JURY

body convened to make decisions of fact in legal proceedings.

Development of the Modern Jury

Historians do not agree on the origin of the English jury. Although some authorities trace it to Anglo-Saxon or even more remote Germanic times, most believe that it was brought to England by the Normans. The first jurors were not triers of fact in legal disputes but were persons acquainted with the situation in question who spoke out of personal knowledge. Thus, in compiling the Domesday Book inquests of neighbors were convened to furnish information on property holdings.

In the enforcement of criminal justice the earliest function of the jury (mid-12th cent.) appears to have been the presentation of accusations, and it was only later that jurors were convened to answer on oath the question of guilt. These early jury trials, while supplanting the ordeal and other irrational procedures, were not themselves satisfactory, because they depended entirely on the unsupported oath of the jurors. A verdict could not be overturned except by attaint, that is, by summoning a second jury to give its sworn verdict on the question as to whether the first jury had committed perjury.

By the 16th cent. the jury was used in civil as well as criminal cases, and the practice of calling witnesses was well developed. However, not until the mid-18th cent. were methods other than the attaint available to set aside an improper verdict.

To the English and other peoples who have adopted the English common-law system, trial by jury became a cherished protection against the possibility of judicial and administrative tyranny. Among the abuses recited in the American Declaration of Independence is "depriving us in many cases, of the benefits of Trial by Jury." The Sixth and Seventh Amendments to the U.S. Constitution, reflecting this concern, require a jury in federal trials, in criminal prosecutions, and in civil suits at common law where the damages sought exceed $20; the traditional exemption of cases in equity was left unchanged.

The merger of law and equity has led to the development of various tests to determine if a case can be tried before a jury. In 1967 the U.S. Supreme Court held that the Fourteenth Amendment guaranteed the right to a jury in state criminal trials. Most U.S. states preserve jury trials for a variety of civil cases. Great Britain has limited the use of civil juries to cases in which community attitudes are especially important (e.g., defamation and fraud).

The Modern Jury

In most criminal cases the charge is first considered by a grand jury with 12 to 23 members. It hears witnesses against the accused, and if 12 jurors believe that there is sufficient evidence to prosecute, an indictment or the like is presented. The jury sitting at the trial proper is called a petit (or petty) jury from its smaller size (usually 12 members).

The selection of a trial jury is essentially alike in civil and in criminal cases. The venire, a panel of prospective jurors living in the district where the trial is to be held, is summoned for examination. Counsel for the parties may first challenge the array, that is, object that the venire as a whole was improperly chosen or is for some reason unfit. The challenges to the poll (the members of the venire taken individually) that follow are designed to secure as jurors unbiased persons without special knowledge of the matters in issue. Included are challenges for principal cause, i.e., some grounds such as relationship to a party that requires dismissal of a member of the venire; challenges to the favor, i.e., suspicion of unfitness on which the judge rules; and a limited number of peremptory challenges. Once selected, the jury (usually with several alternates) takes an oath to act fairly and without preconceptions. At the close of the evidence and after the summations of counsel the judge instructs the jury concerning the verdict. Outside the English-speaking countries there is generally less recourse to the jury and less care in the selection of jurors.

The value of juries in civil trials is disputed. Opponents of juries argue that they are ineffective, irrational, and cause delay; proponents argue that juries bring community standards to bear, can modify the effects of harsh laws, and are a protection against incompetent judges. Critics also have argued that juries are responsible for huge, arbitrary punitive damage awards in malpractice, product liability and similar cases, but an extensive 2001 study of actual cases found that juries and judges tend award punitive damages as often and to the same degree.

Bibliography

See A. T. Vanderbilt, Judges and Jurors: Their Functions, Qualifications, and Selection (1956); P. A. Devlin, Trial by Jury (1956).

____________________

The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition Copyright© 2004, Columbia University Press. Licensed from Lernout & Hauspie Speech Products N.V. All rights reserved.

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books on: Jury  - 21241 results

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...the top and usually then the jury would be more likely to turn against him and you would get the jury on your side. And it was a...row there had to be a row. Juries love rows, of course. It keeps...held in the presence of the jury, which lends itself to exaggerated...
...guarantees the right to a jury. 21 There is also much...in favor of eliminating jury sentencing. 15 Similar...be detected in the way juries are selected. The movement...contemporary American jury hears a relatively small...cases. Nevertheless, juries hear a much larger percentage...
...inability to watch actual juries deliberate has always...launched the historic Chicago Jury Project, their first...before them without a jury." Judges were also asked...empirical insights into jury behavior. Kalven and...reported that judges and juries agreed on 78 percent of...
...quarter sessions as a prologue to the formal charge to the grand jury, a long affair which fills some seventy- five pages in the...August of that year. Since a charge was delivered to the grand jury at every meeting of quarter sessions, and since, presumably...
The data have been collected from jury verdict reporters within these jurisdictions...outcomes of and relevant information on jury verdicts in their respective areas. Appendix...following facts in mind when interpreting jury verdict data: Cases tried to verdict are...
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...Prosecutors like jury sentencing better, juries are more inclined to...conduct trials without juries, and only rarely reduce jury sentences, depart from...applying guidelines to juries and judges alike strip jury sentencing of its independence...
...eleven members of the jury to render a verdict. Rule 23(b) now reads: Jury of Less Than Twelve. Juries shall be of 12 but at...of disputes and accept jury conclusions."). Contra...Reed Amar, Reinventing Juries: Ten Suggested Reforms...
...ultimately awarded by the actual jury.(74) 8. Shadow Juries(75) Shadow juries...juror questionnaires, jury polling, mock juries, and a number of other...democratic function of juries by acknowledging jury tampering, thus validating...
...psychological research on jury deliberations...relies on mock juries, which have obvious...criticized the Chicago Jury Project suggested that surveillance of juries would somehow contaminate...to studying the jury through observations of mock juries and post-verdict...
...1960s had ended in hung juries.52 2. Good Motives.-A jury also may decide not to...64 producing a hung jury,65 and has motivated other juries to nullify in three strikes...product safety go to the jury, then juries, through their awards...
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...prescribed by the 1825 Jury Act (consolidated...revised in a further Juries Act of 1870...and serving on juries. By then, however...opportunities for jury service had been...the welfare of juries with the result that trial by jury remained a trial...
Juries and justice: is...by an impartial jury. But this brave...have shaken the jury system to its core...racially diverse juries; the use of social...arguments to specific juries. Author Stephen...credibility of the jury system. "I think...
...discussion about jury nullification lately. When juries acquitted O.J...to prevent all juries from acquitting...Nevertheless, jury nullification is...changes or not, jury nullification remains...important topic because juries are one of the...
...court stated that juries must be able to reach...punishment. In 1735 jury nullification was...historical type of jury nullification. In...century, all-white juries in the South notoriously...sixtyfour per cent of the juries would include one...convietion." In short, jury nullification can...
...about their own testimony before a grand jury. What is a grand jury? Grand juries are summoned to evaluate a prosecutors evidence...C., in 1998 described a federal grand jury this way: "Grand juries summon witnesses and documents with subpoenas...
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Jury convicts Malvo of capital murder; Rejects...THE WASHINGTON TIMES CHESAPEAKE, Va. - A jury of eight women and four men convicted Lee...deliberating for a little more than 13 hours, the jury returned guilty verdicts on all counts for...
...serve u but not today," said jury expert Shari Seidman Diamond...theyAEre looking to get out of jury duty, Diamond said, and the...People who tend to get out of juries are people who run small businesses...for four weeks and serve on a jury." Amirante sympathizes but...
...percent of the people on the jury rolls do not appear, Judge...residents who fail to appear for jury duty. She said only 10 percent...people summoned actually serve on juries in Los Angeles. Miss Hannaford...percent of the people summoned for jury duty respond; in urban areas...
Jury Duty Serves as Exception in States At-Will Employment. Byline...know a few weeks ago that hed received a summons to appear for jury duty. Phil reminded me of the upcoming jury duty a couple of times as the date approached. He was to report...
Ryan Jury Turns Back the Clock Judge Wont Throw out...Daily Herald Staff Writer A reconstituted jury will decide George Ryans fate, starting...that followed. After reading the 148-page jury instructions to the newly constituted jury...
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encyclopedia articles on: Jury  - 65 results

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...S. states preserve jury trials for a variety of...limited the use of civil juries to cases in which community...and fraud). The Modern Jury In most criminal cases...generally less recourse to the jury and less care in the selection...jurors. The value of juries in civil trials is disputed...
...petit (also, petty) jury, having since early...States, federal grand juries have between 16 and 23 jurors. The grand jury receives complaints...might be excluded at a jury trial may be introduced. The use of grand juries has declined in the...
...developed in England for use in jury trials. Today, they are generally...some jurisdictions. The first juries were not neutral triers of fact...testify before an impartial jury. The groundwork of the rules...However, the judge must tell the jury that they are not bound by his...
...information. An indictment is issued by a grand jury when the jurys investigation is initiated...presentment is an accusation issued by the grand jury on its own knowledge, without any bill...prosecutor without consideration by a grand jury. The Fifth Amendment to the U.S. Constitution...
...except in cases of impeachment, shall be by jury; and such trial shall be held in the State...a presentment or indictment of a grand jury, except in cases arising in the land or...speedy and public trial, by an impartial jury of the State and district wherein the crime...
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