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Cases citing this case: Supreme Court
Cases citing this case: Circuit Courts
U.S. Supreme Court
MAXWELL v. DOW, 176 U.S. 581 (1900)
176 U.S. 581
CHARLES L. MAXWELL, Plff. in Err.,
v.
GEORGE N. DOW, as Warden of the Utah State Prison.
No. 384.
Argued December 4, 1899.
Decided February 26, 1900.
[176 U.S. 581, 582]
Mr. J. W. N. Whitecotton for plaintiff in error.
Messrs. Alexander C. Bishop and William A. Lee for defendant in
error.
Mr. Justice Peckham delivered the opinion of the court:
On the 27th of June, 1898, an information was filed against the
plaintiff in error by the prosecuting attorney of the county, in a
state court of the state of Utah, charging him with the crime of
robbery committed within the county in May, 1898. In September, 1898,
he was tried before a jury composed of but eight jurors, and convicted
and sentenced to imprisonment in the state prison for eighteen years,
and since that time has been confined in prison, undergoing the
sentence of the state court.
In May, 1899, he applied to the supreme court of the state for a
writ of habeas corpus, and alleged in his sworn petition that he was a
natural- born citizen of the United States, and that his imprisonment
was unlawful because he was prosecuted under an information instead of
by indictment by a grand jury, and was tried by a jury composed of
eight, instead of twelve jurors. He specially set up and claimed (1)
that to prosecute him by information abridged his privileges and
immunities as a citizen of the United States, under Article 5 of the
Amendments to the Constitution of the United States, and also violated
section 1 of Article 14 of those Amendments; (2) that a trial by jury
of only eight persons abridged his privileges and immunities as a
citizen of the United States, under Article 6, and also violated
section 1 of Article 14 of such Amendments; (3) that a trial by such a
jury and his subsequent imprisonment by reason of the verdict of that
jury deprived him of his liberty without due process of law, in
violation of section 1 of Article 14, which provides that no state
shall deprive any person of life, liberty, or property without due
process of law. [176
U.S. 581, 583] The supreme court of the state, after a
hearing of the case, denied the petition for a writ, and remanded the
prisoner to the custody of the keeper of the state prison to undergo
the remainder of his sentence; and he then sued out a writ of error
and brought the case here.
The questions to be determined in this court are (1) as to the
validity, with reference to the Federal Constitution, of the
proceeding against the plaintiff in error on an information instead of
by an indictment by a grand jury; and (2) the validity of the trial of
the plaintiff in error by a jury composed of eight instead of twelve
jurors.
We think the various questions raised by the plaintiff in error
have in substance, though not all in terms, been decided by this court
in the cases to which attention will be called. The principles which
have been announced in those cases clearly prove the validity of the
clauses in the Constitution of Utah which are herein attacked as in
violation of the Constitution of the United States. It will therefore
be necessary in this case to do but little else than call attention to
the former decisions of this court, and thereby furnish a conclusive
answer to the contentions of plaintiff in error.
The proceeding by information, and also the trial by a jury
composed of eight jurors, were both provided for by the state
Constitution.
Section 13, Article 1, of the Constitution of Utah provides:
'Offenses heretofore required to be prosecuted by indictment
shall be prosecuted by information after examination and commitment
by a magistrate, unless the examination be waived by the accused
with the consent of the state, or by indictment, with or without
such examination and commitment. The grand jury shall consist of
seven persons, five of whom must concur to find an indictment; but
no grand jury shall be drawn or summoned unless in the opinion of
the judge of the district public interest demands it.'
Section 10, article 1, of that Constitution is as follows:
'In capital cases the right of trial by jury shall remain
inviolate. In courts of general jurisdiction, except in capital
cases, a jury shall consist of eight jurors. In courts of inferior
[176 U.S. 581, 584]
jurisdiction a jury shall consist of four jurors. In
criminal cases the verdict shall be unanimous. In civil cases three
fourths of the jurors may find a verdict. A jury in civil cases
shall be waived unless demanded.'
The objection that the proceeding by information does not amount to
due process of law has been heretofore overruled, and must be regarded
as settled by the case of Hurtado v. California,
110 U.S. 516 , 28 L. ed. 232, 4 Sup. Ct. Rep. 111, 292. The case
has since been frequently approved. Hallinger v. Davis,
146 U.S. 314, 322 , 36 S. L. ed. 986, 991, 13 Sup. Ct. Rep. 105;
McNulty v. California,
149 U.S. 645 , 37 L. ed. 882, 13 Sup. Ct. Rep. 959; Hodgson v.
Vermont,
168 U.S. 262, 272 , 42 S. L. ed. 461, 464, 18 Sup. Ct. Rep. 80;
Holden v. Hardy,
169 U.S. 366, 384 , 42 S. L. ed. 780, 18 Sup. Ct. Rep. 383; Brown
v. New Jersey,
175 U.S. 172, 176 , 20 S. Sup. Ct. Rep. 77, 44 L. ed. --; Bolln v.
Nebraska,
176 U.S. 83 , 20 Sup. Ct. Rep. 287, 44 L. ed. --.
But the plaintiff in error contends that the Hurtado Case did not
decide the question whether the state law violated that clause in the
Fourteenth Amendment which provides that no state shall make or
enforce any law which shall abridge the privileges or immunities of
citizens of the United States. Although the opinion is mainly devoted
to an inquiry whether the California law was a violation of the 'due
process clause' of the above-mentioned amendment, yet the matter in
issue in the case was as to the validity of the state law, and the
court held it valid. It was alleged by the counsel for the plaintiff
in error, before the court which passed sentence, that the proceeding
was in conflict with the Fifth and the Fourteenth Amendments, and
those grounds were before this court. The Fifth Amendment was referred
to in the opinion delivered in this court, and it was held not to have
been violated by the state law, although that amendment provides for
an indictment by a grand jury. This decision could not have been
arrived at if a citizen of the United States were entitled, by virtue
of that clause of the Fourteenth Amendment relating to the privileges
and immunities of citizens of the United States, to claim in a state
court that he could not be prosecuted for an infamous crime unless
upon an indictment by a grand jury. In a Federal court no person can
be held to answer for a capital or otherwise infamous crime unless by
indictment by a grand jury, with the exceptions stated in the
[176 U.S. 581, 585]
Fifth Amendment. Yet this amendment was held in the Hurtado
Case not to apply to a prosecution for murder in a state court
pursuant to a state law. The claim was made in the case (and referred
to in the opinion) that the adoption of the Fourteenth Amendment
provided an additional security to the individual against oppression
by the states themselves, and limited their powers to the same extent
as the amendments theretofore adopted had limited the powers of the
Federal government. By holding that the conviction upon an information
was valid, the court necessarily held that an indictment was not
necessary; that exemption from trial for an infamous crime, excepting
under an indictment, was not one of those privileges or immunities of
a citizen of the United States which a state was prohibited from
abridging. The whole case was probably regarded as involved in the
question as to due process of law. The particular objection founded
upon the privileges and immunities of citizens of the United States is
now taken and insisted upon in this case.
Under these circumstances it may not be improper to inquire as to
the validity of a conviction in a state court, for an infamous crime,
upon an information filed by the proper officer under the authority of
the Constitution and laws of the state wherein the crime was committed
and the conviction took place; confining the inquiry to the question
of the effect of the provision in the Fourteenth Amendment prohibiting
the states from making or enforcing any law which abridges the
privileges or immunities of citizens of the United States. To the
other objection, that a conviction upon an information deprives a
person of his liberty without due process of law, the Hurtado Case is,
as we have said, a complete and conclusive answer.
The inquiry may be pursued in connection with that in regard to the
validity of the provision in the state Constitution for a trial before
a jury to be composed of but eight jurors in criminal cases which are
not capital. One of the objections to this provision is that its
enforcement has abridged the privileges and immunities of the
plaintiff in error as a citizen of the United States; the other
objection being that a
[176 U.S. 581, 586] conviction thus obtained has resulted
in depriving the plaintiff in error of his liberty without due process
of law. Postponing an inquiry in regard to this last objection until
we have examined the other, we proceed to inquire, What are the
privileges and immunities of a citizen of the United States which no
state can abridge? Do they include the right to be exempt from trial,
for an infamous crime, in a state court and under state authority
except upon presentment by a grand jury? And do they also include the
right in all criminal prosecutions in a state court to be tried by a
jury composed of twelve jurors?
That a jury composed, as at common law, of twelve jurors was
intended by the Sixth Amendment to the Federal Constitution, there can
be no doubt. Thompson v. Utah,
170 U.S. 343, 349 , 42 S. L. ed. 1061, 18 Sup. Ct. Rep. 620. And
as the right of trial by jury in certain suits at common law is
preserved by the Seventh Amendment, such a trial implies that there
shall be an unanimous verdict of twelve jurors in all Federal courts
where a jury trial is held. American Pub. Co. v. Fisher,
166 U.S. 464 , 41 L. ed. 1079, 17 Sup. Ct. Rep. 618; Springville
v. Thomas,
166 U.S. 707 , 41 L. ed. 1172, 17 Sup. Ct. Rep. 816.
It would seem to be quite plain that the provision in the Utah
Constitution for a jury of eight jurors in all state criminal trials,
for other than capital offenses, violates the Sixth Amendment,
provided that amendment is now to be construed as applicable to
criminal prosecutions of citizens of the United States in state
courts.
It is conceded that there are certain privileges or immunities
possessed by a citizen of the United States, because of his
citizenship, and that they cannot be abridged by any action of the
states. In order to limit the powers which it was feared might be
claimed or exercised by the Federal government, under the provisions
of the Constitution as it was when adopted, the first ten amendments
to that instrument were proposed to the legislatures of the several
states by the first Congress on the 25th of September, 1789. They were
intended as restraints and limitations upon the powers of the general
government, and were not intended to and did not have any effect upon
the powers of the respective states. This has
[176 U.S. 581, 587]
been many times decided. The cases herewith cited are to that
effect, and they cite many others which decide the same matter. Spies
v. Illinois,
123 U.S. 131, 166 , 31 S. L. ed. 80, 86, 8 Sup. Ct. Rep. 21;
Holden v. Hardy,
169 U.S. 366, 382 , 42 S. L. ed. 780, 787, 18 Sup. Ct. Rep. 383;
Brown v. New Jersey,
175 U.S. 172, 174 , 20 S. Sup. Ct. Rep. 77, 44 L. ed. --.
It is claimed, however, that since the adoption of the Fourteenth
Amendment the effect of the former amendments has been thereby changed
and greatly enlarged. It is now urged in substance that all the
provisions contained in the first ten amendments, so far as they
secure and recognize the fundamental rights of the individual as
against the exercise of Federal power, are by virtue of this amendment
to be regarded as privileges or immunities of a citizen of the United
States, and therefore the states cannot provide for any procedure in
state courts which could not be followed in a Federal court because of
the limitations contained in those amendments. This was also the
contention made upon the argument in the Spies Case,
123 U.S. 151 , 31 L. ed. 80, 8 Sup. Ct. Rep. 21; but in the
opinion of the court therein, which was delivered by Mr. Chief Justice
Waite, the question was not decided because it was held that the case
did not require its decision.
In the Slaughter-House Cases, 16 Wall. 36, 21 L. ed. 394, the
subject of the privileges or immunities of citizens of the United
States, as distinguished from those of a particular state, was treated
by Mr. Justice Miller in delivering the opinion of the court. He
stated that the argument in favor of the plaintiffs, claiming that the
ordinance of the city of New Orleans was invalid, rested wholly on the
assumption that the citizenship is the same and the privileges and
immunities guaranteed by the Fourteenth Amendment are the same as to
citizens of the United States and citizens of the several states. This
he showed to be not well founded; that there was a citizenship of the
United States and a citizenship of the states, which were distinct
from each other, depending upon different characteristics and
circumstances in the individual; that it was only privileges and
immunities of the citizen of the United States that were placed by the
amendment under the protection of the Federal Constitution, and that
the privileges and immunities of a citizen of a state, whatever they
might be, were not [176
U.S. 581, 588] intended to have any additional protection
by the paragraph in question, but they must rest for their security
and protection where they have heretofore rested.
He then proceeded to inquire as to the meaning of the words
'privileges and immunities' as used in the amendment, and said that
the first occurrence of the phrase in our constitutional history is
found to be in the fourth article of the old confederation, in which
it was declared 'that the better to secure and perpetuate mutual
friendship and intercourse among the people of the different states in
this union the free inhabitants of each of these states, paupers,
vagabonds, and fugitives from justice excepted, shall be entitled to
all the privileges and immunities of free citizens in the several
states; and the people of each state shall have free ingress and
egress to and from any other state, and shall enjoy therein all the
privileges of trade and commerce, subject to the same duties,
impositions, and restrictions as the inhabitants thereof
respectively.' A provision corresponding to this he found in the
Constitution of the United States in section 2 of the Fourth Article,
wherein it is provided that 'the citizens of each state shall be
entitled to all the privileges and immunities of citizens of the
several states.' What those privileges were is not defined in the
Constitution, but the justice said there could be but little question
that the purpose of both those provisions was the same, and that the
privileges and immunities intended were the same in each. He then
referred to the case of Corfield v. Coryell, decided by Mr. Justice
Washington in the circuit court for the district of Pennsylvania, in
1823 (4 Wash. C. C. 371, Fed. Cas. No. 3,230), where the question of
the meaning of this clause in the Constitution was raised. Answering
the question, what were the privileges and immunities of citizens of
the several states, Mr. Justice Washington said in that case:
'We feel no hesitation in confining these expressions to those
privileges and immunities which are in their nature fundamental;
which belong of right to the citizens of all free governments, and
which have at all times been enjoyed by the citizens of the several
states which compose this Union from the time of their becoming
free, independent, and sovereign.
[176 U.S. 581, 589] What these
fundamental principles are it would perhaps be more tedious than
difficult to enumerate. They may, however, be all comprehended under
the following general heads: Protection by the government, the
enjoyment of life and liberty with the right to acquire and possess
property of every kind, and to pursue and obtain happiness and
safety, subject, nevertheless, to such restraints as the government
may prescribe for the general good of the whole.'
Having shown that prior to the Fourteenth Amendment the legislation
under review would have been regarded as relating to the privileges or
immunities of citizens of the state, with which the United States had
no concern, Justice Miller continued:
'It would be the vainest show of learning to attempt to prove by
citations of authority, that up to the adoption of the recent
amendments no claim or pretense was set up that those rights
depended on the Federal government for their existence or
protection, beyond the very few express limitations which the
Federal Constitution imposed up on the states-such, for instance, as
the prohibition against ex post facto laws, bills of attainder, and
laws impairing the obligation of contracts. But with the exception
of these and a few other restrictions the entire domain of the
privileges and immunities of citizens of the states, as above
defined, lay within the constitutional and legislative power of the
states, and without that of the Federal government. Was it the
purpose of the Fourteenth Amendment, by the simple declaration that
no state should make or enforce any law which shall abridge the
privileges and immunities of citizens of the United States, to
transfer the security and protection of all the civil rights, which
we have mentioned, from the states to the Federal government? And
where it is declared that Congress shall have the power to enforce
that article, was it intended to bring within the power of Congress
the entire domain of civil rights heretofore belonging exclusively
to the states?
'All this and more must follow, if the proposition of the
plaintiffs in error be sound. For not only are these rights subject
to the control of Congress whenever in its discretion any
[176 U.S. 581, 590]
of them are supposed to be abridged by state
legislation, but that body may also pass laws in advance, limiting
and restricting the exercise of legislative power by the states, in
their most ordinary and usual functions, as in its judgment it may
think proper on all such subjects. And, still further, such a
construction, followed by the reversal of the judgments of the
supreme court of Louisiana in these cases, would constitute this
court a perpetual censor upon all legislation of the states, on the
civil rights of their own citizens, with authority to nullify such
as it did not approve as consistent with those rights as they
existed at the time of the adoption of this amendment. The argument,
we admit, is not always the most conclusive which is drawn from the
consequences urged against the adoption of a particular construction
of an instrument. But when, as in the case before us, these
consequences are so serious, so far-reaching and pervading, so great
a departure from the structure and spirit of our institutions; when
the effect is to fetter and degrade the state governments by
subjecting them to the control of Congress in the exercise of powers
heretofore universally conceded to them of the most ordinary and
fundamental character; when, in fact, it radically changes the whole
theory of the relations of the state and Federal governments to each
other and of both these governments to the people,-the argument has
a force that is irresistible in the absence of language which
expresses such a purpose too clearly to admit of doubt. We are
convinced that no such results were intended by the Congress which
proposed these amendments, nor by the legislatures of the states
which ratified them.'
If the rights granted by the Louisiana legislature did not infringe
upon the privileges or immunities of citizens of the United States,
the question arose as to what such privileges were, and in enumerating
some of them, without assuming to state them all, it was said that a
citizen of the United States, as such, had the right to come to the
seat of government to assert claims or transact business, to seek the
protection of the government or to share its offices; he had the right
of free access to its seaports, its various offices throughout the
country, and to the courts of justice in the several states; to de-
[176 U.S. 581, 591]
mand the care and protection of the general government over
his life, liberty, and property when on the high seas or within the
jurisdiction of a foreign government; the right, with others, to
peaceably assemble and petition for a redress of grievances; the right
to the writ of habeas corpus, and to use the navigable waters of the
United States, however they may penetrate the territory of the several
states; also all rights secured to our citizens by treaties with
foreign nations; the right to become citizens of any state in the
Union by a bona fide residence therein, with the same rights as other
citizens of that state; and the rights secured to him by the
Thirteenth and Fifteenth. Amendments to the Constitution. A right,
such as is claimed here, was not mentioned, and we may suppose it was
regarded as pertaining to the state, and not covered by the amendment.
Other objections to the judgment were fully examined, and the
result was reached that the legislation of the state of Louisiana
complained of violated no provision of the Constitution of the United
States.
We have made this extended reference to the case because of its
great importance, the thoroughness of the treatment of the subject,
and the great ability displayed by the author of the opinion. Although
his suggestion that only discrimination by a state against the negroes
as a class or on account of their race was covered by the amendment as
to the equal protection of the laws has not been affirmed by the later
cases, yet it was but the expression of his belief as to want would be
the decision of the court when a case came before it involving that
point. The opinion upon the matters actually involved and maintained
by the judgment in the case has never been doubted or overruled by any
judgment of this court. It remains one of the leading cases upon the
subject of that portion of the Fourteenth Amendment of which it
treats.
The definition of the words 'privileges and immunities,' as given
by Mr. Justice Washington, was adopted in substance in Paul v.
Virginia, 8 Wall. 180, 19 L. ed. 360, and in Ward v. Maryland, 12
Wall. 430, 20 L. ed. 453. These rights, it is said in the
Slaughter-House Cases, have always been held to be the class of
[176 U.S. 581, 592]
rights which the state governments were created to establish
and secure.
In the same volume as the Slaughter-House Cases is that of Bradwell
v. Illinois, 16 Wall. 130, 21 L. ed. 442, where it is held that the
right to practise law in the courts of a state is not a privilege or
immunity of a citizen of the United States, within the meaning of the
Fourteenth Amendment. And in Minor v. Happersett, 21 Wall. 162, 22 L.
ed. 627, it was held that the right of suffrage was not necessarily
one of the privileges or immunities of citizenship before the adoption
of the Fourteenth Amendment, and although a woman was in one sense a
citizen of the United States yet she did not obtain the right of
suffrage by the adoption of that amendment. The right to vote is a
most important one in our form of government, yet it is not given by
the amendment.
In speaking of the meaning of the phrase 'privileges and immunities
of citizens of the several states,' under section 2d, article fourth,
of the Constitution, it was said by the present Chief Justice, in Cole
v. Cunningham,
133 U.S. 107 , 33 L. ed. 538, 10 Sup. Ct. Rep. 269, that the
intention was 'to confer on the citizens of the several states a
general citizenship, and to communicate all the privileges and
immunities which the citizens of the same state would be entitled to
under the like circumstances, and this includes the right to institute
actions.'
And in Blake v. McClung,
172 U.S. 239, 248 , 43 S. L. ed. 432, 19 Sup. Ct. Rep. 165,
various cases are cited regarding the meaning of the words 'privileges
and immunities,' under the Fourth Article of the Constitution, in not
one of which is there any mention made of the right claimed in this
case as one of the privileges or immunities of citizens in the several
states.
These cases show the meaning which the courts have attached to the
expression, as used in the Fourth Article of the Constitution, and the
argument is not labored which gives the same meaning to it when used
in the Fourteenth Amendment.
That the primary reason for that amendment was to secure the full
enjoyment of liberty to the colored race is not denied; yet it is not
restricted to that purpose, and it applies to every-
[176 U.S. 581, 593]
one, white or black, that comes within its provisions. But,
as said in the Slaughter-House Cases, the protection of the citizen in
his rights as a citizen of the state still remains with the state.
This principle is again announced in the decision in United States v.
Cruikshank,
92 U.S. 542 , 23 L. ed. 588, wherein it is said that sovereignty,
for the protection of the rights of life and personal liberty within
the respective states, rests alone with the states. But if all these
rights are included in the phrase 'privileges and immunities' of
citizens of the United States, which the states by reason of the
Fourteenth Amendment cannot in any manner abridge, then the
sovereignty of the state in regard to them has been entirely
destroyed, and the Slaughter-House Cases and United States v.
Cruikshank are all wrong, and should be overruled.
It was said in Minor v. Happersett, 21 Wall. 162, 22 L. ed. 627,
that the amendment did not add to the privileges and immunities of a
citizen; it simply furnished an additional guaranty for the protection
of such as he already had. And in Re Kemmler,
136 U.S. 436, 448 , 34 S. L. ed. 519, 524, 10 Sup. Ct. Rep. 930,
it was stated by the present Chief Justice that--
'The Fourteenth Amendment did not radically change the whole
theory of the relations of the state and Federal governments to each
other, and of both governments to the people. The same person may be
at the same time a citizen of the United States and a citizen of a
state. Protection to life, liberty, and property rests primarily
with the states, and the amendment furnishes an additional guaranty
against any encroachment by the states upon those fundamental rights
which belong to citizenship, and which the state governments were
created to secure. The privileges and immunities of citizens of the
United States, as distinguished from the privileges and immunities
of citizens of the states, are indeed protected by it; but those are
privileges and immunities arising out of the nature and essential
character of the national government, and granted or secured by the
Constitution of the United States. United States v. Cruikshank,
92 U.S. 542 , 23 L. ed. 588; Slaughter-House Cases, 16 Wall. 36,
21 L. ed. 394.'
In Cooley's Constitutional Limitations, 4th ed. p. 497, marg. page
397, the author says.
[176 U.S. 581, 594] 'Although the precise meaning of
'privileges and immunities' is not very definitely settled as yet, it
appears to be conceded that the Constitution secures in each state to
the citizens of all other states the right to remove to and carry on
business therein; the right by the usual modes to acquire and hold
property, and to protect and defend the same in the law; the right to
the usual remedles for the collection of debts and the enforcement of
other personal rights, and the right to be exempt, in property and
person, from taxes or burdens which the property or persons of
citizens of the same state are not subject to.'
There is no intimation here that among the privileges or immunities
of a citizen of the United States are the right of trial by jury in a
state court for a state offense, and the right to be exempt from any
trial for an infamous crime, unless upon presentment by a grand jury.
And yet if these were such privileges and immunities, they would be
among the first that would occur to anyone when enumerating or
defining them. Nor would these rights come under the description given
by the Chief Justice in the Kemmler Case,
136 U.S. 436, 448 , 34 S. L. ed. 519, 524, 10 Sup. Ct. Rep. 930.
Such privileges or immunities do not arise out of the nature or
essential character of the national government.
In Walker v. Sauvinet,
92 U.S. 90 , 23 L. ed. 678, it was held that a trial by jury in
suits at common law in the state courts was not a privilege or
immunity belonging to a person as a citizen of the United States, and
protected, therefore, by the Fourteenth Amendment. The action was
tried without a jury by virtue of an act of the legislature of the
state of Louisiana. The plaintiff in error objected to such a trial,
alleging that he had a constitutional right to a trial by jury, and
that the statute was void to the extent that it deprived him of that
right. The objection was overruled. Mr. Chief Justice Waite, in
delivering the opinion of the court, said:
'By article 7 of the Amendments it is provided that 'in suits at
common law, where the value in controversy shall exceed twenty
dollars, the right of trial by jury shall be preserved.' This, as
has been many times decided, relates only to trials in the courts of
the United States. Edwards v. Elliott, 21 Wall.
[176 U.S. 581, 595]
557, 22 L. ed. 492. The states, so far as this
amendment is concerned, are left to regulate trials in their own
courts in their own way. A trial by jury in suits at common law
pending in the state courts is not therefore a privilege or immunity
of national citizenship, which the states are forbidden by the
Fourteenth Amendment to abridge. A state cannot deprive a person of
his property without due process of law; but this does not
necessarily imply that all trials in the state courts affecting the
property of persons must be by jury. This requirement of the
Constitution is met if the trial is had according to the settled
course of judicial proceedings. (Den ex dem. Murray v. Hoboken Land
& Improv. Co. 18 How. 280, 15 L. ed. 372.) Due process of law is
process due according to the law of the land. This process in the
states is regulated by the law of the state. Our power over that law
is only to determine whether it is in conflict with the supreme law
of the land,-that is to say, with the Constitution and laws of the
United States made in pursuance thereof,-or with any treaty made
under the authority of the United States.'
This case shows that the Fourteenth Amendment in forbidding a state
to abridge the privileges or immunities of citizens of the United
States does not include among them the right of trial by jury in a
civil case, in a state court, although the right to such a trial in
the Federal courts is specially secured to all persons in the cases
mentioned in the Seventh Amendment.
Is any one of the rights secured to the individual by the Fifth or
by the Sixth Amendment any more a privilege or immunity of a citizen
of the United States than are those secured by the Seventh? In none
are they privileges or immunities granted and belonging to the
individual as a citizen of the United States, but they are secured to
all persons as against the Federal government, entirely irrespective
of such citizenship. As the individual does not enjoy them as a
privilege of citizenship of the United States, therefore, when the
Fourteenth Amendment prohibits the abridgment by the states of those
privileges or immunities which he enjoys as such citizen, it is not
correct or reasonable to say that it covers and extends to
[176 U.S. 581, 596]
certain rights which he does not enjoy by reason of his
citizenship, but simply because those rights exist in favor of all
individuals as against Federal governmental powers. The nature or
character of the right of trial by jury is the same in a criminal
prosecution as in a civil action, and in neither case does it spring
from nor is it founded upon the citizenship of the individual as a
citizen of the United States, and if not, then it cannot be said that
in either case it is a privilege or immunity which alone belongs to
him as such citizen.
So it was held in the oyster planting case (McCready v. Virginia,
94 U.S. 391 , 24 L. ed. 248), that the right which the people of
that state acquired to appropriate its tide waters and the beds
therein for taking and cultivating fish was but a regulation of the
use, by the people, of their common property, and the right thus
acquired did not come from their citizenship alone, but from their
citizenship and property combined. It was therefore a property right,
and not a mere privilege or immunity of citizenship, and for that
reason the citizen of one state was not invested by the Constitution
of the United States with any interest in the common property of the
citizen of another state.
This was a decision under another section of the Constitution (
section 2d of Article Fourth) from the one under discussion, and it
gives to the citizens of each state all privileges and immunities of
citizens of the several states; but it is cited for the purpose of
showing that where the privilege or immunity does not rest alone upon
citizenship a citizen of another state does not participate therein.
In this case the privilege or immunity claimed does not rest upon
the individual by virtue of his national citizenship, and hence is not
protected by a clause which simply prohibits the abridgment of the
privileges or immunites of citizens of the United States. Those are
not distinctly privileges or immunities of such citizenship, where
everyone has the same as against the Federal government, whether
citizen or not.
The Fourteenth Amendment, it must be remembered, did not add to
those privileges or immunities. The Sauvinet Case is an authority in
favor of the contention that the amendment
[176 U.S. 581, 597]
does not preclude the states by their constitutions and laws
from altering the rule as to indictment by a grand jury, or as to the
number of jurors necessary to compose a petit jury in a criminal case
not capital.
The same reasoning is applicable to the case of Kennard v.
Louisiana ex rel. Morgan,
92 U.S. 480 , L. ed. 478, although that case was decided with
special reference to the 'due process of law' clause.
In Re Kemmler,
136 U.S. 436, 448 , 34 S. L. ed. 519, 524, 10 Sup. Ct. Rep. 930,
it was stated that it was not contended and could not be that the
Eighth Amendment to the Federal Constitution was intended to apply to
the states. This was said long after the adoption of the Fourteenth
Amendment, and also subsequent to the making of the claim that by its
adoption the limitations of the preceding amendments had been altered
and enlarged so as in effect to make them applicable to proceedings in
the state courts.
In Presser v. Illinois,
116 U.S. 252 , 29 L. ed. 615, 6 Sup. Ct. Rep. 580, it was held
that the Second Amendment to the Constitution, in regard to the right
of the people to bear arms, is a limitation only on the power of
Congress and the national government, and not of the states. It was
therein said, however, that as all citizens capable of bearing arms
constitute the reserved military force of the national government the
states could not prohibit the people from keeping and bearing arms, so
as to deprive the United States of their rightful resource for
maintaining the public security, and disable the people from
performing their duty to the general government.
In O'Neil v. Vermont,
144 U.S. 323, 332 , 36 S. L. ed. 450, 456, 12 Sup. Ct. Rep. 693,
it was stated that as a general question it has always been ruled that
the Eighth Amendment to the Constitution of the United States does not
apply to the states.
In Thorington v. Montgomery,
147 U.S. 490 , 37 L. ed. 252, 13 Sup. Ct. Rep. 394, it was said
that the Fifth Amendment to the Constitution operates exclusively in
restraint of Federal power, and has no application to the states.
We have cited these cases for the purpose of showing that the
privileges and immunities of citizens of the United States do not
necessarily include all the rights protected by the first eight
amendments to the Federal Constitution against the
[176 U.S. 581, 598]
powers of the Federal government. They were decided
subsequently to the adoption of the Fourteenth Amendment, and if the
particular clause of that amendment, now under consideration, had the
effect claimed for it in this case, it is not too much to say that it
would have been asserted and the principles applied in some of them.
It has been held that the last clause of the Seventh Amendment,
which provides that no fact tried by a jury shall be otherwise
re-examined in any court of the United States than according to the
rules of the common law, is not confined to trials by jury in Federal
courts, but applies equally to a cause tried before a jury in a state
court and brought thence before a Federal court. The Justices v.
Murray, 9 Wall. 274, sub nom. New York Supreme Court Justices v.
United States ex rel. Murray, 19 L. ed. 658; Chicago, B. & Q. R. Co.
v. Chicago,
166 U.S. 226 , 41 L. ed. 979, 17 Sup. Ct. Rep. 581; Capital
Traction Co. v. Hof,
174 U.S. 1 , 43 L. ed. 873, 19 Sup. Ct. Rep. 580. But these
decisions only carry out the idea that the amendment is a restraint
upon Federal power, and not upon the power of the state, inasmuch as
they declare that the clause restricts the right of the Federal courts
to re-examine the facts found by a jury in a state court, as well as
in a Federal one.
In Missouri v. Lewis,
101 U.S. 22 , 25 L. ed. 989, it was held that the clause of the
Fourteenth Amendment, which prohibits a state from denying to any
person the equal protection of the laws, did not thereby prohibit the
state from prescribing the jurisdiction of its several courts either
as to their territorial limits or the subject-matter, or amount or
finality of their respective judgments or decrees; that a state might
establish one system of law in one portion of its territory and
another system in another, provided it did not encroach upon the
proper jurisdiction of the United States, nor abridge the privileges
or immunities of citizens of the United States, nor deny to any person
within its jurisdiction the equal protection of the laws in the same
district, nor deprive him of his rights without due process of law. In
the course of the opinion, which was delivered by Mr. Justice Bradley,
he said:
'We might go still further and say, with undoubted truth, that
there is nothing in the Constitution to prevent any state from
adopting any system of laws or judicature it sees fit for
[176 U.S. 581, 599]
all or any part of its territory. If the state of New
York, for example, should see fit to adopt the civil law and its
method of procedure for New York city and the surrounding counties,
and the common law and its method of procedure for the rest of the
state, there is nothing in the Constitution of the United States to
prevent its doing so. This would not of itself, within the meaning
of the Fourteenth Amendment, be a denial to any person of the equal
protection of the laws. If every person residing or being in either
portion of the state should be accorded the equal protection of the
laws prevailing there, he could not justly complain of a violation
of the clause referred to. For, as before said, it has respect to
persons and classes of persons. It means that no person or class of
persons shall be denied the same protection of the laws which is
enjoyed by other persons or other classes in the same place and
under like circumstances. The Fourteenth Amendment does not profess
to secure to all persons in the United States the benefit of the
same laws and the same remedies. Great diversities in these respects
may exist in two states separated only by an imaginary line. On one
side of this line there may be a right of trial by jury, and on the
other side no such right. Each state prescribes its own modes of
judicial proceeding. If diversities of laws and judicial proceedings
may exist in the several states without violating the equality
clause in the Fourteenth Amendment, there is no solid reason why
there may not be such diversities in different parts of the same
state. A uniformity which is not essential as regards different
states cannot be essential as regards different parts of a state,
provided that in each and all there is no infraction of the
constitutional provision. Diversities which are allowable in
different states are allowable in different parts of the same state.
Where part of a state is thickly settled, and another part has but
few inhabitants, it may be desirable to have different systems of
judicature for the two portions,-trial by jury in one, for example,
and not in the other. Large cities may require a multiplication of
courts and a peculiar arrangement of jurisdictions. It would be an
unfortunate restriction of the powers of the state government if it
could not, in its [176
U.S. 581, 600] discretion, provide for these various
exigencies. If a Mexican state should be acquired by treaty and
added to an adjoining state or part of a state in the United States,
and the two should be erected into a new state, it cannot be doubted
that such new state might allow the Mexican laws and judicature to
continue unchanged in the one portion, and the common law and its
corresponding judicature in the other portion. Such an arrangement
would not be prohibited by any fair construction of the Fourteenth
Amendment. It would not be based on any respect of persons or
classes, but on municipal considerations alone, and a regard for the
welfare of all classes within the particular territory or
jurisdiction.'
Although this case was principally discussed under that clause of
the Fourteenth Amendment which prohibits a state from denying to any
person within its jurisdiction the equal protection of the laws, yet
the application of the amendment with regard to the privileges or
immunities of citizens of the United States was also referred to, and
if it had been supposed that it secured to a citizen of the United
States, when proceeded against under state authority, all the
privileges and immunities set forth in the first eight amendments to
the Federal Constitution, Mr. Justice Bradley could not, in the course
of his opinion in the case, have said that a trial by jury might exist
as a right in one state and not exist in another. Trial by jury would
in such case have been protected under the Fourteenth Amendment,
because it was granted to all persons by Article Six in all criminal
prosecutions in the Federal courts, and by Article Seven in civil
actions at common law, where the value in controversy should exceed
$20. On the contrary, it was stated that great diversity in these
respects might exist in two states separated only by an imaginary
line, on one side of which there might be a right of trial by jury,
and on the other side no such right. Each state, it was said,
prescribes its own modes of judicial procedure. The decision of this
case was by an unanimous court, and the remarks of the justice are
wholly irreconcilable with the existence of a right of trial by jury
in a state court, which was guaranteed and protected by the Fourteenth
Amendment, notwithstanding the
[176 U.S. 581, 601] denial of such right by
and under the Constitution and laws of the state.
The principle to be deduced from these various cases is that the
rights claimed by the plaintiff in error rest with the state
governments, and are not protected by the particular clause of the
amendment under discussion. What protection may be afforded the
individual against state legislation or the procedure in state courts
or tribunals, under other clauses of the amendment, we do not now
inquire, as what has been heretofore said is restricted to the
particular clause of that amendment which is now spoken of,-the
privileges or immunities of citizens of the United States.
Counsel for plaintiff in error has cited from the speech of one of
the Senators of the United States, made in the Senate when the
proposed Fourteenth Amendment was under consideration by that body,
wherein he stated that among the privileges and immunities which the
committee having the amendment in charge sought to protect against
invasion or abridgment by the states were included those set forth in
the first eight amendments to the Constitution; and counsel has argued
that this court should therefore give that construction to the
amendment which was contended for by the Senator in his speech.
What speeches were made by other Senators and by Representatives in
the House upon this subject is not stated by counsel, nor does he
state what construction was given to it, if any, by other members of
Congress. It is clear that what is said in Congress upon such an
occasion may or may not express the views of the majority of those who
favor the adoption of the measure which may be before that body, and
the question whether the proposed amendment itself expresses the
meaning which those who spoke in its favor may have assumed that it
did, is one to be determined by the language actually therein used,
and not by the speeches made regarding it.
What individual Senators or Representatives may have urged in
debate, in regard to the meaning to be given to a proposed
constitutional amendment, or bill, or resolution, does not furnish a
firm ground for its proper construction, nor is it important
[176 U.S. 581, 602]
as explanatory of the grounds upon which the members voted in
adopting it. United States v. Trans-Missouri Freight Asso.
166 U.S. 290, 318 , 41 S. L. ed. 1007, 1019, 17 Sup. Ct. Rep. 540;
Dunlap v. United States,
173 U.S. 65, 75 , 43 S. L. ed. 616, 19 Sup. Ct. Rep. 319.
In the case of a constitutional amendment it is of less materiality
than in that of an ordinary bill or resolution. A constitutional
amendment must be agreed to, not only by Senators and Representatives,
but it must be ratified by the legislatures, or by conventions, in
three fourths of the states before such amendment can take effect. The
safe way is to read its language in connection with the known
condition of affairs out of which the occasion for its adoption may
have arisen, and then to construe it, if there be therein any doubtful
expressions, in a way, so far as is reasonably possible, to forward
the known purpose or object for which the amendment was adopted. This
rule could not, of course, be so used as to limit the force and effect
of an amendment in a manner which the plain and unambiguous language
used therein would not justify or permit.
For the reasons stated, we come to the conclusion that the clause
under consideration does not affect the validity of the Utah
Constitution and legislation.
The remaining question is whether in denying the right of an
individual, in all criminal cases not capital, to have a jury composed
of twelve jurors, the state deprives him of life, liberty, or property
without due process of law.
This question is, as we believe, substantially answered by the
reasoning of the opinion in the Hurtado Case,
110 U.S. 516, 535 , 28 S. L. ed. 232, 238, 4 Sup. Ct. Rep. 111,
292. The distinct question was there presented whether it was due
process of law to prosecute a person charged with murder by an
information under the state Constitution and law. It was held that it
was, and that the Fourteenth Amendment did not prohibit such a
procedure. In our opinion the right to be exempt from prosecution for
an infamous crime, except upon a presentment by a grand jury, is of
the same nature as the right to a trial by a petit jury of the number
fixed by the common law. If the state have the power to abolish the
grand jury and the consequent proceeding by indictment, the same
course of rea- [176 U.S.
581, 603] soning which establishes that right will and
does establish the right to alter the number of the petit jury from
that provided by the common law. Many cases upon the subject since the
Hurtado Case was decided are to be found gathered in Hodgson v.
Vermont,
168 U.S. 262 , 42 L. ed. 461, 18 Sup. Ct. Rep. 80; Holden v.
Hardy,
169 U.S. 366, 384 , 42 S. L. ed. 780, 788, 13 Sup. Ct. Rep. 383;
Brown v. New Jersey,
175 U.S. 172 , 20 Sup. Ct. Rep. 77, 44 L. ed. --; Bolln v.
Nebraska,
176 U.S. 83 , 20 Sup. Ct. Rep. 287, 44 L. ed. --.
Trial by jury has never been affirmed to be a necessary requisite
of due process of law. In not one of the cases cited and commented
upon in the Hurtado Case is a trial by jury mentioned as a necessary
part of such process.
In Re Converse,
137 U.S. 624 , 34 L. ed. 796, 11 Sup. Ct. Rep. 191, it was stated
that the Fourteenth Amendment was not designed to interfere with the
power of a state to protect the lives, liberty, and property of its
citizens, nor with the exercise of that power in the adjudications of
the courts of a state in administering process provided by the law of
the state.
In Caldwell v. Texas,
137 U.S. 692 , 34 L. ed. 816, 11 Sup. Ct. Rep. 224, it was held
that no state can deprive particular persons or classes of persons of
equal and impartial justice under the law, without violating the
provisions of the Fourteenth Amendment to the Constitution, and that
due process of law, within the meaning of the Constitution, is secured
when the laws operate on all alike, and no one is subjected to partial
or arbitrary exercise of the powers of government.
In Leeper v. Texas,
139 U.S. 462, 467 , 35 S. L. ed. 225, 226, 11 Sup. Ct. Rep. 577,
it was said 'that by the Fourteenth Amendment the powers of states in
dealing with crime within their borders are not limited, except that
no state can deprive particular persons, or class of persons, of equal
and impartial justice under the law; that law in its regular course of
administration through courts of justice is due process, and when
secured by the law of the state the constitutional requirement is
satisfied; and that due process is so secured by laws operating on all
alike, and not subjecting the individual to the arbitrary exercise of
the powers of government unrestrained by the established principles of
private right and distributive justice. Hurtado v. California,
110 U.S. 516, 535 , 28 S. L. ed. 232, 238, 4 Sup. Ct. Rep. 111,
292, and cases cited.' See also, for statement
[176 U.S. 581, 604]
as to due process of law, the cases of Davidson v. New
Orleans,
96 U.S. 97 , 24 L. ed. 616; Hagar v. Reclamation Dist. No. 108,
111 U.S. 701, 707 , 28 S. L. ed. 569, 4 Sup. Ct. Rep. 663.
The clause has been held to extend to a proceeding conducted to
judgment in a state court under a valid statute of the state, if such
judgment resulted in the taking of private property for public use,
without compensation made or secured to the owner, under the
conditions mentioned in the cases herewith cited. Chicago, B. & Q. R.
Co. v. Chicago,
166 U.S. 226 , 41 L. ed. 985, 17 Sup. Ct. Rep. 581; Backus v. Fort
Street Union Depot Co.
169 U.S. 557 , 42 L. ed. 853, 18 Sup. Ct. Rep. 445.
It has also been held not to impair the police power of a state.
Barbier v. Connolly,
113 U.S. 27 , 28 L. ed. 923, 5 Sup. Ct. Rep. 375.
It appears to us that the questions whether a trial in criminal
cases not capital shall be by a jury composed of eight instead of
twelve jurors, and whether in case of an infamous crime a person shall
only be liable to be tried after presentment or indictment of twelve
jurors, and whether in case of an determined by the citizens of each
state for themselves, and do not come within the clause of the
amendment under consideration, so long as all persons within the
jurisdiction of the state are made liable to be proceeded against by
the same kind of procedure and to have the same kind of trial, and the
equal protection of the laws is secured to them. Caldwell v. Texas,
137 U.S. 692 , 34 L. ed. 816, 11 Sup. Ct. Rep. 224; Leeper v.
Texas,
139 U.S. 462 , 35 L. ed. 225, 11 Sup. Ct. Rep. 577. It is
emphatically the case of the people by their organic law providing for
their own affairs, and we are of opinion they are much better judges
of what they ought to have in these respects than anyone else can be.
The reasons given in the learned and most able opinion of Mr. Justice
Matthews, in the Hurtado Case, for the judgment therein rendered,
apply with equal force in regard to a trial by a jury of less than
twelve jurors. The right to be proceeded against only by indictment,
and the right to a trial by twelve jurors, are of the same nature, and
are subject to the same judgment, and the people in the several states
have the same right to provide by their organic law for the change of
both or either. Under this construction of the
[176 U.S. 581, 605]
amendment there can be no just fear that the liberties of the
citizen will not be carefully protected by the states respectively. It
is a case of self-protection, and the people can be trusted to look
out and care for themselves. There is no reason to doubt their
willingness or their ability to do so, and when providing in their
Constitution and legislation for the manner in which civil or criminal
actions shall be tried, it is in entire conformity with the character
of the Federal government that they should have the right to decide
for themselves what shall be the form and character of the procedure
in such trials, whether there shall be an indictment or an information
only, whether there shall be a jury of twelve or a lesser number, and
whether the verdict must be unanimous or not. These are matters which
have no relation to the character of the Federal government. As was
stated by Mr. Justice Brewer, in delivering the opinion of the court
in Brown v. New Jersey,
175 U.S. 172 , 20 Sup. Ct. Rep. 77, 44 L. ed. --, the state has
full control over the procedure in its courts, both in civil and
criminal cases, subject only to the qualification that such procedure
must not work a denial of fundamental rights or conflict with specific
and applicable provisions of the Federal Constitution. The legislation
in question is not, in our opinion, open to either of these
objections.
Judged by the various cases in this court we think there is no
error in this record, and the judgment of the Supreme Court of Utah
must therefore be affirmed.
For dissenting opinion by Mr. Justice Harlan, see 20 Sup. Ct. Rep.
494, 44 L. ed. --.
Dissenting opinion by Mr. Justice Harlan:
Under an information filed against him in one of the courts of the
state of Utah, Maxwell, the plaintiff in error, a citizen of the
United States, was convicted of the crime of robbery, and having been
tried by a jury consisting of eight persons was found guilty and
sentenced to confinement in the penitentiary for the term of eighteen
years.
He insists that his imprisonment is in violation of the
Constitution of the United States in that he was proceeded against by
information,-not by indictment or presentment of grand
[176 U.S. 581, 606]
jury,-and was tried for an infamous crime by a jury composed
of less than twelve persons.
By its opinion and judgment just rendered this court holds that
neither the prosecution by information nor the trial by eight jurors
was in violation of the Constitution of the United States.
Upon the first point I do not care to say anything. For, in Hurtado
v. California,
110 U.S. 516 , 28 L. ed. 232, 4 Sup. Ct. Rep. 111, 292, this court
held that a state enactment authorizing the prosecution by information
for the crime of murder in the first degree-the penalty for such crime
being death-was not in violation of the Constitution of the United
States. The principles there announced have been reaffirmed in later
cases. In the Hurtado Case I dissented from the opinion and judgment
of the court and stated fully the reasons why, in my judgment, no
civil tribunal or court, Federal or state, could legally try a citizen
of the United States for an infamous crime otherwise than on the
indictment or presentment of a grand jury. I adhere to the views then
expressed, but further discussion of the question decided seems
unnecessary.
The remaining question in the present case is whether the trial of
the accused by eight jurors is forbidden by the Constitution of the
United States.
The Fourteenth Amendment, after declaring that all persons born or
naturalized in the United States and subject to the jurisdiction
thereof are citizens of the United States and of the state wherein
they reside, provides that 'no state shall make or enforce any law
which shall abridge the privileges or immunities of citizens of the
United States, nor shall any state deprive any person of life,
liberty, or property without due process of law.'
What are the privileges and immunities of 'citizens of the United
States?' Without attempting to enumerate them, it ought to be deemed
safe to say that such privileges and immunities embrace at least those
expressly recognized by the Constitution of the United States and
placed beyond the power of Congress to take away or impair.
When the Constitution was adopted by the convention of
[176 U.S. 581, 607]
1787 and placed before the people for their acceptance or
rejection, many wise statesmen whose patriotism no one then questioned
or now questions earnestly objected to its acceptance upon the ground
that it did not contain a bill of rights guarding the fundamental
guaranties of life, liberty, and property against the unwarranted
exercise of power by the national government. But the friends of the
Constitution, believing that the failure to accept it would destroy
all hope for permanent union among the people of the original states,
and following the advice of Washington, who was the leader of the
constitutional forces, met this objection by showing that when the
Constitution had been accepted by the requisite number of states and
thereby became the supreme law of the land, such amendments could be
adopted as would relieve the apprehensions of those who deemed it
necessary, by express provisions, to guard against the infringement by
the agencies of the general government of any of the essential rights
of American freemen. This view prevailed, and the implied pledge thus
given was carried out by the first Congress, which promptly adopted
and submitted to the people of the several states the first ten
Amendments. These Amendments have ever since been regarded as the
national Bill of Rights.
Let us look at some of those Amendments. It is declared by the
First, 'Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of
religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof, or abridging the
freedom of speech or of the press, or the right of the people
peaceably to assemble and to petition the government for a redress of
grievances;' by the Third, 'no soldiers shall, in time of peace, be
quartered in any house, without the consent of the owner, nor in time
of war, but in a manner to be prescribed by law;' by the Fourth, 'the
right of the people to be secure in their persons, houses, papers, and
effects against unreasonable searches and seizures shall not be
violated, and no warrants shall issue but upon probable cause,
supported by oath or affirmation, and particularly describing the
place to be searched, and the persons or things to be seized;' by the
Fifth, no person shall 'be subject for the same offense to be twice
put in jeopardy of life or limb, nor shall he be compelled
[176 U.S. 581, 608]
in any criminal case to be a witness against himself, nor be
deprived of life, liberty, or property without due process of law, nor
shall private property be taken for public use without just
compensation;' by the Sixth, '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, and to be informed of the nature and cause of the accusation, to
be confronted with the witnesses against him, to have compulsory
process for obtaining withnesses in his favor, and to have the
assistance of counsel for his defense;' and by the Eighth, 'excessive
bail shall not be required nor excessive fines imposed, nor cruel and
unusual punishments inflicted.'
It seems to me that the privileges and immunities enumerated in
these Amendments belong to every citizen of the United States. They
were universally so regarded prior to the adoption of the Fourteenth
Amendment. In order to form a more perfect union, establish justice,
insure domestic tranquillity, provide for the common defense, promote
the general welfare, and secure the blessings of liberty to themselves
and their posterity, the political community known as the people of
the United States ordained and established the Constitution of the
United States; and every member of that political community was a
citizen of the United States. It was that community that adopted, in
the mode prescribed by the Constitution, the first ten Amendments; and
what they had in view by so doing was to make it certain that the
privileges and immunities therein specified -the enjoyment of which,
the fathers believed, were necessary in order to secure the blessings
of liberty-could never be inpaired or destroyed by the national
government.
Now, the original Constitution declared that 'the trial of all
crimes, except in cases of impeachment, shall be by jury.' This was
supplemented by the Sixth Amendment, declaring that in all criminal
prosecutions the accused should enjoy the right to a speedy and public
trial by an impartial jury of the state and district wherein the crime
was committed. And [176
U.S. 581, 609] we have held that the jury here referred
to was a common-law jury consisting of neither more nor less than
twelve persons, whose unanimous verdict was necessary to acquit or
convict the accused; that a jury of less number was not admissible in
any criminal trial in the District of Columbia or in a territory of
the United States, or in any prosecution of a criminal character in a
court of the United States, or in any court organized under the
authority of the United States. Callan v. Wilson,
127 U.S. 540 , 32 L. ed. 223, 8 Sup. Ct. Rep. 1301; Thompson v.
Utah,
170 U.S. 343 , 42 L. ed. 1061, 18 Sup. Ct. Rep. 620. We have often
adjudged that the declaration in Magan Charta that the King would not
pass upon any freeman, nor condemn him, 'but by the lawful judgment of
his peers,' referred to a jury of twelve persons. $It is not difficult
to understand why the fathers entrenched the right of trial by jury in
the supreme law of the land. They regarded the recognition and
exercise of that right as vital to the protection of liberty aganist
arbitrary power. Mr. Hallam in his Constitutional History of England,
after observing that liberty had been the slow fruit of ages, said
that as early as the reign of Henry VII. one of the essential checks
upon royal power was that 'the fact of guilt or innocence on a
criminal charge was determined in a public court, and in the county
where the offense was alleged to have occurred, by a jury of twelve
men, from whose unanimous verdict no appeal could be made.' And it is
an interesting fact that the first ordinance adopted by the Plymouth
colony in 1623 was one declaring, among other things, that 'all
criminal facts' should be tried 'by the verdict of twelve honest men
to be impaneled by authority, in form of a jurye upon their oaths.'
The value of that institution was recognized by the patriotic men of
the revolutionary period when in the Declaration of Independence they
complained that the King of Great Britain had deprived the people of
the colonies in many cases of the benefits of trial by jury. Referring
to the provisions of the Federal Constitution relating to the personal
security of citizens of the United States, Kent says they 'must be
regarded as fundamental in every state, for the colonies were parties
to the national declaration of rights in 1774, in which the trial by
[176 U.S. 581, 610]
jury, and the other rights and liberties of English subjects,
were peremptorily claimed as their undoubted inheritance and
birthright.' Upon this general subject Mr. Justice Story in his
Commentaries on the Constitution has said: 'It was under the
consciousness of the full possession of the rights, liberties, and
immunities of British subjects, that the colonists in almost all the
early legislation of their respective assemblies insisted upon a
declaratory act, acknowledging and confirming them. And for the most
part they thus succeeded in obtaining a real and effective Magna
Charta of their liberties. The trial by jury in all cases, civil and
criminal, was as firmly and universally established in the colonies as
in the mother country.' 1 Story, Const. 165. Again, the same eminent
jurist says: 'It seems hardly necessary in this place to expatiate
upon the antiquity or importance of the trial by jury in criminal
cases. It was from very early times insisted on by our ancestors in
the parent country, as the great bulwark of their civil and political
liberties, and watched with an unceasing jealousy and solicitude. The
right constitutes one of the fundamental articles of Magna Charta, in
which it is declared, ' nullus homo capiatur, nec imprisonetur, aut
exuletur, aut aliquo modo destruatur, etc.; nisi per legale judicium
parium suorum, vel per legem terroe;' no man shall be arrested, nor
imprisoned, nor banished, nor deprived of life, etc., but by the
judgment of his peers, or by the law of the land. The judgement of his
peers here alluded to, and commonly called, in the quaint language of
former times, a trial per pais, or trial by the country, is the trial
by a jury, who are called the peers of the party accused, being of the
like condition and equality in the state. When our more immediate
ancestors removed to America, they bought this great privilege with
them, as their birthright and inheritance, as a part of that admirable
common law which had fenced round and interposed barriers on every
side against the approaches of arbitrary power. It is now incorporated
into all our state Constitutions as a fundamental right, and the
Constitution of the United States would have been justly obnoxious to
the most conclusive objection if it had not recognized and confirmed
it in the most solemn terms. The great object of a trial by jury
[176 U.S. 581, 611]
in criminal cases is to guard against a spirit of oppression
and tyranny on the part of rulers, and against a spirit of violence
and vindictiveness on the part of the people. Indeed, it is often more
important to guard against the latter than the former.' 2 Story,
Const. 1779, 1780. Blackstone has said: 'A celebrated French writer,
who concludes that because Rome, Sparta, and Carthage have lost their
liberties, therefore those of England in time must perish, should have
recollected that Rome, Sparta, and Carthage, at the time when their
liberties were lost, were strangers to the trial by jury.' 2 Bl. Com.
379. In a recent American work on trial by jury the author well says:
'The English colonists settled here with a deep-rooted regard for this
right. It had been, no doubt, to them in the mother country a valuable
protection. They brought it with them and established and cherished it
as one of their dearest privileges, and in every enumeration of their
rights and immunities it takes a conspicuous place.' Again, the same
author: 'Ever since Magna Charta, the right to a trial by jury has
been esteemed a peculiarly dear and inestimable privilege by the
English race; and whether in a strictly historical view the right was
defined or secured by that instrument or not, it was nevertheless
invariably appealed to and implicitly relied on as unalterably and
inviolably securing the right among other valuable privileges
guaranteed therein. During long centuries, when popular rights were
overborne by prerogative or despotism, those who claimed and were
denied the right to such a trial founded their demand on the guaranty
of the Great Charter, and solemnly protested against its violation
when the privilege was denied them; and whenever an invasion or
violation of individual rights was threatened, the security afforded
by this guaranty was relied on as an effectual safeguard either to
repel the attack or nullify its effect.' Proffatt, Jury Trial, 81, 82.
And this court has declared that 'the trial by jury is justly dear to
the American people. It has always been an object of deep interest and
solicitude, and every encroachment upon it has been watched with great
jealousy.' Parsons v. Bedford, 3 Pet. 433, 446, 7 L. ed. 732, 736.
Notwithstanding this history of the incorporation into the
[176 U.S. 581, 612]
Constitution of the United States of the provision relating
to trial by jury, it is now adjudged that immunity form trial for
crime except by a jury of twelve jurors is not an immunity belonging
to citizens of the United States within the meaning of the Fourteenth
Amendment.
It does not solve the question before us to from trial for crime
except by a jury only to the powers of the national government, and
not to the powers of the states. For, if, prior to the adoption of the
Fourteenth Amendment, it was one of the privileges or immunities of
citizens of the United States that they should not be tried for crime
in any court organized or existing under national authority except by
a jury composed of twelve persons, how can it be that a citizen of the
United States may be now tried in a state court for crime,
particularly for an infamous crime, by eight jurors, when that
Amendment expressly declares that 'no state shall make or enforce any
law which shall abridge the privileges or immunities of citizens of
the United States?' It does not meet the case to say that a trial by
eight jurors is as much a trial by jury as if there were twelve
jurors; for if a citizen charged with crime can be subjected to trial
by a less number of jurors that that prescribed by the Constitution,
the number may be reduced to three. Indeed, under the interpretation
now given to the amendment, it will, I think, be impossible to excape
the conclusion that a state may abolish trial by jury altogether in a
criminal case, however grave the offense charged, and authorize the
trial of a case of felony before a single judge. I cannot assent to
this interpretation, because it is opposed to the plain words of the
Constitution, and defeats the manifest object of the Fourteenth
Amendment.
I am of opinion that under the original Constitution and the Sixth
Amendment, it is one of the privileges and immunities of citizens of
the United States that when charged with crime they shall be tried
only by a jury composed of twelve persons; consequently, a state
statute authorizing the trial by a jury of eight persons of a citizen
of the United States, charged with crime, is void under the Fourteenth
Amendment, declaring that no state shall make or enforce any law that
[176 U.S. 581, 613]
'shall abridge the privileges or immunities of citizens of
the United States.'
I am also of opinion that the trial of the accused for the crime
charged against him by a jury of eight persons was not consistent with
the 'due process of law' prescribed by the Fourteenth Amendment.
Referring to the words in the Fifth Amendment, that 'no person shall
be deprived of life, liberty, or property without due process of law,'
this court said in Den ex dem. Murray v. Hoboken Land & Improv. Co. 18
How. 272, 276, 277, 15 L. ed. 372, 374: 'The Constitution contains no
description of those processes which it was intended to allow or
forbid. It does not even declare what principles are to be applied to
ascertain whether it be due process. It was manifest that it was not
left to the legislative power to enact any process which might be
devised. The article is a restraint on the legislative, as well as on
the executive and judicial, powers of the government, and cannot be so
construed as to leave Congress free to make any process 'due process
of law' by its mere will. To what principles are we to resort to
ascertain whether this process enacted by Congress is due process? To
this the answer must be twofold. We must examine the Constitution
itself to see whether this process be in conflict with any of its
provisions. If not found to be so, we must look to those settled
usages and modes of proceeding existing in the common and statute law
of England before the emigration of our ancestors, and which are shown
not to have been unsuited to their civil and political condition by
having been acted on by them after the settlement of this country.'
No one, I think, can produce any authority to show that according
to the 'settled usages and modes of proceeding existing in the common
and statute law of England before the emigration of our ancestors,'
the trial of one accused of felony otherwise than by a jury of twelve,
or wholly without a jury, was consistent with 'due process of law.' If
the original Constitution had not contained a specific prohibition of
trials for crime otherwise than by a jury, the requirement of due
process of law in the Fifth Amendment would have stood in the way of
any act of Congress authorizing criminal trials in the
[176 U.S. 581, 614]
Federal courts in any mode except by a common-law jury. When,
therefore, the Fourteenth Amendment forbade the deprivation by any
state of life, liberty, or property without due process of law, the
intention was to prevent any state from infringing the guaranties for
the protection of life and liberty that had already been guarded
against infringement by the national government.
This interpretation of the Fourteenth Amendment finds support in
some of the decisions of this court. In addition to the clause
forbidding the deprivation of property 'without due process of law,'
there is in the Fifth Amendment a clause specifically declaring, 'nor
shall private property be taken for public use without just
compensation.' The Fourteenth Amendment does not in terms refer to the
taking of private property for public use, yet we have held that the
requirement of 'due process of law' in that Amendment forbids the
taking of private property for public use without making or securing
just compensation. Chicago, B. & Q. R. Co. v. Chicago,
166 U.S. 226, 233 , 241 S., 41 L. ed. 979, 983, 986, 17 Sup. Ct.
Rep. 581; Norwood v. Baker,
172 U.S. 269, 277 , 43 S. L. ed. 443, 446, 19 Sup. Ct. Rep. 187.
If, then, the 'due process of law' required by the Fourteenth
Amendment does not allow a state to take private property without just
compensation, but does allow the life or liberty of the citizen to be
taken in a mode that is repugnant to the settled usages and the modes
of proceeding authorized at the time the Constitution was adopted and
which was expressly forbidden in the national Bill of Rights, it would
seem that the protection of private property is of more consequence
that the protection of the life and liberty of the citizen.
If the court had not ruled otherwise, I should have thought it
indisputable that when by the Fourteenth Amendment it was declared
that no state should make or enforce any law abridging the privileges
or immunities of citizens of the United States, nor deprive any person
of life, liberty, or property without due process of law, the People
of the United States put upon the states the same restrictions that
had been imposed upon the national government in respect, as well of
the privileges, and immunities of citizens of the United States, as of
[176 U.S. 581, 615]
the protection of the fundamental rights of life, liberty,
and property.
The decision to-day rendered is very farreaching in its
consequences. I take it no one doubts that the great men who laid the
foundations of our government regarded the preservation of the
privileges and immunities specified in the first ten Amendments as
vital to the personal security of American citizens. To say of any
people that they do not enjoy those privileges and immunities is to
say that they do not enjoy real freedom. But suppose a state should
prohibit the free exercise of religion; or abridge the freedom of
speech or of the press; or forbid its people from peaceably assembling
to petition the government for a redress of grievances; or authorize
soldiers in time of peace to be quartered in any house without the
consent of the owner; or permit the persons, houses, papers, and
effects of the citizens to be subjected to unreasonable searches and
seizures under warrants not issued upon probable cause nor supported
by oath or affirmation, nor describing the place to be searched and
the persons or things to be seized; or allow a person to be twice put
in jeopardy of life or limb; or compel the accused to be a witness
against himself; or deny to the accused the right to be informed of
the nature and cause of the accusation against him, to be confronted
with the witnesses against him, to have compulsory process for
obtaining witnesses in his favor, or to have the assistance of
counsel; or require excessive bail; or inflict cruel and unusual
punishment. These or any of these things being done by a state, this
court, according to the reasoning and legal effect of the opinion just
delivered, would be bound to say that the privileges and immunities
specified were not privileges and immunities of citizens of the United
States within the meaning of the Fourteenth Amendment, and that
citizens of the United States affected by the action of the state
could not invoke the protection of that Amendment or of any other
provision of the national Constitution. Suppose the state of Utah
should amend its Constitution and make the Mormon religion the
established religion of the state, to be supported by taxation on all
the people of Utah. Could its right to do
[176 U.S. 581, 616]
so, as far as the Constitution of the United States is
concerned, be gainsaid under the principles of the opinion just
delivered? If such an amendment were alleged to be invalid under the
national Constitution, could not the opinion herein be cited as
showing that the right to the free exercise of religion was not a
privilege of a 'citizen of the United States' within the meaning of
the Fourteenth Amendment? Suppose, again, a state should prescribe as
a punishment for crime burning at the stake or putting out the eyes of
the accused. Would this court have any alternative under the decision
just rendered but to say that the immunity from cruel and unusual
punishments recognized in the Eighth Amendment as belonging to every
citizen of the United States was not an immunity of a citizen within
the meaning of the Fourteenth Amendment, and was not protected by that
Amendment against impairment by the state? The privileges and
immunities specified in the first ten Amendments as belonging to the
people of the United States are equally protected by the Constitution.
No judicial tribunal has authority to say that some of them may be
abridged by the states while others may not be abridged. If a state
can take from the citizen charged with crime the right to be tried by
a jury of twelve persons, it can, so far as the Constitution of the
United States is concerned, take away the remaining privileges and
immunities specified in the national Bill of Rights. There is no
middle position, unless it be assumed to be one of the functions of
the judiciary by an interpretation of the Constitution to mitigate or
defeat what its members may deem the erroneous or unwise action of the
people in adopting the Fourteenth Amendment. The court cannot properly
say that the Constitution of the United States does not protect the
citizen when charged with crime in a state court against trial
otherwise than by a jury of twelve persons, but does protect him
against cruel and unusual punishment, or against being put twice in
jeopardy of life or limb for the same offense, or against being
compelled to testify against himself in a criminal prosecution, or in
freedom of speech or in the free exercise of religion. The right to be
tried when charged with crime by a jury of twelve persons
[176 U.S. 581, 617]
is placed by the Constitution upon the same basis as the
other rights specified in the first ten Amendments. And while those
Amendments originally limited only the powers of the national
government in respect of the privileges and immunities specified
therein, since the adoption of the Fourteenth Amendment those
privileges and immunities are, in my opinion, also guarded against
infringement by the states.
If it be said that there need be no apprehension that any state
will strike down the guaranties of life and liberty which are found in
the national Bill of Rights, the answer is that the plaintiff in error
is now in the penitentiary of Utah as the result of a mode of trial
that would not have been tolerated in England at the time American
independence was achieved, nor even now, and would have caused the
rejection of the Constitution by every one of the original states if
it had been sanctioned by any provision in that instrument when it was
laid before the people for acceptance or rejection. Liberty, it has
been well said, depends, not so much upon the absence of actual
oppression, as on the existence of constitutional checks upon the
power to oppress. These checks should not be destroyed or impaired by
judicial decisions. On the contrary, speaking by Mr. Justice Bradley,
we have declared in Boyd v. United States,
116 U.S. 616, 636 , 29 S. L. ed. 746, 753, 6 Sup. Ct. Rep. 524,
535, that 'it is the duty of courts to be watchful for the
constitutional rights of the citizen.' If some of the guaranties of
life, liberty, and property which at the time of the adoption of the
national Constitution were regarded as fundamental and as absolutely
essential to the enjoyment of freedom, have in the judgment of some
ceased to be of practical value, it is for the people of the United
States so to declare by an amendment of that instrument. But, if I do
not wholly misapprehend the scope and legal effect of the present
decision, the Constitution of the United States does not stand in the
way of any state striking down guaranties of life and liberty that
English-speaking people have for centuries regarded as vital to
personal security, and which the men of the revolutionary period
universally claimed as the birthright of freemen.
I dissent from the opinion and judgment of the court.
Footnotes
[
Footnote 1 ] For main opinion in this case see 20 Sup. Ct. Rep.
448, 44 L. ed.-
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