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''Apodaca v. Oregon'', 406 U.S. 404 (1972), was a
United States Supreme Court The Supreme Court of the United States (SCOTUS) is the highest court in the federal judiciary of the United States. It has ultimate appellate jurisdiction over all U.S. federal court cases, and over state court cases that involve a point ...
case in which the Court held that state juries may convict a defendant by a less-than-unanimous verdict in a felony criminal case. The four-justice
plurality Plurality may refer to: Voting * Plurality (voting), or relative majority, when a given candidate receives more votes than any other but still fewer than half of the total ** Plurality voting, system in which each voter votes for one candidate and ...
opinion of the court, written by Justice
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, affirmed the judgment of the
Oregon Court of Appeals The Oregon Court of Appeals is the state intermediate appellate court in the US state of Oregon. Part of the Oregon Judicial Department, it has thirteen judges and is located in Salem. Except for death penalty cases, which are reserved to the O ...
and held that there was no constitutional right to a unanimous verdict. Although federal law requires federal juries to reach criminal verdicts unanimously,Fed. R. Crim. P. 31
the Court held
Oregon Oregon () is a state in the Pacific Northwest region of the Western United States. The Columbia River delineates much of Oregon's northern boundary with Washington, while the Snake River delineates much of its eastern boundary with Idah ...
's practice did not violate the Sixth Amendment right to trial by jury and so allowed it to continue. In ''Johnson v. Louisiana'', a case decided on the same day, the Court held that Louisiana's similar practice of allowing criminal convictions by a jury vote of 9–3 did not violate due process or equal protection under the Fourteenth Amendment.. Justice Powell, in his concurring opinion, argued that there was a constitutional right to a unanimous jury in the Sixth Amendment, but that the Fourteenth Amendment's
Due Process Clause In United States constitutional law, a Due Process Clause is found in both the Fifth and Fourteenth Amendments to the United States Constitution, which prohibits arbitrary deprivation of "life, liberty, or property" by the government except as ...
does not incorporate that right as applied to the states. This case is part of a line of cases interpreting if and how the Sixth Amendment is applied against the states through the Fourteenth Amendment for the purposes of
incorporation doctrine In United States constitutional law, incorporation is the doctrine by which portions of the Bill of Rights have been made applicable to the states. When the Bill of Rights was ratified, the courts held that its protections extended only to the ...
, although the division of opinions prevented a clear-cut answer to that question in this case. ''Apodaca v. Oregon'' was overruled by ''
Ramos v. Louisiana ''Ramos v. Louisiana'', 590 U.S. ___ (2020), was a U.S. Supreme Court decision in which the Court ruled that the Sixth Amendment to the U.S. Constitution requires that guilty verdicts for criminal trials be unanimous. Only cases in Oregon and Lo ...
'' (2020)..


Background on non-unanimous jury verdicts

Federal law requires that juries return a unanimous verdict—one that all members of the jury agree upon—in criminal trials. While most states follow the same requirement for felony convictions, at the time when ''Apodaca'' reached the U.S. Supreme Court, neither Oregon nor Louisiana required state court juries to return unanimous verdicts. Oregon created its rule in 1934 by state constitutional amendment.Voters' pamphlet, State of Oregon special election (May 18, 1934), https://digital.osl.state.or.us/islandora/object/osl%3A64497/datastream/OBJ/view."Introduction and Measure Listings, 1902-2018," 2019-2020 Oregon Blue Book: Almanac & Fact Book, https://sos.oregon.gov/blue-book/Documents/elections/initiative.pdf. Specifically, as long as at least 10 jurors on a 12-member jury agreed, the jury could render a verdict of guilty or not guilty.Voters added a provision that allows "that in the circuit court ten members of the jury may render a verdict of guilty or not guilty, save and except a verdict of guilty for first degree murder, which shall be found only by unanimous verdict.
OR. CONST. art I, § 11
The Louisiana Legislature passed a similar "Majority Rule" law in 1880, allowing for jury verdicts of 9–3, which was later ratified at its 1898 constitutional convention."Timeline: Louisiana's split-verdict jury law and its racist, white supremacist roots," ''The Advocate'' (Apr. 7, 2011), https://www.theadvocate.com/baton_rouge/news/courts/article_5db560ac-3a8e-11e8-b5de-874f8cdde5a5.html In 2018, Louisiana voters passed a constitutional amendment that ended their practice of non-unanimous juries. When ''Apodaca'' was overruled by ''
Ramos v. Louisiana ''Ramos v. Louisiana'', 590 U.S. ___ (2020), was a U.S. Supreme Court decision in which the Court ruled that the Sixth Amendment to the U.S. Constitution requires that guilty verdicts for criminal trials be unanimous. Only cases in Oregon and Lo ...
'' in April 2020, Oregon was the only state that still allowed non-unanimous jury verdicts for felonies (although first-degree murder convictions require a unanimous jury verdict).


Facts and procedural posture

Robert Apodaca, Henry Morgan Cooper, Jr., and James Arnold Madden, were convicted of assault with a deadly weapon, burglary in a dwelling, and grand larceny, respectively, in separate trials in Oregon state court.''Apodaca'', 406 U.S. at 405–06. All three juries returned non-unanimous verdicts: Apodaca and Madden's juries voted 11–1 to convict, and Cooper's jury voted 10–2. They appealed their convictions to the Court of Appeals of Oregon, arguing that they were entitled to have the jury instructed that jurors must unanimously agree to convict.''State v. Plumes'', 1 Or. App. 483, 484 (1969), aff'd sub nom. ''Apodaca v. Oregon'', 406 U.S. 404 (1972). The Court of Appeals of Oregon, sitting en banc, affirmed their convictions. In doing so, the court relied on a previous Oregon Supreme Court case, ''State v. Gann'', 254 Or. 549 (1969), that had upheld the provision of the Oregon Constitution allowing the 10–2 jury practice as not a violation of the Fourteenth Amendment. The Oregon Supreme Court denied review, and the three sought review in the U.S. Supreme Court. In ''
Johnson v. Louisiana Johnson v. Louisiana, 406 U. S. 356 (1972), was a court case in the U.S. Supreme Court involving the Due Process Clause and Equal Protection Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution. The U.S. Supreme Court ruled tha ...
'' (a case decided by the Supreme Court on the same day as ''Apodaca''), a criminal defendant in Louisiana raised the same issue: whether a less-than-unanimous jury verdict in state court criminal cases violates a defendant's constitutional rights. Frank Johnson was convicted of armed robbery by a Louisiana state court jury verdict of 9–3, which was permissible under Louisiana law. However, unlike in ''Apodaca'', where petitioners argued that this practice violated their Sixth Amendment right to a jury trial (as
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by the Fourteenth Amendment), the petitioner in ''Johnson'' raised Fourteenth Amendment equal protection and due process claims. The Supreme Court of Louisiana affirmed his conviction, holding that a 9–3 jury verdict did not violate his equal protection or due process rights. Johnson petitioned the U.S. Supreme Court for review. Both ''Apodaca'' and ''Johnson'' were argued before the U.S. Supreme Court on March 1, 1971, and reargued on January 10, 1972.''Apodaca v. Oregon'', Oyez, https://www.oyez.org/cases/1971/69-5046; ''Johnson v. Louisiana'', Oyez, https://www.oyez.org/cases/1970/69-5035. Arguing the case for the state of Oregon were
Jacob Tanzer Jacob B. Tanzer (February 13, 1935 – July 23, 2018) was an American attorney in the state of Oregon. Prior to private practice Tanzer served as the 81st justice of the Oregon Supreme Court. He also served on the Oregon Court of Appeals, was a d ...
and
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; both would later serve on the Oregon Court of Appeals. The Court decided both cases on May 22, 1972, and upheld the Oregon and Louisiana non-unanimous jury convictions.


U.S. Supreme Court decision and reasoning

First, the Supreme Court held that the constitutional right to trial by jury found in the Sixth Amendment ( made applicable to the states by the Fourteenth Amendment.) was not violated by a less-than-unanimous jury verdict in state criminal court. The Court likened jury unanimity to the 12-person requirement for juries. In ''
Williams v. Florida ''Williams v. Florida'', 399 U.S. 78 (1970), is a United States Supreme Court case in which the Court held that the Fifth Amendment does not entitle a defendant in a criminal trial to refuse to provide details of his alibi witnesses to the prosec ...
'', decided just four years before ''Apodaca'', the Court held that Florida's refusal to impanel more than six members for a jury trial did not violate the defendant's Sixth Amendment rights. Although the Court in ''Williams'' recognized a long common law tradition of having 12-member juries, it stated, " conclude, in short, as we began: the fact that the jury at common law was composed of precisely 12 is a historical accident.". The Court in ''Apodaca'' drew parallels between the 12-member requirement and the unanimous requirement: both "arose during the Middle Ages and had become an accepted feature of the common-law jury by the 18th century." And yet neither a 12-member jury nor jury unanimity, the Court held, were constitutional requirements. In its reasoning, the Court recognized, as it did in ''
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'' and '' Williams,'' that the purposes of a jury included to "safeguard against the corrupt or overzealous prosecutor and against the compliant, biased, or eccentric judge," and to inject into the trial "commonsense judgment of a group of laymen".''Apodaca'', 406 U.S. at 410. But the Court found that these purposes could still be accomplished even if a jury returned a less-than-unanimous verdict. Moreover, the Court reasoned, requiring unanimity would simply produce more
hung juries A hung jury, also called a deadlocked jury, is a judicial jury that cannot agree upon a verdict after extended deliberation and is unable to reach the required unanimity or supermajority. Hung jury usually results in the case being tried again. T ...
.''Apodaca'', 406 U.S. at 411. The Court also rejected the argument that unanimity would protect the reasonable-doubt standard. If some jurors voted to acquit, the petitioners argued, they could not have been found guilty
beyond a reasonable doubt Beyond a reasonable doubt is a legal standard of proof required to validate a criminal conviction in most adversarial legal systems. It is a higher standard of proof than the balance of probabilities standard commonly used in civil cases, bec ...
. But the Court rejected the idea that this requirement is found in the Sixth Amendment, because the reasonable-doubt standard arose after the Constitution was written and is instead rooted in due process. Second, the Court also held that jury unanimity is ''not'' mandated by the Fourteenth Amendment's requirement that racial minorities not be systemically excluded during
voir dire (; often ; from an Anglo-Norman phrase meaning "to speak the truth") is a legal phrase for a variety of procedures connected with jury trials. It originally referred to an oath taken by jurors to tell the truth ( la, verum dicere). This term is ...
, the process by which jurors are chosen for a trial. Petitioners had argued that allowing non-unanimous jury verdicts skirts the requirement to not exclude minorities because the majority could simply out-vote minority members of the jury by 10–2 or 11–1. In rejecting this argument, the Court first said that defendants do not have a right to have members of their community on their particular jury, but rather that minority members simply cannot be ''systematically'' excluded from juries. Next, the Court said that even if racial minorities found themselves in a jury minority, the rest of the jury would hear their voices and that there is "no proof for the notion that a majority will disregard its instructions and cast its votes for guilt or innocence based on prejudice rather than the evidence".


Concurrences and dissents

The four-justice
plurality Plurality may refer to: Voting * Plurality (voting), or relative majority, when a given candidate receives more votes than any other but still fewer than half of the total ** Plurality voting, system in which each voter votes for one candidate and ...
decided that federal and state juries should operate in the same way—and that the constitution does not require jury unanimity in either court system. The four dissenting justices agreed that federal and state juries should abide by the same rules—but argued that the constitution ''does'' require jury unanimity. Justice Powell concurred with the plurality opinion, determining that the Sixth Amendment mandated jury unanimity in federal trials but ''not'' in state trials, because he found that the Fourteenth Amendment did not incorporate that right as applied to the states. Because the Court's decision garnered support from only four justices—a plurality, rather than a majority—Justice Powell's narrower concurrence controls, and is what must be followed by state courts. Because ''Apodaca'' and ''Johnson'' presented the same question, the Court decided both cases on the same day and some of the justices' opinions apply to both cases. In ''Apodaca'', Justice
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wrote the plurality opinion of the court, which was joined by Chief Justice
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, Justice
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, and Justice Rehnquist. Justice
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dissented, and Justice
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and Justice
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joined that dissent. Similarly, in ''Johnson'', Justice White wrote the opinion of the Court, and Justice Stewart filed a dissenting opinion, which Justice Brennan and Justice Marshall joined. There were five other written opinions that applied to both ''Apodaca'' and ''Johnson.'' Justice Blackmun and Justice Powell each wrote a concurring opinion; and Justices
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, Brennan, and Marshall each wrote a dissent (Justice Douglas's dissent was joined by Justice Brennan and Justice Marshall; Justices Brennan and Marshall joined each other's dissents).


Controversial history

Recent scholarly debate has focused on the historical origins of Oregon and Louisiana's less-than-unanimous jury practices. Oregon's constitutional amendment was put on the ballot a year after a lone holdout juror prevented a Jewish man from being found guilty of murdering a Protestant one. On Nov. 25, 1933, the day after the jury convicted on the lesser offense of manslaughter (resulting in a three-year sentence), ''The Morning Oregonian'' "railed against the juror in an editorial tinged with racist undertones and nativist fervor," in which the editors wrote that "the vast immigration into America from southern and eastern Europe, of people untrained in the jury system, have combined to make the jury of twelve increasingly unwieldy and unsatisfactory." Previous editorials around the same time "bemoaned 'mixed-blood' jurors and lamented the role that some immigrants played on juries, questioning their 'sense of responsibility' and 'views on crime and punishment.'" The Oregon constitutional amendment passed on May 18, 1934. In the 1990s, an Oregon study found that too few minorities were called for jury duty, even fewer served on juries, and preemptory challenges were being used based on race. Furthermore, other studies show that non-unanimous juries make it more likely that minority members on a jury can be out-voted. The Supreme Court in ''Apodaca'' had considered this issue, but hypothesized that the majority would still carefully consider the objections of minority jurors before overruling them. The Court lent further support to the states' non-unanimous jury verdict systems by saying that they helped prevent hung juries with holdouts who refuse to convict–or acquit. Because this rule can go either way, it could benefit some defendants who will be acquitted of a crime instead of having to go through another trial. Louisiana's legislature changed its Code of Practice to allow for non-unanimous jury verdicts in 1880, during the Jim Crow era. Louisiana's white land owners struggled to replace free slave labor, and the state began leasing convicts to plantation owners. During the 1898 Louisiana constitutional convention, the Louisiana legislature ratified the split verdict law, making it possible to convict defendants on a jury verdict of 9–3. This, in turn, created more convicts (especially freed blacks), and thus increased the numbers available for for-profit convict leasing. Louisiana officially ended its non-unanimous jury verdict system by constitutional amendment in 2018. Scholars and politicians had argued that Oregon should also end its practice. On April 20, 2020, the Supreme Court overruled ''Apodaca v. Oregon'' in ''
Ramos v. Louisiana ''Ramos v. Louisiana'', 590 U.S. ___ (2020), was a U.S. Supreme Court decision in which the Court ruled that the Sixth Amendment to the U.S. Constitution requires that guilty verdicts for criminal trials be unanimous. Only cases in Oregon and Lo ...
''.


See also

*
List of United States Supreme Court cases, volume 406 This is a list of all United States Supreme Court cases from volume 406 of the ''United States Reports The ''United States Reports'' () are the official record ( law reports) of the Supreme Court of the United States. They include rulings, ord ...


References


Further reading

*Aliza B. Kaplan & Amy Saack, ''Overturning Apodaca v. Oregon Should Be Easy: Nonunanimous Jury Verdicts in Criminal Cases Undermine the Credibility of Our Justice System'' (February 28, 2017). 95 Oregon L. Rev. 1 (2017). SSRN
https://ssrn.com/abstract=2922181
*Gary J. Jacobsohn, ''The Unanimous Verdict: Politics and the Jury Trial''
1977 Wash. U. L. Q. 39
(1977). * *''Jury Trial—Unanimous Verdicts: Johnson v. Louisiana, 406 U.S. 356 (1972), Apodaca v. Oregon, 406 U.S. 404 (1972)''
63 J. Crim. L. Criminology & Police Sci. 500
(1972).


External links

* {{Sixth Amendment, impartial, state=expanded United States Supreme Court cases United States Supreme Court cases of the Burger Court United States Sixth Amendment jury case law Incorporation case law 1972 in United States case law Unanimity