The Act of March 3, 1885, Laws 2d Sess. 48th Cong, c. 353, page
437, restored to this Court appellate jurisdiction in habeas corpus
cases over decisions of circuit court of the United States and
decisions of the Supreme Court of the District of Columbia.
Neither this Court nor the Supreme Court of the District of
Columbia has appellate jurisdiction over a naval court-martial nor
over offenses which it has power to try.
In order to make a case for habeas corpus, there must be actual
confinement or the present means of enforcing it; mere moral
restraint is not sufficient.
The appellant, a medical director in the Navy, was, under
Rev.Stat. §§ 419, 420, 421, 426, 1471, appointed and commissioned
Chief of the Bureau of Medicine and Surgery in the Navy Department,
with the title of Surgeon General, and served as such the full term
filed by law. After he had vacated that office, a court-martial was
ordered to try him under charges and specifications for conduct as
Chief of the Bureau and Surgeon General,
Page 114 U. S. 565
and the Secretary of the Navy notified him thus: "You are placed
under arrest and you will confine yourself to the limits of the
City of Washington." An application for a writ of habeas corpus
having been denied by the Supreme Court of the District of
Columbia, on appeal to this Court, it was
held (1) that no
restraint of liberty was shown to justify the use of the writ of
habeas corpus; (2) that the Court would not decide in these
proceedings, whether the Surgeon General of the Navy as Chief of
the Bureau of Medicine and Surgery in the Navy, is liable to be
tried by court-martial for failure to perform his duties as Surgeon
General.
This was an appeal from a judgment of the Supreme Court of the
District of Columbia refusing a writ of habeas corpus to release
appellant, a Medical Inspector in the Navy, from restraint under an
arrest, made by order of the Secretary of the Navy. The facts which
make the case are stated in the opinion of the Court.
MR. JUSTICE MILLER delivered the opinion of the Court.
This is an appeal from a judgment of the Supreme Court of the
District of Columbia which refused to make an order on a writ of
habeas corpus relieving appellant from the custody of the appellee,
who, it is alleged, held the appellant in restraint of his liberty
unlawfully.
Upon the decision of the Supreme Court of the District adverse
to petitioner, an application for an original writ of habeas corpus
was made to this Court by counsel for appellant, but on a
suggestion from the Court that an act of Congress at its session
just closed had restored the appellate jurisdiction of this Court
in habeas corpus cases over decisions of the circuit courts,
* and that this
necessarily included jurisdiction over
Page 114 U. S. 566
similar judgments of the Supreme Court of the District of
Columbia, counsel, on due consideration, withdrew their
application, and, appealing from the judgment of that court, bring
here the record of it for review.
Rev.Stat.Dist.Col. § 846, which makes the jurisdiction of this
Court over judgments and decrees of the circuit courts of the
United States the measure of its jurisdiction (except as regards
the sum in controversy) over judgments and decrees of the Supreme
Court of the District in similar cases, justifies the exercise of
our appellate jurisdiction in the present case.
The original petition for the writ was addressed to Mr. Justice
Cox of the Supreme Court of the District, and alleged that on the
second day of March, 1885, the petitioner was arrested and
imprisoned, and ever since has so remained in arrest and
imprisonment and restrained of his liberty in the District of
Columbia illegally. The petition sets out an order of the Secretary
of the Navy under which this restraint is exercised, which order is
in the following terms:
"WASHINGTON, February 28, 1885"
"SIR: Transmitted herewith you will receive charges, with
specifications, preferred against you by the department."
"A general court-martial has been ordered to convene in rooms
numbered 32 and 33 at the Navy Department, Washington, D.C., at 12
o'clock noon on Monday, the ninth proximo, at which time and place
you will appear and report yourself to Rear Admiral Edward Simpson,
United States Navy, the presiding officer of the court, for trial.
The Judge Advocate will summon such witnesses as you may require
for your defense."
"You are hereby placed under arrest, and you will confine
yourself to the limits of the City of Washington."
"Very respectfully,"
"WM. E. CHANDLER"
"
Secretary of the Navy"
"Medical Director"
"PHILIP S. WALES"
"
U.S.N., Washington, D.C. "
Page 114 U. S. 567
It also makes an exhibit to the petition a copy of the charges
and specifications accompanying this order. It is unnecessary to
say more of these charges at present than that they relate to
derelictions of duty on the part of the appellant while he was
Surgeon General of the Navy, and as such had charge of the Bureau
of Medicine and Surgery in the Navy Department, which office he
held from August 20, 1879, to January 26, 1884. He had therefore
ceased to be Surgeon General and was in the exercise of his
functions as medical director of the Navy when this order was
served on him.
Judge Cox issued the writ directed to William C. Whitney,
Secretary of the Navy, who had become such by succession to
Secretary Chandler. To this writ Secretary Whitney made return
stating the action of Secretary Chandler, and the history of the
appellant's connection with the Navy since he was appointed medical
inspector in June, 1873, the charges preferred against him as chief
of the bureau of medicine and surgery, and the order of arrest of
Secretary Chandler, and closes his return as follows:
"Your respondent respectfully submits that the said Philip S.
Wales is not now, nor was at the time of issuing the annexed writ,
in the custody or possession of, or confined or restrained of his
liberty by your respondent other than as appears by the papers
marked A, B, and C, attached hereto and made part of this return,
and that the cause of such detention, if any there be, is fully
shown in said exhibits."
"And your respondent further answers that neither he nor anyone
by his authority has exercised any physical restraint over the said
Philip S. Wales before or since the issue of said writ."
"Your respondent further answers that by virtue of his office as
Secretary of the Navy, the said Philip S. Wales being a medical
director in the Navy, was at the time of the issuing of the said
writ and has since continually been in the power of your respondent
so far as the statutes of the United States and the regulations of
the Navy not inconsistent therewith have vested him with authority
over the said Philip S. Wales. "
Page 114 U. S. 568
"Your respondent further says that he knows of no obstacle or
impediment to prevent the said Philip S. Wales from being present
before your honor at the time and place fixed in the said writ, but
in order to comply with the order of your honor, and under and by
virtue of his authority as Secretary of the Navy, he has ordered
the said Philip S. Wales to be present at the time and place so
fixed. Wherefore the said William C. Whitney, Secretary of the
Navy, has here, before your Honorable Court, the body of the said
Philip S. Wales, together with the said writ, as therein he is
commanded."
"W. C. WHITNEY"
"
Secretary of the Navy"
To this return the petitioner by his counsel demurred, when, on
this demurrer and after motion of the respondent to discharge the
writ, Mr. Justice Cox certified the case into the court in general
term. That court, after full hearing and due consideration, made
the following order:
"
Habeas Corpus. Ex relatione PHILIP S. WALES -- No.
15,780"
"This cause coming on for hearing and having been argued by
counsel and duly considered, it is, this 14th day of April, 1885,
ordered and adjudged that the petition be dismissed with costs, the
court being of opinion that the relator has not been, nor is he at
this present, deprived of his personal liberty by virtue of the
orders of the Secretary of the Navy set out in the petition."
"By the court:"
"A. WYLIE"
It is from this order that the present appeal is taken.
The only other matter apparent in the record necessary to be
stated at this time is that the court-martial referred to in the
order of arrest was duly appointed, assembled, and organized, and
that appellant appeared before it, and at his request it has been
adjourned from time to time to await the result of these
proceedings in habeas corpus.
Two questions have been elaborately argued before us,
namely:
1. Does the return of the Secretary of the Navy to the writ
Page 114 U. S. 569
and its accompanying exhibits show such restraint of the liberty
of the petitioner by that officer as justifies the use of the writ
of habeas corpus?
2. If there is a restraint which in its character demands the
issue of the writ, are the charges for which the petitioner is
required to answer before the naval court-martial of the class of
which such a court has jurisdiction?
The latter is a question of importance and not free from
difficulty, since its solution requires the court to decide whether
the Surgeon General of the Navy, as Chief of the Bureau of Medicine
and Surgery in the Department of the Navy, under the immediate
supervision of the Secretary, is liable for any failure to perform
his duties as Surgeon General, to be tried by a military court
under the articles of war governing the Navy or has a right for
such offenses to be tried alone by the civil courts, and according
to the law, for offenses not military. Is he in that character in
the civil or military service of the United States? The difficulty
of stating the question shows the embarrassment attending its
decision.
The other question, however, has precedence both because it is
the one on which the court of the District decided it and because,
if there was no such restraint, whether legal or illegal, as to
call for the use of the writ, there is no occasion to inquire into
its cause.
It is obvious that petitioner is under no physical restraint. He
walks the streets of Washington with no one to hinder his
movements, just as he did before the Secretary's order was served
on him. It is not stated as a fact in the record, but it is a fair
inference from all that is found in it, that as medical director he
was residing in Washington and performing there the duties of his
office. It is beyond dispute that the Secretary of the Navy had the
right to direct him to reside in the city in performance of these
duties. If he had been somewhere else, the Secretary could have
ordered him to Washington as medical director, and in order to
leave Washington lawfully he would have to obtain leave of absence.
He must in such case remain here until otherwise ordered or
permitted. It is not easy to see how he is under any restraint of
his personal
Page 114 U. S. 570
liberty by the order of arrest which he was not under before.
Nor can it be believed that if this order had made no reference to
a trial on charges against him before a court-martial, he would
have felt any restraint whatever though it had directed him to
remain in the city until further orders. If the order had directed
him so to remain and act as a member of such court, can anyone
believe he would have felt himself a prisoner entitled to the
benefit of a writ of a writ of habeas corpus?
On the other hand, there is an obvious motive on the part of the
petitioner for construing this order as making him a prisoner in
the custody of the Secretary. That motive is to have himself
brought before a civil court which, on inquiry into the cause of
his imprisonment, may decide that the offense with which the
Secretary charges him is not of a military character, is not one of
which a naval court-martial can entertain jurisdiction, and,
releasing him from the restraint of the order of arrest, it would
incidentally release him from the power of that court.
But neither the Supreme Court of the District nor this Court has
any appellate jurisdiction over the naval court-martial nor over
offenses which such a court has power to try. Neither of these
courts is authorized to interfere with it in the performance of its
duty, by way of a writ of prohibition or any order of that nature.
The civil courts can relieve a person from imprisonment under order
of such court only by writ of habeas corpus, and then only when it
is made apparent that it proceeds without jurisdiction. If there is
no restraint, there is no right in the civil court to interfere.
Its power, then, extends no further than to release the prisoner.
It cannot remit a fine, or restore to an office, or reverse the
judgment of the military court. Whatever effect the decision of the
court may have on the proceedings, orders, or judgments of the
military court is incidental to the order releasing the prisoner.
Of course, if there is no prisoner to release, if there is no
custody to be discharged, if there is no such restraint as requires
relief, then the civil court has no power to interfere with the
military court or other tribunal over which it has by law no
appellate jurisdiction.
Page 114 U. S. 571
The writ of habeas corpus is not a writ of error, though in some
cases in which the court issuing it has appellate power over the
court by whose order the petitioner is held in custody it may be
used with the writ of certiorari for that purpose. In such case,
however, as the one before us, it is not a writ of error. Its
purpose is to enable the court to inquire first if the petitioner
is restrained of his liberty. If he is not, the court can do
nothing but discharge the writ. If there is such restraint, the
court can then inquire into the cause of it, and if the alleged
cause be unlawful, it must then discharge the prisoner.
There is no very satisfactory definition to be found is the
adjudged cases of the character of the restraint or imprisonment
suffered by a party applying for the writ of habeas corpus, which
is necessary to sustain the writ. This can hardly be expected from
the variety of restraints for which it is used to give relief.
Confinement under civil and criminal process may be so relieved.
Wives restrained by husbands, children withheld from the proper
parent or guardian, persons held under arbitrary custody by private
individuals, as in a mad house, as well as those under military
control, may all become proper subjects of relief by the writ of
habeas corpus. Obviously the extent and character of the restraint
which justifies the writ must vary according to the nature of the
control which is asserted over the party in whose behalf the writ
is prayed.
In the case of a man in the military or naval service, where he
is, whether as an officer or a private, always more or less subject
in his movements, by the very necessity of military rule and
subordination, to the orders of his superior officer, it should be
made clear that some unusual restraint upon his liberty of personal
movement exists to justify the issue of the writ; otherwise every
order of the superior officer directing the movements of his
subordinate which necessarily to some extent curtails his freedom
of will may be held to be a restraint of his liberty, and the party
so ordered may seek relief from obedience by means of a writ of
habeas corpus.
Something more than moral restraint is necessary to make a
Page 114 U. S. 572
case for habeas corpus. There must be actual confinement or the
present means of enforcing it. The class of cases in which a
sheriff or other officer, with a writ in his hands for the arrest
of a person whom he is required to take into custody, to whom the
person to be arrested submits without force being applied, comes
under this definition. The officer has the authority to arrest, and
the power to enforce it. If the party named in the writ resists or
attempts to resist, the officer can summon bystanders to his
assistance, and may himself use personal violence. Here, the force
is imminent and the party is in presence of it. It is physical
power which controls him, though not called into demonstrative
action.
It is said in argument that such is the power exercised over the
appellant under the order of the Secretary of the Navy. But this
is, we think, a mistake. If Dr. Wales had chosen to disobey this
order, he had nothing to do but take the next or any subsequent
train from the city and leave it. There was no one at hand to
hinder him. And though it is said that a file of marines or some
proper officer could have been sent to arrest and bring him back,
this could only be done by another order of the Secretary, and
would be another arrest, and a real imprisonment under another and
distinct order. Here would be a real restraint of liberty, quite
different from the first. The fear of this latter proceeding, which
may or may not keep Dr. Wales within the limits of the city, is a
moral restraint which concerns his own convenience, and in regard
to which he exercises his own will.
The present case bears a strong analogy to
Dodge's
Case, in 6 Martin (La.) 569. It appeared there that the party
who sued out the writ had been committed to jail on execution for
debt, and having given the usual bond by which he and his sureties
were bound to pay the debt if he left the prison bounds, he was
admitted to the privilege of those bounds. The plaintiff in
execution failing to pay the fees necessary to the support of the
prisoner, the latter sued out a writ of habeas corpus.
That eminent jurist Chief Justice Martin said on appeal to the
supreme court:
"It appears to us that the writ of habeas corpus was improperly
resorted to. The appellee was
Page 114 U. S. 573
under no physical restraint, and there was no necessity to recur
to a court or judge to cause any moral restraint to cease. The
sheriff did not restrain him, since he had admitted him to the
benefit of the bounds; the doors of the jail were not closed on
him, and if he was detained, it was not by the sheriff or jailer.
If his was a moral restraint, it could not be an illegal one. The
object of the appellee was not to obtain the removal of an illegal
restraint from a judge, but the declaration of the court that the
plaintiffs in execution had by their neglect lost the right of
detaining him. A judgment declaring such neglect and pronouncing on
the consequences of it was what the appellee had in view."
The judgment awarding the writ was reversed. The analogy to the
case before us is striking.
A very similar case was passed upon by the Supreme Court of
Pennsylvania in
Respublica v. Arnold, 3 Yeates 263. A
party who had been indicted for arson and had given bail for his
appearance to answer the indictment applied, while out under bail
to be discharged by writ of habeas corpus on the ground of delay in
the prosecution. The court held that the statute of Pennsylvania,
which was a reenactment of the habeas corpus act of 31 Charles II,
c. 2, spoke of persons committed or detained, and clearly did not
apply to a person out on bail. And Mr. Justice Yeates very
pertinently inquires, "Would not a habeas corpus directed to the
bail of a supposed offender be perfectly novel?" And Smith, J.,
said that the inclination of his mind was that habeas corpus could
not lie to the bail.
In a note to the cases of
Rex v. Dawes and
Rex v.
Kessel, 1 Burrow 638, the same principle is stated, though by
whom the note is made does not appear. Both these persons were
brought before Lord Mansfield in the King's Bench on a rule against
the commissioners to enforce an act of Parliament to increase the
army. In both cases the ground on which the discharge was asked was
that they were illegally pressed into the service. Lord Mansfield
discharged one because his statement was found to be correct, and
refused the other because his statement was not true. The note to
the report, apparently in explanation of the fact that they were
not brought before the court by writ of habeas
Page 114 U. S. 574
corpus, and that no objection was taken to the rule by the
commissioner, says:
"Neither of these could have brought a habeas corpus; neither of
them was in custody. Dawes had deserted and absconded, and Kessel
had been made a corporal. No objection was made by the commissioner
to the propriety of the method adopted."
In the continuation of Chief Baron Comyn's Digest, published in
1776, and in Rose's edition of that digest, these cases are cited
as showing that the parties could not bring habeas corpus, because
they were not in custody. Comyn's Digest, Continuation, p. 345; 4
Comyn's Dig. (4th ed. 8vo, London, 1800) 313,
Habeas Corpus
B.
While the acts of Congress concerning this writ are not
decisive, perhaps, as to what is a restraint of liberty, they are
evidently framed in their provisions for proceedings in such cases
on the idea of the existence of some actual restraint. Rev.Stat. §
754 says the application for the writ must set forth "in whose
custody he [the petitioner] is detained, and by virtue of what
claim or authority, if known;" § 755 that "the writ must be
directed to the person in whose custody the party is;" § 757 that
this person shall certify to the court or justice before whom the
writ is returnable, the true cause of the detention, and by § 758
he is required "at the same time to bring the body of the party
before the judge who granted the writ."
All these provisions contemplate a proceeding against some
person who has the immediate custody of the party detained, with
the power to produce the body of such party before the court or
judge, that he may be liberated if no sufficient reason is shown to
the contrary.
In case of a person who is going at large with no one
controlling or watching him or detaining him, his body cannot be
produced by the person to whom the writ is directed unless by
consent of the alleged prisoner or by his capture and forcible
traduction into the presence of the court.
The record in the present case shows that no such thing was
done. The Secretary denies that Wales is in his custody, and he
does not produce his body, but Wales, on the direction of the
Secretary, appears without any compulsion, and reports
Page 114 U. S. 575
himself to the court and to Justice Cox, as he did to the
court-martial.
We concur with the Supreme Court of the District in the opinion
that the record does not present such a case of restraint of
personal liberty as to call for discharge by a writ of habeas
corpus.
In thus deciding, we are not leaving the appellant without
remedy if his counsel are right in believing the court-martial has
no jurisdiction of the offense of which he is charged. He can make
that objection to that court before trial. He can make it before
judgment after the facts are all before that court. He can make it
before the reviewing tribunal.
If that court finds him guilty and imposes imprisonment as part
of a sentence, he can then have a writ to relieve him of that
imprisonment. If he should be deprived of office, he can sue for
his pay and have the question of the jurisdiction of the court
which made such an order inquired into in that suit. If his pay is
stopped in whole or in part, he can do the same thing. In all these
modes, he can have relief if the court is without jurisdiction, and
the inquiry into that jurisdiction will be more satisfactory after
the court shall have decided on the nature of the offense for which
it punishes him than it can before. And this manner of relief is
more in accord with the orderly administration of justice and the
delicate relations of the two classes of courts, civil and
military, than the assumption in advance by the one court that the
other will exercise a jurisdiction which does not belong to it.
The judgment of the Supreme Court of the District of Columbia
is
Affirmed.
*
"An act amending section seven hundred and sixty-four of the
Revised Statutes.
Be it enacted by the Senate and House of
Representatives of the United States in Congress assembled
that section seven hundred and sixty-four of the Revised Statutes
be amended so that the same shall read as follows:"
" From the final decision of such circuit court an appeal may be
taken to the Supreme Court in the cases described in the preceding
section."
Approved March 3, 1885. Laws of 2d Sess. 48th Cong. c. 353, page
437.