1. The District Court of the United States for the District of
New Jersey has jurisdiction of a suit in admiralty,
in
personam, against a New York corporation, where it acquires
such jurisdiction by the seizure, under process of attachment, of a
vessel belonging to such corporation when such vessel is afloat in
the Kill van Kull, between Staten Island and New Jersey at the end
of the dock at Bayonne, New Jersey at a place at least 300 feet
below high water mark and nearly the same distance below low water
mark and is fastened to said dock by means of a line running from
the vessel and attached to spikes on the dock.
2. A vessel so situated is within the territorial limits of the
State of New Jersey and of the District of New Jersey, and is not
within the territorial limits of the New York or of the Eastern
District of New York.
3. The subject matter of the dispute as to boundary between New
York and New Jersey explained, and the settlement as to the same
made by the agreement of September 16, 1833, between the two
states, as set forth in and consented to by the act of Congress of
June 28th, 1834, c. 120, 4 Stat. 708, interpreted.
4. When Congress enacts that a judicial district shall consist
of a state, the boundaries of the district vary afterwards as those
of the state vary.
Petition for writ of prohibition to the District Court of the
United States for the District of New Jersey, proceeding as a court
of admiralty. The sole question at issue was whether that court had
jurisdiction in admiralty over a vessel afloat but fastened by a
hawser to the end of a dock in the Kill van Kull, between Staten
Island and New Jersey at a place about three hundred feet distant
in the stream from the line of ordinary low water mark.
Page 108 U. S. 404
MR. JUSTICE BLATCHFORD delivered the opinion of the Court.
The question involved in this case is as to the territorial
jurisdiction of the District Court of the United States for the
District of New Jersey. In April, 1882, a libel in admiralty
in
personam for damages growing out of a collision was filed in
that court against the Devoe Manufacturing Company, a New York
corporation. In October, 1882, process was issued by the court to
the marshal commanding him to cite the respondent if it should be
found in the district, and, if it could not be there found, to
attach its goods and chattels within the district. On this process
the marshal seized a tug belonging to the corporation and made
return that he had attached the tug as its property. At the time of
the seizure, the tug was afloat in the Kill van Kull, between
Staten Island and New Jersey at the end of a dock at Bayonne, New
Jersey, at a place at least 300 feet below high water mark and
nearly the same distance below low water mark, and about half a
mile from the entrance of the Kill into the Bay of New York, and
was fastened to the dock by means of a line or fastening running
from the tug and attached to piles on the dock, and was lying close
up to the dock. The respondent, insisting that the tug, when
seized, was within the exclusive jurisdiction of the Eastern
District of New York, and not within the jurisdiction of the
District of New Jersey, applied to the court to set aside the
service of the process. The court denied the application, holding
that the tug, being, when seized, fastened to a wharf or pier on
the western side of the Kill van Kull, was within the exclusive
jurisdiction of the District of New Jersey. The respondent now
applies to this Court to issue a writ of prohibition to the
district court restraining it from exercising the jurisdiction so
asserted.
By section 2 of the Act of September 24, 1789, "to establish the
judicial courts of the United States," 1 Stat. 73, c. 20, the
United States were divided
"into thirteen districts, to be limited and called as follows: .
. . one to consist of the State of New York, and to be called New
York District; one
Page 108 U. S. 405
to consist of the State of New Jersey, and to be called New
Jersey District,"
and, by section 3, a court called a district court was created
in each of said districts, and, by section 9, exclusive original
cognizance was given to such district courts of all civil causes of
admiralty and maritime jurisdiction within their respective
districts. By these provisions, the territorial limits of the
respective States of New York and New Jersey were made the
territorial limits of the respective Judicial Districts of New York
and New Jersey.
By section 1 of the Act of April 9, 1814, 3 Stat. 120, c. 49, it
was enacted that the State of New York
"shall be and the same is hereby divided into two districts in
manner following, to-wit, the Counties of Renesselaer, Albany,
Schenectady, Schoharie, and Delaware, together with all that part
of the said state lying south of the said above-mentioned counties,
shall compose one district, to be called the Southern District of
New York, and all the remaining part of the said state shall
compose another district, to be called the Northern District of New
York."
By virtue of this act, all that part of the State of New York
which was bounded on the line between New York and New Jersey fell
within the Southern District of New York. The boundary line between
the states still formed the boundary line of jurisdiction between
the districts.
By section 3 of the Act of April 3, 1818, 3 Stat. 414, c. 32,
the Counties of Albany, Renesselaer, Schenectady, Schoharie, and
Delaware were transferred from the Southern District of New York to
the Northern District of New York, but the boundaries of the
Southern District of New York were otherwise not altered.
A dispute existed for a long time between the States of New York
and New Jersey respecting the boundary line between them as to
property and jurisdiction. The history and circumstances of this
dispute, some particulars of which are to be found in the reports
of the cases of
State v. Babcock, 1 Vroom, 29;
People
v. Central Railroad Company of New Jersey, 42 N.Y. 283, and
Hall v. Devoe Manufacturing Company, 14 F. 183, are not
material to the determination of this case, in the view we take of
it, any further than to show what was the
Page 108 U. S. 406
subject matter of the dispute. For the purpose of having it
settled, the State of New Jersey filed a bill in equity in this
Court against the State of New York, in February, 1829. That bill
sets forth the patent of March 12, 1664, from Charles the Second to
the Duke of York; the conveyance of lease and release by the Duke
of York, of June 24, 1664, to Lord Berkeley and Sir George
Carteret, of land constituting the State of New Jersey; the
division of the land, by various conveyances, into East New Jersey
and West New Jersey; its settlement and the institution of
proprietary governments therein, which continued until May, 1702,
when the proprietors surrendered their right of government to Queen
Anne, and the union of the two divisions into one province and
government, under the Crown of England, which continued until July
4, 1776. The bill sets forth that the Hudson River was, by the said
grants, the
brk:
dividing boundary between New Jersey and New York, and New
Jersey was bounded on her eastern shores by the waters formed by
the confluence of the Hudson and East Rivers, and also by the
waters of Staten Island Sound, or Kill van Kull, or Arthur Kull,
which sound is distinct from Hudson River or Bay; that soon after
the grant to Berkeley and Carteret, the inhabitants of East New
Jersey proceeded to use the waters of the Hudson and sound
adjoining the New Jersey shore for the purposes of fishing,
navigation, wharfing, and other purposes, and erected docks and
piers at Jersey City and Hoboken, and on the shores of the Hudson,
and far beyond low water mark without interruption from the
inhabitants or public authorities of New York, and the citizens of
New Jersey had always exercised full and absolute right and
enjoyment over the River Hudson and the other adjoining waters to
the midway or channel thereof, and also a common right of
navigation and use over the whole of the river and dividing waters
in common with the State of New York; that by the fair construction
of the said grants, and by the principles of public law, New Jersey
is entitled to the exclusive jurisdiction and property of and over
the waters of the Hudson River from the forty-first degree of
latitude to the Bay of New York, to the
filum aquae, or
middle of the river, and to the midway or channel
Page 108 U. S. 407
of the Bay of New York, and the whole of Staten Island Sound,
together with the land covered by the water of the river, bay, and
sound in the like extent; that while the said two states were
colonies, New York became wrongfully possessed of Staten Island and
the other small islands in the dividing waters between the two
states; that the possession thus acquired by New York had been
since acquiesced in, New York insisting that her possession of said
islands had established her title; that New York has no other
pretense of title to said islands but adverse possession; that, as
such possession has been uniformly confined in its exercise to the
fast land thereof, the title of New Jersey to the whole waters of
the
brk:
Staten Island Sound remains clear and absolute in New Jersey,
according to the terms of said grants; that though the people of
the State of New York formerly recognized the rights and
jurisdiction of New Jersey as so set forth, they had lately
asserted an absolute and exclusive right of property, jurisdiction,
and sovereignty over all the waters of the Hudson River and Bay and
Staten Island Sound, and that quite up to high water mark on the
New Jersey shore, and by late public statutes had extended the west
lines of her counties lying opposite to New Jersey on the east side
of the Hudson River to the west bank of the river, and had enforced
the said unjust pretension by enacting that penalties should be
imposed on any person who should execute, or attempt to execute,
civil or criminal process on any part of the dividing waters by
virtue of any other authority than her own laws; that under color
of said statutes, her officers had occasionally executed process on
the west side of Hudson River and on the wharves so erected on the
west bank of the river within the territory and jurisdiction of New
Jersey; that New York pretends that all that part of said tract of
country granted to the Duke of York, and which he did not convey to
Berkeley and Carteret, remained in him; that no part of Hudson
River was granted to Berkeley and Carteret, and that when New York
became an independent state, all the said domain of the Duke of
York, with the Hudson River and the other dividing waters, vested
in full propriety and sovereignty in New York, and that New York
has always
Page 108 U. S. 408
claimed and possessed the same accordingly; that New Jersey
insists that in the grants to Berkeley and Carteret, the equal use
and property of the River Hudson and sound is expressly and in
terms conveyed to them, and accordingly Berkeley and Carteret and
their grantees and assigns before the revolution, and New Jersey,
as one of the United States, since the revolution, had always
claimed, exercised, occupied, and enjoyed right, title, and
jurisdiction, as well over the territory as the waters of Hudson
River and Bay, equal in extent to those used and exercised by New
York; that the citizens of New Jersey, both before and since the
revolution, under the authority, jurisdiction, and control, as well
of the colonial as of the state government of New Jersey, had, ever
since the first settlement of the colony, used, occupied, and
enjoyed the territory and waters of the Hudson River and Bay and
Staten Island Sound, and all other dividing waters between the said
states, by building and constructing docks and wharves thereon
extending far below low water mark on the westerly shores thereof,
by locating and appropriating several fisheries therein and
exercising the rights of common fishery in other parts thereof, by
locating and appropriating oyster grounds therein and planting them
with oysters under rights derived from New Jersey, and by
navigating the same with her ships and vessels, which would at
pleasure, lie at anchor in the Hudson River, Bay, and Sound, and
also by the docks and wharves so constructed under the authority
and jurisdiction of New Jersey, without interruption, and by
various other acts and uses; that, even though said grants may not
have conveyed any right of property in said river, yet inasmuch as
no part of said river was ever granted to the Colony of New York,
it remained in the Duke of York until
brk:
his accession to the throne of England in 1685, when said river
became reannexed to the Crown by his accession thereto and remained
a royal river until the American revolution, and, upon the
independence of New York and New Jersey being achieved, this public
navigable river became the common boundary of the two states, with
a right of property and jurisdiction in each to the midway thereof;
that at the time of the said grants to the Duke of York and from
him to Berkeley and
Page 108 U. S. 409
Carteret, and for many years after, the general understanding of
all parties interested in the subject matter of those grants was
that no part of the waters of the Hudson River belonged to New
York, but said river, so far as respected the colony of New York,
her counties and the City of New York especially, was the mere
natural boundary of the said colony, in which no right of property
existed or could exist; that all the ancient grants made by the
Duke of York to individuals while he remained a duke and after he
became the King, or by the colonial government established by him
in the State of New York, are limited to low water mark on the east
side of the Hudson River; that the first charter to the City of New
York, made in 1686, gives the city boundary and assigns to it all
Manhattan Island as far as low water mark; that the Colonial
Legislature of New York, by an act passed in 1691, revised the
previous act or ordinance laying off several counties in New York,
and the county boundaries fixed by the said revised statutes were
prescribed and based upon the principle that New York had no claim
to the waters on the New Jersey side of the Hudson, the City and
County of New York and the Counties of Westchester and Dutchess
being expressly located on the east bank of the Hudson, and that
New Jersey had uniformly resisted and apposed said encroachments
and pretensions of New York from their first existence. The bill
prays that the eastern boundary line between New Jersey and New
York may be ascertained and established; that the rights of
property, jurisdiction, and sovereignty of New Jersey may be
confirmed to the
filum aquae or middle of Hudson River,
from the 41st degree of north latitude on said river through the
whole line of the eastern shore of New Jersey, as far as said river
washes and bounds New Jersey, down to the Bay of New York and to
the channel or midway of the said bay, and to all the waters and
the land they cover lying between the New Jersey shore and Staten
Island, and all other waters washing the southern shores of New
Jersey within and above the Narrows; that New Jersey may be quieted
in the full and free enjoyment of her property, jurisdiction, and
sovereignty in said waters, and that the right, title,
jurisdiction, and sovereignty
Page 108 U. S. 410
of New Jersey in and over the same, as part of her public
domain, may be confirmed and established by the decree of this
Court.
The averments made by New Jersey in said bill show that claims
she made, and what her understanding was as to the claims made by
New York, and as to the assertion of claims theretofore by the
respective states. It is alleged by the counsel for the applicant
that in early colonial times the waters surrounding Staten Island
were regarded as the waters of the Hudson River, and Staten Island
was regarded as lying in the waters of the Hudson River; that in
the grant to Berkeley and Carteret, New Jersey was bounded on the
east partly by the main sea and partly by the Hudson River; that
the same boundary was contained in the subsequent grant of East
Jersey to Carteret; that in 1682 and again in 1709, the Legislature
of East Jersey, by statute, bounded Bergen County, the site of the
present dispute, on the bay and the Hudson River; that such
legislation of New Jersey as to the boundary of Bergen County
remained unchanged until 1807; that the Montgomerie charter to the
City of New York, in 1730, expressed the jurisdiction of that city
as extending "to low water mark on the west side of the North
river, or so far as the limits of our said province extend there;"
and that the boundaries of New York were asserted by it, in its
Revised Statutes of 1830, to embrace the waters of Kill van Kull to
low water mark on the New Jersey side.
The matters in dispute between the two states as to boundary
being those thus set forth, the dispute was brought to a close by
an agreement or compact entered into on the 16th of September,
1833, between commissioners appointed by the two states, which
agreement was confirmed by the legislatures of the two states
respectively. The consent of the Congress of the Unites states was
given to said agreement, "and to each and every part and article
thereof," by an act approved June 28, 1834, 4 Stat. 708, c. 126.
That act sets forth the agreement at length. The first five
articles of it, which are all that are important here, are as
follows:
"ARTICLE FIRST. The boundary line between the two States
Page 108 U. S. 411
of New York and New Jersey from a point in the middle of Hudson
River opposite the point on the west shore thereof in the
forty-first degree of north latitude, as heretofore ascertained and
marked, to the main sea shall be the middle of the said river, of
the Bay of New York, of the waters between Staten Island and New
Jersey, and of Raritan Bay, to the main sea, except as hereinafter
otherwise particularly mentioned."
"ARTICLE SECOND. The State of New York shall retain its present
jurisdiction of and over Bedlow's and Ellis' islands, and shall
also retain exclusive jurisdiction of and over the other islands
lying in the waters above mentioned, and now under the jurisdiction
of that state."
"ARTICLE THIRD. The State of New York shall have and enjoy
exclusive jurisdiction of and over all the waters of the Bay of New
York, and of and over all the waters of Hudson River lying west of
Manhattan Island and to the south of the mouth of Spuytenduyvel
Creek, and of and over the lands covered by the said waters to the
low water mark on the westerly or New Jersey side thereof, subject
to the following rights of property and of jurisdiction of the
State of New Jersey; that is to say:"
"1. The State of New Jersey shall have the exclusive right of
property in and to the land under water lying west of the middle of
the Bay of New York, and west of the middle of that part of the
Hudson River which lies between Manhattan island and New
Jersey."
"2. The State of New Jersey shall have the exclusive
jurisdiction of and over the wharves, docks, and improvements made
and to be made on the shore of the said state, and of and over all
vessels aground on said shore, or fastened to any such wharf or
dock, except that the said vessels shall be subject to the
quarantine or health laws, and laws in relation to passengers, of
the State of New York, which now exist or which may hereafter be
passed."
"3. The State of New Jersey shall have the exclusive right of
regulating the fisheries on the westerly side of the middle of said
waters,
provided that the navigation be not obstructed or
hindered."
"ARTICLE FOURTH. The State of New York shall have exclusive
jurisdiction of and over the waters of the Kill van Kull between
Staten Island and New Jersey to the westernmost end
Page 108 U. S. 412
of Shooter's Island in respect to such quarantine laws, and laws
relating to passengers, as now exist or may hereafter be passed
under the authority of that state, and for executing the same, and
the said state shall also have exclusive jurisdiction for the like
purposes of and over the waters of the sound from the westernmost
end of Shooter's Island to Woodbridge Creek, as to all vessels
bound to any port in the said State of New York."
"ARTICLE FIFTH. The State of New Jersey shall have and enjoy
exclusive jurisdiction of and over all the waters of the sound
between Staten Island and New Jersey lying south of Woodbridge
Creek, and of and over all the waters of Raritan Bay lying westward
of a line drawn from the light house at Prince's Bay to the mouth
of Mattavan Creek, subject to the following rights of property and
of jurisdiction of the State of New York; that is to say:"
"1. The State of New York shall have the exclusive right of
property in and to the land under water lying between the middle of
the said waters and Staten Island."
"2. The State of New York shall have the exclusive jurisdiction
of and over the wharves, docks, and improvements made and to be
made on the shore of Staten Island, and of and over all vessels
aground on said shore or fastened to any such wharf or dock, except
that the said vessels shall be subject to the quarantine or health
laws, and laws in relation to passengers of the State of New
Jersey, which now exist or which may hereafter be passed."
"3. The State of New York shall have the exclusive right of
regulating the fisheries between the shore of Staten Island and the
middle of the said waters,
provided that the navigation of
the said waters be not obstructed or hindered."
The Act of June 28, 1934, provides that nothing contained in
said agreement
"shall be construed to impair or in any manner affect any right
of jurisdiction of the United States in and over the islands or
waters which form the subject of the said agreement."
It is apparent from the terms of the various provisions of the
agreement that it is an agreement settling the territorial limits
and jurisdiction of the two states in respect to the waters between
them from a point in the middle of the Hudson River,
Page 108 U. S. 413
in the 41st degree of north latitude to the sea. The boundary
line is declared to be the middle of the said river, of the Bay of
New York, of the waters between Staten Island and New Jersey, and
of Raritan Bay, except as afterwards otherwise particularly
mentioned. What may be the effect of the exception -- whether it
affects the boundary line itself or only amounts to the concession
of extraterritorial jurisdiction to the one state and the other
beyond the territorial boundary -- is not necessary to be decided
in the present case. For in either view, it is clear that the
waters in which the tug was lying when she was seized were within
the boundaries of the State of New Jersey. The only jurisdiction
given to the State of New York, beyond the boundary line specified
in Article First, over the waters of the Kill van Kull, is that
specified in Article Fourth, by which it is declared that
"The State of New York shall have exclusive jurisdiction of and
over the waters of the Kill van Kull between Staten Island and New
Jersey to the westernmost end of Shooter's Island in respect to
such quarantine laws, and laws relating to passengers as now exist
or may hereafter be passed under the authority of that state and
for executing the same."
The rest of that article relates to Staten Island Sound west of
Shooter's Island, and has no reference to this case. The
jurisdiction thus conceded to New York is, clearly, a limited one,
and cannot, in any view, be regarded as altering the general
boundary line, and as the tug, when seized, was on the New Jersey
side of that line, she was within the State of New Jersey not
because she was fastened to a dock on the shores of New Jersey, but
because she was within that part of the waters between Staten
Island and New Jersey which, by Article First of the agreement, is
set apart to New Jersey.
Being thus within the State of New Jersey, was the tug within
the District of New Jersey and within the territorial jurisdiction
of the District Court of the United States for the District of New
Jersey? We are all of the opinion that, when the act of Congress of
1789 declared that the New Jersey District should consist of the
State of New Jersey, it intended that any territory, land, or water
which should at any time,
Page 108 U. S. 414
with the express assent of Congress, form part of that state,
should form part of the District of New Jersey. By sections 530 and
531 of the Revised Statutes the State of New Jersey constitutes a
Judicial District. The intention is that the boundary of the
district shall be coterminous with the boundary of the state. The
same thing is true as to the Southern District of New York, and as
to the district across the water at the
locus in quo,
which is the Eastern District of New York. That district was
created by the Act of February 25, 1865, 13 Stat. 438, c. 54, to
consist of "the Counties of Kings, Queens, Suffolk, and Richmond,
in the State of New York, with the waters thereof." By section 541
of the Revised Statutes, the Northern District of New York is
defined as including the Counties of Albany, Renesselaer,
Schoharie, and Delaware, with all the counties north [and west] of
them; the Eastern District as including "the Counties of Richmond,
Kings, Queens, and Suffolk, with the waters thereof;" and the
Southern District as including "the residue of said state, with the
waters thereof." It is consonant with the convenience and habits of
the people that, when any place is within the limits and
jurisdiction of a state, it should not be joined to the whole or a
part of another state, as to the jurisdiction of the courts of the
federal government, and it is not to be presumed, in view of the
terms of the statues on the subject, and of the necessity for the
consent of Congress to all compacts between the states, that such
separation can be intended unless clearly expressed. Where Congress
declares that such a Judicial District shall consist of such a
state, and afterwards the boundary of the state is so lawfully
altered as to include or exclude a particular piece of territory,
it is a reasonable construction to say that the Judicial District
shall,
ipso facto, without further legislation by
Congress, expand or contract accordingly. When the State of
Massachusetts ceded to the State of New York, in 1853, its
sovereignty and jurisdiction over the District of Boston Corner,
and the latter state accepted the same, and Congress consented to
such cession and annexation, Act of January 3, 1855, c. 20, vol.
10, Stat. 602, there was no special transfer by Congress of the
annexed territory from the District of Massachusetts to the
Southern District
Page 108 U. S. 415
of New York, but it fell within that district by becoming a part
of Columbia County, in the State of New York.
The provision in the Act of June 28, 1834, that nothing in the
agreement between New York and New Jersey shall impair "any right
of jurisdiction of the United States in and over the islands or
waters which form the subject of the said agreement," is well
satisfied without construing it as applying to the then existing
jurisdiction of any particular court of the United States. Article
Second of the agreement provides that
"The State of New York shall retain its present jurisdiction of
and over Bedlow's and Ellis' islands, and shall also retain
exclusive jurisdiction of and over the other islands lying in the
waters above mentioned, and now under the jurisdiction of that
state."
Other articles of the agreement provide for the exclusive
jurisdiction of New York or New Jersey over specified waters. In
giving consent to the agreement and "each and every part and
article thereof," Congress was consenting, apparently, as against
any rights of jurisdiction which the United States then had, to the
exclusive jurisdictions of New York and New Jersey, respectively,
over the islands and waters referred to. Hence, for abundant
caution, the clause in question was added. New York had, by an act
passed February 15, 1800, 1 R.L. 189, ceded to the United States
jurisdiction over "all that certain island called Bedlow's Island,
bounded on all sides by the waters of the Hudson River, all that
certain island called Oyster island" (known afterwards and now as
Ellis' island), "bounded on all sides by the waters of the Hudson
River," and also Governors' Island, reserving to the state the
right to serve and execute, on those islands respectively, civil or
criminal process issuing under the authority of the state.
Reference is made to Article Sixth of the Amendments of the
Constitution, 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,"
and it is suggested that the boundaries of a district could not
be ascertained by law, if they were left to change with such local
changes as coterminous
Page 108 U. S. 416
states might agree upon with each other as to their respective
boundaries and limits. Article Six was one of ten articles proposed
by the first Congress as amendments to the Constitution on the 25th
of September, 1789, the day after the Judiciary Act was approved,
providing that the New York District should consist of the State of
New York, and the New Jersey District of the State of New Jersey,
and defining and ascertaining by law all the other districts which
it established solely by naming the several states as districts.
There were two disputes as to boundary existing at that time
between Massachusetts and Rhode Island, both of them running back
to colonial times, one respecting the northern boundary of Rhode
Island and the other respecting the eastern boundary of Rhode
Island. The particulars of the first dispute appear in the record
of a suit in equity brought in this Court by Rhode Island against
Massachusetts, in 1832,
37 U. S. 12 Pet.
657, to settle such northern boundary. In December, 1845, by a
decree of this Court, the bill in the suit was dismissed on the
merits and the northern boundary of Rhode Island was established on
the line claimed by Massachusetts. In 1854, Massachusetts filed a
bill in equity in this Court against Rhode Island to settle said
eastern boundary. A conventional boundary line, different from that
claimed by either state, was agreed upon and sanctioned by Congress
by an Act approved February 9, 1859, 11 Stat. 382, c. 28, and
established by a decree of this Court made December, 16, 1861, to
take effect March 1, 1862. The act of Congress declared that the
new line should "be taken and deemed to be, for all purposes
affecting
brk:
the jurisdiction of the United States or of any department of
the government thereof," the true line of boundary between
Massachusetts and Rhode Island. In the latter case as in the
present one, the boundary between the two disputing states was
settled on a line different from that claimed by either. The
Judiciary Act defined the state as the district, not the state as
either party to the dispute claimed it to be, and the effect of the
change of state boundary in the present case on the limits of
judicial districts must be held to be as potent as that in the case
of Massachusetts and Rhode Island, notwithstanding the affirmative
provision in the act in
Page 108 U. S. 417
the latter case as to the jurisdiction of the United States and
of the departments of its government. Congress has always left
judicial districts to be confined within state limits. Of course,
the district, as a place of trial, must be ascertained by law
before the crime was committed, and a person charged with a crime
cannot be tried for it in a district which did not include, when
the crime was committed, the place where it was committed. Whether
a change in the boundary of a state, and thus of a district, after
the commission of a crime and before a trial for it, would have the
effect of preventing a trial in any district is a question which
must be decided when it shall arise. The mode adopted by Congress
of ascertaining districts by law in such manner that their
boundaries shall change as the boundaries of the states change is
one at least sufficient and convenient for practical purposes in
all cases except where a person charged with crime, and placed on
trial in a particular district, may be able to establish that his
rights under Article 6 of the Amendments of the Constitution are
being violated.
Views not in harmony with those above set forth were expressed
by the District Court for the Southern District of New York in the
case of
United States v. The Julia Lawrence and the case
of
The L. W. Eaton, 9 Benedict 289. The former case was
decided by Judge Betts in 1860, and from that time forward, the
District Court for the Southern District of New York exercised its
jurisdiction on the view that that jurisdiction was not to be
governed by the provisions of the agreement between New York and
New Jersey. Our attention has not been called to any case before
the present one where a federal court in New Jersey has passed on
the question of the limits of the District of New Jersey, as
affected by that agreement. There being thus a conflict of
interpretation between the judicial authorities of the two
districts as to the question of the territorial jurisdiction of
those districts, it is important that the effect of the agreement
between the two state on that jurisdiction should be clearly
defined. This we have endeavored to do. The result is that
The application for the writ of prohibition must be
denied.