This Court can issue a writ of habeas corpus in the exercise of
its original jurisdiction only when the inferior court has acted
without jurisdiction, or when it has exceeded its powers to the
prejudice of the party seeking relief.
At the time when the indictment in this case was found, Oklahoma
was not a territory with an organized system of government, in the
sense in which the word "territories" is used in the Act of
February 9, 1889, 25 Stat. 658, § 120.
An indictment was so framed as to permit it to be construed as
charging the common law offense of rape (as it alleged the carnal
knowledge to have been without the consent of the woman), or the
statutory offense (Act of Feb. 9, 1889, 25 Stat. 658, c. 120) of
carnally and unlawfully knowing a female under sixteen years of age
(as it alleged that the woman was under sixteen years of age). It
was not signed by the District Attorney of the United States. No
motion was made to compel the prosecuting attorney to elect on
which charge he world try the prisoner. The court instructed the
jury that the allegations respecting the will of the woman might be
rejected as surplusage and the rest of the indictment be good under
the statute. The jury found the prisoner guilty of the statutory
offense, and judgment was entered accordingly.
Held:
Page 135 U. S. 444
(1) That there was no error in the ruling of the court.
(2) That this conviction could be set up against a pending
indictment for the same offense, charged to have been committed in
violation of the statute.
(3) That the signature of the District Attorney to the
indictment was not necessary.
(4) That it was immaterial whether there was or was not error in
any of these matters, as none went to the jurisdiction.
This was a petition for a writ of habeas corpus. The case is
stated in the opinion.
MR. JUSTICE MILLER delivered the opinion of the Court.
This is a petition by Charles Mason Lane, addressed to the
original jurisdiction of this Court, for a writ of habeas corpus.
Upon the filing of the petition, a rule was issued upon Charles H.
case, warden of the penitentiary of the State of Kansas, who, it
was alleged, held the petitioner in unlawful imprisonment. Case
made a return to this rule in which he said that the prisoner was
held under a
mittimus issued from the office of the Clerk
of the District Court of the United States in and for the District
of Kansas, and accompanying the return was a certified copy of the
proceedings in that court under which Lane was held. From this it
appears that the following indictment was found in that court at
its September term, 1889:
"
The United States of America, District of Kansas,
ss.:"
"
I
n the district court of the said United States in and for the said"
"
district, September term, 1889"
"The United States of America"
"v. Indictment for rape"
"Charles Lane, whose more full"
"Christian name is unknown"
"At the term of the district court of the United States of
America in and for the said district of Kansas, begun and held
Page 135 U. S. 445
at Wichita, in said district, on the second day of September, in
the year of our Lord one thousand eight hundred and eighty-nine,
the grand jurors of the United States of America, duly impaneled
and sworn, and charged to inquire of offenses committed within that
part of the said district lying north of the Canadian River and
east of Texas and the one hundredth meridian not set apart and
occupied by the Cherokee, Creek, and Seminole Indian tribes, upon
their oaths do find and present that Charles Lane, whose more full
Christian name is to the grand jurors aforesaid unknown, late of
that part of the public domain acquired by the United States of
America by the Act of Congress approved March 2, 1889, commonly
known as 'Oklahoma,' and being a part of the District of Kansas
aforesaid, on or about the 4th day of July, in the year of our Lord
one thousand eight hundred and eighty-nine at that part of the
District of Kansas aforesaid, the same being a place and district
of country under the exclusive jurisdiction of the United States
and within the exclusive jurisdiction of this Court, with force of
arms in and upon one Frances M. Skeed, a female under the age of
sixteen years, then and there being, violently and feloniously did
make an assault, and her, the said Frances M. Skeed, then and
there, forcibly and against her will, feloniously did ravish and
carnally know, against the peace and dignity of the United States
of America, and contrary to the form of the statute in such cases
made and provided."
"E. HAGAN,
Ass't. U.S. Att'y"
"[Endorsed:] No. ___. The
United States v. Charles
Lane. Rape. Sec. 5345. J. Hoopes, Foreman. A true bill. J.
HOOPES, Foreman. Witnesses: WM. H. SKEED, Oklahoma City, I. T.
FRANCES M. SKEED. Dr. I. W. BENIPE. N. T. ROSS. ROSA SKEED. Dr. H.
C. HUNTER, Dodd City, Texas. Filed September 6, 1889. J. C. WILSON,
Clerk."
Under the plea of not guilty, a trial was had on this indictment
in which the jury rendered the following verdict:
"We, the jury in the above-entitled cause, duly impaneled and
sworn,
Page 135 U. S. 446
upon our oaths find the defendant guilty of carnal and unlawful
knowledge of Frances M. Skeed, a female under the age of sixteen
years, as charged in the indictment."
A motion for a new trial and in arrest of judgment was made,
heard, and overruled, and the following sentence pronounced by the
court:
"Thereupon, it is now by the court here considered, ordered, and
adjudged that said defendant be imprisoned in the Kansas
penitentiary for the period of five years. It is further ordered
that the marshal deliver, or cause to be delivered, the body of
said Charles Lane to the warden of said penitentiary within ten
days from this date."
Some kind of certificate appears to have been made after this to
transfer the case to the circuit court of the United States, where
it came before Brewer, circuit judge, who delivered an opinion in
it concurring informally with the judgment of the district court,
which is found as an appendix to the brief of the counsel for the
government.
The counsel for petitioner has argued the case before us as if
every error that may possibly be found in the ruling of the
district court in the progress of the case was a sufficient ground
to release the prisoner on this writ of habeas corpus. It has been
often reiterated in this Court that the writ of habeas corpus
cannot be converted into a writ of error, and that this Court, when
asked to issue a writ of habeas corpus as of its original
jurisdiction, can do so only when the inferior court has acted
without jurisdiction, or has exceeded its powers to the prejudice
of the party seeking relief.
There is really but one question, out of the several grounds of
relief sought in this case, that is a proper subject for this
Court. By the Act of Congress approved February, 9, 1889, c. 120,
25 Stat. 658, under which defendant is indicted and convicted, it
is provided
"that every person who shall carnally and unlawfully know any
female under the age of sixteen years, or who shall be accessory to
such carnal and unlawful knowledge before the fact, in the District
of Columbia or other place, except the territories, over which the
United States has exclusive jurisdiction, or on any vessel within
the admiralty or maritime jurisdiction of the United States, and
out of the
Page 135 U. S. 447
jurisdiction of any state or territory, shall be guilty of a
felony, and when convicted thereof shall be punished by
imprisonment at hard labor, for the first offense, for not more
than fifteen years, and for each subsequent offense not more than
thirty years."
The offense with which the petitioner is here charged is alleged
in the indictment to have been committed within that part of the
Indian Territory commonly known as "Oklahoma," and it is alleged in
the indictment that this a district of country under the exclusive
jurisdiction of the United States, and within the jurisdiction of
the district court of Kansas. The counsel for prisoner contend that
this is a territory, within the exception of the act of Congress of
1889; that therefore this act does not apply to the case, and that,
there being no other act of Congress punishing a party for carnal
and unlawful knowledge of a female under the age of sixteen years,
the court was without jurisdiction to try or to sentence the
prisoner. But we think the words "except the territories" have
reference exclusively to that system of organized government long
existing within the United States by which certain regions of the
country have been erected into civil governments. These governments
have an executive, a legislative, and a judicial system. They have
the powers which all these departments of government have
exercised, which are conferred upon them by act of Congress, and
their legislative acts are subject to the disapproval of the
Congress of the United States. They are not in any sense
independent governments. They have no senators in Congress, and no
representatives in the lower house of that body except what are
called "delegates," with limited functions. Yet they exercise
nearly all the powers of government under what are generally called
"organic acts," passed by Congress, conferring such powers on them.
It is this class of governments, long known by the name of
"territories," that the act of Congress excepts from the operation
of this statute, while it extends it to all other places over which
the United States have exclusive jurisdiction.
Oklahoma was not of this class of territories. It had no
legislative body. It had no government. It had no established
Page 135 U. S. 448
or organized system of government for the control of the people
within its limits, as the territories of the United States have and
have always had. We are therefore of opinion that the objection
taken on this point by the counsel for prisoner is unsound.
It is next objected that the indictment is bad inasmuch as it
contains the double charge of a rape at common law and of the
statutory offense under the act of February 9, 1889, and it is
quite obvious that both these offenses can be made out from the
language of the indictment, which is in a single count. The
allegation that the offense was by violence and against the will of
the woman, with the other allegations in the indictment, describe
the offense of rape. The allegation that the defendant had carnal
knowledge of a female under 16 years of age makes out the offense
under the statute of 1889. But the view of the court was that the
allegation that the carnal knowledge was against the will of the
woman may be rejected as surplusage, and the rest of the indictment
be good under the statute referred to, and, as the court instructed
the jury in accordance with that view of the subject, and as the
jury found the prisoner guilty not of the crime of rape, but of the
smaller crime of carnal knowledge of a female under sixteen years
of age, the action of the court on that subject was probably
correct. At all events, the court had jurisdiction of the prisoner,
and it had jurisdiction both of the offense of rape and of carnal
knowledge of a female under sixteen years of age. It was its duty
to decide whether there was a sufficient indictment to subject the
party to trial for either or both of these offenses. As no motion
was made to compel the prosecuting attorney to elect on which of
the charges he would try the prisoner, we think that there was no
error in its rulings on this subject. If there were, it was not an
error which went to the jurisdiction of the court to try and
sentence the prisoner.
It is urged that there is an indictment now pending against the
prisoner for the same offense, charged only as carnal knowledge of
a female under sixteen years of age, and that the present
indictment is so ambiguous that the trial and conviction
Page 135 U. S. 449
under it would be no bar to the proceeding under the second
indictment. We do not think the proposition is a sound one, as the
prisoner was clearly convicted of the same offense which is charged
in the second indictment.
An objection is made to the indictment that it was not signed by
the district attorney of the United States, but as the indictment
was found by the grand jury and endorsed as a true bill by the
foreman and filed in open court according to law, we do not see
that there is any error on that subject -- certainly, none which
goes to the jurisdiction of the court.
See Commonwealth v.
Stone, 105 Mass. 469.
It is said that the indictment was fatally defective because it
did not sufficiently apprise the prisoner of the nature of the
offense for which he was to be tried. But he was tried and
convicted for carnally and unlawfully knowing a female under the
age of sixteen years. This was succinctly and clearly set out in
the indictment as the charge, or one of the charges, against him,
which he must have known he was to meet, and we do not think the
objection has any merit.
There may be other objections made by counsel to the proceedings
under which the prisoner was convicted, but none of them rises to
the dignity of questioning the jurisdiction of the court. The rule
upon the warden of the penitentiary is therefore discharged, and a
writ or habeas corpus
Denied.