A writ of error does not lie in behalf of the United States in a
criminal case.
This was an indictment on sections 5508 and 5509 of the Revised
Statutes (copied
ante, 144 U. S. 264,
note) averring that while one Joseph Wright, a citizen of the
United States, was returning to his home after having appeared and
testified before the grand jury of the United States in obedience
to subpoenas from the circuit court of the United States against
persons charged with violations of the internal revenue laws, and
while he was still a witness under such subpoenas, the defendants
conspired to injure and oppress him in the free exercise and
enjoyment of the right and privilege, secured to him by the
Constitution and laws of the United States, to inform the proper
officers of the United States of violations of the internal revenue
laws, and to testify under and in obedience to such subpoenas, and
to return to his home in peace and safety after so testifying, and
to be secure, safe, and unmolested in his person and exempt from
violence for having exercised and enjoyed those rights and
privileges, and further averring that the defendants, in pursuance
and prosecution of such conspiracy, assaulted and murdered him.
The defendants demurred to the indictment
"because there
Page 144 U. S. 311
are no such rights or privileges secured to the party conspired
against, by the Constitution and laws of the United States as those
set out in the indictment"
and "because, on the facts alleged in said indictment, there is
no crime or offense set out of which the courts of the United
States can take cognizance."
On October 5, 1891, the circuit court, held by MR. JUSTICE LAMAR
and Judge Newman adjudged that the demurrer was well founded in
law, and that it be sustained, and the indictment quashed. 48 F.
78.
This writ of error was thereupon sued out by the United States,
and was allowed by the presiding justice. The defendants in error
moved to dismiss the writ of error for want of jurisdiction.
MR. JUSTICE GRAY, after stating the facts in the foregoing
language, delivered the opinion of the Court.
The jurisdiction of this Court is invoked by the United States
under that provision of the Judiciary Act of 1891 by which
"appeals or writs of error may be taken from the district courts
or from the existing circuit courts direct to the supreme court . .
. in any case that involves the construction or application of the
Constitution of the United States."
Act March 3, 1891, c. 517, § 5, 26 Stat. 827, 828.
But the question which lies at the very threshold is whether
this provision has conferred upon the United States the right to
sue out a writ of error in any criminal case.
This statute, like all acts of Congress, and even the
Constitution itself, is to be read in the light of the common law,
from which our system of jurisprudence is derived.
Charles
River Bridge v. Warren Bridge, 11 Pet. 420,
36 U. S. 545;
Rice v. Railroad
Co., 1 Black 358,
66 U. S.
374-375;
United States v.
Carll, 105 U.S.
Page 144 U. S. 312
611;
Ex Parte Wilson, 114 U. S. 417,
114 U. S. 422;
1 Kent Com. 336. As aids, therefore, in its interpretation, we
naturally turn to the decisions in England and in the several
states of the union whose laws have the same source.
The law of England on this matter is not wholly free from doubt.
But the theory that at common law the King could have a writ of
error in a criminal case after judgment for the defendant has
little support beyond sayings of Lord Coke and Lord Hale seeming to
imply but by no means affirming it; two attempts in the House of
Lords, near the end of the seventeenth century, to reverse a
reversal of an attainder, and an Irish case and two or three
English cases decided more than sixty years after the Declaration
of Independence, in none of which does the question of the right of
the Crown in this respect appear to have been suggested by counsel
or considered by the court. 3 Inst. 214; 2 Hale P.C. 247, 248, 394,
395;
Rex v. Walcott, Show.P.C. 127;
Rex v.
Tucker, Show.P.C. 186, 1 Ld.Raym. 1;
Regina v.
Houston (1841), 2 Crawford & Dix 191;
The Queen v.
Millis (1843), 10 Cl. & Fin. 534;
The Queen v.
Wilson (1844), 6 Q.B. 620;
The Queen v. Chadwick
(1847), 11 Q.B. 173, 205. And from the time of Lord Hale to that of
Chadwick's Case, just cited, the textbooks, with hardly an
exception, either assume or assert that the defendant (or his
representative) is the only party who can have either a new trial
or a writ of error in a criminal case, and that a judgment in his
favor is final and conclusive.
See 2 Hawk. c. 47, §
12; c. 50, §§ 10
et seq.; Bac.Abr. Trial, L 9,
"Error," B; 1 Chit.Crim.Law 657, 747; Stark.Crim.Pl. (2d ed.) 357,
367, 371; Archb.Crim.Pl. (12th Eng. & 6th Amer. ed.) 177,
199.
But whatever may have been, or may be, the law of England upon
that question, it is settled by an overwhelming weight of American
authority that the state has no right to sue out a writ of error
upon a judgment in favor of the defendant in a criminal case except
under and in accordance with express statutes, whether that
judgment was rendered upon a verdict of acquittal or upon the
determination by the court of a question of law.
Page 144 U. S. 313
In a few states, decisions denying a writ of error to the state
after judgment for the defendant on a verdict of acquittal have
proceeded upon the ground that to grant it would be to put him
twice in jeopardy, in violation of a constitutional provision.
See State v. Anderson (1844), 3 Sm. & Marsh. 751;
State v. Hand (1845), 6 Ark. 169;
State v. Burris
(1848), 3 Tex. 118;
People v. Webb (1869), 38 Cal. 467;
People v. Swift (1886), 59 Mich. 529, 541.
But the courts of many states, including some of great
authority, have denied, upon broader grounds, the right of the
state to bring a writ of error in any criminal case whatever, even
when the discharge of the defendant was upon the decision of an
issue of law by the court, as on demurrer to the indictment, motion
to quash, special verdict, or motion in arrest of judgment.
The Supreme Court of Tennessee, in 1817, in dismissing an appeal
by the state after an acquittal of perjury, said:
"A writ of error or appeal in the nature of a writ of error will
not lie for the state in such a case. It is a rule of the common
law that no one shall be brought twice into jeopardy for one and
the same offense. Were it not for this salutary rule, one obnoxious
to the government might be harassed and run down, by repeated
attempts to carry on a prosecution against him. Because of this
rule it is that a new trial cannot be granted in a criminal case
where the defendant is acquitted. A writ of error will lie for the
defendant, but not against him. This is a rule of such vital
importance to the security of the citizen that it cannot be
impaired but by express words, and none such are used in"
the statutes of the state.
"Neither does the Constitution, art. 11, sec. 10, apply, for
here the punishment does not extend to life or limb. The whole of
this case rests upon the common law rule."
State v. Reynolds, 4 Haywood 110. In a similar case in
1829, the same court said:
"The court are unanimously of opinion that no appeal lies for
the state from a verdict and judgment of acquittal on a state
prosecution. The state, having established her jurisdiction and
tried her experiment, should be content. To permit appeals might be
the means of unnecessary vexation."
State v.
Page 144 U. S. 314
Hitchcock, cited in 6 Yerger 360. In 1834, the same
rule was applied where, after a verdict of guilty, a motion in
arrest of judgment had been made by the defendant and sustained by
the court.
State v. Solomons, 6 Yerger 360.
In 1820, a writ of error obtained by the attorney for the
commonwealth to reverse a judgment for the defendant on demurrer to
an information for unlawful gaming was dismissed by the General
Court of Virginia, saying only:
"The court is unanimously of opinion that the writ of error
improvidently issued on the part of the commonwealth, because no
writ of error lies in a criminal case
for the
commonwealth."
Commonwealth v. Harrison, 2 Virg.Cas. 202.
The Supreme Court of Illinois in two early cases as summarily
dismissed writs of error sued out by the state, in the one case to
reverse a judgment of acquittal upon exceptions taken at a trial by
jury and in the other to reverse a judgment reversing for want of
jurisdiction a conviction before a justice of the peace.
People
v. Dill (1836), 1 Scammon 257;
People v. Royal
(1839), 1 Scammon 557.
In 1848, a writ of error by the state to reverse a judgment for
the defendant on a demurrer to the indictment was dismissed by the
Court of Appeals of New York upon a careful review by Judge Bronson
of the English and American authorities, including several earlier
cases in New York in which such writs of error had been brought, of
which the court said:
"But in none of the cases was the question either made by
counsel or considered by the court whether the people could
properly bring error. Such precedents are not of much
importance."
People v. Corning, 2 N.Y. 9, 15. That decision had been
since recognized and acted on by that court except so far as
affected by express statutes.
People v. Carnal, 6 N.Y.
463;
People v. Clark, 7 N.Y. 385;
People v.
Merrill, 14 N.Y. 74, 76, 78;
People v. Bork, 78 N.Y.
346.
In 1849, the Supreme Judicial Court of Massachusetts, speaking
by Chief Justice Shaw, held that a writ of error did not lie in a
criminal case in behalf of the commonwealth, and therefore
dismissed writs of error sued out to reverse judgments upon
indictments in two cases, in one of which the defendant,
Page 144 U. S. 315
after pleading
nolo contendere, had moved in arrest of
judgment for formal defects in the indictment, and thereupon
judgment had been arrested and the defendant discharged, and in the
other the indictment had been quashed on the defendant's motion.
Commonwealth v. Cummings and
Same v. McGinnis, 3
Cush. 212.
In the same year, the Supreme Court of Georgia made a similar
decision, dismissing a writ of error sued out by the state upon a
judgment quashing an indictment against the defendant, and in an
able and well considered opinion delivered by Judge Nisbet
said:
"The rule seems to be well settled in England that in criminal
cases, a new trial is not grantable to the crown after verdict of
acquittal even though the acquittal be founded on the misdirection
of the judge. This is the general rule, and obtains in the states
of our union. It excludes a rehearing after acquittal upon errors
of law, and therefore, it would seem, denies also a rehearing upon
judgments of the court upon questions of law even when the jury
have not passed upon the guilt or innocence of the prisoner. If the
effect of the judgment is a discharge, there can be no rehearing
either by new trial or writ of error. Indeed it may be stated as a
general rule that in criminal cases, upon general principles,
errors are not subject to revision at the instance of the state. .
. . These principles are founded upon that great fundamental rule
of the common law,
nemo debet bis vexari pro una et eadem
causa, which rule, for greater caution and in stricter
vigilance over the rights of the citizen against the state, has
been in substance embodied in the Constitution of the United
States, thus: 'Nor shall any person be subject, for the same
offense, to be twice put in jeopardy of life or limb.' After
observing that this provision of the Constitution could have no
direct bearing upon that case, which was of a misdemeanor only, and
in which there had been no trial by jury, the court added:"
"The common law maxim and the Constitution are founded in the
humanity of the law and in a jealous watchfulness over the
rights of the citizen when brought in unequal contest with the
state. It is doubtless
in the spirit of this benign rule
of the common
Page 144 U. S. 316
law, embodied in the federal Constitution -- a spirit of liberty
and justice, tempered with mercy -- that in several of the states
of this union in criminal causes, a writ of error has been denied
to the state."
State v. Jones, 7 Ga. 422, 424-425.
The Supreme Court of Iowa, in 1856, ordered a writ of error sued
out by the state after the defendant had been acquitted by a jury
to be dismissed not because to order a new trial would be against
art. 1, sec. 12, of the constitution of the state, declaring that
"no person shall after acquittal be tried for the same offense," or
the court expressly waived a decision of that question, but only
because of "there being no law to authorize a writ of error on the
part of the state in a criminal case."
State v. Johnson, 2
Ia. 549.
The Supreme Court of Wisconsin, in 1864, held that a writ of
error did not lie in behalf of the state to reverse a judgment in
favor of the defendant upon a demurrer to his plea to an
indictment.
State v. Kemp, 17 Wis. 669. The Supreme Court
of Missouri in 1877 made a similar decision, overruling earlier
cases in the same court.
State v. Copeland, 65 Mo. 497.
And the Supreme Court of Florida, in 1881, held that the state was
not entitled to a writ of error to reverse a judgment quashing an
indictment, and discharging the accused.
State v. Burns,
18 Fla. 185.
In those states in which the government, in the absence of any
statute expressly giving it the right, has been allowed to bring
error, or appeal in the nature of error, after judgment for the
defendant on demurrer to the indictment, motion to quash, special
verdict, or motion in arrest of judgment, the question appears to
have become settled by early practice before it was contested.
In North Carolina, the right of the state has been strictly
limited to the cases just enumerated, and has been denied even when
the defendant was discharged upon a judgment sustaining a plea of
former acquittal as sufficient in law, or upon a ruling that there
was no legal prosecutor, and the supreme court has repeatedly
declared that the state's right of appeal in a criminal case was
not derived from the common law, or
Page 144 U. S. 317
from any statute, but had obtained under judicial sanction by a
long practice, and has held that neither art. 4, sec. 8, of the
state constitution of 1876, giving that court "jurisdiction to
review upon appeal any decision of the courts below upon any matter
of law or legal inference," nor art. 4, sec. 27, of the same
constitution, providing that in all criminal cases before a justice
of the peace, "the party against whom judgment is given may appeal
to the superior court, where the matter shall be heard anew," gave
any right of appeal to the state, but only to the defendant.
State v. Hadcock (1802), 2 Haywood 162;
State v.
Lane (1878), 78 N.C. 547;
State v. Swepson (1880), 82
N.C. 541;
State v. Moore (1881), 84 N.C. 724;
State v.
Powell (1882), 86 N.C. 640.
The Court of Appeals of Maryland, in 1821, sustained a writ of
error by the state to reverse a judgment in favor of the defendants
on demurrer to the indictment, citing a number of unreported cases
decided in that state in 1793 and 1817.
State v. Buchanan,
5 Har. & Johns. 317, 324, 330. But the same court, in 1878,
refused to construe a statute of 1872 providing that in all
criminal trials, it should be lawful for the attorney for the state
to tender a bill of exceptions and to appeal, as authorizing the
court, on such exceptions and appeal, to order a new trial after a
verdict of acquittal.
State v. Shields, 49 Md. 301.
In Louisiana, in the leading case, the court admitted that to
allow the state to bring a writ of error in a criminal case was
contrary to the common law of England, to the law of most of the
states, and to the general opinion of the bar, and the later cases
appear to be put largely upon the ground that the practice had
become settled by a course of decision.
State v. Jones
(1845), 8 Rob. (La.) 573, 574;
State v. Ellis (1857), 12
La.Ann. 390;
State v. Ross (1859), 14 La.Ann. 364;
State v. Taylor (1882), 34 La.Ann. 978;
State v.
Robinson (1885), 37 La.Ann. 673.
The Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, from an early period,
occasionally entertained without question writs of error sued out
by the state in criminal cases.
Commonwealth v. Taylor
(1812), 5 Binney 277;
Commonwealth v. McKisson (1822), 8
S.
Page 144 U. S. 318
& R. 420;
Commonwealth v. Church (1845), 1 Penn.St.
105. The first mention of the question appears to have been in a
case in which the only objection taken to the right of the
commonwealth to sue out a writ of error was that the writ had not
been specially allowed, of which the court said:
"There is nothing in the disabling provisos of the statutes to
limit the right of the commonwealth, and the powers of this Court,
whether deduced from the common law, from the old provincial act of
1722, or from legislation under our state constitutions, are quite
competent to the review of any judicial record, when no statutory
restraints have been imposed. It would be very strange if the
commonwealth might not appeal to her own tribunals for justice
without the special consent of certain of her own officers."
This theory that the state may sue out a writ of error unless
expressly denied it by statute is opposed to the view maintained by
a host of decisions above cited, and it is observable that such
judges as Judge Thompson and Judge Sharswood were in favor of
quashing writs so sued out.
Commonwealth v. Capp (1864),
48 Penn.St. 53, 56;
Commonwealth v. Moore (1882), 99
Penn.St. 570, 576.
In many of the states, indeed, including some of those above
mentioned, the right to sue out a writ of error, or to take an
appeal in the nature of a writ of error in criminal cases has been
given to the state by positive statute. But the decisions above
cited conclusively show that under the common law as generally
understood and administered in the United States, and in the
absence of any statute expressly giving the right to the state, a
writ of error cannot be sued out in a criminal case after a final
judgment in favor of the defendant, whether that judgment has been
rendered upon a verdict of acquittal or upon a determination by the
court of an issue of law. In either case, the defendant, having
been once put upon his trial and discharged by the court, is not to
be again vexed for the same cause unless the legislature, acting
within its constitutional authority, has made express provision for
a review of the judgment at the instance of the government.
In the light of these decisions, we come to the
consideration
Page 144 U. S. 319
of the acts of Congress on the subject of writs of error in
criminal cases.
The appellate jurisdiction of this Court rests wholly on the
acts of Congress. For a long time after the adoption of the
Constitution, Congress made no provision for bringing any criminal
case from a circuit court of the United States to this Court by
writ of error. At February Term, 1803, indeed, this Court, no
objection being made, took jurisdiction of a writ of error sued out
by the United States to the Circuit Court for the District of
Columbia in a criminal case.
United States v.
Simms, 1 Cranch 252. But at February Term, 1805, in
a like case, this Court, upon full argument and consideration, held
that it had no jurisdiction of a writ of error in a criminal case,
and overruled
United States v. Simms, Chief Justice
Marshall saying:
"No question was made in that case as to the jurisdiction. It
passed
sub silentio, and the Court does not consider
itself as bound by that case."
United States v.
More, 3 Cranch 159,
7 U. S. 172. And
it was thenceforth held to be settled that criminal cases could not
be brought from a circuit court of the United States to this Court
by writ of error, but only by certificate of division of opinion
upon specific questions of law.
Ex Parte
Kearney, 7 Wheat. 38,
20 U. S. 42;
Ex Parte
Gordon, 1 Black 503;
Ex Parte Yarbrough,
110 U. S. 651;
Farnsworth v. Montana, 129 U. S. 104,
129 U. S. 113;
United States v. Perrin, 131 U. S. 55.
As to each of the territories except Washington, the Revised
Statutes provided that final judgments and decrees of its supreme
court, where the value of the matter in dispute exceeded $1,000,
might be reviewed by this Court upon writ of error or appeal in the
same manner and under the same regulations as the final judgments
and decrees of a circuit court of the United States. Rev.Stat.
§§ 702, 1909. The Act of June 23, 1874, c. 469, § 3,
provided that a writ of error should lie from this Court to the
Supreme Court of the Territory of Utah "in criminal cases where the
accused shall have been sentenced to capital punishment or
convicted of bigamy or polygamy." 18 Stat. 254. The Act of March 3,
1885, c. 355, provided in § 1 that no appeal or writ of error
should
Page 144 U. S. 320
be allowed from the supreme court of a territory unless the
matter in dispute exceeded $5,000, and in § 2 that the
preceding section should not apply to any case
"in which is drawn in question the validity of a treaty or
statute of, or an authority exercised under, the United States, but
in all such cases an appeal or writ of error may be brought without
regard to the sum or value in dispute."
23 Stat. 443. At October term, 1885, this Court, without
objection, decided upon the merits a writ of error to the Supreme
Court of the Territory of Utah by one convicted of a crime which
was neither bigamy or polygamy nor punishable with death. But at
the same term, after argument upon its jurisdiction of a like writ
of error, the Court dismissed both writs of error and, in answering
the objection that it had taken jurisdiction of the first writ,
said:
"The question of jurisdiction was not considered in fact in that
case, nor alluded to in the decision, nor presented to the court by
the counsel for the United States, nor referred to by either party
at the argument or in the briefs. Probably both parties desired a
decision on the merits."
Cannon v. United States, 116 U. S.
55, and
118 U. S. 118 U.S.
355;
Snow v. United States, 118 U.
S. 346,
118 U. S. 354.
The question whether the provision of the Act of March 3, 1885, c.
355, § 2, authorizing a writ of error from this Court to the
supreme court of any territory in any case "in which is drawn in
question the validity of a treaty or statute of, or an authority
exercised under, the United States" extended to criminal cases was
then left open, but at October term, 1888, was decided in the
negative.
Farnsworth v. Montana, 129 U.
S. 104.
The manner of bringing up criminal cases from the circuit courts
of the United States upon a certificate of division of opinion has
undergone some changes by successive acts of Congress. Under the
Act of April 29, 1802, c. 31, § 6, whenever there was a
division of opinion in the circuit court upon a question of law,
the question was certified to this Court for decision, provided
that the case might proceed in the circuit court if, in its
opinion, further proceedings could be had without prejudice to the
merits, and that no imprisonment should be allowed or punishment
inflicted upon which the judges
Page 144 U. S. 321
were divided in opinion. 2 Stat. 159;
United
States v. Tyler, 7 Cranch 285;
United
States v. Daniel, 6 Wheat. 542;
United
States v. Bailey, 9 Pet. 267. By the Act of June 1,
1872, c. 255, § 1, "whenever, in any suit or proceeding" in a
circuit court there occurred any difference of opinion between the
judges, the opinion of the presiding judge was to prevail for the
time being, but upon the entry of a final judgment, decree, or
order, and a certificate of division of opinion as under the act of
1802, "either party" might remove the case to this Court "on writ
of error or appeal, according to the nature of the case." 17 Stat.
196. That act continued in force only about two years, when it was
repealed by the Revised Statutes. By sections 650, 652, and 693 of
those Statutes, its provisions were restricted to civil suits and
proceedings, and by sections 651 and 697 the provisions of section
6 of the act of 1802 were reenacted as to criminal cases.
Ex
Parte Tom Tong, 108 U. S. 556,
108 U. S. 559.
In
United States v. Reese, 92 U. S.
214, and in
United States v. Cruikshank,
92 U. S. 542,
argued at October term, 1874, and decided at October term, 1875,
which were brought to this Court by the United States by writ of
error and certificate of division of opinion after judgment
according to the opinion of the presiding judge sustaining a
demurrer to the indictment or a motion in arrest of judgment, it
appears by the records and briefs on file that the judgment below
was entered and the certificate of division made under the act of
1872, and that no objection was taken to the jurisdiction of this
Court. The exercise of jurisdiction over those cases on writ of
error is therefore entitled to no more weight by way of precedent
than the exercise of appellate jurisdiction
sub silentio
in the cases, above cited, of
United States v.
Simms, 1 Cranch 252, and
Cannon v. United
States, 116 U. S. 55.
The first act of Congress which authorized a criminal case to be
brought from a circuit court of the United States to this Court
except upon a certificate of division of opinion was the Act of
February 6, 1889, c. 113, § 6, by which it was enacted that
"in all cases of conviction" of a capital crime in any court of the
United States, the final judgment "against
Page 144 U. S. 322
the respondent" might, on his application, be reexamined,
reversed, or affirmed by this Court on writ of error. 25 Stat. 656.
The writ of error given by that act was thus clearly limited to the
defendant, and the terms and effect of the Act of June 23, 1874, c.
469, § 3, above cited, concerning writs of error from this
Court to the Supreme Court of the Territory of Utah, as well as
those of the Act of March 3, 1879, c. 176, giving a writ of error
from the circuit court of the United States to a district court,
were equally restricted. 18 Stat. 254; 20 Stat. 354.
The provisions of the Judiciary Act of March 3, 1891, c. 517,
material to be considered in this case are those of § 5, by
which appeals or writs of error may be taken from a circuit court
directly to this Court in certain classes of cases, among which are
"cases of conviction of a capital or otherwise infamous crime," and
"any case that involves the construction or application of the
Constitution of the United States," and those of § 6 by which
the circuit courts of appeals established by this act have
appellate jurisdiction to review, by appeal or writ of error, final
decisions in the district and circuit courts "in all cases other
than those provided for in the preceding section of this act,
unless otherwise provided by law," and the judgments or decrees of
the circuit courts of appeals are made final "in all cases arising
under the criminal laws" and in certain other classes of cases,
unless questions are certified to this Court, or the whole case
ordered up by writ of certiorari, as therein provided. 26 Stat.
827, 828.
The provision of section 5, authorizing writs of error from this
Court in cases of capital or otherwise infamous crimes, is clearly
limited, in terms and effect -- like the provision of the act of
1889, authorizing a writ of error in cases of capital crimes, and
earlier acts, above cited -- to convictions only. Whether a writ of
error by the defendant in a criminal case of lower grade would be
included in the provisions of that section for bringing to this
Court cases in which the jurisdiction of the court below is in
issue, or which involve the construction or application of the
Constitution of the United States, or the
Page 144 U. S. 323
validity of a law of the United States, or the validity or
construction of a treaty, or in which it is contended that the
Constitution or a law of a state contravenes the Constitution of
the United States, is not now before us for decision.
The provision of section 6 giving the circuit courts of appeals
in general terms appellate jurisdiction of criminal cases says
nothing as to the party by whom the writ of error may be brought,
and cannot therefore be presumed to have been intended to confer
upon the government the right to bring it.
In none of the provisions of this act defining the appellate
jurisdiction either of this Court or of the circuit court of
appeals is there any indication of an intention to confer upon the
United States the right to bring up a criminal case of any grade
after judgment below in favor of the defendant. It is impossible to
presume an intention on the part of Congress to make so serious and
far-reaching an innovation in the criminal jurisprudence of the
United States.
Writ of error dismissed for want of jurisdiction.