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Cases citing this case: Supreme Court
Cases citing this case: Circuit Courts
U.S. Supreme Court
U S v. DAWSON, 56 U.S. 467 (1853)
56 U.S. 467 (How.)
THE UNITED STATES, PLAINTIFFS,
v.
JAMES L. DAWSON, AND JOHN R. BAYLOR.
December Term, 1853
THIS case came up from the Circuit Court of the United States for
the Eastern District of Arkansas, upon a certificate of division in
opinion between the judges thereof.
[56 U.S. 467, 468] The two following
questions were certified, viz.
1st. Did the act of Congress, entitled 'An act to divide the
district of Arkansas into two judicial districts,' approved the third
day of March, in the year of our Lord one thousand eight hundred and
fifty-one, whereby the Western District of Arkansas was created and
defined, take away the power and jurisdiction of the Circuit Court of
the United States for the Eastern District of Arkansas, so that it
cannot proceed to hear, try, and determine a prosecution for murder,
pending against the prisoner, James L. Dawson, a white man and not an
Indian, upon an indictment found, presented, and returned into the
Circuit Court of the United States for the District of Arkansas, by
the grand jury impanelled for that district, upon the 16th day of
April, in the year of our Lord one thousand eight hundred and forty-
five, against said James L. Dawson, a white man, for the felonious
killing of Seaborn Hill, another white man and not an Indian, on the
eighth day of July, A. D. 1844, in that country belonging to the Creek
nation of Indians, west of Arkansas, and which formed a part of the
Indian country annexed to the judicial district of Arkansas by the act
of Congress approved the seventeenth day of June, A. D. 1844, entitled
'An act supplementary to the act entitled 'An act to regulate trade
and intercourse with the Indian tribes, and to preserve peace on the
frontiers, passed thirtieth June, one thousand eight hundred and
thirty-four," in which cause, so pending, no trial has as yet been
had.
2d. Can the District Court of the United States for the Western
District of Arkansas take jurisdiction of the case aforesaid, upon the
indictment aforesaid, so found in the year 1845, in said Circuit Court
for the District of Arkansas?
Although the name of Dawson only was mentioned in the question
certified, yet the record showed that Baylor was indicted at the same
as aiding and abetting in the murder.
A motion was made in the Circuit Court to quash the indictment upon
the ground that this honorable court has no jurisdiction or power to
hear, try, or determine this case and prosecution, and that all its
jurisdiction and power in that behalf ceased and was extinguished on
the third day of March, 1851, when that part of the Indian country, in
which the offence is charged to have been committed, was severed from
this district, and made part of a new district, under the jurisdiction
of the District Court of the United States, for the Western District
of Arkansas.' It was upon this motion that the judges differed in
opinion and certified the two questions, above stated, to this court.
The motion to dismiss the case was argued by Mr. Lawrence and Mr.
Pike, for Dawson, and by Mr. Cushing, (Attorney-General,) for the
United States. [56 U.S.
467, 469] Mr. Pike, in his brief, made the following
argumentative statement of pre existing laws upon the subject.
This is an indictment against James L. Dawson for a murder alleged
to have been committed at the Creek agency, in the Creek country, west
of Arkansas, on the 8th day of July, A. D. 1844. The bill was found by
the grand jury for the Arkansas district, at the April term, 1845, of
the Circuit Court of the United States for the District of Arkansas.
At the April term, 1853, present Mr. Justice Daniel, and the
honorable Daniel Ringo, district judge, a motion was made to quash the
indictment for want of jurisdiction, on which motion the judges
dividing in opinion, the prisoner was admitted to bail in an amount
which he has been wholly unable to give; and upon a certificate of
division of opinion the case has come into this court.
By the act of March 3d, 1817, (3 Stat. at Large, 383,) jurisdiction
and power of trial, in cases where offences were committed in any
town, district, or territory belonging to any nation or tribe of
Indians, were given to the courts of the United States 'in each
territory and district of the United States in which any offender
against this act shall be first apprehended or brought for trial.'
The Constitution, art. III, sect. 2, No. 3, had provided that 'the
trial of all crimes, except in cases of impeachment, shall be by jury;
and such trial shall be held in the State where the said crime shall
have been committed; but when not committed within any State, the
trial shall be at such place or places as the Congress may by law have
directed.'
The States and people not thinking this a sufficient guaranty for a
fair and impartial trial, art. VI. of the amendments to the
Constitution provides that 'in all criminal prosecutions, the accused
shall enjoy the right to a speedy and public trial by an impartial
jury of the State and district wherein the crime shall have been
committed, which district shall have been previously ascertained by
law.'
The Intercourse Act of 30th June, 1834, (4 Stat. at Large, 733,) by
the 24th section, after making divers provisions, defining the limits
of the 'Indian country,' and imposing penalties for sundry offences,
provides 'that, for the sole purpose of carrying this act into
effect,' certain Indian country, bounded east by Arkansas and
Missouri, west by Mexico, north by the Osage country, and south by Red
River, 'shall be, and hereby is annexed to the territory of Arkansas;'
and by section 25 it was provided 'that so much of the laws of the
United States as provides for the punishment of crimes committed
within any place within the sole and exclusive jurisdiction of the
United [56 U.S. 467,
470] States shall be in force in the Indian country;
provided the same shall not extend to crimes committed by one Indian
against the person or property of another Indian.' Power to apprehend
offenders in the Indian country, and take them into 'the judicial
district having jurisdiction,' was given by sec. 26.
Under this act the Superior Court of the Arkansas Territory took
and exercised jurisdiction as to offences committed in the Indian
territory so annexed to Arkansas.
But, by act of June 15th, 1836, (5 Stat. at Large, 50, 51,)
Arkansas was admitted as a State; and sec. 4 provided 'that the said
State shall be one judicial district, and be called the Arkansas
District, and a District Court shall be held therein, to consist of
one judge, who shall reside in the said district, and be called a
district judge.' It was provided that he should hold semiannual
sessions at Little Rock, and that he should 'in all things have and
exercise the same jurisdiction and powers which were by law given to
the judge of the Kentucky district, under an act entitled An act to
establish the udicial courts of the United States.'
That was the act of September 24th, 1789, (1 Stat. at Large, 73.)
That act gave to the District Court of Kentucky the jurisdiction of a
circuit court, except on appeals and writs of error, in addition to
the ordinary district-court jurisdiction. Sec. 10, and sec. 29,
provided that in cases punishable with death, the trial should be had
in the county where the offence was committed; or, where that could
not be done without great inconvenience, twelve petit jurors at least
should be summoned from thence.
There was, in the act of 1836, no express repeal of so much of the
act of 1834 as applied to Arkansas; but the legislature, by expressly
limiting and defining the bounds of the Arkansas district, and making
it to be composed of the State, cut away the Indian country, and
severed its connection with Arkansas. It was therefore held by the
District Court of Arkansas that it formed no part of the district, and
that the court had no jurisdiction to try and determine cases upon
indictments found in the Superior Territorial Court, for offences
committed in the Indian country prior to the 15th June, 1836; and all
prisoners so indicted were discharged.
To remedy this, by act of March 1, 1837, (5 Stat. at Large, 147,)
it was provided, that the District Court of Arkansas should have 'the
same jurisdiction and power in all respects whatever that was given to
the several district courts,' by the intercourse act of March 30,
1802, 'or by any subsequent acts of Congress, concerning crimes,
offences, or misdemeanors, which may be committed against the laws of
the United States in any town, settlement,
[56 U.S. 467, 471]
or territory, belonging to any Indian tribe in amity with the
United States, of which any other district court of the United States
may have jurisdiction.'
Section 15 of this act of 1802, like the act of 1834, gave the
jurisdiction of offences committed against its provisions to the
territorial, circuit, and other courts of the United States, in each
district in which the offenders should be apprehended, or into which,
agreeably to the provisions of the act, they should be brought for
trial. By sec. 19, persons apprehended in the Indian country were to
be taken into one of the three adjoining States or districts for
trial. If apprehended in any district, they were, by sec. 17, to be
tried there.
By act of March 3, 1837, (5 Stat. at Large, 176,) the districts of
Alabama, Mississippi, and Arkansas, and the Eastern District of
Louisiana, were erected into the ninth circuit; and provision being
made for holding a circuit court at Little Rock, it was further, by
the third section, provided, that so much of any act or acts of
Congress as vested in sundry district courts, including that of
Arkansas, 'the power and jurisdiction of circuit courts,' should be,
and was thereby repealed, and like jurisdiction was given to the
Circuit Court of Arkansas as to other circuit courts, and to the
District Court of Arkansas as to other district courts.
Under these acts it was held by the Circuit Court for the District
of Arkansas, in 1842, I think, present Mr. Justice Daniel and the
honorable Benjamin Johnson, district judge-that the court had no
jurisdiction as to offences committed in the Indian country.
By act of August 23, 1842, (5 Stat. at Large, 517,) concurrent
jurisdiction with the Circuit Court was given to the district courts
in prosecutions for offences not capital.
And by act of June 17, 1844, (a few days before the day on which
the offence in this case is charged in the indictment to have been
committed,) 5 Stat. at Large, 680, the courts of the United States in
and for the district of Arkansas were vested with the same power and
jurisdiction, to hear, try, determine, and punish, all crimes
committed within the Indian country designated in the 24th section of
the intercourse act of June 30, 1834, and therein and thereby annexed
to the territory of Arkansas, as were vested in the courts of the
United States for that territory before it became a State; and the act
went on to declare: 'That for the sole purpose of carrying this act
into effect, all that Indian territory heretofore annexed by the said
24th section of the act aforesaid to the territory of Arkansas, be,
and the same hereby is annexed to the State of Arkansas.'
Under this act, the Circuit Court assumed jurisdiction of
[56 U.S. 467, 472]
offences committed in the Indian country; and, among other
indictments, this was found.
But on the 3d of March, 1851, a new act passed, (9 Stat. at Large,
594,) by which it was enacted-Sec. 1. That from and after the passage
of this act, the counties of Benton, Washington, Crawford, Scott,
Polk, Franklin, Johnson, Madison, and Carroll, and all that part of
the Indian country lying within the present judicial district of
Arkansas, shall constitute a new judicial district, to be styled 'The
Western District of Arkansas;' and the residue of said State shall be
and remain a judicial district, to be styled 'The Eastern District of
Arkansas."
By sec. 2 of this singularly worded act, 'the judge of the
District- Court of Arkansas' is directed to hold two terms 'of said
court' in each year, at Van Buren, in Crawford county, and special and
adjourned sessions when needed.
By sec. 3 it is provided, that 'the District Court of the United
States for the Western District of Arkansas, hereby established,'
shall have, besides district-court jurisdiction, 'within the limits of
its respective district,' circuit-court jurisdiction, except in cases
of appeals and writs of error, and proceed like a circuit court, with
right of appeal to the Supreme Court. By sec. 4 a marshal and
district-attorney 'for said Western District of Arkansas,' were
provided for, and the district judge was empowered to appoint a clerk
'of said court hereby established.'
Since the passage of this act, and the establishment of the
District Court for the Western District of Arkansas, that court has
taken jurisdiction of indictments found there for capital offences
committed in the Indian country prior to the passage of the act, and
has tried, convicted, and sentenced the parties, and had them
executed. And at the same time a Circuit Court for the Eastern
District of Arkansas has been opened and held, succeeding to the
business of the Circuit Court for the District of Arkansas, and the
cases pending there when the act passed had been proceeded in as still
in the same court. Persons have been tried for offences committed in
the Indian country, and upon indictments found in the Circuit Court
for the District of Arkansas, prior to the passage of the act of 1851;
and one, convicted of manslaughter, is still imprisoned under the
sentence. But in the case of Dawson, the question of jurisdiction was
formally raised, and comes up here for consideration.
At common law, in criminal cases, the venue was local, and matter
of substance affecting the jurisdiction and power of the grand jury,
who were to find the indictment or make the presentment, as well as of
the court who were to try the cause and carry into effect the law. 1
Chitty, Cr. Law, 177, 190.
[56 U.S. 467, 473] (After examining the
English authorities upon this point, the counsel proceeded to the
American.)
One of the grounds of complaint, set forth in the Declaration of
Independence against the English king, was 'for transporting us beyond
seas to be tried for pretended offences.'
After the Constitution was framed, it did not seem to the States
and people that the rights of the citizen were sufficiently guarded by
the provision which gave Congress, where an offence was not committed
within any State, the power to direct, as well after as before the
offence was committed, at what place the trial should be had. The
objections to this were obvious. In every case where an offence was
committed beyond the limits of a State, as on the high seas or in a
territory, Congress might virtually decide the case against the
accused by directing that he should be tried in a remote or unfriendly
district. If the offence were a political one, especially, this was a
power dangerous and odious in the extreme. The sixth article of the
amendments wisely took away this whole power, and provided that the
trial of all criminal prosecutions should be by an impartial jury of
the State and district wherein the crime should have been committed,
and required that such district should have been previously
ascertained by law. It is obvious that the phrase means, previously to
the commission of the offence, because, if Congress could create or
ascertain the district after its commission, that was continuing their
power to direct the trial to be had at whatever place they might think
most apt and fit for the particular case.
It will occur to every one, that it would be intolerable if a power
existed by which, if a man committed an offence in Oregon or Florida,
Congress might, in order to strike him down with perfect certainty,
attach the particular place where he committed the offence to the
District of Maine, so as to carry him to Portland for trial;
retaining, of course, the power to sever again from the district the
country so attached, so soon as the political or other offender should
be immolated, and the ends of public or party vengeance attained.
And it will also occur, that it would be equally dangerous to
concede to Congress a power, when an offense has been committed, to
sever the particular place at which it was committed from the district
of which it then formed a part, and so, disenabling the court to send
beyond its district for jurors, utterly deprive the accused of the
right to a jury of the vicinage.
It was not intended by the amendment to leave the rights of the
accused to be settled by the caprice or hostility of Congress, and by
laws enacted on the spur of the moment, to suit the
[56 U.S. 467, 474]
particular occasion, reach the particular case, and strike the
particular individual.
The amendment is, therefore, peremptory. No man can be tried, under
any circumstances, elsewhere than in the State or district where he
committed the offence. Nor can new districts be created, ad libitum,
after the offence is committed, to carry the trial to whatever remote
point Congress may please, for reasons of prejudice, ill will, or
favoritism, in order to acquit or convict, as inward feeling or
outward pressure may dictate, giving to the particular party, at the
option of Congress, friendly or unfriendly juries and judges, and
allowing or taking from him a jury of his vicinage. Such a power, in a
free country, would be intolerable. Congress could acquit or condemn
at its pleasure. The district within which the crime was committed
must have been previously ascertained by law. Thus, and thus only,
will a possibility of special legislation for the particular case be
avoided, and this power of attainder in disguise taken away.
There have never been but two districts in which it could be said
that the offence in this case was committed. The Eastern District of
Arkansas is limited to certain specified counties of the State; and it
is not the district within which the offence was committed. It was
committed in the former District of Arkansas, and in what now forms a
part of the Western District of Arkansas. If Dawson is now tried in
the Eastern District, certainly he is not tried in the district within
which he committed the offence.
The notion upon which the claim to jurisdiction appears to rest is,
that the Circuit Court for the Eastern District is either the same
court as the former Circuit Court for Arkansas, or its successor. But
so is the District Court for the Western District its successor; for
the judge of the District Court of Arkansas is to hold two terms of
said court at Van Buren.
This idea does not even sound the question, to see how deep it is.
To create a circuit or district court, and confer upon it all power to
punish crimes within the power of Congress to bestow, would be wholly
unavailing, until the territory was defined within whose limits its
jurisdiction should operate. No jurisdiction whatever could be
exercised until a district was established and defined. The continued
existence of the court avails nothing, if its jurisdiction is
compressed into narrower territorial limits. Its power shrinks within
these limits at once. If the particular place in which the offence was
committed is, after the commission of the offence, severed from the
district, or left outside of the jurisdiction by the process of
compression, and the offence is still tried in the court whose
jurisdiction is so [56
U.S. 467, 475] narrowed, the offence, we may admit, would
be tried in the same court as if it had been tried there before the
excision of territory; but the fact still remains, that it will not be
tried in the district, previously ascertained by law, in which the
offence was committed.
It is said that it is the district in which the offence was
committed. That is not so, because it is a new and different district
altogether; the district in which the offence was committed no longer
exists, but two new districts exist in lieu of it. It might as well be
said that, if you sever a man in the middle, he still exists. Suppose,
however, that the act had merely taken off from the Arkansas District
the Indian country, and left the former district to stand with its old
name, still the Arkansas District, as it was before-totus teres atque
rotundus-still, although the Arkansas District, it would not be the
district in which the offence was committed. If you cut off a man's
hand, the man remains, identical and one, as before; because the man,
the individual, the me, is something different and distinct from each
of his members. You may even imagine that a particular faculty or part
of the soul could be cut away, and yet the residue would continue the
identical individual which existed before.
But if you cut a tract of land or country in two, you may call one
half by the name previously borne by the whole, and for some purposes
it may be the same tract or country; but for others it is not so. Take
from Arkansas a county, or half a dozen counties, and in many senses
the residue would be the same Arkansas that existed before. Suits in
her favor would not abate, nor her contracts be annulled, because the
sovereignty or municipal corporation which constitutes the State does
not lose its individuality by parting with a portion of its territory.
But the word district does not mean a corporation, or a being, but
a mere tract and extent of country; and, when it is divided, one half
of it is no more the same district that existed before than the other
is. A half is not the whole; nor can two halves continue to be each
the previous whole.
This may be made more plain, and the fallacy of the notion more
striking, by reflecting that it operates both ways; and, if the
district remains the same when part of its territory is cut away, so
it would if a vast extent of new territory was added. Suppose Congress
had chosen to annex the Indian country to the District of Columbia,
the argument would be thus: The crime was committed at the Creek
agency; that is now made part of the District of Columbia by
annexation. The District of Columbia is a corporation, one and
identical, the same now as before; consequently, it is the District of
Columbia in which [56
U.S. 467, 476] the offence was committed. On the other
hand, it could be said the offence was committed in the District of
Arkansas; the place where it was committed no longer forms part of
that district; but the fact still remains, that the crime was
committed in the District of Arkansas.
All the reason of the thing would be in favor of the District of
Columbia; because the locus of the offence now forming part of that
district, the accused might have a jury of the vicinage; while, if
tried in the maimed District of Arkansas, he could not.
The truth is, that the continued existence and identity of the
metaphysical ens, called district, territory, state, or of that other
called the court, has nothing to do with the question. If it has, the
right guaranteed amounts to nothing. The trial is to be in the
district where the offence was committed, in order that the party may
have, if not the reality, at least the possibility or fiction of a
right to a jury of the vicinage. A constitutional provision, without a
reason for it, would be a monster. The right is one that continues to
the trial; it is, indeed, a right of the trial. The right is, that the
identical place, and fixed solid ground, or unstable water, where the
offence was committed, shall then be within the district in which the
party is to be tried. If there is any district in which this person
could now be tried, it is the Western District of Arkansas. The only
way to avoid the difficulty would have been, as the cases we have
cited show, for Congress to have declared the old district to
continue, with its original territorial extent, for all the purposes
of this and similar cases.
The courts of the United States have no jurisdiction, as to crimes,
except such as is expressly conferred by statute. In such cases, they
have no implied powers, nor any derived from the common law. Hudson v.
Goodwin, 7 Cranch, 32; United States v. Worrall, 2 Dallas, 384; United
States v. Coolidge, 1 Wheat. 415; 1 Kent, 337-8-9; United States v.
Bevans, 3 Wheat. 336.
And it is equally indispensable that the law should put the place
where the crime occurs within the jurisdiction of the court which is
to try the case. United States v. McGill, 4 Dall. 426; United States
v. Bevans, 3 Wheat. 336; Ex parte Bollman and Swartwout, 4 Cranch, 75,
131; United States v. Wiltberger, 5 Wheat. 76.
It is a well-settled principle, that where a statute creating an
offence is repealed, and no provision is made for carrying forward
prosecutions commenced under it, all such prosecutions are absolutely
ended with the repeal of the law.
Such was decided to be the effect of the act repealing the
[56 U.S. 467, 477]
bankrupt act of 1803, in United States v. Passmore, 4 Dall.
372.
And the same decision was made in Miller's case, 1 W. Bla. 451. No
proceedings are pursuable under a repealed statute, which commenced
before the repeal.
These decisions, and others to which we shall refer, do not proceed
upon any peculiar principle especially applying to penalties imposed
by repealed acts, or to the destruction of the criminal character of
acts done before the repeal, but upon a broad general principle of
universal application.
And that principle is simply that stated by Lord Tenterden, in
Surtees v. Ellison, 9 Barn. & Cresw. 752, where he said: 'It has been
long established that, when an act of parliament is repealed, it must
be considered, except as to transactions passed and closed, as if it
had never existed. That is the general rule; and we must not destroy
that by indulging in conjectures as to the intention of the
legislature. We are therefore to look at the statute, 6 Geo. 4, ch.
16, as if it were the first that had ever been passed on the subject
of bankruptcy.' His lordship felt the pressure of the consequences of
the decision, but the law was too well settled to be disregarded; and
he added: 'It is certainly very unfortunate, that a statute of so much
importance should have been framed with so little attention to the
consequences of some of its provisions. It is said that the last will
of a party is to be favorably construed, because the testator is inops
consilii. That we cannot say of the legislature; but we may say that
it is 'magnas inter opes inops." See also Dwarris on Statutes, 673,
676.
The counsel then proceeded to examine other analogous principles,
which there is not room to insert.
Mr. Cushing, (Attorney-General,) insisted that the act of 3d March,
1851, has not taken away the jurisdiction of the Circuit Court to hear
and determine the said indictment then found and pending.
The said act of 3d March, 1851, did not create a new Circuit Court.
It created a new District Court, having the ordinary powers of the
District Court of the United States within the territory assigned to
it, with an anomalous increase of jurisdiction; but it left the then
existing Circuit Court unrepealed, in being and activity.
The general powers of the then existing Circuit Court, remained
unimpaired as to cases begun and pending; its future jurisdiction was
limited to cases originating within a smaller territorial district.
The territory within which the Circuit Court then existing should
exercise its powers over new suits
[56 U.S. 467, 478] and prosecutions
thereafter to be instituted, was lessened; but the powers which
belonged to it as a circuit court, and as common to all the other
Circuit Courts of the United States, were not diminished.
The general rule is, that where the jurisdiction of a court over
the subject-matter has once vested, it is not divested by a subsequent
change of circumstance. United States v. Myers, 2 Brock. 516; Morgan
v. Morgan, 2 Wheat. 290; Mollan v. Torrance, 9 Wheat. 537; Clarke v.
Matthewson, 12 Peters, 165.
Thus, where the complainants, being citizens of a State other than
Kentucky, sued citizens of the State of Kentucky in the Circuit Court
of the United States for the Kentucky District, and pending the suit
one of the complainants voluntarily removed to, and became a citizen
of, the State of Kentucky, the Supreme Court of the United States
decided unanimously 'that the jurisdiction of the court having once
vested, was not divested by the change of residence of either of the
parties.' Morgan's heirs v. Morgan, 2 Wheat. 293, 297.
There are no words in the act of 1851 to give it a retrospective
effect, to make it retroact upon pending suits and prosecutions,
rightfully commenced in the pre existing and continuing Circuit Court.
To give, by implication, a retrospective effect to the newly-created
District Court, whereby to divest a pre existing and continuing
superior Circuit Court of its cognizance over suits, actions, and
prosecutions rightfully begun therein, and undetermined, would violate
the rules of just construction and right reasoning.
Heretofore when a circuit court has been established within a
district wherein only a district court had been established with the
powers of a district court and of a circuit court, in order to divest
the District Court, of its cognizance of cases pending, which belonged
to the proper cognizance and jurisdiction of a circuit court, and
transfer them into the newly-created Circuit Court, or when new courts
have been established, whether circuit courts or district courts, and
it was intended by the Congress of the United States to transfer cases
pending in the old or pre existing courts into the newly-created
courts, there to be heard, tried, and determined, it has been deemed
necessary and proper to employ express and positive enactments to
effect such purposes, and they have been used invariably to that end.
Thus in the act of Congress of 13th February, 1801, (2 Stat. at
Large, 89,) two sections viz. sec. 20 and 24, were introduced as
specially applicable. This act was repealed by 8th March, 1802, (2
Stat. at Large, 132,) and the preceding judicial system reinstated,
and sections 4 and 5 introduced to provide for the case.
[56 U.S. 467, 479]
The act of 24th February, 1807, (2 Stat. at Large, 420,)
established Circuit Courts and abridged the jurisdiction of the
District Courts in the District of Kentucky, Tennessee, and Ohio, and
sec. 3 provided for the transfer of cases.
The act of April 20th, 1818, (3 Stat. at Large, 462,) divided
Pennsylvania into two districts, and sections 4 and 6, provided for
the transfer of cases.
The act of March 10th, 1824, (4 Stat. at Large, 9,) divided Alabama
into two districts, and sec. 5 made the necessary provisions.
The act of 3d March, 1837, (5 Stat. at Large, 176,) erected twelve
new Circuit Courts. The third and fourth sections provided for this
case.
In these six statutes, last quoted, we have examples of two
classes, relative to the divisions of districts and the establishment
of courts therein: one class containing enactments for transferring
cases, begun and pending in one District Court, to another District
Court, established in a part of the territory formerly composing one
district; the second class containing express provisions to take away
the jurisdiction of district courts, acting as circuit courts, over
cases, civil and criminal, begun and pending in such inferior district
courts, and to transfer the cognizance thereof to the superior circuit
courts newly established in the same districts.
If positive enactments were necessary and proper to divest the
jurisdiction of inferior district courts over causes, actions, and
pleas rightfully begun and pending therein, and to transfer the
cognizance thereof to superior circuit courts newly established in the
same districts, a fortiori, express and positive enactment would be
necessary to divest the jurisdiction of a superior court over cases
rightfully begun and pending therein, and to transfer the cognizance
thereof, from such existing continuing superior court, to an inferior
district court newly established within the same territory which
composed the district when the proceeding was instituted in the
Circuit Court.
We have examples of legislation by Congress by which new judicial
districts have been formed out of the old, with total silence as to
the cognizance of actions or prosecutions pending in the old, viz.
The act of April 9th, 1814, (3 Stat. at Large, 120,) and the act of
February 21st, 1823, (3 Stat. at Large, 726.) In these acts, cases
were left to be heard, tried, and determined under the general rule
that when once the jurisdiction of a court has rightfully attached by
action, writ, or prosecution, instituted, it is not divested by change
of circumstances, by mere implication, or otherwise than by express
enactment. [56 U.S. 467,
480] The two acts of May 26th, 1824, (4 Stat. at Large,
50,) and May 26th, 1824, (4 Stat. at Large, 48,) took away certain
counties and attached them to another district, and no special
provision was thought necessary respecting cases then pending.
Furthermore, we have examples of the legislation of the Congress of
the United States in dividing one judicial district, in the States of
North Carolina, into three judicial districts; thereafter, in
consolidating the three into one, and afterwards in dividing that one
into three judicial districts, viz.
The act of 9th June, 1794, (1 Stat. at Large, 396); the act of 3d
March, 1797, (1 Stat. at Large, 518); the act of 29th April, 1802, (2
Stat. at Large, 156.) In these acts there are provisions that there
shall be no failure of justice by abatement or discontinuance of the
process or lapse of jurisdiction.
The act of 3d April, 1794, (1 Stat. at Large, 352,) transfers
jurisdiction from one court to another and provides for thr trial of
cases.
The various acts of Congress for dividing judicial districts, and
for taking off territories or counties from one judicial district and
adding them to another, and for consolidation of judicial districts
into one, and again for dividing that one into several, and for
creating new courts by abolishing some pre existing, and substituting
others in their stead, when compared each with the others, evince,
beyond doubt, that the legislature, in framing those statutes,
understood and acted upon the following principles and rules of law,
viz.
1st. That to abolish the jurisdiction of one existing and
continuing court over any of the subjects originally committed to its
cognizance, and to transfer such jurisdiction to another court, it was
necessary and proper to use words aptly and clearly expressive of such
intent.
2d. That when the jurisdiction of a court had once rightfully ested
over a cause begun and pending, it was not divested by change of
circumstance, but continued with the court, until plainly taken away
by the legislature, or until the court itself was abolished.
By these rules the acts of the legislature are to be construed.
Otherwise the most unexpected, inconvenient, nay, calamitous
consequences would result, with miserable confusion of all justice. If
taking off territory from one judicial district and adding to another
ipso facto abrogates the jurisdiction of the courts (district and
circuit) holden for such diminished district over cases then pending
and originated in such territory so taken from one judicial district
and added to another, then the people of Virginia, of New York, and of
Pennsylvania, would have been thrown into a strange predicament.
[56 U.S. 467, 481]
The statues before cited for dividing the judicial districts in
Virginia, New York, and Pennsylvania, respectively, and afterwards for
diminishing the one and enlarging the other in each State, made no
special provision for, but were silent as to, cases then pending. The
courts wherein they were pending, supposing their jurisdiction to have
continued, went on to hear and determine them. But if the doctrine now
contended for by the counsel for Dawson is to prevail, the said courts
had no jurisdiction; their decisions are absolutely void, confer no
right, bar no right, and all concerned in executing them were
trespassers; for such are the consequences of decisions and sentences
of courts not having jurisdiction. Elliot v. Piersol, 1 Peters, 340;
Wise v. Withers, 3 Cranch, 337; Rose v. Himely, 4 Cranch, 269.
A question arose upon the before-mentioned act of 1824, May 26,
taking away certain counties from the Eastern district of Pennsylvania
and adding them to the western district, in an action of ejectment
pending in the Circuit Court for the district of Pennsylvania, for
land lying in Union county, one of the counties so taken from the
eastern and added to the western district. The question was made at
the first sitting of the Circuit Court for the district of
Pennsylvania after the passage of the act of 1824, whether the said
ejectment so instituted and pending at the passage of that act should
be retained in the Circuit Court, or be sent to the western district
court, acting as a Circuit Court. Upon argument, Mr. Associate Justice
Washington and Judge Peters decided that the case should be retained;
that the said act had not transferred it to the western district.
Lessee of Rhodes and Snyder v. Selin, 4 Wash. C. C. Rep. 725.
To combat this decision, the counsel for the accused cites the
cases of Picquet v. Swan, 5 Mason, 35, and Toland v. Sprague, 12
Peters, 300. The case of Piquet v. Swan is cited to prove 'that title
to real estate, by the general principles of law, can be litigated
only in the State where the land lies, and where the process may go to
find and reach the land and enforce the title of the party.' This
extract, quoted by the counsel for the accused, is connected with the
next preceding and the next succeeding sentence, to actions, in their
nature, 'purely local;' and immediately afterwards Judge Story
explains himself further, by saying 'collateral suits for other
purposes, binding the conscience, or controlling the acts of the party
personally, may be brought and decided elsewhere.' 5 Mason, 42. The
case did not involve the question of a rightful jurisdiction vested,
and sought to be divested by matter subsequent. It was a case brought
in the federal court, and district of Massachusetts, by an alien,
against a citizen of the United States, then out of the United States,
but late of the city of Boston, by color of the
[56 U.S. 467, 482]
State law and a process called the trustee process, or foreign
attachment, and returned by the marshal that he had attached the real
estate of the defendant in the district of Massachusetts, summoned the
supposed trustees and agent of the defendant, Swan, but that 'the said
Swan has not been an inhabitant or resident of this district
(Massachusetts) for three years last past.' Such a suit, Judge Story
decided, could not be so commenced in the federal court contrary to
the federal law, although allowed by the law of the State of
Massachusetts.
In Penn v. Lord Baltimore, in the High Court of Chancery of
England, respecting the title to land in Maryland, Lord Hardwick
decided that it was no objection to the decree for settling the right
between the parties, that the land was in Maryland, and not itself to
be reached by the process of that court. Penn v. Lord Baltimore, 1
Ves. sen. 454, 455.
By the 6th section of the act of 3d March, 1797, (1 Statutes at
Large, by L. & B., p. 515, chap. 20,) writs of execution, upon any
judgment obtained for the use of the United States in one State, may
run and be executed in any other State, or in any of the territories
of the United States. Subpoenas for witnesses may run from one
district to any other, by act of March 2, 1793, (1 Statutes at Large,
by L. & B., p. 335, chap. 22, sec. 6.) And executions 'upon judgments
or decrees obtained in any of the district or circuit courts of the
United States, in any one State, which shall have been, or may
hereafter be, divided into two judicial districts, may run and be
executed in any part of such State;' act of 20th May, 1826, ( 4
Statutes at Large, by L. & B., p. 184, chap. 123.) So that the
question of jurisdiction was not involved in the case of Picquet v.
Swan; but only the sufficiency of the process by foreign attachment
against the absentee, not served personally with the process, to
entitle the plaintiff to judgment by default.
The case of Toland v. Sprague, 12 Peters, 300, cited by the counsel
of the accused, was not a case of jurisdiction once rightfully vested
and sought to be divested by matter subsequent; but a question
whether, according to the acts of Congress, a citizen of Pennsylvania
could commence a suit in the Circuit Court of the United States for
the Eastern District of Pennsylvania, by process of attachment of
property within the State, (as authorized by a law of the State,)
belonging to the absentee, who was a citizen of the State of
Massachusetts. The defendant appeared and pleaded to issue, having
moved to quash the process. The court below rendered judgment in chief
for the plaintiff for his demand. This court decided that the process
of attachment had issued improperly; but as the defendant had appeared
and pleaded to issue, this court said:-
[56 U.S. 467, 483]
'Now if the case were one of a want of jurisdiction in the
court, it would not, according to the well-established principles, be
competent for the parties by any act of theirs to give it. But that is
not the case. The court had jurisdiction over the parties, and the
matter in dispute; the objection was, that the party defendant not
being an inhabitant of Pennsylvania, nor found therein, personal
process could reach him; and that the process of attachment could only
be issued properly against a party under circumstances which subjected
him to process in personam. Now this was a personal privilege or
exemption which it was competent for the party to waive, . . . and
that appearing and pleading will produce that waiver.' 12 Peters, 330,
331. And thereupon the judgment was affirmed.
These cases do not shake the opinion in the case of Rhodes v.
Selin, 4 Wash. C. C. Rep. 725. The principle on which it stands, that
a jurisdiction once rightfully vested, is not divested by after
circumstances, but only by express transfer to some other tribunal, or
by express repeal, is sustained by the case of Morgan's heirs v.
Morgan, 2 Wheat. 297; Tyrell v. Roundtee, 7 Peters, 467, 468.
The conclusion in the case of Rhodes v. Selin, and which is here
maintained, is not a novelty or anomaly, as seems to be assumed in
behalf of the defendant; it is but a single instance of a general
doctrine of statute construction, which is this:
If part of a defined territory, having functions or duties
political, judicial, municipal, or other, be separated from it, either
by annexion to another, or by being converted into a new political,
judicial, municipal, or other entity, then the remaining part of the
territory, or the former public body, retains all its property,
powers, rights, and privileges, and remains subject to all its
obligations and duties, unless some express provisions to the contrary
be made by the act authorizing the separation.
The counsel for the accused relies upon the Constitution of the
United States as amended, for an argument against the jurisdiction of
the Circuit Court of Arkansas. The Constitution, in art. 3, sec. 2,
provides: 'The trial of all crimes, except in cases of impeachment,
shall be by jury; and such trial shall be held in the State, where the
said crimes shall have been committed; but when not committed within
any State, the trial shall be at such place or places as the Congress
may by law have directed.'
This provision authorized the act of Congress, which prescribed
that the trial of the crime charged in the indictment as committed in
the Indian country, out of the limits of any State, should be had in
the Circuit Court of Arkansas. The 6th article of the amendments to
the Constitution, that
[56 U.S. 467, 484] 'the accused shall enjoy the right to
a speedy and public trial, by an impartial jury of the State and
district wherein the crime shall have been committed, which district
shall have been previously ascertained by law,' does not conflict with
the law for defining the place and district for the trial of Dawson.
He committed the crime in no State. He was indicted within a district
defined and ascertained by law before the crime itself was committed;
therefore within the letter and within the spirit and meaning of the
Constitution, howsoever the words-'which district shall have been
previously ascertained by law'-may be construed to mean before the
crime was committed, or before the trial. The Constitution does not
intend that crimes committed by citizens of the United States on board
of our vessels on the high seas, or out of any State, or in the Indian
nations and tribes within the United States, should go unpunished.
This amendment of the Constitution applies only where the offence
has been committed in a State. Then the trial must be in that State,
and the district 'previously ascertained by law' must be within that
State. But where the crime is not committed in any State of this
Union, the trial may be wherever within the jurisdiction of the United
States the Congress shall by law direct.
Finally, it is insisted for the United States that the jurisdiction
vested rightfully in the Circuit Court of Arkansas, by the indictment
therein found; and as that court is in being, unrepealed, and
continuing in full power and activity as a Circuit Court of the United
States, that jurisdiction and cognizance to try the crime charged in
the indictment continues; that it is neither abrogated nor transferred
to any other tribunal by the said subsequent act of 1851. If the
legislature had intended to transfer the cognizance of pending cases,
civil or criminal, they would have used the express words and
enactments to that end, which they had employed in so many previous
like cases.
Mr. Justice NELSON delivered the opinion of the court.
The defendant was indicted, in the Circuit Court of the United
States for the District of Arkansas, for the alleged murder of one
Seaborn Hill, in the Indian country west of the State of Arkansas.
The defendant is a white man, and so was Hill, the deceased.
At a Circuit Court held at the city of Little Rock, on the 28th of
April, 1853, the indictment came on for trial before the judges of
that court; whereupon a motion was made, on behalf of the defendant,
to quash the indictment, for want of jurisdiction of the court to try
the same. And, upon the argument, the judges being divided in opinion,
[56 U.S. 467, 485]
the following question was certified to this court for its
decision.
1. Did the act of Congress entitled 'An act to divide the
District of Arkansas into two judicial districts,' approved the 3d of
March, 1851, by which the Western District of Arkansas was created,
take away the power and jurisdiction of the Circuit Court of the
United States for the Eastern District to try the indictment pending
against the prisoner, James L. Dawson, a white man, found in the
Circuit Court of the United States for the District of Arkansas, by a
grand jury impanelled on the 16th April, 1845, for feloniously killing
Seaborn Hill, a white man, on the 8th of July, 1844, in the country
belonging to the Creek nation of Indians west of Arkansas, and which
formed a part of the Indian country annexed to the judicial district
of Arkansas, by the act of Congress approved on the 17th of June,
1844, 'An act supplementary to the act entitled 'An act to regulate
trade and intercourse with Indian tribes, and to preserve peace on the
frontiers," passed 30th of June, 1834.
To state the question presented for our dedision in a more simple
form, it is this: At the time the State of Arkansas composed but one
judicial district, in which the federal courts were held, the Indian
country lying west of the State was annexed to it for the trial of
crimes committed therein by persons other than Indians. In this
condition of the jurisdiction of these courts, the crime in question
was committed in the Indian country, and the indictment found in the
Circuit Court, at the April term, 1845, while sitting at the city of
Little Rock, the place of holding the court.
Subsequent to this, the State was divided into two judicial
districts, the one called the Eastern, the other the Western District
of Arkansas. The Indian country was attached to and has since belonged
to the western district. The question presented for our decision is,
whether or not the Circuit Court for the Eastern District is competent
to try this indictment, since change in the arrangements of the
districts.
By the 24th section of act of Congress, June 30th, 1834, (4 Stat.
at Large, 733,) it was provided, that all that part of the Indian
country west of the Mississippi river, bounded north by the northern
boundary of lands assigned to the Osage tribe of Indians, west by the
Mexican possessions, south by Red river, and east by the west line of
the Territory of Arkansas, and State of Missouri, should be annexed to
the territorial government of Arkansas, for the sole purpose of
carrying the several provisions of the act into effect. And the 25th
section enacted, that so much of the laws of the United States as
provides for the punishment of crimes committed within any place
within [56 U.S. 467,
486] the sole and exclusive jurisdiction of the United
States, shall be in force in the Indian country, provided the same
shall not extend to crimes committed by one Indian against the person
or property of another Indian.
The act of Congress, June 7th, 1844, (5 Stat. at Large, 680,) which
was enacted after the Territory of Arkansas became a State, provided
that the courts of the United States for the District of the State of
Arkansas, should be vested with the same power and jurisdiction to
punish crimes committed within the Indian country designated in the
24th section of the act of 1834, and therein annexed to the Territory
of Arkansas, as were vested in the courts of the United States for
said territory before the same became a State; and that, for the sole
purpose of carrying the act into effect, all that Indian country
theretofore annexed by said 24th section to the said territory, should
be annexed to the State of Arkansas.
As we have already stated, the crime in question was committed in
this Indian country after it was annexed, for the purposes stated, to
the State of Arkansas; and the indictment was found in the Circuit
Court of the United States for the District of Arkansas, which, we
have seen, was coextensive with the State. And, if no change had taken
place in the arrangement of the district, before the trial, there
could, of course, have been no question as to the jurisdiction of the
court.
But by the act of Congress, 3d March, 1851, it was provided that
the counties of Benton and eight others enumerated, and all that part
of the Indian country annexed to the State of Arkansas for the
purposes stated, should constitute a new judicial district, to be
styled 'The Western District of Arkansas,' and the residue of said
State should be and remain a judicial district, to be styled 'The
Eastern District of Arkansas.'
The 2d section provides, that the judge of the District Court
should hold two terms of his curt in this western district in each
year at Van Buren, the county seat in Crawford county. And the third
confers upon him, in addition to the ordinary powers of a district
court, jurisdiction within the district, of all causes, civil or
criminal, except appeals and writs of error, which are cognizable
before a circuit court of the United States. The fourth provides for
the appointment of a district-attorney and marshal for the district,
and also for a clerk of the court.
It will be seen, on a careful perusal of this act, that it simply
erects a new judicial district out of nine of the western counties in
the State, together with the Indian country, and confers on the
district judge, besides the jurisdiction already possessed, circuit
court powers within the district, subject to the limitation as to
appeals and writs of error; leaving the powers and
[56 U.S. 467, 487]
jurisdiction of the circuit and district courts as they existed
in the remaining portion of the State, untouched. These remain and
continue within the district after the change, the same as before; the
only effect being to restrict the territory over which the
jurisdiction extends. Hence no provision is made as to the time or
place of holding the circuit or district courts in the district, or in
respect to the officers of the courts, such as district-attorney,
marshal, or clerk, or for organizing the courts for the despatch of
their business. These are all provided for under the old organization.
5 Stat. at Large, 50, 51, 176, 177, 178.
We do not, therefore, perceive any objection to the jurisdiction of
these courts over cases pending at the time the change took place,
civil and criminal, inasmuch as the erection of the new district was
not intended to affect it in respect to such cases, nor has it, in our
judgment, necessarily operated to de prive them of it.
It has been supposed that a provision in the sixth amendment of the
Constitution of the United States has a bearing upon this question,
which provides, that 'In all criminal prosecutions, the accused shall
enjoy the right to a speedy and public trial, by an impartial jury of
the State and district wherein the crime shall have been committed,
which district shall have been previously ascertained by law.' The
argument is, that, since the erection of the new district out of the
nine western counties in the State, together with the Indian country,
it is not competent for the Circuit Court, in view of this amendment,
to try the prisoners within the remaining portion of the old district,
inasmuch as that amendment requires the district within which the
offence is committed, and the trial is to be had, must be ascertained
and fixed previous to the commission of the offence.
But it will be seen from the words of this amendment, that it
applies only to the case of offences committed within the limits of a
State; and, whatever might be our conclusion if this offence had been
committed within the State of Arkansas, it is sufficient here to say,
so far as it respects the objection, that the offence was committed
out of its limit, and within the Indian country.
The language of the amendment is too particular and specific to
leave any doubt about it: 'The accused shall enjoy the right to a
speedy and public trial by an impartial jury of the State and district
wherein the crime shall be committed, which district shall have been
previously ascertained by law.'
The only regulation in the Constitution, as it resects crimes
committed out of the limits of a State, is to be found in the 3d art.,
sec. 2, of the Constitution, as follows: 'The trial of crimes, except
in cases of impeachment, shall be by jury, and such trial
[56 U.S. 467, 488]
shall be held in the State where the said crimes shall have
been committed; but when not committed within any State, the trial
shall be at such place or places as the Congress may, by law, have
directed.'
Accordingly, in the first crimes act, passed April 30, 1790, 8, (1
Statutes at Large, p. 114,) it was provided, that 'the trial of crimes
committed on the high seas, or in any place out of the jurisdiction of
any particular State, shall be in the district where the offender is
apprehended, or into which he may first be brought.'
A crime, therefore, committed against the laws of the United
States, out of the limits of a State, is not local, but may be tried
at such place as Congress shall designate by law.
This furnishes an answer to the argument against the jurisdiction
of the court, as it respects venue, trial in the county, and jury from
the vicinage, as well as in respect to the necessity of particular or
fixed districts before the offence.
These considerations have no application or bearing upon the
question.
In this case, by the annexation of the Indian country to the State
of Arkansas, in pursuance of the act of 1844, for the punishment of
crimes committed in that country, the place of indictment and trial
was in the Circuit Court of the United States for that State, in which
the indictment has been found, and was pending in 1851, when the
Western District was set off; and as that change did not affect the
jurisdiction of the court, as it respected pending cases, but remained
the same after the alteration of the district as before, it follows
that the trial of the indictment in this court will be at the place
and in the court as prescribed by law, which is all that is required
in the case of an offence committed out of the limits of a State.
We shall direct, therefore, an answer in the negative, to be
certified to the court below, to the first question sent up for our
decision, as we are of opinion the court possesses jurisdiction to
hear and give judgment on the indictment.
The second question sent up in the division of opinion is as
follows:
Can the District Court of the United States, for the Western
District of Arkansas, take jurisdiction of the case aforesaid, upon
the indictment aforesaid, so found, in the year 1845, in said Circuit
Court, for the District of Arkansas?
As our conclusion upon the first question supersedes the necessity
of passing upon the second, it will be unnecessary to examine it, and
shall, therefore, confine our answer and certificate to the court
below to the first. [56
U.S. 467, 489] Mr. Justice McLEAN dissented.
Mr. Justice McLEAN,
The facts and law of this case, as I understand them, have led me
to a different conclusion from that of a majority of the court. The
twenty- fourth section of the act of the 30th June, 1834, after making
various provisions, defining the limits of the Indian country, and
imposing penalties for several offences by white persons, provides,
'that for the sole purpose of carrying this act into effect, the
Indian country, bounded east by Arkansas and Missouri, west by Mexico,
north by the Osage country, and south by Red River, shall be, and
hereby is, annexed to the Territory of Arkansas.'
On the 8th of July, 1844, a murder was committed at the Creek
agency, in the Creek country, west of Arkansas, for which the grand
jury found a bill of indictment in the Circuit Court of Arkansas, at
April term, 1845.
By an act of March 3, 1851, it is provided, 'that from and after
the passage of this act, the counties of Benton, Washington, Crawford,
Scott, Polk, Franklin, Johnson, Madison, and Carroll, and all that
part of the Indian country lying within the present judicial district
of Arkansas, shall constitute a new judicial district, to be styled,
the Western District of Arkansas; and the residue of said State shall
be and remain a judicial district, to be styled, the Eastern District
of Arkansas.'
After the division of the district, Dawson, the defendant, was
arrested for the alleged murder; and the question, whether the Circuit
Court of the United States, sitting within the Eastern District, has
jurisdiction to try the case, has been referred to this court.
When the offence was committed, and the indictment was found, the
District of Arkansas included the State and the Indian country
described; but when the defendant was arrested, and the case was
called for trial, the district had been divided; and the question is
raised in the Eastern District, the murder having been committed in
the Western.
In the act dividing the district, Congress had power to provide
that all offences, committed in the district before the division,
should be tried in the Eastern District. But no such provision being
made, the question is, whether the jurisdiction may be exercised in
that district without it.
Since the division of the district, capital punishments have been
inflicted in the Western District for offences committed before the
division. This deprived the accused of no rights which they could
claim under the Constitution of the United States, or the laws of the
Union. The sixth article of the
[56 U.S. 467, 490] amendment to the
Constitution declares that, 'in all criminal prosecutions, the accused
shall enjoy the right to a speedy and public trial, by an impartial
jury of the State and district wherein the crime shall have been
committed, which district shall have been previously ascertained by
law.'
As the State and district are connected by the copulative
conjunction, in this provision, the case before us is not technically
within it. The crime is alleged to have been committed within the
Indian country, which the district includes, but it is not within the
State. But the case appears to me to be within the policy of the
provision. Nine counties of the State of Arkansas are within the
district, and from which the jury to try the defendant might be
summoned. This brings the case substantially within the above
provision. Had the place of the murder been within one of the above
counties, the constitutional provisions must have governed the case.
All the rights guaranteed by the Constitution would have been secured
to the criminal by a trial in the Western District; but those rights
are not realized by him on a trial in the Eastern District. And that
is made the place of trial because the alleged murder was not
committed within the State.
In the 2d section of the 3d article of the Constitution, it is
declared that 'the trials of all crimes, except in cases of
impeachment, shall be by jury; and such trial shall be held in the
State where the said crimes shall have been committed; but, when not
committed within any State, the trial shall be at such place or places
as the Congress may by law have directed.' The latter clause of this
provision covers the case now before us. The crime charged was not
committed within any State; but it was committed within a district,
within which such offences are to be tried, as 'directed by Congress.'
And there seems to me to be no authority to try such an offender in
any other district, or at any other place. The act of 1834 provides
that an offender, under the act, when arrested, should be sent for
trial to the district where jurisdiction may be exercised.
The punishments inflicted in the Western District of Arkansas, for
crimes committed before the division of the district, were in
accordance with the above provision of the Constitution and the
principles of the common law, both of which are opposed to a trial of
the same offences in the Eastern District. The tribunal is the same in
both districts, except the circuit judge may not be bound to attend
the Western District; but the Western District includes the place of
the crime which, by the laws of England and of this country, is the
criterion of jurisdiction in criminal cases. This is never departed
from, where the limits of the jurisdiction are prescribed.
[56 U.S. 467, 491]
On what ground can jurisdiction be exercised in the Eastern
District? Not, I presume, on the ground that the crime was committed
before the district was divided. If this be assumed and sustained, the
capital punishments which have been inflicted in the Western District,
for similar offences, have been without authority. The offenders have
been tried, and they have had, substantially, the benefits secured by
the Constitution. They have had a jury from the district, and as near
the vicinage as practicable. These privileges they would not have
realized had they been tried in the Eastern District. If tried in the
Eastern District, the jury must have been summoned from that district,
and not from the district in which the offence was committed. The
considerations in favor of the Western District, as the legal place of
trial, greatly outweigh, it seems to me, any that can arise in favor
of the Eastern District.
There is, however, a fact which may be supposed of great weight in
deciding the question; and that is, the indictment was found before
the division of the district. I will examine this. It is admitted the
jurisdiction was in the Circuit Court for the entire district, when
the indictment was found. This gave jurisdiction; but every step taken
in the cause, subsequent to the findings of the bill, is as much the
exercise of jurisdiction as the finding of the bill.
The establishment of the Western District, in effect, repealed the
jurisdiction of the Eastern District, as to causes of action arising
in the Western District, as fully as if the law had declared, 'no
jurisdiction shall hereafter be taken in any case, civil or criminal,
which is of a local character, and arises in the Western District.
Offences committed in that district are made local by the acts of
Congress. This is not a case where, if jurisdiction once attaches, the
court may finally determine the matter. There seems to me to be no
reason for such a rule in a criminal case, especially when it is
opposed to the policy of the Constitution and to the principles of
common law.
A case lately decided in this court may have some bearing on this
question. Under the fugitive slave law of 1793, certain penalties were
inflicted for aiding a fugitive from labor to escape. A number of
actions were brought in several of the States-in Ohio, Indiana, and
Michigan-for the recovery of this penalty; but it was set up in
defence, that this penalty was repealed by repugnant provisions in the
law of 1850, on the same subject, and this court so held. The actions
which had been pending for years were stricken from the docket. But it
may be said the repeal, in the case stated, operated on the right of
action. This is admitted. And so, it may be said, the Western District
was repugnant to the Eastern, so far as causes of
[56 U.S. 467, 492]
local actions arise in the Western District; and is not this
repugnancy as fatal to the trial, as the repeal of the penalty in the
act of 1793?
All this difficulty arises from an omission of Congress to make, in
the law dividing the district, the necessary provision; and it appears
to me that we have no power, by construction or otherwise, to supply
the omission. This could not be done in an action of ejectment. A writ
of possession, in such a case, could not be issued to the Western
District on a judgment entered in the Eastern. And if such a
jurisdiction could not be sustained in a civil action, much less could
it be sustained in a criminal case.
If a person guilty of a crime in the Indian country, before the
division, could not be indicted and tried in the Eastern District, it
follows, that the fact of the crime having been committed in the
Indian country, can afford no ground of jurisdiction in the present
case. It must rest alone, then, it would seem, for jurisdiction, on
the ground that, the indictment having been found in the Eastern
District, the same jurisdiction may try the defendants, and, if found
guilty, sentence them to be executed. This view must overcome the
locality of the crime, and the right which the defendants may claim,
to have a jury as near the vicinage as practicable, at least a jury
from the district where the crime was committed. These appear to me to
be objections entitled to great consideration. A jurisdiction in so
important a case should not be maintained under reasonable doubts of
its legality.
The cases referred to in the argument to retain the jurisdiction,
do not, as it appears to me, overcome the objections. Numerous
instances are cited where the territory of a judicial district has
been changed, provision being made in the act, that the jurisdiction
should be continued where suits had been commenced. This shows the
necessity of such a provision, and is an argument against the exercise
of the jurisdiction, where no provision has been made. And in those
cases, like the present, where a district has been changed, without
any provision, as to jurisdiction, there is no exercise of it shown,
in a criminal case, especially where the punishment is death.
Where jurisdiction attaches from the citizenship of the parties, a
change of residence does not affect the jurisdiction. The case of
Tyrell v. Roundtree, 7 Peters, 464, seems to have no bearing upon this
question. That action was commenced by an attachment, which was laid
upon the land before the division of the county; and this court said,
the land remained in the custody of the officer subject to the
judgment of the court. An interest was vested in him for the purposes
of that judgment. [56
U.S. 467, 493] The judgment was not a general lien on it,
but was a specific appropriation of the property itself. And they say
the division of the county could not divest this vested interest, or
deprive the officer of the power to finish a process, which was
rightly begun.
There may be cases where counties have been divided after
jurisdiction was taken in a local action, and the suit has been
carried into judgment, but such cases afford no authority in the
present case.
The case relied upon as in point in 4 Washington C. C. Rep. 725,
the court said, 'at the first or second session of this court, which
succeeded the passage of the act of 1824, which added this and other
counties to the western judicial district, we were called upon to
decide, whether the present action, together with some others, then on
our docket for trial, together with the papers belonging to them,
should be sent to the Western District or retained here. After hearing
counsel on the question, the opinion of the court was, that those
cases were not embraced either by the word or by the obvious intention
and policy of the act.'
This does not appear to be a well-considered case. The counties
were annexed to another jurisdiction, and yet the court speak of 'the
obvious intention and policy of the act,' and on that ground entertain
jurisdiction over cases pending in the former district. This was right
in regard to transitory actions, but not where the actions were of a
local character.
Order.
This cause came on to be heard on the transcript of the record from
the Circuit Court of the United States, for the Eastern District of
Arkansas, and on the points or questions, on which the judges of the
said Circuit Court were opposed in opinion, and which were certified
to this court for its opinion, agreeably to the act of Congress, in
such case made and provided, and was argued by counsel. On
consideration whereof, it is the opinion of this court, that the act
of Congress entitled 'An act to divide the District of Arkansas into
two judicial districts,' approved the third day of March, in the year
of our Lord one thousand eight hundred and fifty-one, whereby the
Western District of Arkansas was created and defined, did not take
away the power and jurisdiction of the Circuit Court of the United
States for the Eastern District of Arkansas, so that it can proceed to
hear, try, and determine a prosecution for murder, pending against the
prisoner, James L. Dawson, a white man and not an Indian, upon an
indictment, found, presented, and returned
[56 U.S. 467, 494]
into the Circuit Court of the United States, for the district
of Arkansas, by the grand jury impanelled for that district, upon the
16th day of April, in the year of our Lord one thousand eight hundred
and forty-five, against said James L. Dawson, a white man, for the
felonious killing of Seaborn Hill, another white man and not an
Indian, on the eighth day of July, A. D. 1844, in that county,
belonging to the Creek nation of Indians, west of Arkansas, and which
formed a part of the Indian country annexed to the judicial district
of Arkansas by the act of Congress, approved the seventeenth day of
June, A. D. 1844, entitled 'An act supplementary to the act entitled
'An act to regulate trade and intercourse with the Indian tribes, and
to preserve peace on the frontiers, passed thirtieth June, one
thousand eight hundred and thirty-four," in which cause, so pending,
no trial has yet been had. And that this answer to the first question
supersedes the necessity of any answer to the second question.
Whereupon it is now here ordered and adjudged by this court, that
it be so certified to the said Circuit Court.
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