By the Constitution of the United States, a government is
ordained and established "for the United States of America," and
not for countries outside of their limits, and that Constitution
can have no operation in another country.
The laws passed by Congress to carry into effect the provisions
of the treaties granting exterritorial rights in Japan, China, etc.
Rev.Stat. §§ 4053-4096, do no violation to the provisions
of the Constitution of the United States, although they do not
require an indictment by a grand jury to be found before the
accused can be called upon to answer for the crime of murder
committed in those countries, or secure to him a jury on his
trial.
The provision in Rev.Stat. § 4086 that the jurisdiction
conferred upon ministers and consuls of the United States in Japan,
China, etc., by §§ 4083, 4084, and 4085 shall "be
exercised and enforced in conformity with the laws of the United
States" gives to the accused an opportunity of examining the
complaint against him, or of having a copy of it, the right to be
confronted with the witnesses against him, and to cross-examine
them, and to have the benefit of counsel, and secures regular and
fair trials to Americans committing offenses there, but it does not
require a previous presentment or indictment by a grand jury, and
does not give the right to a petit jury.
The jurisdiction given to domestic tribunals of the United
States over offenses committed on the high seas in the district
where the offender may be found or into which he may be first
brought is not exclusive of the jurisdiction of a consular tribunal
in Japan, China, etc., to try for a similar offense committed in a
port of the country in which the tribunal is established when the
offender is not taken to the United States.
Article IV of the Treaty of June 17, 1857, with Japan is still
in force notwithstanding the provisions in Article XII of the
Treaty of July 29, 1858.
When a foreigner enters the mercantile marine of a nation and
becomes one of the crew of a merchant vessel bearing its flag, he
assumes a temporary allegiance to the flag and, in return for the
protection afforded
Page 140 U. S. 454
him, becomes subject to the laws by which that nation governs
its vessels and seamen.
A law or treaty should be construed so as to give effect to the
object designed, and to that end all its provisions must be
examined in the light of surrounding circumstances.
The fact that a vessel is American is evidence that seamen on
board are Americans also.
When a person convicted of murder accepts a "commutation of
sentence or pardon" upon condition that he be imprisoned at hard
labor for the term of his natural life, there can be no question as
to the binding force of the acceptance.
The petitioner below, the appellant here, is imprisoned in the
penitentiary at Albany in the State of New York. He was convicted
on the 20th of May, 1880, in the American consular tribunal in
Japan, of the crime of murder committed on board of an American
ship in the harbor of Yokohama in that empire, and sentenced to
death.
On the 6th of August following, his sentence was commuted by the
President to imprisonment for life in the penitentiary at Albany,
and to that place he was taken, and there he has ever since been
confined. Nearly ten years afterwards, on the 19th of March, 1890,
he applied to the Circuit Court of the United States for the
Northern District of New York for a writ of habeas corpus for his
discharge, alleging that his conviction, sentence, and imprisonment
were unlawful and stating the causes thereof and the attendant
circumstances. The writ was issued, directed to the superintendent
of the penitentiary, who made return that he held the petitioner
under the warrant of the President, of which a copy was annexed,
and is as follows:
"Rutherford B. Hayes, President of the United States of America,
to all to whom these presents shall come, greeting:"
"Whereas, John M. Ross, an American seaman on board of the
American ship
Bullion, was, on the 20th day of May, 1880,
convicted of the crime of murder committed on board the said ship
Bullion, then in the harbor of Yokohama, Japan, before
Thomas B. Van Buren, Esquire, Consul General
Page 140 U. S. 455
of the United States at Kanagawa, Japan, holding court at that
place, and was by said consul general on such conviction aforesaid,
in pursuance and by authority of the statutes of the United States
to that end made and provided, sentenced to be hanged at such time
and place as the United States minister in Japan may direct,
according to law,"
"And whereas, Mr. Bingham, the United States minister aforesaid,
on the 22d of May following, approved the proceedings, verdict, and
sentence,"
"And whereas, the said minister has postponed the execution of
sentence, believing the ends of justice demand it, and has
submitted the record of the case to the Department of State for the
President's consideration and for commutation of sentence or
pardon, if deemed advisable,"
"And whereas, the President, upon a careful consideration of the
facts and circumstances of the case as they were presented in the
record of the proceedings and by a report from the Secretary of
State, has arrived at the conclusion that the ends of justice will
be fulfilled by the infliction of a less severe punishment than
that of death,"
"Now therefore be it known that I, Rutherford B. Hayes,
President of the United States of America, in consideration of the
premises, divers other good and sufficient reasons also me
thereunto moving, do hereby pardon the said John M. Ross on
condition that the said John M. Ross be imprisoned at hard labor
for the term of his natural life in the Albany Penitentiary in the
State of New York."
"This order will be carried into effect under the direction of
the Secretary of State."
"In testimony whereof, I have hereunto signed my name and caused
the seal of the United States to be affixed."
"Done at the City of Washington this sixth day of August, A.D.
1880, and of the Independence of the United States the one hundred
and fifth."
"[Seal] R. B. HAYES"
"By the President:"
"WM. M. EVARTS,
Secretary of State "
Page 140 U. S. 456
To this warrant was annexed a copy of the petitioner's
acceptance of the conditional pardon of the President, certified to
be correct by the United States consul general at Japan. It is as
follows:
"I, John M. Ross, the person named in the warrant of conditional
pardon granted to me by the President of the United States of
America, dated the 6th day of August, 1880, and of which the
foregoing is a correct copy, do hereby acknowledge of said original
warrant of conditional pardon to me, and do hereby voluntarily and
without qualification accept said conditional pardon with the
condition thereof as therein stated, to-wit, that, 'I, Rutherford
B. Hayes, President of the United States of America,' &c.
&c., 'do hereby pardon the said John M. Ross on the condition
that the said John M. Ross be imprisoned at hard labor for the term
of his natural life in the Albany penitentiary, in the State of New
York.'"
"JOHN M. Ross"
"Kanagawa, Yokohama, Japan, February 28th, 1881"
"Witness: THOS.B. VAN BUREN"
"
U.S. Consul General"
The case was then heard by the circuit court, counsel appearing
for the petitioner and the assistant United States attorney for the
government. On the hearing, a copy of the record of the proceedings
before the consular tribunal, and of the communications by the
consul general to the State Department respecting them, on file in
that department, was given in evidence. No objection was made to
its admissibility.
The facts of the case as thus disclosed, so far as they are
deemed material to the decision of the questions presented, are
substantially as follows:
On the 9th of May, 1880, the appellant, John M. Ross, was one of
the crew of the American ship
Bullion, then in the waters
of Japan, and lying at anchor in the harbor of Yokohama. On that
day, on board of the ship, he assaulted Robert Kelly, its second
mate, with a knife, inflicting in his neck a mortal wound, of which
in a few minutes afterwards he died
Page 140 U. S. 457
on the deck of the ship. Ross was at once arrested by direction
of the master of the vessel and placed in irons, and on the same
day he was taken ashore and confined in jail at Yokohama. On the
following day, May 10th, the master filed with the American consul
general at that place, Thomas B. Van Buren, a complaint against
Ross, charging him with the murder of the mate. It contained
sufficient averments of the offense, was verified by the oath of
the master, and to it the consul general appended his certificate
that he had reasonable grounds for believing its contents were
true. The complaint described the accused as one "supposed to be a
citizen of the United States."
On the 18th of that month, an amended complaint was filed by the
master of the ship with the consul general in which the accused was
described as "an American seaman, duly and lawfully enrolled and
shipped and doing service as such seaman on board the American ship
Bullion." The complaint was also amended in some other
particulars. It was as follows:
"
U.S. Consular General Court, Kanagawa, Japan"
"
Amended Complaint"
"John P. Reed, master of the American ship
Bullion, on
oath complains that John Martin Ross, an American seaman, duly and
lawfully enrolled and shipped and doing service as such seaman on
board the American ship
Bullion, did on the early morning
of the 9th day of May, 1880, on board of said ship, while lying in
the harbor of Yokohama, Japan, and within the jurisdiction of this
Court, with force and arms, maliciously, feloniously, deliberately,
willfully, and of his malice aforethought make an assault upon one
Robert Kelly, the mate of said ship, and did then and there
feloniously, maliciously, deliberately, and of malice aforethought,
strike and cut the said Robert Kelly with a knife, from which said
Robert Kelly died on board said ship a short time thereafter.
Wherefore, affiant charges that said John Martin Ross willfully and
maliciously killed and murdered the said Robert Kelly,
Page 140 U. S. 458
and affiant further says that said John Martin Ross is still a
seaman on said ship."
"J. P. REED"
"Sworn and subscribed before me this 18th day of May, 1880."
"THOS.B. VAN BUREN"
"
U.S. Consul General"
To this amended complaint was annexed a certificate of the
consul general that he had reasonable grounds for believing its
contents to be true, similar to the one to the original
complaint.
Previously to its being filed, the accused appeared with counsel
before the consul general and, the complaint being read to him, he
presented an affidavit stating that he was a subject of Great
Britain, a native of Prince Edward's Island, a dependency of the
British empire, and had never renounced the rights or liabilities
of a British subject, or been expatriated from his native
allegiance or been naturalized in any other country. Upon this
affidavit, he contended that the court was without jurisdiction
over him by reason of his being a subject of Great Britain, and he
prayed that he be discharged. His contention was termed in the
record a demurrer to the complaint.
The court held that as the accused was a seaman on an American
vessel, he was subject to its jurisdiction, and overruled the
objection. The counsel of the accused then moved that the charge
against him be dismissed on the ground that he could not be held
for the offense except upon the presentment or indictment of a
grand jury, but this motion was also overruled. Four associates
were drawn, as required by statute and the consular regulations, to
sit with the consul general on the trial of the accused, and, being
sworn to answer questions as to their eligibility, the accused
stated that he had no questions to ask them on that subject. They
were then sworn in to try the cause "in accordance with court
regulations." A motion for a jury on the trial was also made, and
denied. The
Page 140 U. S. 459
amended complaint was then substituted in place of the original,
to which no objection was interposed, and to it the accused pleaded
"not guilty," and asked for the names of the witnesses for the
prosecution, which were furnished to him. The witnesses were then
sworn and examined, and they established beyond all possible doubt
the offense of murder charged against the accused, which was
committed under circumstances of great atrocity. The court found
him guilty of murder, and he was sentenced to suffer death in such
manner and at such time and place as the United States minister
should direct. The conviction and sentence were concurred in by the
four associates, and were approved by Mr. Bingham, the minister of
the United States in Japan. The minister transmitted the record of
the case to the Department of State for the consideration of the
President and for commutation of the sentence or pardon of the
prisoner if deemed advisable. The President subsequently directed
the issue to the prisoner of a pardon on condition that he be
imprisoned at hard labor for the term of his natural life in the
penitentiary at Albany, and it was accepted by him on that
condition. His sentence was accordingly commuted, and he was
removed to the Albany Penitentiary.
The circuit court, after hearing argument of counsel and full
consideration of the subject, made an order on January 21, 1891,
denying the motion of the prisoner for his discharge and remanding
him to the penitentiary and the custody of its superintendent. 44
F. 185. From that order the case is brought here on appeal.
Page 140 U. S. 461
MR. JUSTICE FIELD, after stating the case, delivered the opinion
of the Court.
The circuit court did not refuse to discharge the petitioner
upon any independent conclusion as to the validity of the
legislation of Congress establishing the consular tribunal in Japan
and the trial of Americans for offenses committed within the
territory of that country without the indictment of a grand jury
and without a trial by a petit jury, but placed its decision upon
the long and uniform acquiescence by the executive, administrative,
and legislative departments of the government in the validity of
the legislation. Nor did the circuit court consider whether the
status of the petitioner as a citizen of the United States, or as
an American within the meaning of the treaty with Japan, could be
questioned while he was a seaman of an American ship, under the
protection of the American flag, but simply stated the view taken
on that subject by the minister to Japan, the State Department, and
the President. Said the court:
"During the thirty years since the statutes conferring the
judicial powers on ministers and consuls which have been referred
to were enacted, that jurisdiction has been freely exercised.
Citizens of the United States have been tried for serious offenses
before these officers without preliminary indictment or a common
law jury, and convicted and punished. These trials have been
authorized by the regulations, orders, and decrees of ministers,
and it
Page 140 U. S. 462
must be presumed that the regulations, orders, and decrees of
ministers prescribing the mode of trial have been transmitted to
the Secretary of State, and by him been laid before Congress for
revision, as required by law. Unless the petitioner was not
properly subject to this jurisdiction because he was not a citizen
of the United States, his trial and sentence were in all respects
model, as well as substantial, regular, and valid under the laws of
Congress according to the construction placed upon these statutes
by the acquiescence of the executive, administrative, and
legislative departments of the government for this long period of
time."
Under these circumstances, the circuit court was of opinion that
it ought not to adjudge that the sentence imposed upon the
petitioner was utterly unwarranted and void when the case was one
in which his rights could be adequately protected by this Court,
and when a decision by the circuit court setting him at liberty,
although it might be reversed, would be practically
irrevocable.
The circuit court might have found an additional ground for not
calling in question the legislation of Congress in the uniform
practice of civilized governments for centuries to provide consular
tribunals in other than Christian countries, or to invest their
consuls with judicial authority, which is the same thing, for the
trial of their own subjects or citizens for offenses committed in
those countries, as well as for the settlement of civil disputes
between them, and in the uniform recognition, down to the time of
the formation of our government, of the fact that the establishment
of such tribunals was among the most important subjects for treaty
stipulations. This recognition of their importance has continued
ever since, though the powers of those tribunals are now more
carefully defined than formerly.
Dainese v. Hale,
91 U. S. 13.
The practice of European governments to sent officers to reside
in foreign countries, authorized to exercise a limited jurisdiction
over vessels and seamen of their country, to watch the interests of
their countrymen, and to assist in adjusting their disputes and
protecting their commerce, goes back to a very early period, even
preceding what are termed the Middle
Page 140 U. S. 463
Ages. During those ages, these commercial magistrates, generally
designated as "consuls," possessed to some extent a representative
character, sometimes discharging judicial and diplomatic functions.
In other than Christian countries, they were, by treaty
stipulations, usually clothed with authority to hear complaints
against their countrymen and to sit in judgment upon them when
charged with public offenses. After the rise of Islamism and the
spread of its followers over western Asia and other countries
bordering on the Mediterranean, the exercise of this judicial
authority became a matter of great concern. The intense hostility
of the people of Moslem faith to all other sects, and particularly
to Christians, affected all their intercourse and all proceedings
had in their tribunals. Even the rules of evidence adopted by them
placed those of different faith on unequal grounds in any
controversy with them. For this cause, and by reason of the
barbarous and cruel punishments inflicted in those countries, and
the frequent use of torture to enforce confession from parties
accused, it was a matter of deep interest to Christian governments
of withdraw the trial of their subjects, when charged with the
commission of a public offense, from the arbitrary and despotic
action of the local officials. Treaties conferring such
jurisdiction upon these consuls were essential to the peaceful
residence of Christians within those countries and the successful
prosecution of commerce with their people.
The treatymaking power vested in our government extends to all
proper subjects of negotiation with foreign governments. It can,
equally with any of the former or present governments of Europe,
make treaties providing for the exercise of judicial authority in
other countries by its officers appointed to reside therein.
We do not understand that any question is made by counsel as to
its power in this respect. His objection is to the legislation by
which such treaties are carried out, contending that so far as
crimes of a felonious character are concerned, the same protection
and guaranty against an undue accusation or an unfair trial secured
by the Constitution to citizens of the United States at home should
be enjoyed by them abroad.
Page 140 U. S. 464
In none of the laws which have been passed by Congress to give
effect to treaties of the kind has there been any attempt to
require indictment by a grand jury before one can be called upon to
answer for a public offense of that grade committed in those
countries, or to secure a jury on the trial of the offense. Yet the
laws on that subject have been passed without objection to their
constitutionality. Indeed, objection on that ground was never
raised in any quarter, so far as we are informed, until a recent
period.
It is now, however, earnestly pressed by counsel for the
petitioner, but we do not think it tenable. By the Constitution, a
government is ordained and established "for the United States of
America," and not for countries outside of their limits. The
guarantees it affords against accusation of capital or infamous
crimes, except by indictment or presentment by a grand jury, and
for an impartial trial by a jury when thus accused apply only to
citizens and others within the United States or who are brought
there for trial for alleged offenses committed elsewhere, and not
to residents or temporary sojourners abroad.
Cook v. United
States, 138 U. S. 157,
138 U. S. 181.
The Constitution can have no operation in another country. When,
therefore, the representatives or officers of our government are
permitted to exercise authority of any kind in another country, it
must be on such conditions as the two countries may agree, the laws
of neither one being obligatory upon the other. The deck of a
private American vessel, it is true, is considered, for many
purposes, constructively as territory of the United States; yet
persons on board of such vessels, whether officers, sailors, or
passengers, cannot invoke the protection of the provisions referred
to until brought within the actual territorial boundaries of the
United States. And besides, their enforcement abroad in numerous
places, where it would be highly important to have consuls invested
with judicial authority, would be impracticable from the
impossibility of obtaining a competent grand or petit jury. The
requirement of such a body to accuse and to try an offender would,
in a majority of cases, cause an abandonment or all prosecution.
The framers of the Constitution, who were fully
Page 140 U. S. 465
aware of the necessity of having judicial authority exercised by
our consuls in non-Christian countries if commercial intercourse
was to be had with their people, never could have supposed that all
the guarantees in the administration of the law upon criminals at
home were to be transferred to such consular establishments and
applied before an American who had committed a felony there could
be accused and tried. They must have known that such a requirement
would defeat the main purpose of investing the consul with judicial
authority. While, therefore, in one aspect the American accused of
crime committed in those countries is deprived of the guarantees of
the Constitution against unjust accusation and a partial trial, yet
in another aspect he is the gainer in being withdrawn from the
procedure of their tribunals, often arbitrary and oppressive, and
sometimes accompanied with extreme cruelty and torture. Letter of
Mr. Cushing to Mr. Calhoun of September 29, 1844, accompanying
President's message communicating abstract of treaty with China,
Senate Doc. 58, 28th Cong., 2d Sess.; letter on judicial
exterritorial rights by Secretary Frelinghuysen to chairman of
Senate Committee on Foreign Relations of April 29, 1882, Senate
Doc. 89, 47th Cong. 1st Sess.; Phillimore on Int.Law, vol. 2, part
7; Halleck, on Int.Law, c. 41.
We turn now to the treaties between Japan and the United
States.
The treaty of June 17, 1857, executed by the consul general of
the United States and the governors of Simoda, is the one which
first conceded to the American consul in Japan authority to try
Americans committing offenses in that country. Article 4 of that
treaty is as follows:
"Art. IV. Americans committing offenses in Japan shall be tried
by the American consul general or consul, and shall be punished
according to American laws. Japanese committing offenses against
Americans shall be tried by the Japanese authorities and punished
according to Japanese laws."
11 Stat. 723. The Treaty with Japan of July 29, 1858, in some
particulars, changes the phraseology of the concession of judicial
authority
Page 140 U. S. 466
to the American consul in Japan, but, as we shall see
subsequently, without revocation of the concession itself. Its
sixth article is as follows:
"Art. VI. Americans committing offenses against Japanese shall
be tried in American consular courts, and when guilty shall be
punished according to American law. Japanese committing offenses
against Americans shall be tried by the Japanese authorities, and
punished according to Japanese law. The consular courts shall be
open to Japanese creditors to enable them to recover their just
claims against American citizens, and the Japanese courts shall in
like manner be open to American citizens for the recovery of their
just claims against Japanese."
12 Stat. 1056.
As will be seen, the language of the fourth article of the
treaty of 1857 is that "Americans committing offenses in Japan
shall be tried," etc., while the language of the sixth article of
the treaty of 1858 is that "Americans committing offenses against
Japanese shall be tried," etc. Offenses committed in Japan and
offenses committed against Japanese are not necessarily identical
in meaning. The latter, standing by itself, would require a more
restricted construction. But the twelfth article of that treaty
obviates that. It is as follows:
"Art. XII. Such of the provisions of the treaty made by
Commodore Perry, and signed at Kanagawa on the 31st of March, 1854,
as conflict with the provisions of this treaty are hereby revoked,
and as all the provisions of a convention executed by the consul
general of the United States and the governors of Simoda on the
17th of June, 1857, are incorporated in this treaty, that
convention is also revoked."
It will thus be perceived that the revocation of the treaty of
1857 was made upon the assumption and declaration that all its
provisions were incorporated into the treaty of 1858. The
revocation must therefore be held to be limited to those
provisions, and those only, which are thus incorporated; that
treaty still remaining in force as to the unincorporated
provisions. This has been the practical construction given to the
alleged revocation by the authorities of both countries -- a
Page 140 U. S. 467
construction which, in view of the erroneous statement as to the
incorporation into the new treaty of all the provisions of the
former one, is reasonable and just.
Our government has always treated article IV of the treaty of
1857 as continuing in force, and it is published as such in the
United States Consular Regulations, issued in 1888. Appendix No. 1,
p. 313. Its official interpretation is found in Article 71 of those
regulations, which declares that "consuls have exclusive
jurisdiction over crimes and offenses committed by citizens of the
United States in Japan." Mr. Bingham, our minister to that country
for several years after the treaty of 1858, always assumed the
incorporation into that treaty of all the provisions of the treaty
of 1857, or that they were saved by it. When the prisoner reached
San Francisco on his way from Japan to Albany, he applied to the
circuit court of the United States for a writ of habeas corpus and
cited the sixth article of the treaty of 1858, insisting that it
only provided for the trial of Americans by American consular
courts in Japan for offenses committed against Japanese, and
therefore he could not be held to answer for the murder of the
second officer of the American ship
Bullion when in
Japanese waters, because he was not a Japanese subject. In a
communication made under date of June 8, 1881, by the minister to
the Secretary of State, reference is made to this position, and the
following language is used:
"Nothing, in my opinion, could more strongly testify to the
utter weakness of the claim made for Ross against the government
than this attempt to limit the jurisdiction of our consuls in Japan
over Americans guilty of crimes by them committed within this
empire, to such crimes only as they should commit upon the persons
of Japanese subjects. According to this logic, Americans may in
Japan murder each other, and the citizens or subjects of all lands
save the subjects of Japan, with impunity, as it is admitted by
this government that it cannot try an American for any offense
whatever, and it must also be conceded that the tribunals of no
other government than our own can try Americans for crimes by them
committed within this empire. In giving my reasons to the
department for sustaining
Page 140 U. S. 468
the jurisdiction of the United States in this case and for
approving, as I did, the conviction of Ross, in which the consul
general and the four associates who sat with him had concurred, I
cited Article IV of our convention of 1857 with Japan, to-wit:
'That Americans committing offenses in Japan shall be tried by the
American consul general or consul, and shall be punished according
to American law.' This provision of the convention of 1857 and all
other provisions thereof were saved and incorporated in our treaty
of 1858 with Japan, Article XII [quoted above]. You will observe
that Mr. Townsend Harris was the consul general of the United
States who negotiated both of these treaties with Japan, and that
the treaty of 1858 was ratified April 12, 1860, and that
thereafter, to-wit, June 22, 1860, Congress passed the act to carry
into effect this treaty with Japan, and provided that the minister
and consuls of the United States in Japan be 'fully empowered to
arraign and try in the manner (in said statute provided) all
citizens of the United States charged with offenses against law
committed' (by them in Japan) [sec. 4084, Rev.Stat.], and also by
§ 4086 provided that the jurisdiction in both civil and
criminal matters in Japan shall"
"
in all cases be exercised and enforced in conformity
with the laws of the United States, which, so far as necessary to
execute such treaty, are extended over all citizens of the United
States therein, and over
all others to the extent the
terms of the treaty justify or require."
"Here was the construction above stated by me asserted by the
same Senate which ratified the treaty, and by the same President
who approved both the treaty and the act of Congress. The President
and the department have always construed the treaty of 1858 as
carrying with it and incorporating therein the fourth article and
all other provisions of the convention of 1857."
The legislation of Congress to carry into effect the treaty with
Japan is found in the Revised Statutes, in sections most of which
apply equally to treaties with China, Siam, Egypt, and Madagascar.
Sections 4083-4091. Confining ourselves to the treaty with Japan
only, we find that the legislation secures a regular and fair trial
to Americans committing offenses within that empire.
Page 140 U. S. 469
It enacts that the minister and consuls of the United States
appointed to reside there shall, in addition to other powers and
duties imposed upon them respectively, be invested with the
judicial authority therein described, which shall appertain to
their respective offices and be a part of the duties belonging
thereto, so far as the same is allowed by treaty, and empowers them
to arraign and try, in the manner therein provided, all citizens of
the United States charged with offenses against law committed in
that country, and to sentence such offenders as therein provided,
and to issue all suitable and necessary process to carry their
authority into execution. It declares that their jurisdiction in
both criminal and civil matters shall in all cases be exercised and
enforced in conformity with the laws of the United States, which,
so far as necessary to execute the treaty and suitable to carry it
into effect, are extended over all citizens of the United States in
Japan and over all others there to the extent that the terms of the
treaty justify or require. It also provides that where such laws
are not adapted to the object or are deficient in the provisions
necessary to furnish suitable remedies, the common law and the law
of equity and admiralty shall be extended in like manner over such
citizens and others, and that if neither the common law, nor the
law of equity or admiralty, nor the statutes of the United States
furnish appropriate and sufficient remedies, the minister shall, be
decrees and regulations, which shall have the force of law, supply
such defects and deficiencies. Each of the consuls is authorized,
upon facts within his own knowledge or which he has good reason to
believe true, or upon complaint made or information filed in
writing, and authenticated in such way as shall be prescribed by
the minister, to issue his warrant for the arrest of any citizen of
the United States charged with committing in the country an offense
against law, and to arraign and try any such offender, and to
sentence him to punishment in the manner therein prescribed.
The legislation also declares that insurrection or rebellion
against the government with intent to subvert the same, and murder,
shall be punishable with death, but that no person
Page 140 U. S. 470
shall be convicted thereof unless the consul and his associates
in the trial all concur in the opinion and the minister approves of
the conviction. It also provides that whenever in any case the
consul is of opinion that by reason of the legal questions which
may arise therein, assistance will be useful to him, or that a
severer punishment than previously specified in certain cases will
be required, he shall summon to sit with him on the trial one or
more citizens of the United States, not exceeding four, and in
capital cases not less than four, who shall be taken by lot from a
list which has been previously submitted to and approved by the
minister, and shall be persons of good repute and competent for the
duty.
The jurisdiction of the consular tribunal, as is thus seen, is
to be exercised and enforced in accordance with the laws of the
United States, and of course, in pursuance of them, the accused
will have an opportunity of examining the complaint against him, or
will be presented with a copy stating the offense he has committed,
will be entitled to be confronted with the witnesses against him,
and to cross-examine them, and to have the benefit of counsel, and
indeed will have the benefit of all the provisions necessary to
secure a fair trial before the consul and his associates. The only
complaint of this legislation made by counsel is that, in directing
the trial to be had before the consul and associates summoned to
sit with him, it does not require a previous presentment or
indictment by a grand jury, and does not give to the accused a
petit jury. The want of such clauses, as affecting the validity of
the legislation, we have already considered. It is not pretended
that the prisoner did not have in other respects a fair trial in
the consular court.
It is further objected to the proceedings in the consular court
that the offense with which the petitioner was charged, having been
committed on board of a vessel of the United States in Japanese
waters, was not triable before the consular court, and that the
petitioner, being a subject of Great Britain, was not within the
jurisdiction of that court. These objections we will now proceed to
consider.
The argument presented in support of the first of these
Page 140 U. S. 471
positions is briefly this. Congress has provided for the
punishment of murder committed upon the high seas, or any arm or
bay of the sea within the admiralty and maritime jurisdiction of
the United States, and out of the jurisdiction of any particular
state, and has provided that the trial of all offenses committed
upon the high seas, out of the jurisdiction of any particular
state, shall be in the district where the offender is found or into
which he is first brought. The term "high seas" includes waters on
the seacoast without the boundaries of low water mark, and the
waters of the port of Yokohama constitute, within the meaning of
the statute, high seas. Therefore it is contended that although the
ship
Bullion was at the time lying in those waters, the
offense for which the appellant was tried and convicted was
committed on the high seas, and within the jurisdiction of the
domestic tribunals of the United States, and is not punishable
elsewhere. In support of this position, it is assumed that the
jurisdiction of the consular court is limited to offenses committed
on land, within the territory of Japan, to the exclusion of
offenses committed on waters within that territory.
There is, as it seems to us, an obvious answer to this argument.
The jurisdiction to try offenses committed on the high seas in the
district where the offender may be found, or into which he may be
first brought, is not exclusive of the jurisdiction of the consular
tribunal to try a similar offense when committed in a port of a
foreign country in which that tribunal is established and the
offender is not taken to the United States. There is no law of
Congress compelling the master of a vessel to carry or transport
him to any home port when he can be turned over to a consular court
having jurisdiction of similar offenses committed in the foreign
country. 7 Opinions Attys.Gen. 722. The provisions conferring
jurisdiction in capital cases upon the consuls in Japan when the
offense is committed in that country are embodied in the Revised
Statutes, with the provisions as to the jurisdiction of domestic
tribunals over such offenses committed on the high seas, and those
statures were reenacted together, and, as reenacted, went into
operation at the same time. To both effect must
Page 140 U. S. 472
be given in proper cases, where they are applicable. We do not
adopt the limitation stated by counsel to the jurisdiction of the
consular tribunal -- that it extends only to offenses committed on
land. Neither the treaty nor the Revised Statutes to carry them
into effect contain any such limitation. The latter speak of
offenses committed in the country of Japan -- meaning within the
territorial jurisdiction of that country -- which includes its
ports and navigable waters as well as its lands.
The position that the petitioner, being a subject of Great
Britain, was not within the jurisdiction of the consular court is
more plausible, but admits, we think, of a sufficient answer. The
national character of the petitioner, for all the purposes of the
consular jurisdiction, was determinable by his enlistment as one of
the crew of the American ship
Bullion. By such enlistment
he became an American seaman, one of an American crew on board of
an American vessel, and as such entitled to the protection and
benefits of all the laws passed by Congress on behalf of American
seamen and subject to all their obligations and liabilities.
Although his relations to the British government are not so changed
that, after the expiration of his enlistment on board of the
American ship, that government may not enforce his obligation of
allegiance, and he, on the other hand, may not be entitled to
invoke its protection as a British subject, that relation was
changed during his service of seaman on board of the American ship
under his enlistment. He could then insist upon treatment as an
American seaman, and invoke for his protection all the power of the
United States which could be called into exercise for the
protection of seamen who were native born. He owes for that time to
the country to which the ship on which he is serving belongs a
temporary allegiance, and must be held to all its responsibilities.
The question has been treated more as a political one for
diplomatic adjustment than as a legal one to be determined by the
judicial tribunals, and has been the subject of correspondence
between our government and that of Great Britain.
The position taken by our government is expressed in a
Page 140 U. S. 473
communication from the Secretary of State to the British
government under date of June 16, 1881. It was the assertion of a
principle which the Secretary insisted
"is in entire conformity with the principles of English law as
applied to a mercantile service almost identical with our own in
its organization and regulation. That principle is that when a
foreigner enters the mercantile marine of any nation and becomes
one of the crew of a vessel having undoubtedly a national
character, he assumes a temporary allegiance to the flag under
which he serves, and in return for the protection afforded him
becomes subject to the laws by which that nation, in the exercise
of an unquestioned authority, governs its vessels and seamen. If,
therefore,"
he continued,
"the government of the United States has by treaty stipulation
with Japan acquired the privilege of administering its own laws
upon its own vessels, and in relation to its own seamen, in
Japanese territory, then every American vessel and every seaman of
its crew are subject to the jurisdiction which by such treaty has
been transferred to the government of the United States."
"If Ross had been a passenger on board of the
Bullion,
or if, residing in Yokohama, he had come on board temporarily, and
had then committed the murder, the question of jurisdiction would
have been very different. But as it was, he was part of the crew, a
duly enrolled seaman under American laws, enjoying the protection
of this government to such an extent that he could have been
protected from arrest by the British authorities, and his
subjection to the laws of the United States cannot be avoided just
at the moment that it suits his convenience to allege foreign
citizenship. The law which he violated was the law made by the
United States for the government of United States vessels; the
person murdered was one of his own superior officers, whom he had
bound himself to respect and obey, and it is difficult to see by
what authority the British government can assume the duty or claim
the right to vindicate that law or protect that officer."
"The mercantile service is certainly a national service,
although not quite in the sense in which that term would be applied
to the national navy. It is an organized service, governed
Page 140 U. S. 474
by a special and complex system of law, administered by national
officers, such as collectors, harbor masters, shipping masters, and
consuls, appointed by national authority. This system of law
attaches to the vessel and crew when they leave a national port,
and accompanies them round the globe, regulating their lives,
protecting their persons, and punishing their offenses. The sailor,
like the soldier, during his enlistment knows no other allegiance
than to the country under whose flag he serves. This law may be
suspended while he is in the ports of a foreign nation, but where
such foreign nation grants to the country which he serves the power
to administer its own laws in such foreign territory, then the law
under which he enlisted again becomes supreme."
The Secretary concluded his communication with the following
expression of the determination of our government:
"So impressed is this government with the importance and
propriety of these views that while it will receive with the most
respectful consideration the expression of any different conviction
which Her Britannic Majesty's government may entertain, it will yet
feel bound to instruct its consular and diplomatic officers in the
east that in China and Japan, the judicial authority of the consuls
of the United States will be considered as extending over all
persons duly shipped and enrolled upon the articles of any merchant
vessel of the United States, whatever be the nationality of such
person. And all offenses which would be justiciable by the consular
courts of the United States, where the persons so offending are
native-born or naturalized citizens of the United States, employed
in the merchant service thereof, are equally justiciable by the
same consular courts in the case of seamen of foreign
nationality."
The determination thus expressed was afterwards carried out by
incorporating the doctrine into the permanent regulations of the
department for the guide of the consuls of this country. 72d
Regulation.
The views thus forcibly expressed present, in our judgment, the
true status of the prisoner while an enlisted seaman on the
American vessel, and give effect to the purpose of the treaty
Page 140 U. S. 475
and the legislation of Congress. The treaty uses the term
"Americans" in speaking of those who may be brought within the
jurisdiction of the consular court for offenses committed in Japan.
The statute designates them as "citizens of the United States," and
yet extends the laws of the United States so far as they may be
necessary to execute the treaty and are suitable to carry the same
into effect not only over all citizens of the United States in
Japan, but also over "all others to the extent that the terms of
the treaty justify or require."
Reading the treaty and statute together, in view of the purpose
designed to be accomplished, we are satisfied that it was intended
by them to bring within our laws all who are citizens, and also all
who, though not strictly citizens, are by their service equally
entitled to the care and protection of the government. It is a
canon of interpretation to so construe a law or a treaty as to give
effect to the object designed, and for that purpose all of its
provisions must be examined in the light of attendant and
surrounding circumstances. To some terms and expressions a literal
meaning will be given, and to others a larger and more extended
one. The reports of adjudged cases and approved legal treatises are
full of illustrations of the application of this rule. The inquiry
in all such cases is as to what was intended in the law by the
legislature, and in the treaty by the contracting parties.
In
Geofroy v. Riggs, 133 U. S. 258,
which was before this Court at the last term, it was held that the
District of Columbia, as a political community, is one of "the
states of the union," within the meaning of that term as used in
the consular convention of 1853 with France, such construction
being necessary to give consistency to the provisions of the
convention and not defeat the consideration given to France for her
concession of certain rights to citizens of the United States. And
in the present case, to carry out the intention of the treaty and
statute in question, they will be construed to apply to all parties
who are by public law or the law of the country entitled to be
treated for the time, from their employment and service, as
citizens. There are many adjudications to the effect that such
character will be ascribed to parties, and they
Page 140 U. S. 476
be held liable to all its consequences, and entitled to all its
benefits, on other grounds than birth or naturalization.
A statute of Henry VIII enacted that if anybody should rob or
take "the goods of the King's subjects within this realm" and be
found guilty, the party robbed should have restitution of the
goods. Of this statute Sir Matthew Hale said that
"though it speaks of the King's subjects, it extends to aliens
robbed, for, though they are not the King's natural-born subjects,
they are the King's subjects when in England, by local
allegiance."
1 Hale's Pleas of the Crown, p. 542.
In
United States v.
Holmes, 5 Wheat. 412, which is in point in the case
before us, certain parties were indicted in the Circuit Court of
the United States for the District of Massachusetts and convicted
of murder on the high seas. It appeared that a vessel, apparently
Spanish, was captured by privateers from Buenos Ayres, and a prize
crew was put on board, of whom the prisoners were a part. One of
them was a citizen of the United States, and the others were
foreigners. The crime was committed by drowning the person whose
death was charged, by the prisoners driving or throwing him
overboard. On motion for a new trial, certain questions arose on
which the judges were divided in opinion. One of these was whether
it made any difference, as to the point of jurisdiction, whether
the prisoners, or any of them, were citizens of the United States,
or that the offense was committed not on board of any vessel, but
in the high seas. The Court said that the question contained two
propositions -- one as to the national character of the offender
and the person against whom the offense was committed, and second
as to the place where it was committed. In respect to the first,
the court was of opinion that it made no difference whether the
offender was a citizen of the United States or not, adding:
"if it [the offense] be committed on board of a foreign vessel
by a citizen of the United States, or on board of vessel of the
United States by a foreigner, the offender is to be considered,
pro hac vice, and in respect to this subject, as belonging
to the nation under whose flag he sails."
The case of
The Queen v. Anderson, L.R. 1 Crown
Cases
Page 140 U. S. 477
Reserved 161, is still more in point. There, one James Anderson,
an American citizen, was indicted at the central criminal court in
England for murder on board a vessel belonging to the port of
Yarmouth, in Nova Scotia. She was registered in London, and was
sailing under the British flag. At the time the offense was
committed, the vessel was in the River Garonne, within the
boundaries of the French Empire, on her way up to Bordeaux, which
city is by the course of the river about ninety miles from the open
sea. The vessel had proceeded about half-way up the river, and was
at the time of the offense about 330 yards from the nearest shore;
the river at that place being about half a mile wide. The tide
flows up to the place and beyond it. The prisoner was convicted,
and the case was reserved for the opinion of the court. It was
contended on behalf of the prisoner that the court had no
jurisdiction in the case, because he was an American citizen and in
a foreign country at the time the offense was committed, and also
that section 267 of the Merchant Shipping Act, which it was said
the Crown relied upon at the trial, applied only to British seamen.
Mr. Justice Blackburn, in regard to this last statement, observed:
"The expression "British seamen" may mean one who, whatever his
nationality, is serving on board a British ship," and also that it
had been decided "that a ship which bears a nation's flag is to be
treated as a part of the territory of that nation. A ship is a kind
of floating island." Counsel answered that if it floated into the
territory of another nation it would cease to be so, and the
jurisdiction of the flag would then be excluded, and that the man
might have been tried in France; to which Chief Justice Bovill
replied: "Even if he might, why should not this country legislate
to regulate the conduct of those on board its own vessels, or so as
to have concurrent jurisdiction?" All the judges concurred in
sustaining the conviction. In giving his opinion, the Chief Justice
said:
"There is no doubt that the place where the offense was
committed was within the territory of France, and that the prisoner
was therefore subject to the laws of France, which that nation
might enforce if they thought fit; but at the same time he was also
within a British merchant vessel, on board that
Page 140 U. S. 478
vessel as a part of the crew, and as such he must be taken to
have been under the protection of the British law, and also
amendable to its provisions. It is said that the prisoner was an
American citizen, but he had embarked by his own consent on board a
British ship, and was at the time a portion of its crew. There are
many observations to be found in various writers to show that in
some instances, though subject to American law as a citizen of
America, and to the law of France as being found within French
territory, yet that he must also be considered as being within
British jurisdiction as forming a part of the crew of a British
vessel, upon the principle that the jurisdiction of a country is
preserved over its vessels though they may be in ports or rivers
belonging to another nation."
P. 165.
Mr. Justice Blackburn said:
"Where a nation allows a vessel to sail under her flag, and the
crew have the protection of that flag, common sense and justice
require that they should be punishable by the law of the flag."
P. 170.
The views expressed by the Department of State, quoted above,
are in harmony with the doctrine uniformly asserted by our
government against the claim by England of a right to take its
countrymen from the deck of an American merchant vessel and press
them into its naval service. It is a part of our history that the
assertion of this claim, and its enforcement in many instances,
caused a degree of irritation among our people which no conduct of
any other country has ever produced. Its enforcement was deemed a
great indignity upon this country, and a violation of our right of
sovereignty, our vessels being considered as parts of our
territory. It led to the war of 1812, and although that war closed
without obtaining a relinquishment of the claim, its further
assertion was not attempted. At last, in a communication by Mr.
Webster, then Secretary of State, to Lord Ashburton, the special
British minister to this country, on the 8th of August, 1842, the
claim was repudiated, and the announcement made that it would no
longer be allowed by our government, and must be abandoned. The
conclusion of Mr. Webster's communication bears upon the question
before us. After referring to the claim of Great
Page 140 U. S. 479
Britain, and demonstrating the injustice of the position and its
violation of national rights, he said:
"In the early disputes between the two governments on this so
long contested topic, the distinguished person to whose hands were
first entrusted the seals of this department declared that 'the
simplest rule will be that the vessel being American shall be
evidence that the seamen on board are such.' Fifty years'
experience, the utter failure of many negotiations, and a careful
reconsideration now had of the whole subject at a moment when the
passions are laid, and no present interest or emergency exists to
bias the judgment, have convinced this government that this is not
only the simplest and best, but the only, rule which can be adopted
and observed consistently with the rights and honor of the United
States and the security of their citizens. That rule announces,
therefore, what will hereafter be the principle maintained by their
government. In every regularly documented American merchant vessel,
the crew who navigate it will find their protection in the flag
which is over them."
Webster's Works, vol. VI, p. 325.
This rule that the vessel being American is evidence that the
seamen on board are such is now an established doctrine of this
country, and in support of it there is with the American people no
diversity of opinion, and can be no division of action.
We are satisfied that the trust rule of construction in the
present case was adopted by the Department of State in the
correspondence with the English government, and that the action of
the consular tribunal in taking jurisdiction of the prisoner Ross,
though an English subject, for the offense committed was
authorized. While he was an enlisted seaman on the American vessel,
which floated the American flag, he was, within the meaning of the
statute and the treaty, an American, under the protection and
subject to the laws of the United States equally with the seaman
who was native born. As an American seaman, he could have demanded
a trial before the consular court as a matter of right, and must
therefore be held subject to it as a matter of obligation.
We have not overlooked the objection, repeatedly made and
Page 140 U. S. 480
earnestly pressed by counsel, that the consular tribunal is a
court of limited jurisdiction. It is undoubtedly a court of that
character, limited by the treaty and the statutes passed to carry
it into effect, and its jurisdiction cannot be extended beyond
their legitimate meaning; but their construction is not therefore
to be so restricted as to practically defeat the purposes to be
accomplished by the treaty, but rather so as to give it full
operation, in order that it may not be a vain and nugatory act.
It is true that the occasion for consular tribunals in Japan may
hereafter be less than at present, as every year that country
progresses in civilization and in the assimilation of its system of
judicial procedure to that of Christian countries, as well as in
the improvement of its penal statutes; but the system of consular
tribunals which have a general similarity in their main provisions
is of the highest importance, and their establishment in other than
Christian countries, where our people may desire to go in pursuit
of commerce, will often be essential for the protection of their
persons and property.
We have not considered the objection to the discharge of the
prisoner on the ground that he accepted the conditional pardon of
the President. If his conviction and sentence were void for want of
jurisdiction in the consular tribunal, it may be doubtful whether
he was estopped, by his acceptance of the pardon, from assailing
their validity; but into that inquiry we need not go, for, the
consular court having had jurisdiction to try and sentence him,
there can be no question as to the binding force of the
acceptance.
Order affirmed.