When a person accused of crime is convicted in a court of the
United States and is sentenced by the court, under Rev.Stat. §
5356, to imprisonment for one year and the payment of a fine, the
court is without jurisdiction to further adjudge that that
imprisonment shall take place in a state penitentiary under
Rev.Stat. § 5546, and the prisoner, if sentenced to be
confined in a state penitentiary, is entitled to a writ of habeas
corpus directing his discharge from the custody of the warden of
the state penitentiary, but without prejudice to the right of the
United States to take any lawful measures to have the petitioner
sentenced in accordance with law upon the verdict against him.
Where a conviction is correct, and where the error or excess of
jurisdiction is the ordering the prisoner to be confined in a
penitentiary where the law does not allow the court to send him,
there is no good reason why jurisdiction of the prisoner should not
he reassumed by the court that imposed the sentence in order that
its defect may be corrected.
Page 151 U. S. 243
The court discharging the prisoner in such case on habeas corpus
should delay his discharge for such reasonable time as may be
necessary to have him taken before the court where the judgment was
rendered, in order that the defects in the former judgment for want
of jurisdiction, which are the subjects of complaint, may be
corrected.
The petitioner, John Bonner, a citizen of the United States,
represents that he is now and has been since the 23d of May, 1893,
unlawfully deprived of his liberty by one P. W. Madden, as warden
of the penitentiary of Iowa situated in Anamosa, in that state. He
sets forth as the cause of his restrain and detention that at the
October term, 1892, of the United States Court for the Third
Judicial Division of the Indian Territory, he was indicted for the
larceny, in May previous, in the Chickasaw Nation, within the
Indian Territory, of four head of cattle, of the value of fifty
dollars, the property of one Robert Williams, who was not a member
of any Indian tribe; that during that month, he was arraigned
before the same court and pleaded not guilty to the indictment, and
was tried and found guilty. The statute under which the indictment
was found is contained in section 5356 of the Revised Statutes, and
is as follows:
"Every person who, upon the high seas, or in any place under the
exclusive jurisdiction of the United States, takes and carries
away, with intent to steal or purloin, the personal goods of
another shall be punished by a fine of not more than one thousand
dollars, or by imprisonment not more than one year, or by both such
fine and imprisonment."
The court, by its judgment, sentenced the petitioner to
imprisonment in the penitentiary at Anamosa, in the State of Iowa,
for the term of one year, and to the payment of a fine of $1,000.
It also added that the marshal of the court, to whose custody he
was then committed, should safely keep and convey the petitioner,
and deliver him to the custody of the warden of the penitentiary,
who would receive and keep him in prison for the period of one year
in execution of the sentence. The petitioner also sets forth that
the warden of the penitentiary has no other authority to hold him
than the said judgment and order of commitment.
The petitioner alleges that the said sentence and order of
commitment are void; that the court was without power or
jurisdiction under the law to render the judgment, and that he had
applied to the United States judge of the Northern District of Iowa
for a writ of habeas corpus to be released from confinement, and
that the writ was denied to him. He
Page 151 U. S. 244
therefore prays that this Court will issue the writ of habeas
corpus to the said warden to appear before this Court and show what
authority, if any, he has for restraining the petitioner of his
liberty, and that upon final hearing he may be discharged.
An order was issued from this Court in October last to the
warden to show cause why the writ should not be granted as prayed.
The warden returns answer that he holds the prisoner by virtue of a
warrant of commitment issued upon the judgment and sentence of the
United States court as above stated, of which a copy is annexed to
the petition, and that at the time of the petitioner's conviction
and of the judgment and sentence, there was no penitentiary or jail
suitable for the confinement of convicts, or available therefor, in
the Indian Territory, and that the state penitentiary at Anamosa
had been duly designated by the Attorney General, under section
5546 of the Revised Statutes of the United States, as the place of
confinement for prisoners convicted of crime by that court, and
that the order of the court for the confinement of the petitioner
in that penitentiary under its sentence of imprisonment was in
pursuance of that designation.
So much of section 5546 of the Revised Statutes as bears upon
the question under consideration in this case is as follows:
"All persons who have been or who may hereafter be convicted of
crime by any court of the United States whose punishment is
imprisonment in a district or territory where, at the time of
conviction, there may be no penitentiary or jail suitable for the
confinement of convicts or available therefor shall be confined
during the term for which they have been or may be sentenced in
some suitable jail or penitentiary in a convenient state or
territory, to be designated by the Attorney General, and shall be
transported and delivered to the warden or keeper of such jail or
penitentiary by the marshal of the district or territory where the
conviction has occurred. "
Page 151 U. S. 254
MR. JUSTICE FIELD, after stating the facts in the foregoing
language, delivered the opinion of the Court.
The petitioner asks for the issue of the writ of habeas corpus
in order that he may be thereby set at liberty, on the ground that
his imprisonment in the penitentiary at Anamosa, in Iowa, is in
pursuance of a judgment of a court which possessed no authority
under the law to pass sentence upon him of imprisonment in the
state penitentiary, upon his conviction of the offense for which he
was indicted and tried. That is a sentence which can only be
imposed where it is specifically prescribed, or where the
imprisonment ordered is for a period longer than one year, or at
hard labor. To an imprisonment for that period or at hard labor in
a state penitentiary infamy is attached, and a taint of that
character can be cast only in the cases mentioned.
Section 5356 of the Revised Statutes of the United States, under
which the defendant was indicted and convicted, prescribes as a
punishment for the offenses designated fine or imprisonment -- the
fine not to exceed $1,000, and the imprisonment not more than one
year -- or by both such fine and imprisonment. Such imprisonment
cannot be enforced in a state penitentiary. Its limitation, being
to one year, must be enforced elsewhere. Section 5541 of the
Revised Statutes provides that:
"In every case where any person convicted of any offense against
the United States is sentenced to imprisonment for a period longer
than one year, the court by which the sentence is passed may order
the same to be executed in any state jail or penitentiary within
the district or state where such court is held, the use of which
jail or penitentiary is allowed by the legislature of the state for
that purpose."
And section 5542 provides for a similar imprisonment in a state
jail or penitentiary where the person has been convicted of any
offense against the United States and sentenced to imprisonment and
confinement at hard labor. It follows
Page 151 U. S. 255
that the court had no jurisdiction to order an imprisonment when
the place is not specified in the law, to be executed in a
penitentiary, when the imprisonment is not ordered for a period
longer than one year or at hard labor. The statute is equivalent to
a direct denial of any authority on the part of the court to direct
that imprisonment be executed in a penitentiary in any cases other
than those specified. Whatever discretion, therefore, the court may
possess in prescribing the extent of imprisonment as a punishment
for the offense committed, it cannot, in specifying the place of
imprisonment, name one of these institutions. This has been
expressly adjudged in
In re Mills, 135 U.
S. 263,
135 U. S. 270,
which in one part of it presents features in all respects similar
to those of the present case.
There, the petitioner, Mills, was detained by the warden of the
state penitentiary in Columbus, Ohio, pursuant to two judgments of
the District Court of the United States for the Western District of
Arkansas sentencing him in each case to confinement in the
penitentiary of that state. Application was made by the prisoner
for a writ of habeas corpus on the ground that the court by which
he was tried had no jurisdiction of the offenses with which he was
charged, and on the further ground that his detention in the
penitentiary under the sentences, neither of which was for a longer
period than one year, was contrary to the laws of the United
States. The first position was not considered tenable, but the
second was deemed sufficient to authorize the issue of the writ.
The Court held that, apart from any question as to whether the
court below had jurisdiction to try the offense charged, the
detention of the petitioner in the penitentiary upon sentences
neither of which was for imprisonment longer than one year was in
violation of the laws of the United States, and that he was
therefore entitled to be discharged from the custody of the warden
of the institution. "A sentence simply of
imprisonment,'" said
the Court,
"in the case of a person convicted of an offense against the
United States where the statute prescribing the punishment does not
require that the accused shall be confined in a penitentiary cannot
be executed by confinement in that institution except in cases
where
Page 151 U. S. 256
the sentence is 'for a period longer than one year.' There is
consequently no escape from the conclusion that the judgment of the
court sentencing the petitioner to imprisonment in a penitentiary
in one case for a year and in the other for six months was in
violation of the statutes of the United States. The court below was
without jurisdiction to pass any such sentences, and the orders
directing the sentences of imprisonment to be executed in a
penitentiary are void."
The Court added: "This is not a case of mere error, but one in
which the court below transcended its power," citing
Ex Parte
Lange, 18 Wall. 163,
85 U. S. 176;
Ex Parte Parks, 93 U. S. 18,
93 U. S. 23;
Ex Parte Virginia, 100 U. S. 339,
100 U. S. 343;
Ex Parte Rowland, 104 U. S. 604,
104 U. S. 612;
In re Coy, 127 U. S. 731,
127 U. S. 738,
and
Hans Nielson, Petitioner, 131 U.
S. 176,
131 U. S.
182.
Counsel for the government admits that upon the authority of
that case, construing the Revised Statutes, the petitioner should
not have been sentenced to imprisonment in the penitentiary, but he
claims that the judgment and sentence are not for that cause void,
so as to entitle the petitioner to a writ of habeas corpus for his
discharge, and he asks the Court to reconsider the doctrine
announced, contending that neither the reason of the law nor the
authorities sustain the position. According to his argument, it
would seem that the court does not exceed its jurisdiction when it
directs imprisonment in a penitentiary, to which place it is
expressly forbidden to order it. It would be as well, and be
equally within its authority, for the court to order the
imprisonment to be in the guard house of a fort, or the hulks of a
prison ship, or in any other place not specified in the law.
We are unable to agree with the learned counsel, but are of
opinion that in all cases where life or liberty is affected by its
proceedings, the court must keep strictly within the limits of the
law authorizing it to take jurisdiction, and to try the case, and
to render judgment. It cannot pass beyond those limits in any
essential requirement in either stage of these proceedings, and its
authority in those particulars is not to be enlarged by any mere
inferences from the law or doubtful construction of its terms.
There has been a great deal said
Page 151 U. S. 257
and written, in many cases with embarrassing looseness of
expression, as to the jurisdiction of the courts in criminal cases.
From a somewhat extended examination of the authorities, we will
venture to state some rule applicable to all of them, by which the
jurisdiction as to any particular judgment of the court in such
cases may be determined. It is plain that such court has
jurisdiction to render a particular judgment only when the offense
charged is within the class of offenses placed by the law under its
jurisdiction, and when, in taking custody of the accused and in its
modes of procedure to the determination of the question of his
guilt or innocence, and in rendering judgment, the court keeps
within the limitations prescribed by the law, customary or
statutory. When the court goes out of these limitations, its
action, to the extent of such excess, is void. Proceeding within
these limitations, its action may be erroneous, but not void.
To illustrate: in order that a court may take jurisdiction of a
criminal case, the law must in the first instance authorize it to
act upon a particular class of offenses within which the one
presented is embraced. Then comes the mode of the presentation of
the offense to the court. That is specifically prescribed. If the
offense be a felony, the accusation in the federal court must be
made by a grand jury summoned to investigate the charge of the
public prosecutor against the accused. Such indictment can only be
found by a specified number of the grand jury. If not found by that
number, the court cannot proceed at all. If the offense be only a
misdemeanor, not punishable by imprisonment in the penitentiary,
Mackin v. United States, 117 U. S. 348, the
accusation may be made by indictment of the grand jury, or by
information of the public prosecutor. An information is a formal
charge against the accused of the offense, with such particulars as
to time, place, and attendant circumstances as will apprise him of
the nature of the charge he is to meet, signed by the public
prosecutor. When the indictment is found, or the information is
filed, a warrant is issued for the arrest of the accused, to be
brought before the court, unless he is at the time in custody, in
which case an order for that purpose is made, to the end in
Page 151 U. S. 258
either case that he may be arraigned and plead to the indictment
or information. When he is brought before the court, objections to
the validity or form of the indictment or information, if made, are
considered, or issue is joined upon the accusation. When issue is
thus joined, the court must proceed to trial by a jury, except in
case of the accused's confession. It cannot then proceed to
determine the issue in any other way. When the jury have rendered
their verdict, the court has to pronounce the proper judgment upon
such verdict, and the law, in prescribing the punishment either as
to the extent or the mode or the place of it, should be followed.
If the court is authorized to impose imprisonment, and it exceeds
the time prescribed by law, the judgment is void for the excess. If
the law prescribes a place of imprisonment, the court cannot direct
a different place not authorized. It cannot direct imprisonment in
a penitentiary when the law assigns that institution for
imprisonment under judgments of a different character. If the case
be a capital one and the punishment be death, it must be inflicted
in the form prescribed by law. Although life is to be extinguished,
it cannot be by any other mode. The proposition put forward by
counsel that if the court has authority to inflict the punishment
prescribed, its action is not void though it pursues any form or
mode which may commend itself to its discretion, is certainly not
to be tolerated. Imprisonment might be accompanied with
inconceivable misery and mental suffering by its solitary character
or other attending circumstances. Death might be inflicted by
torture or by starvation, or by drawing and quartering. All these
modes, or any of them, would be permissible if the doctrine
asserted by him can be maintained.
A question of some difficulty arises which has been disposed of
in different ways, and that is as to the validity of a judgment
which exceeds in its extent the duration of time prescribed by law.
With many courts and judges, perhaps with the majority, such
judgment is considered valid to the extent to which the law allowed
it to be entered, and only void for the excess. Following out this
argument, it is further claimed that therefore the writ of habeas
corpus cannot be
Page 151 U. S. 259
invoked for the relief of a party until the time has expired to
which the judgment should have been limited. But that question is
only of speculative interest here, for there is here no question of
excess of punishment. The prisoner is ordered to be confined in the
penitentiary, where the law does not allow the court to send him
for a single hour. To deny the writ of habeas corpus in such a case
is a virtual suspension of it, and it should be constantly borne in
mind that the writ was intended as a protection of the citizen from
encroachment upon his liberty from any source -- equally as well
from the unauthorized acts of courts and judges as the unauthorized
acts of individuals.
The law of our country takes care, or should take care, that not
the weight of a judge's finger shall fall upon any one except as
specifically authorized. A rigid adherence to this doctrine will
give far greater security and safety to the citizen than permitting
the exercise of an unlimited discretion on the part of the courts
in the imposition of punishments, as to their extent, or as to the
mode or place of their execution, leaving the injured party, in
case of error, to the slow remedy of an appeal from the erroneous
judgment or order, which in most cases would be unavailing to give
relief In the case before us, had an appeal been taken from the
judgment of the United States Court of the Indian Territory, it
would hardly have reached a determination before the period of the
sentence would have expired and the wrong caused by the
imprisonment in the penitentiary have been inflicted.
Much complaint is made that persons are often discharged from
arrest and imprisonment when their conviction, upon which such
imprisonment was ordered, is perfectly correct, the excess of
jurisdiction on the part of the court being in enlarging the
punishment, or in enforcing it in a different mode or place than
that provided by the law. But in such cases, there need not be any
failure of justice, for where the conviction is correct and the
error or excess of jurisdiction has been as stated, there does not
seem to be any good reason why jurisdiction of the prisoner should
not be reassumed by the court that imposed the sentence in order
that its defect may be corrected.
Page 151 U. S. 260
The judges of all courts of record are magistrates, and their
object should be not to turn loose upon society persons who have
been justly convicted of criminal offenses, but, where the
punishment imposed, in the mode, extent, or place of its execution,
has exceeded the law, to have it corrected by calling the attention
of the court to such excess. We do not perceive any departure from
principle, or any denial of the petitioner's right, in adopting
such a course. He complains of the unlawfulness of his place of
imprisonment. He is only entitled to relief from that unlawful
feature, and that he would obtain if opportunity be given to that
court for correction in that particular. It is true, where there
are also errors on the trial of the case affecting the judgment not
trenching upon its jurisdiction, the mere remanding the prisoner to
the original court that imposed the sentence to correct the
judgment in those particulars for which the writ is issued would
not answer, for his relief would only come upon a new trial, and
his remedy for such errors must be sought by appeal or writ of
error. But in a vast majority of cases, the extent and mode and
place of punishment may be corrected by the original court without
a new trial, and the party punished as he should be, while relieved
from any excess committed by the court, of which he complains. In
such case, the original court would only set aside what it had no
authority to do, and substitute directions required by the law to
be done upon the conviction of the offender.
Some of the state courts have expressed themselves strongly in
favor of the adoption of this course, where the defects complained
of consist only in the judgment -- in its extent or mode, or place
of punishment -- the conviction being in all respects regular. In
Beale v. Commonwealth, 25 Penn.St. 11, 22, the Supreme
Court of Pennsylvania said:
"The common law embodies in itself sufficient reason and common
sense to reject the monstrous doctrine that a prisoner whose guilt
is established by a regular verdict is to escape punishment
altogether because the court committed error in passing the
sentence. If this court sanctioned such a rule, it would fail to
perform the chief duty for which it was established. "
Page 151 U. S. 261
It is true that this language was used in a case pending in the
supreme court of a state on writ of error, but if then the court
would send the case back to have the error, not touching the
verdict, corrected and justice enforced, there is the same reason
why such correction should be made when the prisoner is discharged
on habeas corpus for alleged defects of jurisdiction in the
rendition of the judgment under which he is held. The end sought by
him -- to be relieved from the defects in the judgment rendered to
his injury -- is secured, and at the same time the community is not
made to suffer by a failure in the enforcement of justice against
him.
The court is invested with the largest power to control and
direct the form of judgment to be entered in cases brought up
before it on habeas corpus. Section 761 of the Revised Statutes, on
this subject provides that:
"The court, or justice, or judge shall proceed in a summary way
to determine the facts of the case by hearing the testimony and
arguments, and thereupon to dispose of the party as law and justice
require."
It would seem that in the interest of justice and to prevent its
defeat, this Court might well delay the discharge of the petitioner
for such reasonable time as may be necessary to have him taken
before the court where the judgment was rendered, that the defects,
for want of jurisdiction, which are the subject of complaint in
that judgment may be corrected.
Medley, Petitioner,
134 U. S. 160,
134 U. S.
174.
In the case of
Coleman v. Tennessee, 97 U. S.
509, a party who had been convicted of a capital
offense, and the judgment had been confirmed by the Supreme Court
of that state, was discharged by judgment of this Court because it
was held that the state court had no jurisdiction to try a soldier
of the army of the United States for a military offense committed
by him while in the military service, and subject to the articles
of war. But as it appeared that the prisoner had been tried by a
court martial regularly convened in the army for the same offense,
and sentenced to be shot, and had afterwards escaped, this Court,
in reversing the judgment of the Supreme Court of Tennessee, stated
that that court could turn the prisoner over to the military
authorities of the United States. He was so turned
Page 151 U. S. 262
over, and the punishment was commuted to life imprisonment, and
he was sent to Fort Leavenworth to serve it out.
In some cases, it is true that no correction can be made of the
judgment, as where the court had, under the law, no jurisdiction of
the case -- that is, no right to take cognizance of the offense
alleged -- and the prisoner must then be entirely discharged; but
those cases will be rare, and much of the complaint that is made
for discharging on habeas corpus persons who have been duly
convicted will be thus removed.
Ordered that the writ of habeas corpus issue, and that the
petitioner be discharged from the custody of the warden of the
penitentiary at Anamosa, in the State of Iowa, but without
prejudice to the right of the United States to take any lawful
measures to have the petitioner sentenced in accordance with law
upon the verdict against him.