F. was convicted of murder in the Criminal Court of Cook County,
Illinois, and sentenced by that court to suffer the penalty of
death. Upon writ of error to the Supreme Court of Illinois, that
judgment was affirmed and the day fixed in the original judgment
for carrying the sentence into execution having passed, that court
fixed another day. After the expiration of the term, the accused
applied for a correction of the record of the Supreme Court so as
to show that he was not present in that court when the original
judgment was affirmed, and another day fixed for the execution. The
application was denied upon the ground, in part, that amendments of
the record of the court in derogation of the final judgment could
not be allowed at a subsequent term.
Held:
(1) That the law of Illinois, as declared by its highest court,
in respect to amendments of the record was applicable to all
persons within the jurisdiction of that state, and its enforcement
against the plaintiff in error was not a denial to him by the state
of the equal protection of the laws.
(2) That due process of law did not require the presence of the
accused in the appellate court when the original judgment of the
trial court was affirmed and a new day fixed for his execution.
The case is stated in the opinion.
MR. JUSTICE HARLAN, after stating the facts in the foregoing
language, delivered the opinion of the Court.
Page 143 U. S. 453
The judgment of the Supreme Court of Illinois rendered September
14, 1887, in the case of
Spies v. Illinois, and which is
set out in the opinion in
Schwab v. Berggren, ante,
143 U. S. 442, was
before this Court on application for a writ of error, which was
dismissed November 2, 1887.
123 U. S. 131.
As stated in the opinion in
Schwab v. Berggren, it was
represented to the court below, by a petition filed March 5, 1888,
by Fielden, Neebe, and Schwab, three of the defendants convicted in
the Criminal Court of Cook County of the crime of murder, that the
order of September 14, 1887, was false and untrue in its recital
that they were in court when it was entered, whereas in fact
neither of them was so present, in person or by counsel, nor were
they or either of them, or the counsel of either, notified to be
present on that day in court. They asked an amendment of the record
that would make it conform to the truth and show upon its face the
above facts. The application was supported by the affidavits of
counsel. This motion was stricken from the docket by order of court
entered March 16, 1888. Subsequently, March 22, 1888, a motion was
made to set aside that order, and the application to amend the
record, in the manner above indicated, was renewed. This motion was
taken under advisement and its consideration deferred until the
succeeding term, and on the 15th of March, 1889, was denied.
Subsequently, March 26, 1889, Fielden, Schwab, and Neebe asked
leave to amend the original motion so as to add thereto the
following:
"And in support of said motion to amend said record, your
petitioners file herewith, and refer to the same in support of
amendment of said record, the affidavits of Samuel Fielden, Michael
Schwab, Oscar W. Neebe, petitioners, and W. P. Black and M.
Salomon, petitioners' attorneys, wherein it is set forth that none
of the plaintiffs in error appeared or could appear in this
honorable court, where the said judgment was given, nor were they
or any of them present by counsel on said occasion, nor were their
counsel notified or furnished opportunity to be present on said
occasion, and petitioners further say and allege and claim that the
said recital in said record deprives petitioners and said
plaintiffs in
Page 143 U. S. 454
error of substantial rights guaranteed the said plaintiffs in
error by the Constitution of the United States and by the
Constitution of the State of Illinois, and particularly in said
recital on said record and the judgment of this Court, in violation
of the 14th Amendment to the Constitution of the United States, and
in violation of section two of article two of the Constitution of
the State of Illinois, and plaintiffs in error claim the benefit,
right, privileges, and immunities guaranteed by the constitutional
provisions referred to."
At the same time, they applied for a rehearing of the motion
previously made, claiming that the decision of the court below in
overruling it, and in refusing to amend the record as requested by
them, was in violation of the rights secured to them by the
Fourteenth Amendment of the Constitution of the United States, and
by other provisions of that instrument, and also in violation of
section two of article two and other provisions of the Constitution
of the State of Illinois. They insisted, in the application for a
rehearing, that a legal judgment could not have been rendered
against them unless they were brought before the court and were
personally present when the judgment against them was pronounced;
that the refusal to amend the record, and permitting it to stand as
it was, deprived them of their right and privilege of questioning
the judgment so pronounced,
"if petitioners shall see fit to do so, in the United States
Supreme Court, to which petitioners claim they have a right of
appeal from the judgment of this court condemning petitioners."
They also applied for leave to present a bill of exceptions
embodying the above motions, amendment to motion, petition for
rehearing, and affidavits filed in support of the application to
amend the record. The Supreme Court of Illinois overruled each
motion and the petition for rehearing, and from its order to that
effect Fielden prosecuted this writ of error.
The Supreme Court of Illinois held that under the practice in
that state,
"amendments of the record in affirmance of the judgment, when
there is anything to amend by, may, upon notice, be made at a term
subsequent to that at which final judgment is rendered; but
amendments not in affirmance, but in derogation, of the judgment
are not allowed at a term
Page 143 U. S. 455
subsequent to that at which final judgment is rendered. . . .
This motion, not having been made at the same term at which final
judgment was rendered nor until the case had passed beyond the
power of this court to stay, by its order, the execution of the
judgment, clearly comes too late."
In order that it might not be understood as conceding that the
amendment, if made, would affect the validity of the judgment, the
court proceeded to show that, according to the principles of the
common law as well as under the laws of Illinois, it had
jurisdiction to hear and finally determine, in the absence of the
defendants, the writ of error sued out for the review of the
judgment of the Criminal Court of Cook County. It said:
"If the present plaintiffs in error and their counsel had been
actually present in court when the judgment of affirmance here was
entered, the law allowed them to then say or do nothing which by
any possibility could have benefited plaintiffs in error. They
were, after judgment was entered, entitled only to move for a
rehearing, and this could only be done on printed petition; but
thirty days were allowed in which to prepare it. 93 Ill. p. 11,
rule 41. . . . Undoubtedly,"
the court further said,
"if plaintiffs in error or their counsel had been actually
present in court when the decision was announced, they would then
have known what the decision was; but that fact was equally well
made known to them by notice from the clerk in ample time to avail
of their right to file a petition for rehearing. And if indeed,
without any fault of theirs, more time would have been needed
within which to prepare the petition for rehearing, it was within
the recognized practice of this Court to have extended the time for
that purpose beyond the thirty days. But no claim is here made that
plaintiffs in error were not informed of the decision in the case
in time to file a petition for rehearing. They did not seek to
avail of that right, but voluntarily waived it and prosecuted a
writ of error upon the record from the Supreme Court of the United
States, and it was not until after that was decided adversely to
them that they discovered the claim made error in the record of
which amendment is now sought."
Fielden v. People, 128 Ill. 595.
Page 143 U. S. 456
The plaintiff in error contends that the refusal to amend the
record, so as to show that he was not present in person or by
counsel in the Supreme Court of Illinois at the time it affirmed
the judgment of the trial court and fixed the day for carrying that
judgment into execution was a denial to him of that equal
protection of the laws which is accorded by the Constitution of the
United States to all persons within the jurisdiction of the
respective states; also that such action upon the part of the court
below was inconsistent with "due process of law."
Assuming that these constitutional questions were so raised in
the court below as to authorize them to be considered here, we are
of opinion that no right secured to the plaintiff in error by the
Constitution of the United States was violated by the refusal of
the Supreme Court of Illinois to allow the proposed amendment of
its record. We take, as is our duty, the law of Illinois to be, as
declared by its highest court, that amendments of the record of a
court in derogation of its final judgment are not permitted in that
state after the expiration of the term at which the judgment was
rendered. That law is applicable to all persons within the
jurisdiction of the state, and its enforcement against the
plaintiff in error cannot therefore be said to be a denial to him
by the State of the equal protection of the laws. Neither
discussion nor citation of authorities is required to support a
proposition so manifestly correct.
When the original case was before this Court, Chief Justice
Waite said:
"The objection that the defendants were not actually present in
the supreme court of the state at the time sentence was pronounced
cannot be made on the record as it now stands, because on its face
it shows that they were present. If this is not in accordance with
the fact, the record must be corrected below, not here. It will be
time enough to consider whether the objection presents a federal
question when the correction has been made."
Spies v. Illinois, 123 U. S. 131,
123 U. S. 182.
These observations were adverted to in argument, but we do not
perceive that they have any bearing on the questions now raised.
The Chief Justice only meant to
Page 143 U. S. 457
say that this Court could not amend the record, but, if amended
by the court below, the question would still remain whether the
objection referred to could be considered by this Court.
Equally without merit is the suggestion that the action of the
court below in disposing of the writ of error to the Criminal Court
of Cook County in the absence of the accused was not in conformity
to "due process of law." This question was determined in
Schwab
v. Berggren, just decided, and we do not deem it necessary to
add anything to what is there said.
Judgment affirmed.