Case ID: njl_61/html/0493-01.html
Source: Caselaw Access Project
Author: {"author": "Garrison, J.", "license": "Public Domain", "url": "https://static.case.law/"}
Date Created: 2024-08-24T03:29:51.129683

EDWARD CLIFFORD v. HUDSON COUNTY OYER AND TERMINER.
    On an application for a writ of mandamus to compel a Court of Oyer and' Terminer to amend its record by inserting therein that an indictment was tried by a struck jury—Hdd, that the manner in which the twelve-jurors who tried an indictment were selected from the body of the county forms no part of the record of the court.
    On application for a mandamus.
    
    Argued at February Term, 1898, before Justices Deptte,. Van Syckel and Garrison.
    For the motion, William D. Daly.
    
   The opinion of the court was delivered by

Garrison, J.

Edward Clifford was indicted for murder and tried before the Hudson Oyer and Terminer, where he was found guilty of murder of the first degree and sentenced to be hung. This judgment was affirmed in this court and in the Court of Errors and Appeals upon successive writs of. error. Application is now made for a mandamus to compel the Court of Oyer and Terminer to amend its record by inserting therein that the indictment was tried by a strueh jury and not by a petit jury—that is, that the jury was selected in the method prescribed by the eighteenth section of the Jury act, and not by that prescribed in the thirteenth and following sections.

This application loses sight of the essential difference between the record of a court and the history of the trial of a cause therein. The record of a court contains only those things that are essential to the validity of the proceeding, such as the nature of the issue, the presence of a judge, and in respect to the jury, that it was of the proper number of proper men, properly qualified and returned by the proper officer—a venire at common law. From this point down to the return of the verdict the record is silent. The occurrences of this interval appertain to the conduct of the trial by the court, and of these the record does not speak; they are made •to appear by methods provided for that purpose at common law and by statute. Hence, all objections to the array that have not been pleaded, all inquiry into the way in which it was selected, all exceptions to the panel, all challenges to individual jurors, all questions touching the service of the list, as well as all other similar matters, form no part of the record, and would be no part of it even if inserted by the clerk from his minutes of the trial. The history of the trial in these respects could, at common law, be certified only by a bill of exceptions sealed by the trial court, which is still the ■rule save as the mode of certification has been modified by the legislature. This rule of practice is illustrated in the case of Peak v. State, 21 Vroom 179, and in Moschell v. State, 24 Id. 498, where a criminal cause was tried by a struck jury.

From this brief exposition it follows that the fact that the jury that tried this indictment was selected from the body •of the county by the statutory method of striking a jury cannot be made a part of the record of the Court of Oyer and Terminer.

This disposes of the application for a mandamus, which is, for this reason, denied.