An Essay On The Trial By Jury - Lysander Spooner (little red riding hood read aloud .TXT) 📗
- Author: Lysander Spooner
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Except Such A Substantially The Whole People Of The Country
Consent That It May Exercise. In such A Trial, Therefore, "The
Country," Or The People, Judge Of And Dtermine Their Own Liberties
Against The Government, Instead Of Thegovernment'S Judging of And
Determining its Own Powers Over The People.
But All This "Trial By The Country" Would Be No Trial At All "By The
Country," But Only A Trial By The Government, If The Government
'Could Either Declare Who May, And Who May Not, Be Jurors, Or
Could Dictate To The Jury Anything whatever, Either Of Law Or
Evidence, That Is Of The Essence Of The Trial.
If The Government May Decide Who May, And Who May Not, Be
Jurors, It Will Of Course Select Only Its Partisans, And Those Friendly
To Its Measures. It May Not Only Prescribe Who May, And Who May
Not, Be Eligible To Be Drawn As Jurors; But It May Also Question Each
Person Drawn As A Juror, As To His Sentiments In regard To The
Particular Law Involved in each Trial, Before Suffering him To Be
Sworn On The Panel; And Exclude Him If He Be Found Unfavorable To
The Maintenance Of Such A Law. [1]
So, Also, If The Government May Dictate To The Jury What Laws They
Are To Enforce, It Is No Longer A " Trial By The Country," But A Trial By
The Government; Because The Jury Then Try The Accused, Not By Any
Standard Of Their Own Not By Their Own Judgments Of Their Rightful
Liberties But By A Standard. Dictated to Them By The Government.
And The Standard, Thus Dictated by The Government, Becomes The
Measure Of The People'S Liberties. If The Government Dictate The
Standard Of Trial, It Of Course Dictates The Results Of The Trial. And
Such A Trial Is No Trial By The Country, But Only A Trial By The
Government; And In it The Government Determines What Are Its Own
Powers Over The People, Instead Of The People'S Determining what
Are Their Own Liberties Against The Government. In short, If The Jury
Have No Right To Judge Of The Justice Of A Law Of The Government,
They Plainly Can Do Nothing to Protect The People Against The
Oppressions Of The Government; For There Are No Oppressions Which
The Government May Not Authorize By Law.
The Jury Are Also To Judge Whether The Laws Are Rightly Expounded
To Them By The Court. Unless They Judge On This Point, They Do
Nothing to Protect Their Liberties Against The Oppressions That Are
Capable Of Being practiced under Cover Of A Corrupt Exposition Of
The Laws. If The Judiciary Can Authoritatively Dictate To A Jury Any
Exposition Of The Law, They Can Dictate To Them The Law Itself, And
Such Laws As They Please; Because Laws Are, In practice, One Thing
Or Another, According as They Are Expounded.
The Jury Must Also Judge Whether There Really Be Any Such Law, (Be
It Good Or Bad,) As The Accused is Charged with Having transgressed.
Chapter 1 (The Right Of Juries To Judge Of The Justice Of Laws) Section 1 Pg 7Unless They Judge On This Point, The People Are Liable To Have Their
Liberties Taken From Them By Brute Force, Without Any Law At All.
The Jury Must Also Judge Of The Laws Of Evidence. If The
Government Can Dictate To A Jury The Laws Of Evidence, It Can Not
Only Shut Out Any Evidence It Pleases, Tending to Vindicate The
Accused, But It Can Require That Any Evidence Whatever, That It
Pleases To Offer, Be Held As Conclusive Proof Of Any Offence
Whatever Which The Government Chooses To Allege.
It Is Manifest, Therefore, That The Jury Must Judge Of And Try The
Whole Case, And Every Part And Parcel Of The Case, Free Of Any
Dictation Or Authority On The Part Of The Government. They Must
Judge Of The Existence Of The Law; Of The True Exposition Of The Law;
Of The Justice Of The Law; And Of The Admissibility And Weight Of All
The Evidence Offered; Otherwise The Government Will Have
Everything its Own Way; The Jury Will Be Mere Puppets In the Hands
Of The Government: And The Trial Will Be, In reality, A Trial By The
Government, And Not A "Trial By The Country." By Such Trials The
Government Will Determine Its Own Powers Over The People, Instead
Of The People'S Determining their Own Liberties Against The
Government; And It Will Be An Entire Delusion To Talk, As For
Centuries We Have Done, Of The Trial By Jury, As A "Palladium Of
Liberty," Or As Any Protection To The People Against The Oppression
And Tyranny Of The Government.
The Question, Then, Between Trial By Jury, As Thus Described, And
Trial By The Government, Is Simply A Question Between Liberty And
Despotism. The Authority To Judge What Are The Powers Of The
Government, And What The Liberties Of The People, Must Necessarily
Be Vested in one Or The Other Of The Parties Themselves The
Government, Or The People; Because There Is No Third Party To Whom
It Can Be Entrusted. If The Authority Be Vested in the Government,
The Governmnt Is Absolute, And The People Have No Liberties Except
Such As The Government Sees Fit To Indulge Them With. If, On The
Other Hand, That Authority Be Vested in the People, Then The People
Have All Liberties, (As Against The Government,) Except Suc As
Substantially The Whole People (Through A Jury) Choose To Disclaim;
And The Government Can Exercise No Power Except Such As
Substantially The Whole People (Through A Jury) Consent That It May
Exercise.
Chapter 1 (The Right Of Juries To Judge Of The Justice Of Laws) Section 2 Pg 8
By Saying that The Government Is Chosen By The People; That, In
Theory, It Represents The People; That It Is Designed to Do The Will Of
The People; That Its Members Are All Sworn To Observe The
Fundamental Or Constitutional Law Instituted by The People; That Its
Acts Are Therefore Entitled to Be Considered the Acts Of The People;
Chapter 1 (The Right Of Juries To Judge Of The Justice Of Laws) Section 2 Pg 9And That To Allow A Jury, Representing the People, To Invalidate The
Acts Of The' Government, Would Therefore Be Arraying the People
Against Themselves.
There Are Two Answers To Such An Argument.
One Answer Is, That, In a Representative Government, There Is No
Absurdity Or Contradiction, Nor Any Arraying of The People Against
Themselves, In requiring that The Statutes Or Enactments Of The
Government Shall Pass The Ordeal Of Any Number Of Separate
Tribunals, Before It Shall Be Determined that They Are To Have The
Force Of Laws. Our American Constitutions Have Provided five Of
These Separate Tribunals, To Wit, Representatives, Senate,
Executive,[2] Jury, And Judges; And Have Made It Necessary That
Each Enactment Shall Pass The Ordeal Of All These Separate Tribunals,
Before Its Authority Can Be Established by The Punishment Of Those
Who Choose To Transgress It. And There Is No More Absurdity Or
Inconsistency In making a Jury One Of These Several Tribunals, Than
There Is In making the Representatives, Or The Senate, Or The
Executive, Or The Judges, One Of Them. There Is No More Absurdity
In Giving a Jury A Veto Upon The Laws, Than There Is In giving a Veto
To Each Of These Other Tribunals. The People Are No More Arrayed
Against Themselves, When A Jury Puts Its Veto Upon A Statute, Which
The Other Tribunals Have Sanctioned, Than They Are When The Same
Veto Is Exercised by The Representatives, The Senate, The Executive,
Or The Judges.
But Another Answer To The Argument That The People Are Arrayed
Against Themselves, When A Jury Hold An Enactment Of The
Government Invalid, Is, That The Government, And All The
Departments Of The Government, Are Merely The Servants And Agents
Of The People; Not Invested with Arbitrary Or Absolute Authority To
Bind The People, But Required to Submit All Their Enactments To The
Judgment Of A Tribunal More Fairly Representing the Whole People,
Before They Carry Them Into Execution, By Punishing any Individual
For Transgressing them. If The Government Were Not Thus Required to
Submit Their Enactments To The Judgment Of "The Country," Before
Executing them Upon Individuals If, In other Words, The People
Had Reserved to Themselves No Veto Upon The Acts Of The
Government, The Government, Instead Of Being a Mere Servant And
Agent Of The People, Would Be An Absolute Despot Over The People.
It Would Have All Power In its Own Hands; Because The Power To
Punish Carries All Other Powers With It. A Power That Can, Of Itself,
And By Its Own Authority, Punish Disobedience, Can Compel
Obedience And Submission, And Is Above All Responsibility For The
Character Of Its Laws. In short, It Is A Despotism.
And It Is Of No Consequence To Inquire How A Government Came By
This Power To Punish, Whether By Prescription, By Inheritance, By
Usurpation. Or By Delegation From The People'S If It Have Now But
Got It, The Government Is Absolute.
It Is Plain, Therefore, That If The People Have Invested the
Government With Power To Make Laws That Absolutely Bind The
Chapter 1 (The Right Of Juries To Judge Of The Justice Of Laws) Section 2 Pg 10People, And To Punish The People For Transgressing those Laws, The
People Have Surrendered their Liberties Unreservedly Into The Hands
Of The Government.
It Is Of No Avail To Say, In answer To This View Of The Ease, That In
Surrendering their Liberties Into The Hands Of The Government, The
People Took An Oath From The Government, That It Would Exercise Its
Power Within Certain Constitutional Limits; For When Did Oaths
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