The District Court for the District of Alaska has jurisdiction
in admiralty to forfeit vessels for violating the provisions of
Rev.Stat. § 1956 on any of the navigable waters of the United
States which were acquired by the treaty with Russia concluded
March 30, 1857, 15 Stat. 539.
Page 143 U. S. 473
Prohibition will not go after judgment and sentence unless want
of jurisdiction appears on the face of the proceedings; but before
judgment, the superior court can examine not simply the process and
pleadings technically of record, but also the facts and evidence
upon which action was taken.
United States district courts, sitting in admiralty, are courts
of superior jurisdiction, and every intendment is made in favor of
their decrees, and when it appears that the court had jurisdiction
of the subject matter and either that the defendant was duly served
with process or that he voluntarily appeared and made defense, the
decree is not open collaterally to any inquiry upon the merits or
jurisdiction dependent on those facts.
On an application for a writ of prohibition, the inquiry being
confined to the matter of jurisdiction, only the record proper
should be looked into, and not documents and other evidence in
addition to the record which may be sent up under the provisions of
Rev.Stat. § 698.
The latter part of § 7 of the Act of May 17, 1584, 23 Stat.
24, 26, mad be read as follows: "And the final judgments and
decrees of said District Court of Alaska may be reviewed by the
Supreme Court of the United States as in other cases," and, being
so read, its meaning is that this Court may review the final
judgments or decrees of that court, as in cases of the same kind
from other courts.
When a party aggrieved by a judgment has an appeal to this Court
which becomes inefficacious through his neglect, a writ of
prohibition to prevent the enforcement of the judgment will not
issue from this Court.
The Act of February 16, 1875, 18 Stat. 315, c. 77, § 1,
applies to appeals taken from decrees of the District Court of the
United States for the District of Alaska sitting in admiralty.
At a time when a diplomatic correspondence was going on between
the United States and Great Britain respecting the extent of the
jurisdiction of the former in the waters of Behring Sea, a libel in
admiralty was filed in the District Court of Alaska alleging a
seizure by the United States authorities of a vessel "within the
limits of Alaska Territory, and in the waters thereof and within
the civil and judicial District of Alaska," to-wit:
"Within the waters of that portion of Behring Sea belonging to
the United States and said district, on waters navigable from the
sea by vessels of ten or more tons burden,"
and charging that
"the said vessel and her captain, officers and crew were then
and there found engaged in killing fur seals within the limits of
Alaska Territory and in the said waters thereof, in violation,"
etc. The findings of fact followed this description, and
described the act complained of as done "within the waters of
Alaska." No request was made to have the findings made more
specific as to the place where the offense was committed. The
vessel being condemned, the claimants appealed to this Court. The
appeal was duly entered and docketed, and was then dismissed on
application of the appellant, who applied for leave to file an
application for a writ of prohibition to restrain the court below
from enforcing the sentence
Page 143 U. S. 474
or the decree of condemnation. Leave being granted, the petition
was filed, and it is now
Held:
(1) That the legal inference from the findings of fact is that
the act took place within the jurisdiction of the United
States.
(2) That an appeal lay to this Court from the decree of the
district court.
(3) That, the district court having found the facts, this Court
would be limited on appeal to the consideration of the questions of
law presented by the record.
(4) That the district court on the pleadings and facts found had
jurisdiction of the case, and the petitioner might have prosecuted
an appeal, and that the appeal taken was insufficient for the
petitioner's purposes because of his neglect to have included in
the findings the exact locality of the seizure.
(b) That for this reason the writ of prohibition should not
issue, the court resting its denial of it on this ground, although
it might have placed it upon the well settled principle that an
application to a court to review the action of the political
department of the government, upon a question pending between it
and a foreign power, and to determine whether the government was
right or wrong, made while diplomatic negotiations were still going
on, should be denied.
The Court stated the case as follows:
This is an application for a writ of prohibition to the District
Court of the United States for the District of Alaska, to restrain
the enforcement of a sentence of forfeiture and condemnation
entered in that court September 19, 1887, on a libel filed by the
United States against the schooner
W. P. Sayward upon the
ground that that court was without jurisdiction in the premises.
The petitioner, Cooper, is the owner of the vessel, and with his
petition a suggestion was presented by Sir John Thompson, K.C.M.G.,
her Britannic majesty's Attorney General of Canada, with the
knowledge and approval of the imperial government of Great Britain,
requesting the aid of the court for the claimant, a subject of her
Britannic majesty.
The motion for leave to file the application was made on the
12th of January, 1891, and leave was granted on the second day of
February. The application having accordingly been filed, a rule was
issued against the judge of the District
Page 143 U. S. 475
Court of Alaska to show cause why the writ should not go. The
petition is set out
in extenso in
In re Cooper,
138 U. S. 404. The
main averments are that the schooner
W. P. Sayward, a
British vessel, while lawfully sailing upon the high seas in
latitude 44�43' north and longitude 167�51' west, and
59 miles from any land whatsoever, was forcibly seized by an armed
revenue vessel of the United States and forcibly carried into the
port of Sitka, and there forcibly detained and delivered to the
United States marshal, and by the attorney for the United States of
the District of Alaska libeled in the district court, and by said
court condemned for having killed fur seal at the place of seizure.
It was further averred that the decree of forfeiture was made and
entered September 19, 1887; that the petitioner, having been
admitted as the actual owner of the said schooner as claimant,
appealed to this Court April 26, 1888, and docketed said appeal
here October 30, 1888, but dismissed the same (January 12, 1891)
because advised that an appeal would not lie, and that the decree
was and is a nullity, and that all the matters of fact alleged in
the petition, save those of which this Court takes judicial notice,
appear by the record and proceedings of the district court, and it
was claimed in argument that the petitioner, having referred to the
original record and proceedings of the district court, was entitled
to have the same read and considered as part of his case in this
Court, and he accordingly filed a complete and authenticated
transcript of the entire proceedings in the district court, as he
alleged.
A return was made in due course by John S. Bugbee, judge of the
court in question, stating that he was not such judge at the time
the decree was entered, but was appointed and qualified on December
7, 1889, and he thereupon sets forth
"the final record of the cause in which said decree of
forfeiture was made and entered, as prepared under section 750 of
the Revised Statutes of the United States from the files, minutes,
and journal of said district court of the United States, District
of Alaska,"
as follows:
The libel dated and filed September 13, 1887:
"The libel of information of M. D. Ball, attorney of the
Page 143 U. S. 476
United States for the District of Alaska, who prosecutes on
behalf of the said United States, in the name and on behalf of the
said United States, alleges and informs as follows, to-wit:"
"That L. G. Shepard, an officer in the revenue marine service of
the United States, duly commissioned by the President of the United
States, in command of the United States revenue-cutter
Rush, and on special duty in the waters of the District of
Alaska, heretofore, to-wit, on the 9th day of July, A.D. 1887,
within the limits of Alaska Territory and in the waters thereof,
and within the civil and Judicial District of Alaska, to-wit,
within the waters of that portion of Behring Sea belonging to the
United States and said district, on waters navigable from the sea
by vessels of ten or more tons burden, seized the schooner
W.
P. Sayward, of Victoria, B.C., her tackle, apparel, boats,
cargo, and furniture, being the property of some person or persons
unknown to said attorney."
"The property is more particularly described as follows, to-wit:
Schooner W. P. Sayward, of Victoria, B.C., of 59 and
79/100 tons burden, as per register, standing and running rigging,
sails, chronometer, and nautical instruments, clock, lamps,
carpenter's tools, books, two anchors, casks, cooking and table
utensils, provisions, and 477 fur seal skins, and all other
property found upon or appurtenant to said schooner."
"That L. G. Shepard was then and there duly commissioned and
authorized by the proper department of the United States to make
said seizure."
"That all said property was then and there seized as forfeited
to the United States for the following causes:"
"That the said vessel and her captain, officers, and crew were
then and there found engaged in killing fur seals within the limits
of Alaska Territory, and in the said waters thereof, in violation
of section 1956 of the Revised Statutes of the United States; that
all the said property, after being seized as aforesaid, was brought
into the port of Sitka, in said district, and turned over to the
United States marshal of this district, with the exception of the
477 fur seal skins, which latter were brought into the port of
Oonalaska in said territory and delivered into the keeping of Isaac
Anderson, a deputy United
Page 143 U. S. 477
states marshal of this district, and all of said property is now
within the Judicial District of Alaska, United States of America,
and said M. D. Ball, attorney as aforesaid, further informs and
alleges that on the 9th day of July, A.D. 1887, Geo. R. Ferry and
certain other persons whose names are to the said United States
attorney unknown, who were then and there engaged on board of said
schooner
W. P. Sayward as seamen and seal hunters, did,
under the directions and by the authority of Geo. R. Ferry, then
and there master of said schooner, engage in killing and did kill,
in the territory and District of Alaska and in the waters thereof,
thirty fur seals, in violation of section 1956 of the Revised
Statutes of the United States in such cases made and provided."
"That the said 477 fur seal skins and other goods so seized on
board the schooner
W. P. Sayward constituted the cargo of
said schooner at the time of the killing of said fur seals and at
the time of said seizure."
"And said attorney saith that all and singular the premises were
and are true, and within the admiralty and maritime jurisdiction of
the United States and of this honorable court, and that by reason
thereof, and by force of the statutes in such cases made and
provided, the aforementioned schooner, being a vessel of 59.79
tons' burden, and her said apparel, tackle, boats, cargo, and
furniture, became and are forfeited to the use of the United
States."
"Wherefore the said attorney prays that the usual process and
monition of this honorable court issue in this behalf against said
schooner and all said hereinbefore described property to enforce
the forfeiture thereof, and requiring notice to be given to all
persons to appear and show cause on the return day of said process
why said forfeiture should not be decreed, and that, after due
proceedings are had, all said property be adjudged, decreed, and
condemned as forfeited to the use of the United States, and for
such other relief as may be proper in the premises."
The monition dated September 15, 1887, and returned and filed
September 19, 1887, and the return.
Order of court of September 15, 1887, granting leave to the
Page 143 U. S. 478
proctor for claimants to file claim of master for owner and the
claim; also order granting leave to proctor for claimants to file a
demurrer to the libel, and the demurrer.
Order of court overruling the demurrer on the same day and leave
granted to file answer, and the answer:
'And now comes George R. Ferry, master, as aforesaid, and for
answer to the libel of information filed herein, says:
"1st. He admits that L. G. Shepard was an officer of the United
States revenue marine service, duly commissioned, and that he was
at the time the property proceeded against herein was seized, in
command of the United States revenue cutter
Rush, and on
official duty at the time the said seizure was made, and was then
and there duly commissioned and authorized by the proper department
of the United States to make said seizure, but denies that said
seizure was made within the waters of Alaska Territory, or within
the civil and Judicial District of Alaska, or in any portion of
Behring Sea belonging to the United States, or upon any other
waters belonging to libellants navigable from the sea by vessels of
ten tons or over."
"2nd. Denies that said vessel, her captain, officers, and crew,
were then and there found engaged in killing fur seals within the
limits of Alaska Territory, or in the waters thereof, or that they
were then and there violating any law of the United States."
"3rd. Denies that on the ninth day of July, A.D. 1887, any other
person or persons did then and there, under the direction and
authority of the said George R. Ferry, or any other person, or at
all, kill any fur seal within the District of Alaska, or in the
waters thereof."
"4th. Denies that the property proceeded against in this cause,
or any portion thereof, ever became forfeited to the United States;
wherefore the said claimant prays that the libel of information
filed herein may be dismissed, and for any other just and equitable
relief as to this Court may seem meet and proper."
September 19, 1887, leave granted proctor for owners to file a
waiver of the publication and posting of the notice of the
Page 143 U. S. 479
libel and seizure of the property granted, and waiver filed the
same day:
"And now comes W. Clark, Esq., proctor for the owners of the
above-named schooner, as appears by their claim filed herein, and
on behalf of said owners, and being authorized thereto, waives said
owners' right to publication and posting of the notice of the libel
and seizure of the property being proceeded against in this cause,
and waives also time of hearing, and announces himself ready to
proceed to trial."
Record entry of September 19, 1887:
"This cause having been tried and submitted, the court, from the
evidence, finds the following facts and conclusions of law:"
"1st. That on the 9th day of July, 1887, and theretofore, the
master and crew of the defendant vessel were engaged in killing and
did kill fur seals in that portion of Behring Sea ceded by Russia
to the United States by the treaty of March, 1867, and within the
waters of Alaska, in violation of section 1956 of the Revised
Statutes of the United States, and that the promiscuous shooting of
fur-bearing animals in the waters adjacent to the islands of St.
Paul and St. George, and in that portion of Behring Sea east of
193d degree of west longitude, has a tendency to frighten and
prevent the said animals from going upon these islands, as they
have been accustomed to in the past."
"2nd. That on the said 9th day of July, 1887, said vessel, her
furniture, apparel, tackle, cargo, and 477 fur seal skins were
seized in said waters by the commanding officer of the United
States revenue cutter
Rush, then and there engaged in the
revenue marine service of the United States."
"3rd. That said commanding officer was duly commissioned by the
President of the United States, and made such seizure under the
direction and by the authority of the Treasury Department of the
United States."
"4th. That said property so seized was delivered by said
commanding officer of said cutter to the United States Marshal of
the District of Alaska, and is now within the jurisdiction of the
court. "
Page 143 U. S. 480
"As conclusions of law, the court finds that the plaintiff is
entitled to a decree of forfeiture against said vessel, her tackle,
apparel, furniture, cargo, and the said 477 fur seal skins."
Motion in arrest of decree, filed September 19, 1887:
"At this time comes W. Clark, proctor for claimants, and moves
the court to arrest the decree of forfeiture in the said cause for
the following reasons, to-wit:"
"1st. That the libel of information herein does not state facts
sufficient in law to enable the United States to have and maintain
this action for the forfeiture of the property seized herein."
"2nd. That the evidence produced on the part of the United
States in this cause is not sufficient upon which to base a decree
of forfeiture."
"3rd. That from the evidence produced on the part of the United
States it appears that this Court has no jurisdiction over the
subject matter of this cause."
"4th. That the act of Congress under which the seizure herein
was made is contrary to the spirit of international law and
ultra vires, in that it purports to give the United States
jurisdiction over a portion of the high seas more than three marine
leagues from its shores, and purports to establish an international
boundary line in mid-ocean, with no definite terminal points, and
impossible to determine by absolute measurement or clearly define
by marks."
"Therefore claimants pray that said decree may be forever
arrested, and this cause dismissed."
Order denying motion and decree of September 19, 1887:
"The marshal having returned on the monition issued to him in
the above-entitled action that in obedience thereto he had attached
the said schooner
W. P. Sayward, her tackle, apparel,
boats, cargo, and furniture, and proctor for claimants, on behalf
of said owners, having waived said owners' right to publication and
posting of the notice of the libel and seizure, and also time of
hearing, and has given due notice to all persons claiming the same
to appear before this Court on the 19th day of Sept., 1887 at 11
o'clock A.M. at the District of Alaska, United States of America,
then and there to interpose
Page 143 U. S. 481
their claims and make their allegations in that behalf, and Geo.
R. Ferry, the captain of said vessel, having heretofore filed a
claim to all of said property on behalf of J. D. Warren and Andrew
Laing, of Victoria, B.C., and no other persons having appeared, and
no other claims or allegations having been made or filed by any
other person or persons, and the usual proclamation having been
made, and said cause having been heard this day by consent of
parties, on the pleadings and proofs, M. D. Ball Esq., U.S. Dist.
Atty., by A. K. Delaney, Esq., of counsel in that behalf, appearing
as advocate for said libellant, and W. Clark, Esq., as advocate for
said claimants, and said cause having been submitted to the court
for decision, and due deliberation being had in the premises, and
the court having filed his findings and conclusions of law herein,
it is now thereupon ordered, sentenced, and decreed as
follows:"
"1st. That all persons whosoever, other than said claimants, be,
and they are hereby, decreed in contumacy and default."
"2nd. That said schooner
W. P. Sayward, her tackle,
apparel, boats, and furniture, and her cargo of 477 fur seal skins,
now in the custody of the Deputy U.S. Marshal at Oonalaska, and all
property found upon or appurtenant to said schooner, be, and the
same are hereby, condemned as forfeited to the use of the United
States."
"3rd. That unless an appeal be taken to this decree within the
time limited and prescribed by law and the rules of court, the
usual writ of
venditioni exponas will be issued to the
marshal, commanding him to sell all the said property and bring the
proceeds unto this Court, to be distributed according to law. Costs
to be taxed, and are awarded against said claimants."
Motion for a stay of proceedings dated October 3, 1887, and
filed and overruled December 9, 1887; motion for a stay of three
months considered and overruled same day; motion for leave to
appeal filed and granted same day; motion to renew leave to appeal
made and overruled April 14, 1888, but subsequently granted April
16th. April 19, 1888, motion for leave to file stipulation and
consent that vessel be thereupon
Page 143 U. S. 482
discharged, and order to that effect upon stipulation filed and
approved, as follows:
"Whereas a libel of information was filed in the within cause on
the 13th day of September, 1887, in the above court, by the
Honorable M. Ball, U.S. District Attorney for the District of
Alaska, against the schooner
W. P. Sayward, her tackle,
apparel, furniture, and cargo, for the reasons and causes in said
libel mentioned and set forth, and whereas a decree of forfeiture
was on the 19th day of September, 1887, rendered against the said
vessel, her tackle, apparel, furniture, and cargo, and against
Thomas Henry Cooper, of San Francisco, intervening as the sole and
only claimant to said vessel, tackle, apparel, furniture, and
cargo, and whereas the said vessel, tackle, apparel, furniture, and
cargo are now in the custody of the U.S. marshal for the said
District of Alaska under process issued from this Court, and in
pursuance of the prayer of the said libel, and whereas the value of
the said vessel, her tackle, apparel, furniture, and cargo, has
been appraised at $7,289.50, as appears by the report of the
appraisers duly appointed and sworn by this Court, and on file
herein, and whereas the said Cooper, claimant as aforesaid, is
desirous of, and purposes, appealing from the said decree of this
honorable court:"
"Now therefore we, the undersigned, the stipulators, submitting
ourselves to the jurisdiction of this court, do acknowledge
ourselves to be bound unto the United States of America, the said
claimant, Thomas Henry Cooper, as principal, and Bailey Gatzert and
Jacob Furth as sureties, jointly and severally, in the sum of
$7,289.50, lawful money of the United States, hereby consenting and
agreeing that a summary decree may be rendered against us, and each
of us, for the above appraised value, with interest thereon from
this date, and that execution may thereon issue against our goods,
chattels, and lands for the payment thereof or any part thereof
which shall be ordered or decreed, upon condition, nevertheless,
that if the undersigned stipulators shall prosecute their said
appeal without unnecessary delay, and abide by any final decree
that may be rendered by the Supreme Court of the United States
Page 143 U. S. 483
of America to which this cause may be appealed, and in the event
of the said decree of this honorable court being affirmed by such
court of appellate jurisdiction, then if said stipulators pay the
amount named in this stipulation into this Court this stipulation
to be void; otherwise to remain in full force and virtue."
Bond for costs on appeal filed and approved, and April 27, 1888,
leave granted to file affidavit on appeal, and appeal to the
Supreme Court of the United States granted, and affidavit of James
Douglas Warren, as agent for the claimant, and petition for appeal
filed, and appeal allowed.
July 18, 1888, record amended so as to substitute the name of
Cooper as owner for that of Warren.
The return of the district judge thus concludes:
"Respondent further says that he is in receipt of an uncertified
copy of the dismissal of the appeal taken to the supreme court from
said decree of condemnation."
"Further answering, respondent says that he is advised that in
determining his power and duty to enforce said decree as judge of
said District Court of the United States, District of Alaska, he is
limited to and concluded by an examination of the final record of
the admiralty proceeding in which such decree was entered, as set
out above, in accordance with section 750 of the Revised Statutes
of the United States, and he is further advised that this Court, in
considering whether a writ should issue against him to prohibit him
from enforcing said decree, is in like manner limited to and
concluded by said record as above disclosed. Respondent
respectfully submits that upon such record, the district court of
the United States, District of Alaska, had full jurisdiction to
make and enter the decree, and that it is the duty of this
respondent to enforce such decree upon receiving the mandate from
the supreme court issued in due course upon the dismissal of the
appeal. Because of this record, respondent is advised that all
other facts stated in the petition accompanying the rule to show
cause served upon this respondent are irrelevant and incompetent,
and need not be answered by him."
"Respondent respectfully submits to the consideration of
Page 143 U. S. 484
the court whether upon the foregoing allegations of this return
the writ of prohibition should issue against him."
It is contended by the petitioner's counsel that the return is
on its face improper and insufficient, first because the respondent
was bound, if he submitted "anything disclosed by the files,
journal, and minutes of his court for the consideration of this
Court," to submit everything; second, because the record returned
by respondent, as prepared under section 750, Revised Statutes, is
not authenticated "in any manner known to the law, and cannot be
noticed by the court;" third, because the respondent had
"no right to decide for himself without allowing this Court the
opportunity to examine the correctness of his decision, as matter
of law, that any facts stated in a petition accompanying a rule to
show cause, issuing out of this Court and served upon said judge,
are 'irrelevant and incompetent;'"
fourth, because the record is on its face incomplete, since it
shows a motion in arrest of judgment filed and overruled, and the
evidence on file was properly a part of said motion; fifth, because
the record set out in the return
"does not show jurisdiction in the district court to make and
enter a decree of forfeiture against the
W. P. Sayward,
but does show that said court had no jurisdiction to make and enter
said decree. "
Page 143 U. S. 493
MR. CHIEF JUSTICE FULLER, after stating the facts in the
foregoing language, delivered the opinion of the Court.
Page 143 U. S. 494
By section one of the Act of Congress of May 17, 1884, entitled
"An act providing a civil government for Alaska," 23 Stat. 24, c.
53, it is provided
"that the territory ceded to the United States by Russia by the
treaty of March thirtieth, eighteen hundred and sixty-seven, and
known as 'Alaska,' shall constitute a civil and judicial district,
the government of which shall be organized and administered as
hereinafter provided. The temporary seat of government of said
district is hereby established at Sitka."
The first part of section 3 is as follows:
"That there shall be, and hereby is, established a district
court for said district, with the civil and criminal jurisdiction
of district courts of the United States, and the civil and criminal
jurisdiction of district courts of the United States exercising the
jurisdiction of circuit courts, and such other jurisdiction, not
inconsistent with this act, as may be established by law."
Under this section, the court thus established acquired all the
admiralty jurisdiction within the District of Alaska belonging to
district courts of the United States.
The City of Panama,
101 U. S. 453.
Section 688, Revised Statutes, provides: "The Supreme Court
shall have power to issue writs of prohibition to the district
courts, when proceeding as courts of admiralty and maritime
jurisdiction." And although we were of opinion when the application
for the rule was made, and subsequently held,
McAllister v.
United States, 141 U. S. 174,
that the District Court for Alaska was not one of the courts
mentioned in Article III of the Constitution, declaring that the
judicial power of the United States shall be vested in one Supreme
Court and in such inferior courts as Congress shall from time to
time establish, we nevertheless concluded that where the District
Court of Alaska was acting as a district court of the United
States, and, as such, proceeding in admiralty, it came within that
section, and this Court had power to issue the writ of prohibition
to that court in a proper case; and, as the questions involved
could be, in our judgment, more satisfactorily presented upon a
return, we granted the rule.
In re Cooper, 138 U.
S. 404.
Page 143 U. S. 495
The writ thus provided for by section 688 is the common law
writ, which lies to a court of admiralty only when that court is
acting in excess of, or is taking cognizance of matters not arising
within, its jurisdiction. Its office is to prevent an unlawful
assumption of jurisdiction, and not to correct mere errors and
irregularities.
Ex Parte Gordon, 104 U.
S. 515;
Ex Parte Ferry Company, 104 U.
S. 519.
Whether the granting or refusal of the writ is discretionary or
demandable of right has been much debated.
As remarked by MR. JUSTICE GRAY in
Smith v. Whitney,
116 U. S. 167,
116 U. S. 173,
it may be said to be discretionary
"where there is another legal remedy, by appeal or otherwise, or
where the question of the jurisdiction of the court whose action is
sought to be prohibited is doubtful, or depends on facts which are
not made matter of record, or where a stranger, as he may in
England, applies for the writ of prohibition. But where that court
has clearly no jurisdiction of the suit or prosecution instituted
before it, and the defendant therein has objected to its
jurisdiction at the outset, and has no other remedy, he is entitled
to a writ of prohibition as a matter of right, and a refusal to
grant it, where all the proceedings appear of record, may be
reviewed on error."
But it is clear upon reason and authority that where the case
has gone to sentence, and the want of jurisdiction does not appear
upon the face of the proceedings, the granting of the writ, which
even if of right is not of course, is not obligatory upon the
court, and the party applying may be precluded by acquiescence from
obtaining it.
Section 14 of the Act of May 17, 1884, provided:
"That the provisions of chapter three, title twenty-three, of
the Revised Statutes of the United States, relating to the
unorganized Territory of Alaska, shall remain in full force, except
as herein specially otherwise provided."
Chapter 3 of title 23 of the Revised Statutes is entitled
"Provisions Relating to the Unorganized Territory of Alaska," and
begins with section 1954, which is as follows:
"The laws of the United States relating to customs, commerce,
and navigation are extended to and over all the mainland, islands,
and waters
Page 143 U. S. 496
of the territory ceded to the United States by the Emperor of
Russia by treaty concluded at Washington on the thirtieth day of
March, Anno Domini eighteen hundred and sixty-seven, so far as the
same may be applicable thereto."
By the Treaty of March 30, 1867, 15 Stat. 539, the Emperor of
Russia ceded to the United States
"all the territory and dominion now possessed by his said
majesty on the continent of America and in the adjacent islands,
the same being contained within the geographical limits herein set
forth, to-wit: the eastern limit is the line of demarcation between
the Russian and the British possessions in North America, as
established by the convention between Russia and Great Britain of
February 28-16, 1825, described in articles III and IV of said
convention, in the following terms: [Here follows the description
of the eastern limit as given in the convention referred to.]"
"The western limit within which the territories and dominion
conveyed are contained, passes through a point in Behring's straits
on the parallel of sixty-five degrees thirty minutes north latitude
at its intersection by the meridian which passes midway between the
Islands of Krusenstern, or Ignalook, and the Island of Ratmanoff,
or Noonarbook, and proceeds due north, without limitation, into the
same Frozen Ocean. The same western limit, beginning at the same
initial point, proceeds thence in a course nearly southwest through
Behring's Straits and Behring's Sea as to pass midway between the
northwest point of the Island of St. Lawrence and the southeast
point of Cape Choukotaski, to the meridian of one hundred and
seventy-two west longitude; thence, from the intersection of that
meridian, in a southwesterly direction, so as to pass midway
between the Island of Attou and the Copper island of the
Kormandorski couplet or group in the North Pacific Ocean, to the
meridian of one hundred and ninety-three degrees west longitude, so
as to include in the territory conveyed the whole of the Aleutian
Islands east of that meridian."
Section 1956, Tit. XXIII, c. 3, Revised Statutes, reads
thus:
"No person shall kill any otter, mink, marten, sable, or fur
Page 143 U. S. 497
seal, or other fur-bearing animal within the limits of Alaska
Territory, or in the waters thereof, and every person guilty
thereof shall, for each offense, be fined not less than two hundred
nor more than one thousand dollars, or imprisoned not more than six
months, or both, and all vessels, their tackle, apparel, furniture,
and cargo, found engaged in violation of this section shall be
forfeited; but the Secretary of the Treasury shall have power to
authorize the killing of any such mink, marten, sable, or other
fur-bearing animal, except fur seals, under such regulation as he
may prescribe, and it shall be the duty of the Secretary to prevent
the killing of any fur seal, and to provide for the execution of
the provisions of this section until it is otherwise provided by
law; nor shall he grant any special privileges under this
section."
Section 3 of the Act of March 2, 1889, 25 Stat. 1009, c. 415, is
as follows:
"That section nineteen hundred and fifty-six of the Revised
Statutes of the United States is hereby declared to include and to
apply to all the dominion of the United States in the waters of
Behring Sea, and it shall be the duty of the President at a timely
season in each year, to issue his proclamation, and cause the same
to be published for one month in at least one newspaper, if any
such there be, published at each United States port of entry on the
Pacific Coast, warning all persons against entering said waters for
the purpose of violating the provisions of said section, and he
shall also cause one or more vessels of the United States to
diligently cruise said waters and arrest all persons, and seize all
vessels found to be, or to have been, engaged in any violation of
the laws of the United States therein."
Section 734, Revised Statutes, is as follows:
"Proceedings on seizures, for forfeiture under any law of the
United States, made on the high seas, may be prosecuted in any
district into which the property so seized is brought and
proceedings instituted. Proceedings on such seizures made within
any district shall be prosecuted in the district where the seizure
is made, except in cases where it is otherwise provided. "
Page 143 U. S. 498
Under section 563, the district courts have exclusive
jurisdiction over forfeitures and seizures on navigable waters and
on land and on waters not within admiralty and maritime
jurisdiction. The District Court of Alaska had jurisdiction in
admiralty, therefore, to forfeit vessels for violation of section
1956 on any of the navigable waters within the dominion of the
United States acquired by the treaty of March 30, 1867.
The contention on behalf of the petitioner is that it appears
from the record that the schooner
Sayward was forcibly
arrested by the United States on the high seas fifty-nine miles
from shore, and forcibly taken within the limits of the District of
Alaska, and subjected to condemnation and forfeiture in the Alaska
District Court for the violation of section 1956 of the Revised
Statutes of the United States, by its master and seamen and seal
hunters under him, in killing fur seal at the place of seizure, and
that the court was absolutely destitute of jurisdiction, because by
the recognized principles of international law, the territorial
waters of each nation and its municipal jurisdiction on the high
seas are limited to three miles or a marine league from shore. And
it is insisted that when Congress, in section 1956, speaks of
"Alaska Territory" and "the waters thereof," it could only mean, so
far as the sea was concerned, three miles or a marine league from
the shore of the continent, or from the shores of one of the
adjacent islands, and that the Act of March 2, 1889, does not in
any way enlarge the effect of section 1956, because "the dominion
of the United States in the waters of Behring Sea" is limited by
the law of nations to the distance from the shore above
mentioned.
If we assume that the record shows the locality of the alleged
offense and seizure as stated, it also shows that officers of the
United States, acting under the orders of their government, seized
this vessel engaged in catching seal and took her into the nearest
port, and that the law officers of the government libeled her and
proceeded against her for the violation of the laws of the United
States in the district court, resulting in her condemnation.
Page 143 U. S. 499
How did it happen that the officers received such orders? It
must be admitted that they were given in the assertion on the part
of this government of territorial jurisdiction over Behring Sea to
an extent exceeding fifty-nine miles from the shores of Alaska;
that this territorial jurisdiction, in the enforcement of the laws
protecting seal fisheries, was asserted by actual seizures during
the seasons of 1886, 1887, and 1889 of a number of British vessels;
that the government persistently maintains that such jurisdiction
belongs to it based not only on the peculiar nature of the seal
fisheries and the property of the government in them, but also upon
the position that this jurisdiction was asserted by Russia for more
than ninety years, and by that government transferred to the United
States, and that negotiations are pending upon the subject.
While it is conceded that in matters committed by the
Constitution and laws of the United States either to Congress or to
the executive, or to both, courts are clearly bound by the action
of Congress or the executive, or both, within the limits of the
authority conferred by the Constitution and laws, yet it is
insisted that Congress and the executive, constituting the
political departments of the government, having before them the
question "of the extent of the dominion of the United States in the
Behring Sea," which they could doubtless by conjoint action
determine so as to bind the courts, have chosen neither to
determine that extent nor to make any provision of law by which it
is devolved on the executive to determine it, and that therefore it
is the duty of this Court in the case at bar, involving the
legality of the seizure and condemnation of a foreign vessel,
alleged to be in violation of the law of nations and without
warrant of any law of the United States, to determine the
question.
Assuming that the executive alone can speak so as to bind our
courts in respect of the sovereignty of foreign territory, the
changes in foreign governments, the existence of civil war in
foreign countries, and the character of a foreign minister, counsel
nevertheless confidently assert
"that without the clear authority of the law of Congress, the
executive can never, by determining a so-called political question
or by construing an
Page 143 U. S. 500
act of Congress or a treaty, conclude the rights of persons or
property under the protection of the Constitution and laws of the
United States, or conclude the courts of the United States in a
determination of these rights,"
and
Little v.
Barreme, 2 Cranch 170,
6 U. S. 177, and
United States v. Rauscher, 119 U.
S. 407,
119 U. S. 418,
are cited.
In
Little v. Barreme, the legality of the seizure of a
French vessel, coming from a French port on the high seas, by the
orders of the President, purporting to be issued under an act of
Congress authorizing the seizure of vessels bound to a French port,
but not those coming from a French port, was involved, and Mr.
Chief Justice Marshall, delivering the opinion of the Court,
said:
"It is by no means clear that the President of the United
States, whose high duty it is to 'take care that the laws be
faithfully executed,' and who is commander in chief of the armies
and navies of the United States, might not, without any special
authority for that purpose, in the then existing state of things,
have empowered the officers commanding the armed vessels of the
United States to seize and send into port for adjudication American
vessels which were forfeited by being engaged in this illicit
commerce. But when it is observed that the general clause of this
first section of the"
"act, which declares that such vessels may be seized, and may be
prosecuted in any district or circuit court which shall be holden
within or for the district where the seizure shall be made,"
"obviously contemplates a seizure within the United States, and
that the fifth section gives a special authority to seize on the
high seas, and limits that authority to the seizure of vessels
bound or sailing to a French port, the legislature seem to have
prescribed that the manner in which this law shall be carried into
execution was to exclude a seizure of any vessel not bound to a
French port. Of consequence, however strong the circumstances might
be which induced Captain Little to suspect the
Flying Fish
to be an American vessel, they could not excuse the detention of
her, since he would not have been authorized to detain her had she
been really American. "
Page 143 U. S. 501
And he states the conclusion of the Court to be "that the
instructions cannot change the nature of the transaction, or
legalize an act which, without those instructions, would have been
a plain trespass."
In
United States v. Rauscher, it appeared that the
United States asserted the right under the law of nations to try
persons extradited from Great Britain for offenses other than those
for which they were extradited, while Great Britain insisted that
no such right existed under the law of nations or was conceded by
treaty. The question was whether, under the treaty with Great
Britain, a man extradited from England to this country on the
charge of murder could be tried here for another offense, and it
was held that he could not be. And Mr. Justice Miller, delivering
the opinion of the Court, quoted from the
Head Money
Cases, 112 U. S. 580, the
following language as determinative of the principle upon which the
court proceeded:
"A treaty is primarily a compact between independent nations. It
depends for the enforcement of its provisions on the interest and
the honor of the governments which are parties to it. If these
fail, its infraction becomes the subject of international
negotiations and reclamations, so far as the injured party chooses
to seek redress, which may in the end be enforced by actual war. It
is obvious that with all this the judicial courts have nothing to
do and can give no redress. But a treaty may also contain
provisions which confer certain rights upon the citizens or
subjects of one of the nations residing in the territorial limits
of the other, which partake of the nature of municipal law, and
which are capable of enforcement as between private parties in the
courts of the country. An illustration of this character is found
in treaties which regulate the mutual rights of citizens and
subjects of the contracting nations in regard to rights of property
by descent or inheritance, when the individuals concerned are
aliens. The Constitution of the United States places such
provisions as these in the same category as other laws of Congress,
by its declaration that"
"this Constitution and the laws made in pursuance thereof, and
all treaties made or which shall be made under authority of the
United States, shall be the
Page 143 U. S. 502
supreme law of the land."
"A treaty, then, is a law of the land, as an act of Congress is,
whenever its provisions prescribe a rule by which the rights of the
private citizen or subject may be determined; and, when such rights
are of a nature to be enforced in a court of justice, that court
resorts to the treaty for a rule of decision for the case before it
as it would to a statute."
As to the third section of the Act of March 2, 1889, it is
argued that Congress intentionally declined to determine the extent
of the dominion of the United States in the Behring Sea, as shown
by its action during the steps attending the passage of the bill.
That section, as the bill passed the house, contained the
words:
"All the waters of Behring Sea in Alaska embraced within the
boundary lines mentioned and described in the treaty with Russia,
dated March 30, A.D. 1867, by which the Territory of Alaska was
ceded to the United States."
But as finally enacted, these words were omitted, and the
expression "all the dominion of the United States in the waters of
Behring Sea" substituted. Section 2 of the bill, as originally
introduced in the Senate, contained the words in question, but they
were omitted in a substitute adopted by the Senate and added by the
house, by way of amendment, as section 3. To this amendment the
Senate disagreed, and the section, as it now stands, was the result
of a conference between the two houses. If reference could be
properly made to such matters (for the act, as finally approved,
must speak for itself), still we do not concur in the view that it
follows that Congress thereby expressly invited the judicial branch
of the government to determine what are "the limits of Alaska
Territory and the waters thereof" and what is "the dominion of the
United States in the waters of Behring Sea," and think, on the
contrary, that there is much force in the position that whatever
the reason for the conservative course pursued by the Senate, the
enactment of this section, with full knowledge of the executive
action already had and of the diplomatic situation, justified the
President in the conclusion that it was his duty under section 3 to
adhere to the construction already insisted upon as to the extent
of the dominion of the United States, and to continue to act
accordingly.
Page 143 U. S. 503
If this be so, the application calls upon the court, while
negotiations are pending, to decide whether the government is right
or wrong and to review the action of the political departments upon
the question, contrary to the settled law in that regard.
Foster v.
Neilson, 2 Pet. 253;
Williams v. Suffolk Ins.
Company, 3 Sumner 270,
s.c., on certificate of
division,
38 U. S. 13 Pet.
415;
Luther v.
Borden, 7 How. 1;
Georgia v.
Stanton, 6 Wall. 50;
Jones v. United
States, 137 U. S. 202;
Nabob of Carnatic v. East India Company, 1 Ves.Jr. 371, 2
Ves.Jr. 56;
Barclay v. Russell, 3 Ves.Jr. 424;
Penn v.
Baltimore, 1 Ves.Sr. 444.
In this case, her Britannic Majesty's Attorney General of Canada
has presented, with the knowledge and approval of the imperial
government of Great Britain, a suggestion on behalf of the
claimant. He represents no property interest in the vessel, as is
sometimes done by consuls, but only a public political interest. We
are not insensible to the courtesy implied in the willingness thus
manifested that this Court should proceed to a decision on the main
question argued for the petitioner, nor do we permit ourselves to
doubt that under such circumstances the decision would receive all
the consideration that the utmost good faith would require, but it
is very clear that, presented as a political question merely, it
would not fall within our province to determine it. We allude to
this in passing, but not at all with the intention of indicating
that the suggestion itself diminishes the private rights of the
claimant in any degree.
We are not to be understood, however, as underrating the weight
of the argument that, in a case involving private rights, the court
may be obliged, if those rights are dependent upon the construction
of acts of Congress or of a treaty, and the case of Congress or of
a treaty, and its nature, which has not been determined by the
political departments in the form of a law specifically settling
it, or authorizing the executive to do so, to render judgment,
"since we have no more right to decline the jurisdiction which is
given than to usurp that which is not given."
But we need not go further in this direction, as our
decision
Page 143 U. S. 504
rests upon narrower grounds, and we have been led into these
observations because, where an application is made to stay the
enforcement of a decree three years after its rendition, and after
the pendency of an appeal therefrom for the same length of time, an
appeal being allowable, as we shall presently see, we do not regard
the court as constrained to intervene in this way unless, perhaps,
upon an irresistible case, and adequate reason shown for the delay,
and particularly not where such intervention involves the
definition of the line of demarcation between coordinate
departments of the government and the determination of public
questions, action in reference to which is appropriately confided
to other departments than the judicial.
In what has been said, we have assumed that it appears from the
record, properly examinable by us, that the alleged offense was
committed more than a marine league from shore, and we now come to
consider whether this is the fact. And in doing this, with the view
of ascertaining whether the claimant is entitled to be relieved of
the payment of $7,289.50, which is the amount of the stipulation,
the record must be treated as in any other case of private
rights.
As already seen, prohibition will not go after sentence unless
want of jurisdiction appears on the face of the proceedings. But it
is contended that the face of the proceedings, in a case like the
present one, embraces the evidence. We think, however, that there
is a distinction on principle, and sustained by authority, between
what is open on prohibition applied for before sentence and what
afterwards. Prohibition stays what is about to be done, but which
ought not to be done without it. Before judgment, if the court
below persist in going on when it should not, the court above can
examine not simply the process and pleadings technically of record,
but the facts in evidence upon which action is being taken.
In
Ex Parte
Christy, 3 How. 292,
44 U. S. 308,
which was an application for a writ of prohibition against the
District Court of Louisiana sitting as a court in bankruptcy, Mr.
Justice Story said:
"So far as respects these allegations of facts, not so found in
the proceedings of the district court, we are not
Page 143 U. S. 505
upon the present occasion at liberty to entertain any
consideration thereof for the purpose of examination or decision,
as it would be an exercise of original jurisdiction on the part of
this Court not confided to us by law. The application for the
prohibition is made upon the ground that the district court has
transcended its jurisdiction in entertaining those proceedings, and
whether it has or not must depend not upon the facts stated
dehors the record, but upon those stated in the record
upon which the district court was called to act, and by which alone
it could regulate its judgment."
And this language was repeated and approved in
Ex Parte
Easton, 95 U. S. 68, where
prohibition was asked against a district court in admiralty. These
were cases where the application was before sentence, and they show
that the court may consider the evidence as well as the other
proceedings in the court sought to be restrained. But after final
judgment and the lapse of the term, for the superior court to enter
upon an examination of the evidence upon a suggested defect in the
jurisdiction -- that is, a defect not apparent upon the face of the
record proper -- would be for it to rehear the case, and direct the
court below not to carry its own judgment into effect, for defect
of power to try the particular issue, rather than of jurisdiction
over the cause. What the court below could not then do or omit to
do, the court above ought not ordinarily to undertake to compel it
to do or to omit.
In
United States v.
Peters, 3 Dall. 121, the
Cassius, the
vessel seized, was under commission by the French government, and
was libeled in the district court of Pennsylvania on account of the
seizure of a schooner belonging to libellants upon the high seas,
and the libel showed that the schooner had been taken into Port de
Paix, in the dominions of the French Republic, which justified the
presumption that she was carried there for legal adjudication, and
it appeared from the suggestion for the prohibition that such was
the fact, and that therefore the jurisdiction for the adjudication
of the libel was in a French, and not in an American, admiralty
court. That was an application before sentence, and the court could
look into the evidence before the district court if necessary,
Page 143 U. S. 506
though it appears to us that the want of jurisdiction was
evident on the face of the libel, and prohibition was accordingly
issued.
In
Ex Parte Phoenix Insurance Co., 118 U.
S. 610,
118 U. S. 626, it
was held that the district court of the United States in admiralty
has no jurisdiction of a petition by the owner of a steam vessel
for the trial of the question of his liability for damages caused
to buildings on land by fire alleged to have been negligently
communicated to them by the vessel through sparks proceeding from
her smokestack, and for the limitation of such liability, if
existing, under sections 4283 and 4284, Revised Statutes. And MR.
JUSTICE BLATCHFORD, delivering the opinion of the Court, said,
after citing
Ex Parte Easton, 95 U. S.
68, and
Ex Parte Gordon, 104 U.
S. 515:
"But in the present case, the district court is called upon by
the petition of the owner of the vessel to first determine the
question of any liability, when it has no jurisdiction of the cause
of action, and then to determine whether the statute covers the
case. The case is clearly one for a writ of prohibition, as the
want of jurisdiction appears on the face of the proceedings.
United
States v. Peters, 3 Dall. 121."
The cases cited in the textbooks, High on Extr.Rem. 606; Shortt
on Informations 442, 448, sustain the general view that the
evidence is not to be resorted to after sentence. The principle has
no application to courts where the proceedings do not show the
matter in any formal way, and such are the decisions in England in
reference to county and mayor's courts.
United States district courts sitting in admiralty are courts of
superior jurisdiction, and every intendment is made in favor of
their decrees, so that where it appears that the court has
jurisdiction of the subject matter and that the defendant was duly
served with process or voluntarily appeared and made defense, the
decree is not open to attack collaterally.
Miller v.
United States, 11 Wall. 268;
McCormick
v. Sullivant, 10 Wheat. 192;
Des Moines Nav.
Company v. Iowa Homestead Company, 123 U.
S. 552;
Cuddy, Petitioner, 131 U.
S. 280.
By section 750, Revised Statutes, it is provided:
"In equity
Page 143 U. S. 507
and admiralty causes, only the process, pleadings, and decree,
and such orders and memorandums as may be necessary to show the
jurisdiction of the and regularity of the proceedings shall be
entered upon the final record."
Section 698 is as follows:
"Upon the appeal of any cause in equity, or of admiralty and
maritime jurisdiction, or of prize or no prize, a transcript of the
record, as directed by law to be made, and copies of the proofs,
and of such entries and papers on file as may be necessary on the
hearing of the appeal, shall be transmitted to the Supreme Court,
provided that either the court below or the Supreme Court
may order any original document or other evidence to be sent up, in
addition to the copy of the record, or in lieu of a copy of a part
thereof."
In this section, the distinction is recognized between that
which constitutes the final record and that which may be made part
of the record for the purposes of appeal. On appeal, all questions
properly preserved are open to determination, while on prohibition
the inquiry is confined to the matter of jurisdiction, so that it
seems to follow that unless under very extraordinary circumstances,
the record proper should only be looked into in the latter class of
cases.
If the record thus made constitutes the face of the proceedings
here, the alleged want of jurisdiction does not appear
therefrom.
The libel alleges that the seizure was made
"within the limits of Alaska Territory and in the waters
thereof, and within the civil and Judicial District of Alaska,
to-wit, within the waters of that portion of Behring Sea belonging
to the United States and said district, on waters navigable from
the sea by vessels of ten or more tons burden."
As it is admitted that the United States lawfully exercises
jurisdiction to the extent of three miles from shore over the
waters of Behring Sea, the allegation of seizure within the
jurisdiction is sufficient. The libel further avers that the vessel
and her captain, officers, and crew
"were then and there found engaged in killing fur seals within
the limits of Alaska Territory, and in the said waters thereof, in
violation of section 1956 of the
Page 143 U. S. 508
Revised Statutes of the United States."
Of course, these are the waters over which the United States
lawfully exercises jurisdiction, and upon the face of the libel,
the court had jurisdiction of the forfeiture and of the offense.
The master raised no question of jurisdiction in filing his claim,
and, the demurrer having been overruled, the answer denied that the
seizure was made within the waters described, or that the vessel,
captain, officers, or crew were found engaged in killing fur seal
within the limits of Alaska Territory or in the waters thereof, or
that they were then and there violating any law of the United
States. Trial having been had, the court found that
"on the 9th day of July, 1887, and theretofore, the master and
crew of the defendant vessel were engaged in killing and did kill
fur seals in that portion of Behring Sea ceded by Russia to the
United States by the treaty of March, 1867, and within the waters
of Alaska, in violation of section 1956 of the Revised Statutes of
the United States."
This was a finding of the commission of the offense within the
jurisdiction stated in the libel.
As already seen, the first section of the Act of May 17, 1884,
provided "That the territory ceded to the United States by Russia
by the treaty of March thirtieth, eighteen hundred and sixty-seven,
and known as
Alaska,'" should constitute a civil and Judicial
District. And by section 1954 of the Revised Statutes, the laws of
the United States relating to customs, commerce, and navigation
were extended
"to and over all the mainland, islands, and water of the
territory ceded to the United States by the emperor of Russia by
treaty concluded at Washington on the thirtieth day of March, Anno
Domini eighteen hundred and sixty-seven."
The finding refers similarly to that portion of Behring Sea
ceded by Russia, and states that the killing was "within the waters
of Alaska." The second and third findings were that the vessel, her
furniture, apparel, tackle, cargo, and 477 fur seal skins were
seized in said waters, that is to say, in the waters of Alaska, by
the commanding officer of the United States revenue cutter Rush,
then and there engaged in the revenue marine service of the United
States, who was duly commissioned
Page 143 U. S. 509
by the President of the United States, and made such seizure
under the direction and by the authority of the Treasury
Department.
Upon the face of the libel and findings, if the jurisdiction did
not extend beyond three miles from the shore, the legal inference
is that the offense and seizure were within that limit.
Hudson v.
Guestier, 6 Cranch 281;
The Rio
Grande, 23 Wall. 458. The court had power to
inquire into the fact upon which jurisdiction depended, and its
maintenance of jurisdiction involved the conclusion necessary to
sustain it.
If, therefore, the findings of fact are properly part of the
face of the proceedings, the want of jurisdiction not only does not
appear, but the contrary. The petitioner asked no finding of fact
by the court as to the exact locality, but, after the findings and
conclusion were made and filed, moved in arrest, assigning, among
other grounds, "that from the evidence produced on the part of the
United States it appears that this Court has no jurisdiction over
the subject matter of this cause." But this motion was not
equivalent to a plea in abatement, nor to a declinatory allegation
in the nature of a plea to the jurisdiction, nor to a motion for a
rehearing. By the demurrer and answer, the defendant had submitted
to the jurisdiction, and whatever might be his rights upon appeal,
the interposition of this motion did not make that a part of the
face of the proceedings which would not have been so without
it.
Passing from this, however, what is the attitude of the case as
to the findings? Is this Court bound by them or not? If so, no
reference to the evidence would be admissible.
The latter part of section 7 of the Act of May 17, 1884, 23
Stat. 24, 26, is as follows:
"Writs of error in criminal cases shall issue to the said
district court from the United States Circuit Court for the
District of Oregon in the cases provided in chapter one hundred and
seventy-six of the Laws of eighteen hundred and seventy-nine, and
the jurisdiction thereby conferred upon circuit courts is hereby
given to the circuit court of Oregon, and the final judgments or
decrees of said circuit and district courts may be reviewed by the
circuit court of the United States as in other cases."
We
Page 143 U. S. 510
are of opinion that the word "circuit," as here used, refers to
the circuit court of Oregon, and, for the purposes of the matter in
hand, the clause may be read: "And the final judgments or decrees
of said District Court of Alaska may be reviewed by the Supreme
Court of the United States as in other cases."
Under sections 690-692, 695, and 699 of the Revised Statutes,
this Court has appellate jurisdiction to reexamine the final
judgments of any circuit court, or of any district court acting as
a circuit court, in civil actions where the matter in dispute,
exclusive of costs, exceeds the sum or value of $5,000; all final
decrees of any circuit court, or of any district court acting as a
circuit court, in cases of equity and of admiralty and maritime
jurisdiction, within the same limit of amount involved; all final
decrees of any district court in prize causes; all final judgments
at law and final decrees in equity of any circuit court, or of any
district court acting as a circuit court, in any case touching
patent-rights or copyrights; in any civil action brought by the
United States for the enforcement of any revenue law thereof; in
actions against revenue officers; in cases brought on account of
deprivation of rights of citizens or of rights under the
Constitution, and in suits for injuries by conspirators against
civil rights. Under section 701, this Court may affirm, modify, or
reverse any judgment, decree, or order of a circuit court or
district court acting as a circuit court, or of a district court in
prize causes, lawfully brought before it for review, or may direct
such judgment, decree, or order to be rendered or such further
proceedings to be had by the inferior court as the justice of the
case may require. And it is argued that the words "as in other
cases," in section 7 of the act of 1884, can mean nothing else than
other cases of appeals from district courts, and district courts
acting as circuit courts, and that the right of appeal from the
decrees of district courts is confined to prize causes under
section 695.
It is said that if there could be such a thing as an appeal from
the District Court of Alaska in an ordinary admiralty case direct
to this Court, this Court would be obliged to try the case
de
novo; that the District Court of Alaska, sitting as an
Page 143 U. S. 511
admiralty court, would supply and take the place of a circuit
court in admiralty sitting in appeal, although all the statutes
authorizing district courts to exercise the functions of circuit
courts expressly exclude the power of appeal; that the only
foundation of a right of appeal from the Alaska court, based upon
this right to exercise the jurisdiction of a circuit court, in
section 692 of the Revised Statutes, and that only extends to the
final decrees of such district court when exercising the
jurisdiction of a circuit court, while the exercise of admiralty
and maritime jurisdiction by the District Court for Alaska was, by
the act creating it and the Revised Statutes, the exercise of
purely district court jurisdiction as such; nor could the Alaska
court be supposed to have acted in the exercise of both
jurisdictions, as the only admiralty and maritime jurisdiction
which belongs to the circuit courts is appellate.
But the District Court of Alaska is not alone a district court
of the United States, and a district court exercising circuit court
powers; it is also a court of general law and equity jurisdiction.
If the contention of petitioner were correct, any power of review
in this Court over judgments and decrees of the Alaska court in law
and equity, except when entered as a circuit court, would be
excluded. We do not think it was the intention of Congress to give
such finality to its judgments and decrees.
It seems to us that the words "as in other cases" mean as in
similar cases from other courts, and we concur in the construction
contended for on the part of the respondent that the meaning of the
provision is that this Court may review the final judgments or
decrees of the District Court of Alaska as in cases of the same
kind from other courts.
The Act of February 16, 1875, 18 St. 315, provides that circuit
courts of the United States, in deciding causes of admiralty or
maritime jurisdiction on the instance side of the court, shall find
the facts and the conclusions of law upon which it renders its
judgments or decrees, and shall state the facts and conclusions of
law separately, and the review of the judgments or decrees entered
upon such findings, by this Court, upon appeal, is
"limited to a determination of the
Page 143 U. S. 512
questions of law arising upon the record, and to such rulings of
the circuit court, excepted to at the time, as may be presented by
a bill of exceptions prepared as in actions at law."
In
Durousseau v. United
States, 6 Cranch 307,
10 U. S. 315,
the effect of section 10 of the Judiciary Act of 1789, 1 Stat. 73,
77, was under consideration. The section provided "that the
District Court in Kentucky District" should, in addition to the
ordinary jurisdiction of a district court,
"have jurisdiction of all other causes, except of appeals and
writs of error hereinafter made cognizable in a circuit court, and
shall proceed therein in the same manner as a circuit court, and
writs of error and appeals shall lie from decisions therein to the
supreme court in the same causes as from a circuit court to the
supreme court, and under the same regulations."
It was argued that under this provision the writs of error and
appeals provided were intended to lie only from cases in which the
district court acted as a circuit court. Mr. Chief Justice
Marshall, delivering the opinion of the Court, said:
"It would be difficult to conceive an intention in the
legislature to discriminate between judgments rendered by the
District Court of Kentucky, while exercising the powers of a
district court, and those rendered by the same court while
exercising circuit powers, when it is demonstrated that the
legislature makes no distinction in the cases from their nature and
character. Causes of which the district courts have exclusive
original jurisdiction are carried into the circuit courts, and then
become the objects of the appellate jurisdiction of this Court. It
would be strange if, in a case where the powers of the two courts
are united in one court, from whose judgments an appeal lies,
causes of which the district courts have exclusive original
jurisdiction should be excepted from the operation of the appellate
power. It would require plain words to establish this construction.
. . ."
"The plain meaning of these words is that wherever the district
court decides a cause which, if decided in a circuit court, either
in an original suit or on an appeal, would be subject to a writ of
error from the Supreme Court, the
Page 143 U. S. 513
judgment of the district court shall, in like manner, be subject
to a writ of error."
In our view, that decision is in point and is decisive. We hold
that an appeal lay to this Court from the decree in question, and
further that the act of 1875 applies, and that, the district court
having found the facts, we should be limited on appeal in the
consideration of the case to the questions of law presented on the
record.
Upon the face of the libel, the facts found, and the final
decree, the district court clearly had jurisdiction. This
petitioner had a remedy by appeal from that decree, which was
inefficacious because of his neglect to have included in those
findings the fact of the exact locality of the offense and seizure.
Such being the case, the writ of prohibition prayed for should not
issue, even if, under any circumstances, the Court could consider
the evidence taken below in determining whether a prohibition
should issue after sentence.
Rule discharged and prohibition denied.
MR. JUSTICE FIELD dissented.