CHALLENGE.
 This word has several significations. 1. It is an exception or 
objection to a juror. 2. A call by one person upon another to a single 
combat, which is said to be a challenge to fight.
CHALLENGE, criminal law. A request by one person to another, to fight a duel.
2.
 It is a high offence at common law, and indictable, as tending to a 
breach of the peace. It may be in writing or verbally. Vide Hawk. P. C. 
b. 1, c. 63, s. 3; 6 East, R. 464; 8 East, R. 581; 1 Dana, R. 524; 1 
South.. R. 40; 3 Wheel. Cr. C. 245 3 Rogers' Rec. 133; 2 M'Cord, R. 334 1
 Hawks. R. 487; 1 Const. R. 107. He who carries a challenge is also 
punishable by indictment. In most of the states, this barbarous practice
 is punishable by special laws.
3.
 In most of the civilized nations challenging another to fight. is a 
crime, as calculated to destroy the public peace; and those who partake 
in the offence are generally liable to punishment. In Spain it is 
punished by loss of offices, rents, and horrors received from the king, 
and the delinquent is incapable to hold them in future. Aso & Man. 
Inst. B. 2, t. 19, c. 2, 6. See, generally, 6 J. J. @larsh. 120; 1 Munf.
 468; 1 Russ. on Cr. 275; 6 J. J. Marsh. 1 19; Coust. Rep. 10 7; Joy on 
Chal. passim.
CHALLENGE, practice. An exception made to jurors who are to pass on a trial; to a judge; or to a sheriff.
2.
 It will be proper here to consider, 1. the several kinds of challenges;
 2. by whom they are to be made; 3. the time and manner of making them.
3.
 - 1. The several kinds of challenges may be divided into those which 
are peremptory, and those which are for cause. 1. Peremptory challenges 
are those 'which are made without assigning any reason, and which the 
court must allow. The number of these which the prisoner was allowed at 
common law, in all cases of felony, was thirty-five, or one under three 
full juries. This is regulated by the local statutes of the different 
states, and the number except in capital cases, has been probably 
reduced.
4.
 - 2. Challenges for cause are to the array or to the polls. 1. A 
challenge to the array is made on account of some defect in making the 
return to the venire, and is at once an objection to all the jurors in 
the panel. It is either a principal challenge, that is, one founded on 
some manifest partiality, or error committed in selecting, depositing, 
drawing or summoning the jurors, by not pursuing the directions of the 
acts of the legislature; or a challenge for favor.
5.
 - 2. A challenge to the polls is objection made separately to each 
juror as he is about to be sworn. Challenges to the polls, like those to
 the array, are either principal or to the favor.
6.
 First, principal challenges may be made on various grounds: 1st. 
propter defectum, on account of some personal objection, as alienage, 
infancy, old age, or the want of those qualifications required by 
legislative enactment. 2d. Propter affectum, because of some presumed or
 actual partiality in the juryman who is made the subject of the 
objection; on this ground a juror may be objected to, if he is related 
to either within the ninth degree, or is so connected by affinity; this 
is supposed to bias the juror's mind, and is only a presumption of 
partiality. Coxe, 446; 6 Greenl. 307; 3 Day, 491. A juror who has 
conscientious scruples in finding a verdict in a capital case, may be 
challenged. 1 Bald. 78. Much stronger is the reason for this challenge, 
where the juryman has expressed his wishes as to the result of the 
trial, or his opinion of the guilt or innocence of the defendant. 4 
Harg. St. Tr. 748; Hawk. b. 2, c. 43, s. 28; Bac. Ab. Juries, E 5. And 
the smallest degree of interest in the matter to be tried is a decisive 
objection against a juror. 1 Bay, 229; 8 S. & R. 444; 2 Tyler, 401. 
But see 5 Mass. 90. 3d. The third ground of principal challenge to the 
polls, is propter delictum, or the legal incompetency of the juror on 
the ground of infamy. The court, when satisfied from their own 
examination, decide as to the principal challenges to the polls, without
 any further investigation and there is no occasion for the appointment 
of triers. Co. Litt. 157, b; Bac. Ab. Juries, E 12; 8 Watts. R. 304.
7.
 - Secondly. Challenges to the poll for favor may be made, when, 
although the juror is not so evidently partial that his supposed bias 
will be sufficient to authorize. a principal challenge, yet there are 
reasonable grounds to suspect that he will act under some undue 
influence or prejudice. The causes for such cballenge are manifestly 
very numerous, and depend, on a variety of circumstances. The fact to be
 ascertained is, whether the juryman is altogether indifferent as he 
stands unsworn, because, even unconsciously to himself, be may be swayed
 to one side. The line whicb separates the causes for principal 
challenges, and for challenge to the favor, is not very distinctly 
marked. That the juror has acted as godfather to the child of the 
prosecutor or defendant, is cause for a principal cballenge; Co. Litt. 
157, a; while the fact that the party and the juryman are fellow 
servants, and that the latter has been entertained at the house of the 
former, is only cause for challenge to the favor. Co. Litt. 147; Bac. 
Ab. Juries, E 5. Challenges to the favor are not decided upon by the 
court, but are settled by triers. (q. v.)
8.
 - 2. The challenges may be made by the government, or those who 
represent it, or by the defendant, in criminal cases; or they may be 
made by either party in civil cases.
9.
 - 3. As to the time of making the challenge, it is to be observed that 
it is a general rule, that no challenge can be made either to the array 
or to the polls, until a full jury have made their appearance, because 
if that should be the case, the issue will remain pro defectu juratorum;
 and on this account, the party who intends to challenge the array, may,
 under such a contingency, pray a tales to complete the number, and then
 object to the panel. The proper time, of challenging, is between the 
appearance and the swearing of the jurors. The order of making 
challenges is to the array first, and should not that be supported, then
 to the polls; challenging any one juror, waives the right of 
challenging the array. Co. Litt. 158, a; Bac. Ab. Juries, E 11. The 
proper manner of making the challenge, is to state all the objections 
against the jurors at one time; and the party will not be allowed to 
make a second objection to the same juror, when the first has been 
over-ruled. But when a juror has been challenged on one side, and found 
indifferent, he may still be challenged on the other. When the juror has
 been cliallenged for cause, and been pronounced impartial, he may still
 be challenged peremptorily. 6 T. R. 531; 4 Bl. Com. 356; Hawk. b. 2, c.
 46, s. 10.
10.
 As to the mode of making the challenge, the rule is, that a challenge 
to the array must be in writing; but when it is only to a single 
individual, the words " I challenge him " are sufficient in a civil 
case, or on the part of the defendant, in a criminal case when the 
challenge is made for the prosecution, the attorney-general says, We 
challenge him." 4 Harg. St. Tr. 740 Tr. per Pais, 172; and see Cro. C. 
105; 2 Lil. Entr. 472; 10 Wentw. 474; 1 Chit. Cr. Law, 533 to 551.
11.
 Interest forms the only ground at common law for challenging a judge. 
It is no ground of challenge that he has given an opinion in the case 
before. 4 Bin. 349; 2 Bin. 454. By statute, there are in some states 
several other grounds of challenge. See Courts of the U. S., 633 64.
12.
 The sheriff may be challenged for favor as well as affinity. Co. Litt. 
158, a; 10 Serg. &. R. 336-7. And the challenge need not be made to 
the court, but only to the prothonotary. Yet the Sheriff cannot be 
passed by in the direction of process without cause, as he is the proper
 officer to execute writs, except in case of partiality. Yet if process 
be directed to the coroner without cause, it is not void. He cannot 
dispute the authority of the court, but must execute it at his peril, 
and the misdirection is aided by thc statutes of amendment. 11 Serg. 
& R. 303.


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