State, 8 S. & M. 762; Esmon v.

State, 1 Swan, 14; Guenther v. People, 24 N. Y. 100; State v. Kattleman, 35 Mo. 105; State v. Ross, 29 Mo. 39; State v. Martin, 30 Wis. 216; s. c. 11 Am. Rep. 567; United States v. Davenport, Deady, 264; s. c. 1 Green, Cr. R. 429; Stuart v. Commonwealth (Supreme Court of Virginia), 4 Law and Equity Reporter, 288; Johnson v. State, 29 Ark. 31; Barnett v. People, 54 Ill. 331. Contra, State v. Behimer, 20 Ohio, N. s. 572. A nolle prosequi on one count of an indictment after a jury is called and sworn, is a bar to a new indictment for the offence charged therein. Baker v. State, 12 Ohio, N. s. 214.

8 The subject of cruel and unusual punishments was somewhat considered in Barker v. People, 3 Cow. 686,

*

ence to the party's ability to pay it. By Magna Charta [* 329] a freeman was not to be amerced for a small fault, but according to the degree of the fault, and for a great crime in proportion to the heinousness of it, saving to him his contenement ; and after the same manner a merchant, saving to him his merchandise. And a villein was to be amerced after the same manner, saving to him his wainage. The merciful spirit of these provisions addresses itself to the criminal courts of the American States through the provisions of their constitutions.

It has been decided by the Supreme Court of Connecticut that it was not competent in the punishment of a common-law offence to inflict fine and imprisonment without limitation. The precedent, it was said, cited by counsel contending for the opposite doctrine, of the punishment for a libel upon Lord Chancellor Bacon, was deprived of all force of authority by the circumstances attending it; the extravagance of the punishment being clearly referable to the temper of the times. "The common law can never require a fine to the extent of the offender's goods and chattels, or sentence of imprisonment for life. The punishment is both uncertain and unnecessary. It is no more difficult to limit the imprisonment of an atrocious offender to an adequate number of years than to prescribe a limited punishment for minor offences. And when there exists no firmly established practice, and public necessity or convenience does not imperiously demand the principle contended for, it cannot be justified by the common law, as it wants the main ingredients on which that law is founded. Indefinite punishments are fraught with danger, and ought not to be admitted unless the written law should authorize them." 1

It is certainly difficult to determine precisely what is meant

where the opinion was expressed by Chancellor Sanford that a forfeiture of fundamental rights - -e. g., the right to jury trial - could not be imposed as a punishment, but that a forfeiture of the right to hold office might be. But such a forfeiture could not be imposed without giving a right to trial in the usual mode. Commonwealth v. Jones, 10 Bush, 725. In Done v. People, 5 Park. 364, the cruel punishments of colonial times, such as burning alive and

breaking on the wheel, were enumerated by W. W. Campbell, J., who was of opinion that they must be regarded as 66 cruel" if not "unusual," and therefore as being now forbidden.

1 Per Hosmer, Ch. J., in State v. Danforth, 3 Conn. 115. Peters, J., in the same case, pp. 122-124, collects a number of cases in which perpetual imprisonment was awarded at the common law, but, as his associates believed, unwarrantably. Compare Blydenburg v. Miles, 39 Conn. 484.

by cruel and unusual punishments. Probably any punishment declared by statute for an offence which was punishable in the same way at the common law, could not be regarded as cruel or unusual in the constitutional sense. And probably any new statutory offence may be punished to the extent and in the mode permitted by the common law for offences of similar nature. But those degrading punishments which in any State had become obsolete before its existing constitution was adopted, we think may well be held forbidden by it as cruel and unusual. We may well doubt the right to establish the whipping-post and [* 330] the pillory in *States where they were never recognized

as instruments of punishment, or in States whose constitutions, revised since public opinion had banished them, have forbidden cruel and unusual punishments. In such States the public sentiment must be regarded as having condemned them as "cruel," and any punishment which, if ever employed at all, has become altogether obsolete, must certainly be looked upon as "unusual."

A defendant, however, in any case is entitled to have the precise punishment meted out to him which the law provides, and no other. A different punishment cannot be substituted on the ground of its being less in severity. Sentence to transportation for a capital offence would be void; and as the error in such a case would be in the judgment itself, the prisoner would be entitled to his discharge, and could not be tried again. If, however, the legal punishment consists of two distinct and severable things, as fine, and imprisonment, - the imposition of either is legal, and the defendant cannot be heard to complain that the other was not imposed also.2

The Right to Counsel.

Perhaps the privilege most important to the person accused of

1 Bourne v. The King, 7 Ad. & El. 58; Lowenberg v. People, 27 N. Y. 336; Hartung v. People, 26 N. Y. 167; Elliott v. People, 13 Mich. 365; Ex parte Page, 49 Mo. 291; Christian v. Commonwealth, 5 Met. 530; Ex parte Lange, 18 Wall. 163; McDonald v. State (Ct. Appeals Md.), 4 Am. Law Times, N. s. 484. See also Whitebread v. The Queen, 7 Q. B.

582; Rex v. Fletcher, Russ. & Ry. 58. It is competent, however, to provide by statute that on setting aside an erroneous sentence the court shall proceed to impose the sentence which the law required. Wilson v. People, 24 Mich. 410; McDonald v. State, 45 Md. 90.

2 See Kane v. People, 8 Wend. 203.

crime, connected with his trial, is that to be defended by counsel. From very early days a class of men, who have made the laws of their country their special study, and who have been accepted for the confidence of the court in their learning and integrity, have been set apart as officers of the court, whose special duty it should be to render aid to the parties and the court 1 in the application of the law to legal controversies. These persons, before entering upon their employment, were to take an oath of fidelity to the courts whose officers they were, and to their clients; and it was their special * duty to see that no wrong [* 331] was done their clients by means of false or prejudiced

1 In Commonwealth v. Knapp, 9 Pick. 498, the court denied the application of the defendant that Mr. Rantoul should be assigned as his counsel, because, though admitted to the Common Pleas, he was not yet an attorney of the Supreme Court, and that court, consequently, had not the usual control over him; and, besides, counsel was to give aid to the court as well as to the prisoner, and therefore it was proper that a person of more legal experience should be assigned.

2. Every countor is chargeable by the oath that he shall do no wrong nor falsity, contrary to his knowledge, but shall plead for his client the best he can, according to his understanding." Mirror of Justices, c. 2, § 5. The oath in Pennsylvania, on the admission of an attorney to the bar, "to behave himself in the office of an attorney, according to the best of his learning and ability, and with all good fidelity, as well to the court as to the client; that he will use no falsehood, nor delay any man's cause, for lucre or malice," is said, by Mr. Sharswood, to present a comprehensive summary of his duties as a practitioner. Sharswood's Legal Ethics, p. 3. The advocate's oath, in Geneva, was as follows: " I solemnly swear, before Almighty God, to be faithful to the Republic, and to the canton of Geneva; never to depart from the

respect due to the tribunals and authorities; never to counsel or maintain a cause which does not appear to be just or equitable, unless it be the defence of an accused person; never to employ, knowingly, for the purpose of maintaining the causes confided to me, any means contrary to truth, and never seek to mislead the judges by any artifice or false statement of facts or law; to abstain from all offensive personality, and to advance no fact contrary to the honor and reputation of the parties, if it be not indispensable to the cause with which I may be charged; not to encourage either the commencement or continuance of a suit from any motives of passion or interest; nor to reject, for any consideration personal to myself, the cause of the weak, the stranger, or the oppressed." In "The Lawyer's Oath, its Obligations, and some of the Duties springing out of them," by D. Bethune Duffield, Esq, a masterly analysis is given of this oath; and he well says of it: "Here you have the creed of an upright and honorable lawyer. The clear, terse, and lofty language in which it is expressed needs no argument to elucidate its principles, no eloquence to enforce its obligations. It has in it the sacred savor of divine inspiration, and sounds almost like a restored reading from Sinai's original, but broken tablets."

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