“No person ought to be taken or dis-seized of his freehold, liberties or privileges, or outlawed or exiled, or in any manner deprived of his life, liberty or property but by the law of the land.” And that provision of
In this case, the prisoner was arraigned on an. indictment for murder and was convicted of that crime in the first degree. The evidence was entirely circumstantial; and while that character' of evidence may, in its very nature, produce a high degree of moral certainty in its application, yet it is never to. be forgotten that it requires the greatest degree of caution and vigilance in its application.
In reading the record in this case, it hardly seems possible that the jury could have given that cautious and vigilant attention to the evidence which the. law required of them, or to tho presentation of the prisoner’s case to them by his counsel that thought, which the importance of the case demanded. In their immediate presence, one hundered people in their deliberate purpose to prejudice the rights of the prisoner, committed a great wrong against the Oommon-wealth and a contempt of the Court. On the outside of the court-house, greater improprieties took place, for the. purpose of prejudicing the prisoner with the jury. No such demonstrations wore ever witnessed in our State before, and for the honor of the Commonwealth, such ought never to he repeated.
In the statement of the case hy his Honor, he said: “After
Sufficient excuse was made here by the counsel for the prisoner fox the failure to make the motion for a new trial in the Court below to justify the Attorney-General in consenting to an agreement to consider the motion as having been entered at the proper time, which he did. In such a case as this, it was not indispensable that a finding by his Honor that the jury had been influenced by the conduct of the offenders, should have been made. ' The disorderly proceedings assumed such proportions as to warrant this Court in declaring that the trial was not conducted aeording to the law of the land. The propriety of our ruling is strengthened by the circumstances that contempt proceedings were not commenced against those offending, and that no motion was made to set the verdict aside and for a new trial after such unheard-of demonstrations. The counsel for the prisoner, in his argument here, in response to a question, stated that if the verdict had been set aside, the prisoner would have met a violent death on the instant.
The prisoner must not only be tried according to the forms of law, these forms being included in the expression “the law of the land,” but his trial must be unattended by such influences and such demonstrations, of lawlessness and intimi
New Trial.