The Act of March 3, 1885, 23 Stat. 385, c. 341, § 9, was
enacted to transfer to territorial courts established by the United
States the jurisdiction to try the crimes described in it
(including the crime of murder) under territorial laws when sitting
as and exercising the functions of a territorial court and not when
sitting as or exercising the functions of a circuit or district
court of the United States under Rev.Stat. § 1910.
Petition for a writ of habeas corpus. The case is stated in the
opinion of the Court.
MR. JUSTICE MILLER delivered the opinion of the Court.
This is a petition for a writ of habeas corpus to be directed to
the marshal of the United States for the Territory of Arizona, who,
it is alleged, holds the petitioner under a judgment of the
District Court of the United States for the Second Judicial
District of that territory, which condemned him to death for the
crime of murder. This crime is alleged in the indictment to have
been committed by the defendant, an Apache Indian, within said
district, naming no county or other location. The allegation of the
petitioner is that the court which tried him had not at that time,
and in the mode of trial which was pursued, any jurisdiction of the
case against him. It is argued
Page 130 U. S. 344
by counsel and alleged in the petition that the district courts
of the United States in the Territory of Arizona, as in all other
territories, have two distinct jurisdictions -- that in the one
they sit to exercise the powers and to try the same class of cases
that the circuit courts of the United States do within the states,
and in the same manner, while in the other they sit as courts
having jurisdiction of the ordinary contests between private
parties and of criminal offenses arising under the territorial
laws. The controversy in this case seems to turn upon the question
whether the offense for which Gon-shay-ee was tried was an offense
against the laws of the United States and was of that character
which ought to have been tried by the court sitting to try such
cases, or whether it was an offense against the laws of the
territory, and should have been tried under those laws and by the
court sitting to administer justice under them. The petitioner
alleges that the offense with which he was charged was of the
latter class, but that he was tried by the court while it was
exercising its functions under the former.
The record of the case commences with the following statement of
the finding of the indictment:
"
I
N THE DISTRICT COURT OF THE SECOND JUDICIAL DISTRICT"
"
COUNTY OF MARICOPA, TERRITORY OF ARIZONA"
May term, A.D. 1888, sitting for the trial of all cases arising
under the Constitution and laws of the United States and having and
exercising the same jurisdiction in all cases arising under the
Constitution and laws of the United States as is vested in the
circuit and district courts of the United States at a term thereof
held at the City of Phoenix, in the County of Maricopa, in said
district and territory, on the 29th day of May, A.D. one thousand
eight hundred and eighty-eight.
"The United States of America"
"v. Indictment"
"Gon-shay-ee"
"Second Judicial District, Territory of Arizona"
"The grand jurors of the United States of America, within and
for the Second Judicial District, Territory of Arizona,
Page 130 U. S. 345
being duly impaneled, sworn, and charged to inquire within and
for the body of said district of all offenses committed therein
against the United States of America, upon their oath present: that
Gon-shay-ee, an Apache Indian, late of the Second Judicial
District, Territory of Arizona, with force and arms, in said
district and territory, on or about the 5th day of June, A.D. one
thousand eight hundred and eighty-eight and before the finding of
this indictment, did then and there feloniously, willfully,
deliberately, premeditately, and with malice aforethought, make an
assault on a human being, to-wit, William Deal, in the peace of the
United States then and there being, and with a certain gun, which
then and there was loaded with gunpowder and a leaden bullet, and
by him, the said Gon-shay-ee, had and held in his hands, he, the
said Gon-shay-ee, did then and there feloniously, willfully,
deliberately, premeditately, and with malice aforethought shoot off
and discharge at, to, against, and upon the said William Deal,
thereby and by thus striking the said William Deal with the said
leaden bullet, inflicting on and in the body of him, the said
William Deal, one mortal wound, of which mortal wound the said
William Deal then and there instantly died. And so the grand jurors
aforesaid, upon their oath aforesaid, do say that the said
Gon-shay-ee, an Apache Indian, in the manner and form aforesaid,
and at the time and place aforesaid, did him, the said William
Deal, feloniously, willfully, deliberately, premeditately, and with
malice aforethought kill and murder, against the peace of the
United States, and their dignity, and contrary to the form of the
statute in such case made and provided."
"O.T. ROUSE"
"
United States Attorney"
The record of the final judgment of the court is in the
following language:
Page 130 U. S. 346
"
UNITED STATES OF AMERICA"
"
DISTRICT COURT, SECOND JUDICIAL DISTRICT OF
ARIZONA"
"Having and exercising the same jurisdiction under the
Constitution and laws of the United States as is vested in the
district and circuit courts of the United States."
"Regular May term, A.D. 1883"
"June 14, A.D. 1888"
"Present: Hon. Wm. M. Porter, district judge."
"United States of America, Plaintiff"
"v. Convicted of murder"
"Gon-shay-ee, Defendant"
"The defendant, being present in open court in person, and by
his counsel, H. N. Alesander and by his counsel, H. N. Alexander
O.T. Rouse and Joseph Campbell, present on the part of the United
States, and this being the time heretofore fixed for passing
judgment on the defendant in this case, the defendant, Gon-shay-ee,
was duly informed by the court of the nature of the indictment
found against him for the crime of murder committed on or about the
5th day of June, A.D. 1887; of his arraignment and plea of 'not
guilty as charged in the indictment;' of the trial, and the verdict
of the jury on the 4th day of June, A.D. 1888, guilty of murder as
charged in the indictment. The defendant was then asked if he had
any legal cause to show why judgment should not be pronounced
against him, and, no sufficient cause being shown or appearing to
the court, thereupon the court renders its judgment that whereas,
you, Gon-shay-ee, having been duly convicted in this Court of the
crime of murder, it is found by the court that you are so guilty of
said crime. It is considered and adjudged, and the judgment of the
court is, that you, Gon-shay-ee, be removed hence to the county
jail of Maricopa County, or some other place of secure confinement,
and there be securely kept until Friday, the 10th day of August,
A.D. 1888, and on that day you be taken by the United States
Marshal of the Territory of Arizona, to and within the yard of the
jail of said Maricopa County,
Page 130 U. S. 347
Arizona, and between the hours of nine o'clock A.M. and five
o'clock P.M. of that day, by said marshal, you be hanged by the
neck till you are dead."
It is very clear from these transcripts of the proceedings in
the court below that on this trial it proceeded and considered
itself as acting as a court for the trial of offenses arising under
the Constitution and laws of the United States, and as
administering them with the same powers as those vested in the
circuit and district courts of the United States generally. The
grand jurors are described as
"the grand jurors of the United States of America within and for
the Second Judicial District, Territory of Arizona, being duly
impaneled, sworn, and charged to inquire within and for the body of
said district of all offenses committed therein against the United
States."
The court was held in the City of Phoenix, in the County of
Maricopa, and the offense is described as having been committed
within the Second Judicial District of the territory, without any
further reference to the county in which the act was done. In the
final judgment of condemnation, it is declared to be rendered in
the
"District Court, Second Judicial District of Arizona, having and
exercising the same jurisdiction under the Constitution and laws of
the United States as is vested in the district and circuit courts
of the United States."
Both the grand and the petit jurors were summoned by the marshal
of the United States, and the execution of the sentence was imposed
upon that officer, who now holds the prisoner in custody under
it.
If the court which tried the prisoner had been sitting for the
trial of offenses committed against the territorial law, all this
would have been different. The grand jury would have been summoned
for the county in which the act was committed, and from the body of
that county, by its sheriff, and the case would have been tried by
the court sitting in that county, unless for exceptional reasons
which do not appear in this case. The prisoner would, on
conviction, have been held by the sheriff, who would have had the
execution of the sentence committed to him under a warrant from the
court.
All these circumstances are so variant in the nature of the
Page 130 U. S. 348
jurisdiction and the mode in which it must be exercised that the
conviction of the prisoner under the one mode by the law prescribed
for the procedure under the other cannot be held to be within the
power of the court which proceeded under the wrong jurisdiction.
That there exists this system of a distinct jurisdiction,
administered by the same court, in the Territory of Arizona as it
does in nearly all the others is undoubted. The language of §
1910 of the Revised Statutes points very clearly to this
distribution of the functions of the courts of the United States in
the territories. It reads as follows:
"Each of the district courts in the territories mentioned in the
preceding section shall have and exercise the same jurisdiction, in
all cases arising under the Constitution and laws of the United
States, as is vested in the circuit and district courts of the
United States, and the first six days of every term of the
respective district courts, or so much thereof as is necessary,
shall be appropriated to the trial of causes arising under such
Constitution and laws; but writs of error and appeals in all such
cases may be had to the supreme court of each territory as in other
cases."
It may be safely assumed that the practice of the territorial
courts from their first organization has been to observe this
separation of their functions. The payment of the expenses of the
court, while sitting, as it declares in the caption above quoted,
to administer the laws of the United States, with the same
jurisdiction as is vested in the circuit and district courts of the
United States, is made by the federal government on accounts kept
and rendered by its officers, while the same courts, when held
within the different counties of the territories to administer the
territorial laws, whether criminal or civil, are paid by the county
or in some other mode prescribed by the legislature of the
territory.
The following language was used by this Court in
Ex Parte
Crow Dog, 109 U. S. 556,
109 U. S.
560:
"The district court has two distinct jurisdictions. As a
territorial court, it administers the local law of the territorial
government; as invested by act of Congress with jurisdiction to
administer the laws of the United States, it has all the
Page 130 U. S. 349
authority of circuit and district courts. So that in the former
character it may try a prisoner for murder committed in the
territory proper, under the local law, which requires the jury to
determine whether the punishment shall be death or imprisonment for
life, Laws of Dakota, 1883, c. 9, and, in the other character, try
another for a murder committed within the Indian reservation under
a law of the United States which imposes, in case of conviction,
the penalty of death."
Sec. 2145 of the Revised Statutes extends the general laws of
the United States as to the punishment of crimes committed in any
place within their sole and exclusive jurisdiction, except the
District of Columbia, to the Indian country, and it becomes
necessary therefore to inquire whether the locality of the
homicide, for which the prisoner was convicted of murder, is within
that description.
The question in this case is whether the offense charged against
Gon-shay-ee was one committed against the laws of the United States
within the meaning of the distinction which we have been taking, or
whether it was an offense against the laws of the territory, to be
punished by a court proceeding under its laws. It may be conceded
that prior to the statute of 1885, so far as Indians could be
punished for offenses of this kind in any court, either federal or
territorial, the jurisdiction would belong to the one sitting under
the first branch and exercising the judicial functions appropriate
thereto. It is clearly otherwise by the Act of March 3, 1885, 23
Stat. 385. The only portion necessary for our present consideration
is the ninth section, which reads as follows:
"That immediately upon and after the date of the passage of this
act, all Indians committing against the person or property of
another Indian or other person any of the following crimes --
namely murder, manslaughter, rape, assault with intent to kill,
arson, burglary, and larceny -- within any territory of the United
States and either within or without an Indian reservation, shall be
subject therefor to the laws of such territory relating to said
crimes, and shall be tried therefor in the same courts and in the
same manner, and shall be subject to the same penalties, as are all
other persons charged with the
Page 130 U. S. 350
commission of said crimes, respectively, and the said courts are
hereby given jurisdiction in all such cases, and all such Indians
committing any of the above crimes against the person or property
of another Indian or other person within the boundaries of any
state of the United States, and within the limits of any Indian
reservation, shall be subject to the same laws, tried in the same
courts, and in the same manner, and subject to the same penalties,
as are all other persons committing any of the above crimes within
the exclusive jurisdiction of the United States."
This is the last section of the Indian appropriation bill for
that year, and is very clearly a continuation of the policy upon
which Congress entered several years previously of attempting, so
far as possible and consistent with justice and existing
obligations, to reduce the Indians to individual subjection to the
laws of the country and dispense with their tribal relations. This
matter was fully commented upon in the case of
Crow Dog,
already referred to, and in
United States v. Kagama,
118 U. S. 375, in
which the whole history of the relations between the United States
and the Indians was discussed. The latter case arose under the
statute of 1885, now under consideration, which was construed in
the opinion of the Court, and the distinction clearly pointed out
between offenses committed against the laws of the United States,
within the limits of an organized State of the union, and those
committed within the territories. It is there declared that the
enactment is clearly separable into two distinct definitions of the
conditions under which Indians may be punished for the same crimes.
The first is where the offense is committed within the limits of a
territorial government, whether on or off an Indian reservation,
and
"the second is where the offense is committed by one Indian
against the person or property of another, within the limits of a
state of the union but on an Indian reservation."
In that case, the offense was charged to have been committed
within the boundaries of a state of the union, and the Indian was
tried in the Circuit Court of the United States for the District of
California, from which a certificate of a division
Page 130 U. S. 351
of opinion was made to this Court embracing the question whether
a murder committed by an Indian on the reservation of Hoopa Valley
in that state could be tried in that court. We held that the
statute gave this jurisdiction, and that it was constitutional.
Incidentally, however, in remarking upon cases of crime committed
by Indians in the territories, the Court said that "in this class
of cases, the Indian charged with the crime shall be judged by the
laws of the territory on that subject, and tried by its
courts."
The distinction between the trial in such cases by a court
sitting as a circuit court of the United States to try offenses
against the federal laws and that in which it sits as a territorial
court to punish crimes against the laws of the territory was not
clearly stated in that opinion. We have already shown that such a
distinction exists, and have little hesitation in holding that
under the act of 1885, the case of Gon-shay-ee should have been
considered as an offense against the laws of the territory. That
statute evidently intended to provide for the punishment of all
cases of "murder, manslaughter, rape, assault with intent to kill,
arson, burglary, and larceny" committed by Indians within any
Territory of the United States, whether within or without an Indian
reservation, and the declaration is clear that they
"shall be subject therefor to the laws of such territory
relating to said crimes, and shall be tried therefor in the same
courts, and in the same manner, and shall be subject to the same
penalties, as are all other persons charged with the commission of
said crimes, respectively."
These Indians, then, are subjected by this statute not to the
criminal laws of the United States, but to the laws of the
territory. The statute does not even define the crimes of "murder,"
"manslaughter," etc., but this must be governed by the laws of the
territory so far as they furnish any definition of the crime. There
is no language which declares that they shall be tried in the
courts of the United States under the same circumstances as similar
offenses committed by Indians within the states, but the second
provision, which prescribes the punishment of the same offenses
when committed by Indians if within the boundaries of any state and
within the limits
Page 130 U. S. 352
of any Indian reservation, declares that they
"shall be subject to the same laws, tried in the same courts,
and in the same manner, and subject to the same penalties, as are
all other persons committing any of the above crimes within the
exclusive jurisdiction of the United States."
This phrase "within the exclusive jurisdiction of the United
States" is well understood as applying to the crimes which are
committed within the premises, grounds, forts, arsenals,
navy-yards, and other places within the boundaries of a state, or
even within a territory, over which the federal government has by
cession, by agreement, or by reservation exclusive jurisdiction.
Those cases are tried by circuit or district courts of the United
States, administering the laws of the United States, and not by the
courts of the state or those of the territory. The framers of this
act were very careful, in this part of the statute, where the
offense was committed within the territorial limits of a state, to
declare that a violation of the laws of the United States in regard
to these crimes of murder, etc., should be tried in the courts
exercising the jurisdiction of the United States to punish offenses
against the United States.
With regard to the territories, however, it is different. The
declaration is that the Indians shall be tried by the courts of the
territory and according to its laws, and shall be subject to the
penalties which those laws prescribe. They are to be tried in the
same manner and in the same courts as are all other persons charged
with the commission of said crimes, respectively, and the said
courts are given jurisdiction in all such cases. It will be
observed also that this part of the statute makes no distinction in
regard to whether the crime was committed by the Indian on or off
an Indian reservation.
We do not entertain any doubt that this part of the statute was
enacted to transfer to the territorial courts established by the
general government, as all courts of general jurisdiction are in
the territories, the jurisdiction to try the crimes described in it
under the territorial laws, when sitting as and exercising the
functions of such territorial court, as pointed out in the case of
Crow Dog.
Page 130 U. S. 353
The distinctions incident to this mode of trial have already
been indicated. They are important, relating to the jurisdiction
and concerning the life and the liberty of the party against whom a
crime is charged. Whether a man shall be tried in the county where
the offense was committed or carried to some other county perhaps
hundreds of miles distant is a matter of much consequence; it is of
the venue of the trial. Whether he shall be tried by a jury
summoned by the marshal of the United States from the whole
territory, or from a section of it amounting possibly to one-third
of its extent, or by a jury of the county in which the act was
done, by the sheriff of the county, is of much moment to him; so
also as to whether he shall be indicted by a grand jury summoned to
serve for the county, and residents of the county, or by such a
body summoned from the whole territory.
It is of consequence that in this new departure which Congress
has made, of subjecting the Indians in this limited class of cases
to the same laws which govern the whites within the territories
where they both reside, the Indian shall at least have all the
advantages which may accrue from that change, which transfers him,
as to the punishment for these crimes, from the jurisdiction of his
own tribe to the jurisdiction of the government of the territory in
which he lives.
We are of opinion that the writ of habeas corpus should
issue as prayed for in this case, and it is so ordered.