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The Attributes and Function of the Jury .--It was
previously the position of the Court that the right to a jury trial
meant ''a trial by jury as understood and applied at common law, and
includes all the essential elements as they were recognized in this
country and England when the Constitution was adopted.''
52 It had therefore been held that this included trial by a jury of
12 persons
53 who must reach a unanimous verdict
54 and that the jury trial must be held during the first court
proceeding and not de novo at the first appellate stage.
55 However, as it extended the guarantee to the States, the Court
indicated that at least some of these standards were open to
re-examination,
56 and in subsequent cases it has done so. In Williams v. Florida,
57 the Court held that the fixing of jury size at 12 was ''a
historical accident'' which, while firmly established when the Sixth
Amendment was proposed and ratified, was not required as an attribute of
the jury system, either as a matter of common-law background
58 or by any ascertainment of the intent of the framers.
59 Being bound neither by history nor framers' intent, the Court
thought the ''relevant inquiry . . . must be the function that the
particular feature performs and its relation to the purposes of the jury
trial.'' The size of the jury, the Court continued, bore no discernable
relationship to the purposes of jury trial--the prevention of oppression
and the reliability of factfinding. Furthermore, there was little reason
to believe that any great advantage accrued to the defendant by having a
jury composed of 12 rather than six, which was the number at issue in
the case, or that the larger number appreciably increased the variety of
viewpoints on the jury. A jury should be large enough to promote group
deliberation, free from outside attempts at intimidation, and to provide
a fair possibility that a cross-section of the community will be
represented on it, but the Court did not speculate whether there was a
minimum permissible size and it recognized the propriety of conditioning
jury size on the seriousness of the offense.
60
When the unanimity rule was reconsidered, the division of the
Justices was such that different results were reached for state and
federal courts.
61 Applying the same type of analysis as that used in Williams, four
Justices acknowledged that unanimity was a common-law rule but observed
for the reasons reviewed in Williams that it seemed more likely than not
that the framers of the Sixth Amendment had not intended to preserve the
requirement within the term ''jury.'' Therefore, the Justices undertook
a functional analysis of the jury and could not discern that the
requirement of unanimity materially affected the role of the jury as a
barrier against oppression and as a guarantee of a commonsense judgment
of laymen. The Justices also determined that the unanimity requirement
is not implicated in the constitutional requirement of proof beyond a
reasonable doubt, and is not necessary to preserve the feature of the
requisite cross-section representation on the jury.
62 Four dissenting Justices thought that omitting the unanimity
requirement would undermine the reasonable doubt standard, would permit
a majority of jurors simply to ignore those interpreting the facts
differently, and would permit oppression of dissenting minorities.
63 Justice Powell, on the other hand, thought that unanimity was
mandated in federal trials by history and precedent and that it should
not be departed from; however, because it was the due process clause of
the Fourteenth Amendment which imposed the basic jury-trial requirement
on the States, he did not believe that it was necessary to impose all
the attributes of a federal jury on the States. He therefore concurred
in permitting less-than-unanimous verdicts in state courts.
64 Certain functions of the jury are likely to remain consistent
between the federal and state court systems. For instance, the
requirement that a jury find a defendant guilty beyond a reasonable
doubt, which had already been established under the Due Process Clause,
Supp.1 has been held to be a standard mandated by the Sixth
Amendment.
Supp.2 The Court has further held that the Fifth Amendment Due
Process Clause and the Sixth Amendment require that a jury find a
defendant guilty of every element of the crime with which he is charged,
including questions of mixed law and fact.
Supp.3 Thus, a district court presiding over a case of providing
false statements to a federal agency in violation of 18 U.S.C. Sec. 1001
erred when it took the issue of the ''materiality'' of the false
statement away from the jury.
Supp.4
Footnotes
[Footnote 52] Patton v. United States,
281 U.S. 276, 288 (1930).
[Footnote 53] Thompson v. Utah,
170 U.S. 343 (1898). Dicta in other cases was to the same effect.
Maxwell v. Dow,
176 U.S. 581, 586 (1900); Rassmussen v. United States,
197 U.S. 516, 519 (1905; Patton v. United States,
281 U.S. 276, 288 (1930).
[Footnote 54] Andres v. United States,
333 U.S. 740 (1948). See dicta in Maxwell v. Dow,
176 U.S. 581, 586 (1900); Patton v. United States,
281 U.S. 276, 288 (1930).
[Footnote 55] Callan v. Wilson,
127 U.S. 540 (1888). Preserving Callan, as being based on Article
II, Sec. 2, as well as on the Sixth Amendment and being based on a more
burdensome procedure, the Court in Ludwig v. Massachusetts,
427 U.S. 618 (1976), approved a state two-tier system under which
persons accused of certain crimes must be tried in the first instance in
the lower tier without a jury and if convicted may appeal to the second
tier for a trial de novo by jury. Applying a due process standard, the
Court, in an opinion by Justice Blackmun, found that neither the
imposition of additional financial costs upon a defendant, nor the
imposition of increased psychological and physical hardships of two
trials, nor the potential of a harsher sentence on the second trial
impermissibly burdened the right to a jury trial. Justices Stevens,
Brennan, Stewart, and Marshall dissented. Id. at 632. See also North v.
Russell,
427 U.S. 328 (1976).
[Footnote 56] Duncan v. Louisiana,
391 U.S. 145, 158 n.30 (1968); DeStefano v. Woods,
392 U.S. 631, 632 -33 (1968).
[Footnote 57]
399 U.S. 78 (1970). Justice Marshall would have required juries of
12 in both federal and state courts, id. at 116, while Justice Harlan
contended that the Sixth Amendment required juries of 12, although his
view of the due process standard was that the requirement was not
imposed on the States. Id. at 117.
[Footnote 58] The development of 12 as the jury size is traced in
Williams,
399 U.S. at 86 -92.
[Footnote 59] Id. at 92-99. While the historical materials were
scanty, the Court thought it more likely than not that the framers of
the Bill of Rights did not intend to incorporate into the word ''jury''
all its common-law attributes. This conclusion was drawn from the
extended dispute between House and Senate over inclusion of a
''vicinage'' requirement in the clause, which was a common law
attribute, and the elimination of language attaching to jury trials
their ''accustomed requisites.'' But see id. at 123 n.9 (Justice
Harlan).
[Footnote 60] Id. at 99-103. In Ballew v. Georgia,
435 U.S. 223 (1978), the Court unanimously, but with varying
expressions of opinion, held that conviction by a unanimous five-person
jury in a trial for a nonpetty offense deprived an accused of his right
to trial by jury. While readily admitting that the line between six and
five members is not easy to justify, the Justices believed that reducing
a jury to five persons in nonpetty cases raised substantial doubts as to
the fairness of the proceeding and proper functioning of the jury to
warrant drawing the line at six.
[Footnote 61] Apodaca v. Oregon,
406 U.S. 404 (1972), involved a trial held after decision in Duncan
v. Louisiana,
391 U.S. 145 (1968), and thus concerned whether the Sixth Amendment
itself required jury unanimity, while Johnson v. Louisiana,
406 U.S. 356 (1972), involved a pre-Duncan trial and thus raised the
question whether due process required jury unanimity. Johnson held,
five-to-four, that the due process requirement of proof of guilt beyond
a reasonable doubt was not violated by a conviction on a nine-to-three
jury vote in a case in which punishment was necessarily at hard labor.
[Footnote 62] Apodaca v. Oregon,
406 U.S. 404 (1972) (Justices White, Blackmun, and Rehnquist, and
Chief Justice Burger). Justice Blackmun indicated a doubt that any
closer division than nine-to-three in jury decisions would be
permissible. Id. at 365.
[Footnote 63] Id. at 414, and Johnson v. Louisiana,
406 U.S. 356, 380 , 395, 397, 399 (1972) (Justices Douglas, Brennan,
Stewart, and Marshall).
[Footnote 64] Id. at 366. Burch v. Louisiana,
441 U.S. 130 (1979), however, held that conviction by a
non-unanimous six-person jury in a state criminal trial for a nonpetty
offense, under a provision permitting conviction by five out of six
jurors, violated the right of the accused to trial by jury.
Acknowledging that the issue was ''close'' and that no bright line
illuminated the boundary between permissible and impermissible, the
Court thought the near-uniform practice throughout the Nation of
requiring unanimity in six-member juries required nullification of the
state policy. See also Brown v. Louisiana,
447 U.S. 323 (1980) (Burch held retroactive).
[Footnote 1 (1996 Supplement)] See In re Winship, 397 U.S. 358, 364
(1970).
[Footnote 2 (1996 Supplement)] Sullivan v. Louisiana, 508 U.S. 275
(1993).
[Footnote 3 (1996 Supplement)] United States v. Gaudin, 115 S. Ct.
2310 (1995).
[Footnote 4 (1996 Supplement)] Gaudin, 115 S. Ct. at 2320.

Sixth Amendment Part 1 Table of Contents
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Sixth Amendment Text
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