The objection taken to the jurisdiction of the court of common pleas, at a term holden for criminal business, in a matter arising under the act in relation to the maintenance of bastard children, (Rev. Sts. c. 49,) is not farther insisted on ; it having been directly settled in the case of Cummings v. Hodgson, 13 Met. 246, that such a proceeding is *113within the jurisdiction of the criminal court, and not of the court when holden for the tidal of civil cases.
The second ground taken in arrest of judgment is also untenable. The statute does not require the original complaint to the magistrate to be in writing. The examination and accusation of the party complaining is to be reduced to writing by the justice, and signed and sworn to by the complainant.
The third ground for arresting the judgment appears to have been taken upon an erroneous view of the record in this case. A full and proper complaint was, as is required by law, filed in the court of common pleas, in the present case. It must now be assumed, that the plea filed by the defendant was a plea in answer to this complaint, as this was the only matter upon which issue could properly be joined. That complaint was in all respects sufficient, and no ground exists therefore for sustaining the third exception taken to the validity of these proceedings.
The fourth objection, that the respondent was ordered to file a written plea, was not seriously urged, and cannot be maintained. This is believed to have been the usual mode of joining issue in these cases. It is equally beneficial to the respondent as an oral plea, and in no way deprives him of his legal rights, or affects unfavorably his defence.
The fifth objection, that the respondent was not arraigned in the usual form of persons charged with criminal offences, and asked whether he was guilty or not guilty, falls within the principles applicable to the preceding objection, and like that is also untenable.
The sixth objection is, that the jury were impanelled and sworn as in ordinary criminal cases. It is difficult to perceive any grounds upon which the defendant can complain in this matter. The only difference is in the form of the oath, and in the time of administering the same. In civil cases, the jury are sworn at the commencement of the term, and before taking their places upon the panel, and are sworn generally for all civil cases during the term. In criminal cases, the jury are sworn in each case; and if any security for faithful performance of their duty is secured by the administration of an *114oath to the jurors, it would seem to be more fully so by taking one in each particular case about to be committed to them, rather than by the general oath taken at the commencement of the term, and having reference to no particular case. The only difference in the form óf the oath is, that in civil cases, the jury are sworn to render a true verdict according to the law and the evidence given them ; and in criminal cases well and truly to try the issue according to their evidence.
I am not aware, that the latter form enlarges or diminishes the power of the jury, or affects their duty as jurors, in any manner different from the oath in civil cases. It has been sometimes urged, that the form prescribed in criminal trials gave the jury the right to decide upon the law as well as the facts; but this is not so, and the jury are in both cases to receive the law from the court, and to conform their decision to the instructions thus given, in applying the law to the facts to be found by them. Commonwealth v. Porter, 10 Met. 263. Taking into view the nature of the proceedings under the bastardy act, and their similarity in many respects to civil suits, we are not prepared to say, that either form of oath would have been objectionable.
Nor does it affect the regularity of the proceedings, that the action was entitled or described as the case of “ Commonwealth, on the complaint of Sarah A. Smith, v. Nelson G Hayden.”
The seventh objection, that the verdict was taken both orally and in writing, furnishes no ground for arresting the judgment. It being rendered in the form adapted both to criminal and civil cases, certainly one or the other must be right. Exceptions overruled.