State v. Jackson

The judgment of the court was pronounced by

Preston, J.

Jackson, a slave belonging to Mrs. Newcomb, was accused of having, on the night of the 13th of September, 1850, set fire to the dwelling-house of Mrs. Shaw; was tried and convicted of the crime, and sentenced to imprisonment for life in the penitentiary. From the sentence, he has appealed.

In support of his appeal, he alleges that the second section of an act, approved on the 1st of June, 1846, relative to the trial of slaves, requires, that whenever it shall be necessary to try a slave accused of a capital offence, the justice of the peace before whom complaint is brought, shall notify a justice, resident in an adjoining ward, and shall require such justice to attend at his office the day after, for the purpose of choosing ten persons, owners of slaves, to assist at the trial of the accused. It is said, it appears from the record, that the trial was had in an adjoining ward from that in which the justice held jurisdiction, before whom the complaint was brought. 1. That does not appear by the record. Perhaps it might, by the police jury laws of the parish of East Baton Rouge, establishing the boundaries of wards, which are cited, but not brought before us. 2. The law does not expressly require, that the trial should take place in the ward in which the complaint was made, but only that the magistrate, before whom the complaint is made, should require the attendance of a magistrate from an adjoining ward, at his office, to select ten owners of slaves to assist in trying the accused. It would be more conformable to principle, to try the slave in the Ward in which the offence was committed, than in that of the magistrate before whom the complaint is made, if they be different. But, if he is tried in the parish, he has all the advantages of a trial in the vicinage, which is accorded by law to free white persons, and cannot reasonably complain. Publicity in trials is the greatest protection of innocence, and security to the community that crimes should not go unwhipt of justice. The accused was tried in the office of the mayor of Baton Rouge; probably, taking the year through, the most public place in the parish.

Leon Bonnecaze, one of the persons chosen and summoned to assist at the trial of the accused, was excused, at his own request,' from sitting on the tribu*595nal, “on account of his incompotency to understand the English language, to judge of the evidence as it was given;” not, as urged by the defendant, because he was decided by the court to be an incompetent juror. The law confided to the two justices of the peace, to choose the jurors to compose the tribunal. They exercised a wise discretion in excusing Mr. Bonnecaze, for the reasons assigned, and which would have been highly advantageous to the accused, if he had been innocent.

It is next contended, that an express provision of the act of 184G, providing for the trial of slaves, was violated by empanneling nine, instead of ten, slaveholders, for the trial. The third section of the act required the magistrates to select and summon, within three days if possible, ten owners of slaves, residents of the parish, for the purpose of forming the tribunal. This was done, and the jurors appeared at the time and placed fixed for the trial. Mr. Bonnecaze was then excused for sufficient cause; it was more proper to excuse him before, than after being sworn. By the fifteenth section of the act, the nine remaining jurors constituted a quorum for the trial. The law thus established a tribunal of ten jurors, but declared nine a quorum of the tribunal. From whatever cause one failed to sit upon the trial, the remaining nine constituted a quorum, and formed, with the magistrates, the tribunal required by law.

It is urged, that the tribunal, under the ninth section of the act of 1846, could only inflict corporeal punishment, and not imprisonment for life. This court decided the contrary, in the case of The State v. Lewis, a slave, after a careful comparison of the seventh section of the act of 1843, “ to amend the Black Code,” with the ninth section of the act of 1846, ‘ ‘ relative to the trial of slaves. ” We have attentively weighed the arguments in the present case, and reconsidered the reasons given for the former opinion of the court, and are satisfied the decision was correct.

In the opinion given by this court, in the case of The State v. Lewis, the court referred to the act of the 29th of May, 1846, authorizing jurors to qualify their verdict in capital cases, by adding, “ without capital punishment,” and upon the verdict thus rendered, requiring the court to sentence the convict to hard labor for life in the penitentiary. That act was intended for the government of free persons alone, and the tribunal, in the present case, may have been misled, by the reference to it, into an error in the form of their verdict, of “guilty, without capital punishment.” But their intention is palpable to punish the convict with perpetual imprisonment, and it is not for the slave to complain that they extended to him the leniency expressly provided for free persons, and in the same form. The fourteenth section of the act, relative to the trial of slaves, then, expressly applies to the case: “No proceedings had in accordance with this act, shall be annulled or impeded by any error in form.” And for this reason, the fifth ground relied upon by the counsel of the accused, for the reversal of the judgment, is untenable.

It is urged, that no judgment should have been entered up against the accused, — the tribunal having dissolved without concurring in, and signing, the sentence afterwards signed by the justices, to bo put in execution. A decree, or sentence, was unanimously pronounced and signed by the jurors and magistrates composing the tribunal, which was intended to subject the accused to imprisonment for life; and which, as to free persons, could mean nothing else. Being informal, and not express to that effect, the magistrates afterwards put the sentence into legal form, expressing what we know was intended, and signed it, *596We should disregard the law just quoted, if we permitted an immaterial infor¿ality to prevail over a substantial ’conviction and sentence of a slave, to a very * mild punishment for an enormous crime.

Lastly, it is contended, that a new trial should have been granted by the magistrates, upon the affidavit, that material evidence had been discovered after the conviction. The reasons given by the magistrates for refusing it, are satisfactory, even if this court could revise the exercise of their discretion on this subject, by a writ of error. This court has held, in the case of The State v. Hunt, and in other cases, that it has no power to do so.

The attention of the court is further called to the fact, that T). D. Arden, who sat upon the tribunal, was not an owner of slaves, as required by the second section of the act of 1846, relative to the trial of slaves. The fact was ascertained before he was sworn. He was neither challenged, nor a bill of exceptions taken to the decision, that he was a competent juror. The accused took the chance of a favorable verdict from him, and cannot now complain. Besides, upon the authorities cited in the case of The State v.--, just decided, we are of opinion, that neither a new trial can be granted, nor the arrest of judgment ordered after verdict, on the ground that a juror, who sat upon the trial, was incompetent. This view of the point renders it unnecessary for us to examine the question, whether Arden was not a competent juror, inasmuch as his wife was an owner of slaves, the revenue from whose labor belonged to him, rendering him as deeply interested in the proper trial of slaves, as if the title to a slave were in him.

The judgment of the district court is therefore affirmed, with costs.