Section 4598 of the Revised Statutes is not unconstitutional by
reason of its authorizing justices of the peace to issue warrants
to apprehend deserting seamen and deliver them up to the master of
their vessel.
The judicial power of the United States is defined by the
Constitution, and does not prevent Congress from authorizing state
officers to take affidavits, to arrest and commit for trial
offenders against the laws of the United States, to naturalize
aliens, and to perform such other duties as may be regarded as
incidental to the judicial power, rather than a part of it.
Section 4598 and 4599, insofar as they require seamen to carry
out the contracts contained in their shipping articles, are not in
conflict with the Thirteenth Amendment forbidding slavery and
involuntary servitude, and it cannot be open to doubt that the
provision against involuntary servitude was never intended to apply
to such contracts.
The contract of a sailor has always been treated as an
exceptional one, and involving to a certain extent the surrender of
his personal liberty during the life of the contract.
This was an appeal from a judgment of the District Court for the
Northern District of California, rendered August 5, 1895,
dismissing a writ of habeas corpus issued upon the petition of
Robert Robertson, H. H. Olsen, John Bradley, and Morris Hanson.
The petition set forth in substance that the petitioners were
unlawfully restrained of their liberty by Barry Baldwin, Marshal
for the Northern District of California, in the county jail of
Alameda County, by virtue of an order of commitment, made by a
United States commissioner, committing them for trial upon a charge
of disobedience of the lawful orders of the master of the American
barkentine
Arago; that such commitment
Page 165 U. S. 276
was made without reasonable or probable cause, in this, that at
the time of the commission of the alleged offense, petitioners were
held on board the
Arago against their will and by force,
having been theretofore placed on board said vessel by the Marshal
for the District of Oregon, under the provisions of Rev.St. §
4596, subdivision 1, and §§ 4598, 4599, the master
claiming the right to hold petitioners by virtue of these acts;
that §§ 4598 and 4599 are unconstitutional and in
violation of Section 1 of Article III of, and of the Fifth
Amendment to, the Constitution; that § 4598 was also repealed
by Congress on June 7, 1872, 17 Stat. 262, and that the first
subdivision of § 4596 is in violation of the Thirteenth
Amendment in that it compels involuntary servitude.
The record was somewhat meager, but it sufficiently appeared
that the petitioners had shipped on board the
Arago at San
Francisco for a voyage to Knappton, in the State of Washington,
thence to Valparaiso, and thence to such other foreign ports as the
master might direct, and return to a port of discharge in the
United States; that they had each signed shipping articles to
perform the duties of seamen during the course of the voyage, but,
becoming dissatisfied with their employment, they left the vessel
at Astoria, in the State of Oregon, and were subsequently arrested,
under the provisions of Rev.Stat. §§ 4596 to 4599, taken
before a justice of the peace, and by him committed to jail until
the
Arago was ready for sea (some sixteen days), when they
were taken from the jail by the marshal, and placed on board the
Arago against their will; that they refused to "turn to"
in obedience to the orders of the master, were arrested at San
Francisco, charged with refusing to work in violation of Rev.Stat.
§ 4596, were subsequently examined before a commissioner of
the circuit court, and by him held to answer such charge before the
District Court for the Northern District of California.
Shortly thereafter they sued out this writ of habeas corpus,
which, upon a hearing before the district court, was dismissed, and
an order made remanding the prisoners to the custody of the
marshal.
Page 165 U. S. 277
MR. JUSTICE BROWN, after stating the facts in the foregoing
language, delivered the opinion of the Court.
Upon what ground the court below dismissed the writ and remanded
the petitioners does not appear, but the record raises two
questions of some importance: first, as to the constitutionality of
Rev.Stat. §§ 4598, 4599, insofar as they confer
jurisdiction upon justices of the peace to apprehend deserting
seamen and return them to their vessel; second, as to the conflict
of the same sections, and also § 4596, with the Thirteenth
Amendment to the Constitution, abolishing slavery and involuntary
servitude.
Section 4598, which was taken from § 7 of the Act of July
20, 1790, reads as follows:
"SEC. 4598. If any seaman who shall have signed a contract to
perform a voyage shall at any port or place desert, or shall absent
himself from such vessel without leave of the master or officer
commanding in the absence of the master, it shall be lawful for any
justice of the peace within the United States, upon the complaint
of the master, to issue his warrant to apprehend such deserter and
bring him before such justice, and if it then appears that he has
signed a contract within the intent and meaning of this title, and
that the voyage agreed for is not finished, or altered, or the
contract otherwise dissolved, and that such seaman has deserted the
vessel or absented himself without leave, the justice shall commit
him to the house of correction or common jail of the city, town, or
place, to remain there until the vessel shall be ready to proceed
on her voyage, or till the master shall require his discharge, and
then to be delivered to the master, he paying all the cost of such
commitment, and deducting the same out of the wages due to such
seaman. "
Page 165 U. S. 278
Section 4599, which was taken for § 53 of the Shipping
Commissioners' Act of June 7, 1872, authorizes the apprehension of
deserting seamen, with or without the assistance of the local
public officers or constables and without a warrant, and their
conveyance before any court of justice or magistrate of the state,
to be dealt with according to law.
Section 4596, which is also taken from the same act, provides
punishment by imprisonment for desertion, refusal to join the
vessel, or absence without leave.
1. The first proposition, that Congress has no authority under
the Constitution to vest judicial power in the courts or judicial
officers of the several states, originated in an observation of Mr.
Justice Story, in
Martin v. Hunter's
Lessees, 1 Wheat. 304,
14 U. S. 330,
to the effect that "Congress cannot vest any portion of the
judicial power of the United States, except in courts ordained and
established by itself." This was repeated in
Houston v.
Moore, 5 Wheat. 1,
18 U. S. 27, and
the same general doctrine has received the approval of the courts
of several of the states.
United States v. Lathrop, 17
Johns. 4;
Ely v. Peck, 7 Conn. 239;
United States v.
Campbell 6 Hall's Law Jour. 113. These were all actions for
penalties, however, wherein the courts held to the familiar
doctrine that the courts of one sovereignty will not enforce the
penal laws of another.
Huntington v. Attrill, 146 U.
S. 657,
146 U. S. 672.
In
Commonwealth v. Feely, 1 Va.Cases 325, it was held by
the General Court of Virginia, in 1813, that the state courts could
not take jurisdiction of an indictment for a crime committed
against an act of Congress.
In
Ex Parte Knowles, 5 Cal. 300, it was also held that
Congress had no power to confer jurisdiction upon the courts of a
state to naturalize aliens, although, if such power be recognized
by the legislature of a state, it may be exercised by the courts of
such state of competent jurisdiction.
In
State v. Rutter, 12 Niles' Register 115, 231, it was
held in 1817 by Judges Bland and Hanson of Maryland that Congress
had no power to authorize justices of the peace to issue warrants
for the apprehension of offenders against the laws of
Page 165 U. S. 279
the United States. A directly contrary view, however, was taken
by Judge Cheves of South Carolina in
Ex Parte Rhodes, 12
Niles' Register 264.
The general principle announced by these cases is derived from
the third article of the Constitution, the first section of which
declares that
"The judicial power of the United States shall be vested in one
Supreme Court and in such inferior courts as the Congress may from
time to time ordain and establish,"
the judges of which courts "shall hold their offices during good
behavior," etc., and, by the second section,
"The judicial power shall extend to all cases, in law and
equity, arising under this Constitution, the laws of the United
States, and treaties made, or which shall be made, under their
authority; to all cases affecting ambassadors, other public
ministers and consuls; to all cases of admiralty and maritime
jurisdiction; to controversies to which the United States shall be
a party; to controversies between two or more states; between a
state and citizens of another state; between citizens of different
states; between citizens of the same state claiming lands under
grants of different states, and between a state or the citizens
thereof, and foreign states, citizens or subjects."
The better opinion is that the second section was intended as a
constitutional definition of the judicial power,
Chisholm v.
Georgia, 2 Dall. 419,
2 U. S. 475,
which the Constitution intended to confine to courts created by
Congress -- in other words, that such power extends only to the
trial and determination of "cases" in courts of record, and that
Congress is still at liberty to authorize the judicial officers of
the several states to exercise such power as is ordinarily given to
officers of courts not of record -- such, for instance, as the
power to take affidavits, to arrest and commit for trial offenders
against the laws of the United States, to naturalize aliens, and to
perform such other duties as may be regarded as incidental to the
judicial power, rather than a part of the judicial power itself.
This was the view taken by the Supreme Court of Alabama in
Ex
Parte Gist, 26 Ala. 156, wherein the authority of justices of
the peace and other such officers to arrest and commit for a
violation of the criminal law of the United States
Page 165 U. S. 280
was held to be no part of the judicial power within the third
article of the Constitution. And in the case of
Prigg v.
Pennsylvania, 16 Pet. 539, it was said that, as to
the authority conferred on state magistrates to arrest fugitive
slaves and deliver them to their owners under the Act of February
12, 1793, while a difference of opinion existed and might still
exist upon this point in different states, whether state
magistrates were bound to act under it, no doubt was entertained by
this Court that state magistrates might, if they chose, exercise
the authority, unless prohibited by state legislation.
See also Moore v.
Illinois, 14 How. 13;
In re
Kaine, 14 How. 103.
We think the power of justices of the peace to arrest deserting
seamen and deliver them on board their vessel is not within the
definition of the "judicial power" as defined by the Constitution,
and may be lawfully conferred upon state officers. That the
authority is a most convenient one to entrust to such officers
cannot be denied, as seamen frequently leave their vessels in small
places, where there are no federal judicial officers and where a
justice of the peace may usually be found with authority to issue
warrants under the state laws.
2. The question whether sections 4598 and 4599 conflict with the
Thirteenth Amendment, forbidding slavery and involuntary servitude,
depends upon the construction to be given to the term "involuntary
servitude." Does the epithet "involuntary" attach to the word
"servitude" continuously, and make illegal any service which
becomes involuntary at any time during its existence, or does it
attach only at the inception of the servitude, and characterize it
as unlawful because unlawfully entered into? If the former be the
true construction, then no one, not even a soldier, sailor, or
apprentice, can surrender his liberty, even for a day, and the
soldier may desert his regiment upon the eve of battle, or the
sailor abandon his ship at any intermediate port or landing, or
even in a storm at sea, provided only he can find means of escaping
to another vessel. If the latter, then an individual may, for a
valuable consideration, contract for the surrender of his personal
liberty for a definite time and for a recognized purpose, and
subordinate his going and coming to the will of
Page 165 U. S. 281
another during the continuance of the contract; not that all
such contracts would be lawful, but that a servitude which was
knowingly and willingly entered into could not be termed
"involuntary." Thus, if one should agree, for a yearly wage, to
serve another in a particular capacity during his life, and never
to leave his estate without his consent, the contract might not be
enforceable for the want of a legal remedy, or might be void upon
grounds of public policy; but the servitude could not be properly
termed "involuntary." Such agreement for a limited personal
servitude at one time were very common in England, and by statute
of June 17, 1823, 4 Geo. IV. c. 34, § 3, it was enacted that
if any servant in husbandry or any artificer, calico printer,
handcraftsman, miner, collier, keelman, pitman, glassman, potter,
laborer or other person should contract to serve another for a
definite time and should desert such service during the term of the
contract, he was made liable to a criminal punishment. The breach
of a contract for personal service has not, however, been
recognized in this country as involving a liability to criminal
punishment, except in the cases of soldiers, sailors, and possibly
some others; nor would public opinion tolerate a statute to that
effect.
But we are also of opinion that even if the contract of a seaman
could be considered within the letter of the Thirteenth Amendment,
it is not, within its spirit, a case of involuntary servitude. The
law is perfectly well settled that the first ten amendments to the
Constitution, commonly known as the "Bill of Rights," were not
intended to lay down any novel principles of government, but simply
to embody certain guaranties and immunities which we had inherited
from our English ancestors, and which had, from time immemorial,
been subject to certain well recognized exceptions arising from the
necessities of the case. In incorporating these principles into the
fundamental law, there was no intention of disregarding the
exceptions, which continued to be recognized as if they had been
formally expressed. Thus, the freedom of speech and of the press
(Art. I) does not permit the publication of libels, blasphemous or
indecent articles, or other publications injurious to public morals
or private reputation; the right of the people
Page 165 U. S. 282
to keep and bear arms (Art. II) is not infringed by laws
prohibiting the carrying of concealed weapons; the provision that
no person shall be twice put in jeopardy (Art. V) does not prevent
a second trial if upon the first trial the jury failed to agree or
if the verdict was set aside upon the defendant's motion,
United States v. Ball, 163 U. S. 662,
163 U. S. 627,
nor does the provision of the same article that no one shall be a
witness against himself impair his obligation to testify if a
prosecution against him be barred by the lapse of time, a pardon,
or by statutory enactment,
Brown v. Walker, 161 U.
S. 591, and cases cited. Nor does the provision that an
accused person shall be confronted with the witnesses against him
prevent the admission of dying declarations, or the depositions of
witnesses who have died since the former trial.
The prohibition of slavery in the Thirteenth Amendment is well
known to have been adopted with reference to a state of affairs
which had existed in certain states of the Union since the
foundation of the government, while the addition of the words
"involuntary servitude" were said, in the
Slaughterhouse
Cases, 16 Wall. 36, to have been intended to cover
the system of Mexican peonage and the Chinese coolie trade, the
practical operation of which might have been a revival of the
institution of slavery under a different and less offensive name.
It is clear, however, that the amendment was not intended to
introduce any novel doctrine with respect to certain descriptions
of service which have always been treated as exceptional, such as
military and naval enlistments, or to disturb the right of parents
and guardians to the custody of their minor children or wards. The
amendment, however, makes no distinction between a public and a
private service. To say that persons engaged in a public service
are not within the amendment is to admit that there are exceptions
to its general language, and the further question is at once
presented, where shall the line be drawn? We know of no better
answer to make than to say that services which have from time
immemorial been treated as exceptional shall not be regarded as
within its purview.
From the earliest historical period, the contract of the
sailor
Page 165 U. S. 283
has been treated as an exceptional one, and involving, to a
certain extent, the surrender of his personal liberty during the
life of the contract. Indeed the business of navigation could
scarcely be carried on without some guaranty, beyond the ordinary
civil remedies upon contract, that the sailor will not desert the
ship at a critical moment or leave her at some place where seamen
are impossible to be obtained -- as Molloy forcibly expresses it,
"to rot in her neglected brine." Such desertion might involve a
long delay of the vessel while the master is seeking another crew,
an abandonment of the voyage, and, in some cases, the safety of the
ship itself. Hence, the laws of nearly all maritime nations have
made provision for securing the personal attendance of the crew on
board, and for their criminal punishment for desertion, or absence
without leave, during the life of the shipping articles.
Even by the maritime law of the ancient Rhodians, which is
supposed to antedate the birth of Christ by about 900 years,
according to Pardessus (Lois Mar. vol. 1, page 250), if the master
or the sailors absented themselves by night, and the vessel were
lost or damaged, they were bound to respond in the amount of the
loss.
In the compilation of maritime laws known as the "Consulate of
the Sea," it was also provided that a sailor should not go ashore
without permission, upon the penalty of being obliged to pay any
damage occasioned by his absence, and, in default of his being able
to respond, of being thrust in prison until he had paid all such
damage. Chapters 121, 124; 2 Pardessus 146-148.
A like provision is found in the Rules of Oleron, promulgated in
the reign of Henry III., by which, Art. V, the seamen were
forbidden to leave the ship without the master's consent. "If they
do, and by that means she happens to be lost or damnified, they
shall be answerable for the damage." 1 Pet.Ad. xi. A similar
prohibition is found in article 17 of the Laws of Wisbuy. 1 Pet.Ad.
lxxiii.
The laws of the towns belonging to the Hanseatic League, first
enacted and promulgated in 1597, were still more explicit and
severe. No seaman might go ashore without the consent
Page 165 U. S. 284
of the master or other officer, and if he remained longer than
the time allowed, was condemned to pay a fine or suffer an
imprisonment (Arts. 22 and 23); and, by article forty, if a seaman
went ashore without leave, and the ship happened to receive any
damage, "he shall be kept in prison upon bread and water for one
year," and if any seaman died or perished for the want of the
assistance of the absent seaman, the latter was subject to corporal
punishment, and, by article forty-three,
"if an officer or seaman quits a ship and conceals himself, if
afterwards he is apprehended, he shall be delivered up to justice
to be punished; he shall be stigmatized in the face with the first
letter of the name of the town to which he belongs."
1 Pet.Ad. cii.
By the Marine Ordinance of Louis XIV., which was in existence at
the time the Constitution was adopted (Title Third, Art. III),
"if a seaman leaves a master without a discharge in writing
before the voyage is begun, he may be taken up and imprisoned
wherever he can be found, and compelled to restore what he has
received, and serve out the time for which he had engaged himself
for nothing, and if he leaves the ship after the voyage is begun,
he may be punished corporally."
Art. V:
"After the ship is laded, the seamen shall not go ashore without
leave from the master, under pain of five livres for the first
fault, and may be punished corporally if they commit a second."
The present Commercial Code of France, however, makes no express
provision upon the subject; but by the general mercantile law of
Germany, Art. 532,
"the master can cause any seaman, who, after having been
engaged, neglects to enter upon or continue to do his duties, to be
forcibly compelled to perform the same."
By the Dutch Code, Art. 402,
"the master or his representative can call in the public force
against those who refuse to come on board, who absent themselves
from the ship without leave and refuse to perform to the end of the
service for which they were engaged."
Nearly all of the ancient commercial codes either make provision
for payment of damages by seamen who absent
Page 165 U. S. 285
themselves from their ships without leave or for their
imprisonment or forcible conveyance on board. Some of the modern
commercial codes of Europe and South America make similar
provisions. Argentine Code, Art. 1154. Others, including the French
and Spanish Codes, are silent upon the subject.
Turning now to the country from which we have inherited most
immediately our maritime laws and customs, we find that Malynes,
the earliest English writer upon the law merchant, who wrote in
1622, says in his
Lex Mercatoria (vol. I, c. 23) that
"mariners in a strange port should not leave the ship without
the master's license, or fastening her with four ropes, or else the
loss falls upon them. . . . In a strange country, the one-half of
the company at least, ought to remain on shipboard, and the rest
who go on land should keep sobriety and abstain from suspected
places, or else should be punished in body and purse; like as he
who absents himself when the ship is ready to sail. Yea, if he give
out himself worthier than he is in his calling, he shall lose his
hire -- half to the admiral and the other half to the master."
Molloy, one of the most satisfactory of early English writers
upon the subject, states that if seamen depart from a ship without
leave or license of the master and any disaster happens, they must
answer, quoting Art. V of the Rules of Oleron in support of his
proposition.
There appears to have been no legislation directly upon the
subject until 1729, when the Act of 2 Geo. II. c. 36, was enacted
"for the better regulation and government of seamen in the
merchants' service." This act not only provided for the forfeiture
of wages in case of desertion, but for the apprehension of seamen
deserting or absenting themselves, upon warrants to be issued by
justices of the peace, and, in case of their refusal to proceed
upon the voyage, for their committal to the house of correction at
hard labor. Indeed, this seems to have furnished a model upon which
the act of Congress of July 20, 1790 (1 Stat. 131), for the
government and regulation of seamen in the merchants' service, was
constructed. The provisions of this act were substantially repeated
by the
Page 165 U. S. 286
Act of 1791 (31 Geo. III, c. 39), and were subsequently added to
and amended by the acts of 5 & 6 Wm. IV, c.19, and 7 & 8
Vict., c. 112.
The modern law of England is full and explicit upon the duties
and responsibilities of seamen. By Merchants' Shipping Act 1854, 17
& 18 Victoria, c. 104, section 243, a seaman guilty of
desertion might be summarily punished by imprisonment, by
forfeiture of his clothes and effects, and all or any part of his
wages. Similar punishment was meted out to him for neglecting or
refusing to join his ship or to proceed to sea, or for absence
without leave at any time. By section 246,
"whenever at the commencement or during the progress of any
voyage, any seaman or apprentice neglects or refuses to join, or
deserts from or refuses to proceed to sea in any ship in which he
is duly engaged to serve,"
the master was authorized to call upon the police officers or
constables to apprehend him without warrant and take him before a
magistrate who, by article 247, was authorized to order him to be
conveyed on board for the purpose of proceeding on the voyage.
The provision for imprisonment for desertion seems to have been
repealed by the Merchants' Seamen (Payment of Wages and Rating) Act
of 1880, but the tenth section of that act retained the provision
authorizing the master to call upon the police officers or
constables to convey deserting seamen on board their vessels.
This act, however, appears to have been found too lenient,
since, in 1894, the whole subject was reconsidered and covered in
the new Merchants' Shipping Act, 57 & 58 Vict., c. 60, of 748
sections, section 221 of which provides not only for the forfeiture
of wages in case of desertion, but for imprisonment with or without
hard labor, except in cases arising in the United Kingdom. The
provision for the arrest of the deserting seaman and his conveyance
on board the ship is, however, retained both within and without the
kingdom. §§ 222, 223. This is believed to be the latest
legislation on the subject in England.
The earliest American legislation which we have been able
Page 165 U. S. 287
to find is an act of the Colonial General Court of
Massachusetts, passed about 1668, wherein it was enacted that any
mariner who departs and leaves a voyage upon which he has entered
shall forfeit all his wages and shall be further punished by
imprisonment or otherwise, as the case may be circumstanced, and if
he shall have received any considerable part of his wages and shall
run away, he shall be pursued as a disobedient runaway servant.
Mass.Col.Laws (ed. 1889) 251, 256.
The provision of Rev.Stat. § 4598, under which these
proceedings were taken, was first enacted by Congress in 1790. 1
Stat. 131, § 7. This act provided for the apprehension of
deserters and their delivery on board the vessel, but apparently
made no provision for imprisonment as a punishment for desertion;
but by the Shipping Commissioners' Act of 1872, 17 Stat. 243,
§ 51, now incorporated into the Revised Statutes as section
4596, the court is authorized to add to forfeiture of wages for
desertion imprisonment for a period of not more than three months,
and for absence without leave, imprisonment for not more than one
month. In this act and the amendments thereto, very careful
provisions are made for the protection of seamen against the frauds
and cruelty of masters, the devices of boarding house keepers, and,
as far as possible, against the consequences of their own ignorance
and improvidence. At the same time, discipline is more stringently
enforced by additional punishments for desertion, absence without
leave, disobedience, insubordination, and barratry. Indeed, seamen
are treated by Congress, as well as by the Parliament of Great
Britain, as deficient in that full and intelligent responsibility
for their acts which is accredited to ordinary adults, and as
needing the protection of the law in the same sense in which minors
and wards are entitled to the protection of their parents and
guardians.
Quemadmodum pater in filios, magister in discipulos,
dominus in servos vel familiares. The ancient characterization
of seamen as "wards of admiralty" is even more accurate now than it
was formerly.
In the face of this legislation upon the subject of desertion
and absence without leave, which was in force in this country
Page 165 U. S. 288
for more than sixty years before the Thirteenth Amendment was
adopted, and similar legislation abroad from time immemorial, it
cannot be open to doubt that the provision against involuntary
servitude was never intended to apply to their contracts.
The judgment of the court below is therefore
Affirmed.
MR. JUSTICE HARLAN, dissenting.
The appellants shipped on the American barkentine
Arago, having previously signed articles whereby they
undertook to perform the duties of seamen during a voyage of that
vessel from San Francisco (quoting from the record)
"to Knappton, State of Washington, and thence to Valparaiso, and
thence to such other foreign ports as the master may direct, and
return to a port of discharge in the United States."
The vessel was engaged in a purely private business.
As stated in the opinion of the Court, the appellants left the
vessel at Astoria, Oregon, without the consent of the master,
having become dissatisfied with their employment. The grounds of
such dissatisfaction are not stated.
Upon the application of the master, a justice of the peace at
Astoria, Oregon, proceeding under sections 4596 to 4599 of the
Revised Statutes of the United States, issued a warrant for the
arrest of the appellants. They were seized, somewhat as runaway
slaves were in the days of slavery, and committed to jail without
bail, "until the
Arago was ready for sea." After remaining
in jail some sixteen days, they were taken by the marshal and
placed on board the
Arago against their will. While on
board, they refused to "turn to" or to work in obedience to the
orders of the master. Upon the arrival of the barkentine at San
Francisco, they were arrested for having refused to work on the
vessel and committed for trial upon that charge.
If the placing of the appellants on board the
Arago at
Astoria against their will was illegal, then their refusal to work
while thus forcibly held on the vessel could not be a criminal
offense, and their detention and subsequent arrest
Page 165 U. S. 289
for refusing to work while the vessel was going from Astoria to
San Francisco were without authority of law. The question,
therefore, is whether the appellants, having left the vessel at
Astoria, no matter for what cause, could lawfully be required,
against their will, to return to it and to render personal services
for the master.
The government justifies the proceedings taken against the
appellants at Astoria by sections 4596, 4598, and 4599 of the
Revised Statutes of the United States.
By section 4596 it is provided:
"SEC. 4596. Whenever any seaman who has been lawfully engaged,
or any apprentice to the sea service, commits any of the following
offenses, he shall be punishable as follows: First. For desertion,
by imprisonment for not more than three months, and by forfeiture
of all or any part of the clothes or effects he leaves on board,
and of all or any part of the wages or emoluments which he has then
earned. Second. For neglecting and refusing, without reasonable
cause, to join his vessel, or to proceed to sea in his vessel, or
for absence without leave at any time within twenty-four hours of
the vessel's sailing from any port, either at the commencement or
during the progress of any voyage, or for absence at any time
without leave and without sufficient reason from his vessel, or
from his duty, not amounting to desertion, or not treated as such
by the master, by imprisonment for not more than one month, and
also, at the discretion of the court, by forfeiture of his wages,
of not more than two days' pay, and, for every twenty-four hours of
absence, either a sum not exceeding six days' pay, or any expenses
which have been properly incurred in hiring a substitute. Third.
For quitting the vessel without leave after her arrival at her port
of delivery, and before she is placed in security, by forfeiture
out of his wages of not more than one month's pay. Fourth. For
willful disobedience to any lawful command, by imprisonment for not
more than two months, and also at the discretion of the court, by
forfeiture out of his wages of not more than four days' pay. Fifth.
For continued willful disobedience to lawful commands, or continued
willful neglect of duty, by imprisonment
Page 165 U. S. 290
for not more than six months, and also, at the discretion of the
court, by forfeiture, for every twenty-four hours' continuance of
such disobedience or neglect, of either a sum not more than twelve
days' pay or sufficient to defray any expenses which have been
properly incurred in hiring a substitute. Sixth. For assaulting any
master or mate, by imprisonment for not more than two years.
Seventh. For combining with any others of the crew to disobey
lawful commands, or to neglect duty, or to impede navigation of the
vessel, or the progress of the voyage, by imprisonment for not more
than twelve months. . . ."
These provisions are brought forward from the Act of June 7,
1872, c. 322, § 51, 17 Stat. 273.
Section 4598 provides:
"SEC. 4598. If any seaman who shall have signed a contract to
perform a voyage shall at any port or place desert or shall absent
himself from such vessel without leave of the master or officer
commanding in the absence of the master, it shall be lawful for any
justice of the peace within the United States, upon the complaint
of the master, to issue his warrant to apprehend such deserter and
bring him before such justice, and if it then appears that he has
signed a contract within the intent and meaning of this title, and
that the voyage agreed for is not finished or altered, or the
contract otherwise dissolved, and that such seaman has deserted the
vessel or absented himself without leave, the justice shall commit
him to the house of correction or common jail of the city, town, or
place, to remain there until the vessel shall be ready to proceed
on her voyage or till the master shall require his discharge, and
then to be delivered to the master, he paying all the cost of such
commitment and deducting the same out of the wages due to such
seaman."
This section is the same as section 7 of the Act of July 20,
1790, c. 29, 1 Stat. 134..
By section 4599 -- which is substantially the same as section 53
of the above Act of June 7, 1872 -- it is provided:
"SEC. 4599. Whenever, either at the commencement of or during
any voyage, any seaman or apprentice neglects or
Page 165 U. S. 291
refuses to join, or deserts from or refuses to proceed to sea
in, any vessel in which he is duly engaged to serve, or is found
otherwise absenting himself therefrom without leave, the master or
any mate, or the owner or consignee, or shipping commissioner may,
in any place in the United States, with or without the assistance
of the local public officers or constables, who are hereby directed
to give their assistance if required, and also at any place out of
the United States if and so far as the laws in force at such place
will permit, apprehend him without first procuring a warrant, and
may thereupon in any case, and shall in case he so requires and it
is practicable, convey him before any court of justice or
magistrate of any state, city, town, or county within the United
States authorized to take cognizance of offenses of like degree and
kind, to be dealt with according to the provisions of law governing
such cases, and may, for the purpose of conveying him before such
court or magistrate, detain him in custody for a period not
exceeding twenty-four hours, or may, if he does not so require, or
if there is no such court at or near the place, at once convey him
on board. If such apprehension appears to the court or magistrate
before whom the case is brought to have been made on improper or on
insufficient grounds, the master, mate, consignee, or shipping
commissioner who makes the same or causes the same to be made shall
be liable to a penalty of not more than one hundred dollars, but
such penalty, if inflicted, shall be a bar to any action for false
imprisonment."
The decision just made proceeds upon the broad ground that one
who voluntarily engages to serve upon a private vessel in the
capacity of a seaman for a given term, but who, without the consent
of the master, leaves the vessel when in port before the stipulated
term is ended and refuses to return to it, may be arrested and held
in custody until the vessel is ready to proceed on its voyage, and
then delivered against his will, and if need be by actual force, on
the vessel to the master.
The Thirteenth Amendment of the Constitution of the United
States declares that
"Neither slavery nor involuntary servitude, except as a
punishment for crime whereof the party
Page 165 U. S. 292
shall have been duly convicted, shall exist within the United
States or any place subject to their jurisdiction."
Slavery exists wherever the law recognizes a right of property
in a human being, but slavery cannot exist in any form within the
United States. The Thirteenth Amendment uprooted slavery as it once
existed in this country, and destroyed all of its badges and
incidents. It established freedom for all. "By its own unaided
force and effect, it abolished slavery and established freedom."
The amendment, this Court has also said,
"is not a mere prohibition of state laws establishing or
upholding slavery or involuntary servitude, but an absolute
declaration that slavery or involuntary servitude shall not exist
in any part of the United States."
Civil Rights Cases, 109 U. S. 1,
109 U. S. 20.
As to involuntary servitude, it may exist in the United States,
but it can only exist lawfully as a punishment for crime of which
the party shall have been duly convicted. Such is the plain reading
of the Constitution. A condition of enforced service, even for a
limited period, in the private business of another is a condition
of involuntary servitude.
If it be said that government may make it a criminal offense,
punishable by fine or imprisonment or both, for anyone to violate
his private contract voluntarily made, or to refuse without
sufficient reason to perform it -- a proposition which cannot, I
think, be sustained at this day, in this land of freedom -- it
would by no means follow that government could, by force applied in
advance of due conviction of some crime, compel a freeman to render
personal services in respect of the private business of another.
The placing of a person, by force, on a vessel about to sail is
putting him in a condition of involuntary servitude if the purpose
is to compel him against his will to give his personal services in
the private business in which that vessel is engaged. The personal
liberty of individuals, it has been well said,
"consists in the power of locomotion, of changing situation, or
moving one's person to whatsoever place one's own inclination may
direct, without imprisonment or restraint, unless by due course of
law."
1 Bl., c. 1, p. 134.
Page 165 U. S. 293
Can the decision of the Court be sustained under the clause of
the Constitution granting power to Congress to regulate commerce
with foreign nations and among the several states? That power
cannot be exerted except with due regard to other provisions of the
Constitution, particularly those embodying the fundamental
guaranties of life, liberty, and property. While Congress may enact
regulations for the conduct of commerce with foreign nations and
among the states, and may perhaps prescribe punishment for the
violation of such regulations, it may not, in so doing, ignore
other clauses of the Constitution. For instance, a regulation of
commerce cannot be sustained which, in disregard of the express
injunctions of the Constitution, imposes a cruel and unusual
punishment for its violation, or compels a person to testify in a
criminal case against himself, or authorizes him to be put twice in
jeopardy of life or limb, or denies to the accused the privilege of
being confronted with the witnesses against him or of being
informed of the nature and cause of the accusation against him. And
it is equally clear that no regulation of commerce established by
Congress can stand if its necessary operation be either to
establish slavery or to create a condition of involuntary servitude
forbidden by the Constitution.
It is said that the statute in question is sanctioned by long
usage among the nations of the earth, as well as by the above Act
of July 20, 1790.
In considering the antiquity of regulations that restrain the
personal freedom of seamen, the Court refers to the laws of the
ancient Rhodians, which are supposed to have antedated the
Christian era. But those laws, whatever they may have been, were
enacted at a time when no account was taken of a man as man, when
human life and human liberty were regarded as of little value, and
when the powers of government were employed to gratify the ambition
and the pleasures of despotic rulers, rather than promote the
welfare of the people.
Attention has been called by the Court to the laws enacted by
the towns of the Hanseatic League four hundred years ago, by one of
which a seaman who went ashore without leave could, in certain
contingencies, be kept in prison "upon bread
Page 165 U. S. 294
and water for one year," and by another of which an officer or
seaman who quit his ship and concealed himself could be apprehended
and "stigmatized in the face with the first letter of the name of
the town to which he belongs." Why the reference to these
enactments of ancient times, enforced by or under governments
possessing arbitrary power inconsistent with a state of freedom?
Does anyone suppose that a regulation of commerce authorizing
seamen who quit their ship, without leave, to be imprisoned "upon
bread and water for one year," or which required them to be
"stigmatized in the face" with the letter of the town or state to
which they belonged, would now receive the sanction of any court in
the United States?
Reference has also been made to an act of the Colonial General
Court of Massachusetts, passed in 1647, declaring that a seaman who
left his vessel before its voyage was ended might be "pursued as a
runaway servant." But the act referred to was passed when slavery
was tolerated in Massachusetts, with the assent of the government
of Great Britain. It antedated the famous declaration of rights,
promulgated in 1780, in which Massachusetts declared, among other
things, that
"all men are born free and equal, and have certain natural,
essential, and unalienable rights, among which may be reckoned the
right of enjoying and defending their lives and liberties; that of
acquiring, possessing, and protecting property -- in fine, that of
seeking and obtaining their safety and happiness."
The effect of that declaration was well illustrated in
Parsons v. Track, 7 Gray 473. That case involved the
validity of a contract made in a foreign country in 1840 by an
adult inhabitant thereof with a citizen of the United States, "to
serve him, his executors and assigns," for the term of five
years,
"during all of which term the said servant her said master, his
executors or assigns, faithfully shall serve, and that honestly and
obediently in all things, as a good and dutiful servant ought to
do."
It was sought to enforce this contract in Massachusetts. After
carefully examining the provisions of the contract, the court
said:
"As to the nature, then, of the service to be performed, the
place where and the person
Page 165 U. S. 295
to whom it is to be rendered, and the compensation to be paid,
the contract is uncertain and indefinite -- indefinite and
uncertain, not from any infirmity in the language of the parties,
but in its substance and intent. It is, in substance and effect, a
contract for servitude, with no limitation but that of time;
leaving the master to determine what the service should be and the
place where and the person to whom it should be rendered. Such a
contract, it is scarcely necessary to say, is against the policy of
our institutions and laws. If such a sale of service could be
lawfully made for five years, it might, from the same reasons, for
ten, and so for the term of one's life. The door would thus be
opened for a species of servitude inconsistent with the first and
fundamental article of our declaration of rights, which,
proprio vigore, not only abolished every vestige of
slavery then existing in the commonwealth, but rendered every form
of it thereafter legally impossible. That article has always been
regarded not simply as the declaration of an abstract principle,
but as having the active force and conclusive authority of
law."
Observing that one who voluntarily subjected himself to the laws
of the state must find in them the rule of restraint as well as the
rule of action, the court proceeded:
"Under this contract, the plaintiff had no claim for the labor
of the servant for the term of five years or for any term whatever.
She was under no legal obligation to remain in his service. There
was no time during which her service was due to the plaintiff, and
during which she was kept from such service by the acts of the
defendants."
It may be here remarked that the shipping articles signed by the
appellants left the term of their service uncertain, and placed no
restriction whatever upon the route of the vessel after it left
Valparaiso except that it should ultimately return to some port in
the United States.
Under the contract of service, it was at the volition of the
master to entail service upon these appellants for an indefinite
period. So far as the record discloses, it was an accident that the
vessel came back to San Francisco when it did. By the shipping
articles, the appellants could not quit the vessel until it
returned to a port of the
Page 165 U. S. 296
United States, and such return depended absolutely upon the will
of the master. He had only to land at foreign ports, and keep the
vessel away from the United States, in order to prevent the
appellants from leaving his service.
Nor, I submit, is any light thrown upon the present question by
the history of legislation in Great Britain about seamen. The
powers of the British Parliament furnish no test for the powers
that may be exercised by the Congress of the United States.
Referring to the difficulties confronting the convention of 1787,
which framed the present Constitution of the United States, and to
the profound differences between the instrument framed by it and
what is called the "British Constitution," Mr. Bryce, an English
writer of high authority, says in his admirable work on the
American Commonwealth:
"The British Parliament had always been, was then, and remains
now, a sovereign and constituent assembly. It can make and unmake
any and every law, change the form of government or the succession
to the crown, interfere with the course of justice, extinguish the
most sacred private rights of the citizen. Between it and the
people at large there is no legal distinction, because the whole
plenitude of the people's rights and powers resides in it, just as
if the whole nation were present within the chamber where it sits.
In point of legal theory, it is the nation, being the historical
successor of the Folk Moot of our Teutonic forefathers. Both
practically and legally, it is today the only and the sufficient
depository of the authority of the nation, and is therefore, within
the sphere of law, irresponsible and omnipotent."
Volume 1, p. 35. No such powers have been given to or can be
exercised by any legislative body organized under the American
system. Absolute, arbitrary power exists nowhere in this free land.
The authority for the exercise of power by the Congress of the
United States must be found in the Constitution. Whatever it does
in excess of the powers granted to it, or in violation of the
injunctions of the supreme law of the land, is a nullity, and may
be so treated by every person. It would seem therefore evident that
no aid in the present discussion can be derived from the
legislation of Great Britain touching the rights, duties, and
Page 165 U. S. 297
responsibilities of seamen employed on British vessels. If the
Parliament of Great Britain, her Britannic majesty assenting,
should establish slavery or involuntary servitude in England, the
courts there would not question its authority to do so, and would
have no alternative except to sustain legislation of that
character. A very short act of Parliament would suffice to destroy
all the guaranties of life, liberty, and property now enjoyed by
Englishmen. "What," Mr. Bryce says,
"are called in England 'constitutional statutes,' such as Magna
Charta, the Bill of Rights, the Act of Settlement, the Acts of
Union with Scotland and Ireland, are merely ordinary laws, which
could be repealed by Parliament at any moment in exactly the same
way as it can repeal a highway act or lower the duty on
tobacco."
Parliament, he further says,
"can abolish, when it pleases, any institution of the country,
the crown, the House of Lords, the Established Church, the House of
Commons, Parliament itself."
Volume 1, p. 237. In this country, the will of the people, as
expressed in the fundamental law, must be the will of courts and
legislatures. No court is bound to enforce, nor is anyone legally
bound to obey, an act of Congress inconsistent with the
Constitution. If the Thirteenth Amendment forbids such legislation
in reference to seamen as is now under consideration, that is an
end of the matter, and it is of no consequence whatever that
government in other countries may, by the application of force or
by the infliction of fines and imprisonment, compel seamen to
continue in the personal service of those whom they may have agreed
to serve in private business.
Is the existing statute to be sustained because its essential
provisions were embodied in the act of 1790? I think not, and for
the reason, if there were no other, that the Thirteenth Amendment
imposes restrictions upon the powers of Congress that did not exist
when that act was passed. The supreme law of the land now declares
that involuntary servitude, except as a punishment for crime of
which the party shall have been duly convicted, shall not exist any
where within the United States.
The only exceptions to the general principles I have
referred
Page 165 U. S. 298
to, so far as they relate to private business, arise out of
statutes respecting apprentices of tender years. But statutes
relating to that class rest largely upon the idea that a minor is
incapable of having an absolute will of his own before reaching
majority. The infant apprentice, having no will in the matter, is
to be cared for and protected in such way as, in the judgment of
the state, will best subserve the interests both of himself and of
the public. An apprentice serving his master pursuant to terms
permitted by the law cannot, in any proper sense, be said to be in
a condition of involuntary servitude. Upon arriving at his
majority, the infant apprentice may repudiate the contract of
apprenticeship if it extends beyond that period. 2 Parsons on
Contr. 50. The word "involuntary" refers primarily to persons
entitled, in virtue of their age, to act upon their independent
judgment when disposing of their time and labor. Will anyone say
that a person who has reached his majority, and who had voluntarily
agreed, for a valuable consideration, to serve another as an
apprentice for an indefinite period, or even for a given number of
years, can be compelled, against his will, to remain in the service
of the master?
It is said that the grounds upon which the legislation in
question rests are the same as those existing in the cases of
soldiers and sailors. Not so. The army and navy of the United
States are engaged in the performance of public, not private,
duties. Service in the army or navy of one's country according to
the terms of enlistment never implies slavery or involuntary
servitude, even where the soldier or sailor is required against his
will to respect the terms upon which he voluntarily engaged to
serve the public. Involuntary service rendered for the public,
pursuant as well to the requirements of a statute as to a previous
voluntary engagement, is not in any legal sense either slavery or
involuntary servitude.
The further suggestion is made that seamen have always been
treated, by legislation in this country and in England, as if they
needed the protection of the law in the same sense that minors and
wards need the protection of parents and guardians, and hence have
been often described as "wards of admiralty."
Page 165 U. S. 299
Some writers say that seamen are in need of the protection of
the courts "because peculiarly exposed to the wiles of sharpers and
unable to take care of themselves." 2 Parson, Shipp. & Adm. 32.
Mr. Justice Story, in
Harden v. Gordon, 2 Mason 541, 555,
said that
"every court should watch with jealousy any encroachment upon
the rights of seamen, because they are unprotected and need
counsel, because they are thoughtless and require indulgence,
because they are credulous and complying, and are easily
overreached."
Mr. Justice Thompson, in
The Cadmus v. Matthews, 2
Paine 229, 240, said:
"In considering the obligation of seamen, arising out of their
contract in shipping articles, according to the formula in common
use, due weight ought to be given to the character and situation of
this class of men. Generally ignorant and improvident, and probably
very often signing the shipping articles without knowing what they
contain, it is the duty of the court to watch over and protect
their rights, and apply very liberal and equitable considerations
to the enforcement of their contracts."
In view of these principles, I am unable to understand how the
necessity for the protection of seamen against those who take
advantage of them can be made the basis of legislation compelling
them, against their will and by force, to render personal service
for others engaged in private business. Their supposed helpless
condition is thus made the excuse for imposing upon them burdens
that could not be imposed upon other classes without depriving them
of rights that inhere in personal freedom. The Constitution
furnishes no authority for any such distinction between classes of
persons in this country. If, prior to the adoption of the
Thirteenth Amendment, the arrest of a seaman, and his forcible
return, under any circumstances, to the vessel on which he had
engaged to serve could have been authorized by an act of Congress,
such deprivation of the liberty of a freeman cannot be justified
under the Constitution as it now is. To give any other construction
to the Constitution is to say that it is not made for all, and that
all men in this land are not free and equal before the law, but
that one class may be so far subjected to involuntary servitude
Page 165 U. S. 300
as to be compelled by force to render personal services in a
purely private business with which the public has no concern
whatever.
The Court holds that, within the meaning of the Constitution,
the word "involuntary" does not attach to the word "servitude"
continuously, and make illegal a service which was voluntary at the
outset, but became involuntary before the agreed term of service
was ended; consequently,
"an individual may, for a valuable consideration, contract for
the surrender of his personal liberty for a definite time and for a
recognized purpose, and subordinate his going and coming to the
will of another during the continuance of the contract -- not that
all such contracts would be lawful, but that a servitude which was
knowingly and willingly entered into could not be termed
involuntary. Thus,"
the Court proceeds,
"if one should agree, for a yearly wage, to serve another in a
particular capacity during his life and never to leave his estate
without his consent, the contract might be void upon grounds of
public policy, but the servitude could not be properly termed
involuntary. Such agreements for a limited personal servitude at
one time were very common in England, and by Statute of June 17,
1823, 4 Geo. IV, c. 34, it was enacted that if any servant in
husbandry, or any artificer, calico printer, handcraftsman, miner,
collier, keelman, pitman, glassman, potter, laborer, or other
person should contract to serve another for a definite time, and
should desert such service during the term of the contract, he was
made liable to a criminal punishment. The breach of a contract for
a personal service has not, however, been recognized in this
country as involving a liability to criminal punishment except in
the cases of soldiers, sailors, and apprentices, and possibly some
others; nor would public opinion tolerate a statute to that
effect."
It seems to me that these observations rest upon an erroneous
view of the constitutional inhibition upon involuntary
servitude.
Of the meaning and scope of the constitutional interdict upon
slavery no one can entertain doubt. A contract by which one person
agrees to become the slave of another
Page 165 U. S. 301
would not be respected in any court, nor could it become the
foundation of any claim or right, even if it were entered into
without constraint's being used upon the person who assumed to
surrender his liberty and to become the property of another. But
involuntary servitude, no matter when it arises, if it be not the
result of punishment for crime of which the party has been duly
convicted, is as much forbidden by the Constitution as is slavery.
If that condition exists at the time the authority of the law is
invoked to protect one against being forcibly compelled to render
personal services for another, the court cannot refuse to act
because the party seeking relief had voluntarily agreed to render
such services during a given period. The voluntary contracts of
individuals for personal services in private business cannot
justify the existence anywhere or at any time in this country of a
condition of involuntary servitude not imposed as a punishment for
crime, any more than contracts creating the relation of master and
slave can justify the existence and recognition of a state of
slavery anywhere or with respect to any persons, within the
jurisdiction of the United States. The condition of one who
contracts to render personal services in connection with the
private business of another becomes a condition of involuntary
servitude from the moment he is compelled, against his will, to
continue in such service. He may be liable in damages for the
nonperformance of his agreement, but to require him, against his
will, to continue in the personal service of his master is to place
him and keep him in a condition of involuntary servitude. It will
not do to say that, by "immemorial usage," seamen could be held in
a condition of involuntary servitude without having been convicted
of crime. The people of the United States, by an amendment of their
fundamental law, have solemnly decreed that, "except as a
punishment for crime, whereof the party shall have been duly
convicted," involuntary servitude shall not exist in any form in
this country. The adding another exception by interpretation
simply, and without amending the Constitution, is, I submit,
judicial legislation. It is a very serious matter when a judicial
tribunal, by the construction of an act of Congress, defeats the
expressed will of the
Page 165 U. S. 302
legislative branch of the government. It is a still more serious
matter when the clear reading of a constitutional provision
relating to the liberty of man is departed from in deference to
what is called "usage," which has existed for the most part under
monarchical and despotic governments.
In considering this case, it is our duty to look at the
consequences of any decision that may be rendered. We cannot avoid
this duty by saying that it will be time enough to consider
supposed cases when they arise. When such supposed cases do arise,
those who seek judicial support for extraordinary remedies that
encroach upon the liberty of freemen will, of course, refer to the
principles announced in previous adjudications and demand their
application to the particular case in hand.
It is therefore entirely appropriate to inquire as to the
necessary results of the sanction given by this Court to the
statute here in question. If Congress, under its power to regulate
commerce with foreign nations and among the several states, can
authorize the arrest of a seaman who engaged to serve upon a
private vessel, and compel him by force to return to the vessel and
remain during the term for which he engaged, a similar rule may be
prescribed as to employees upon railroads and steamboats engaged in
commerce among the states. Even if it were conceded -- a concession
to be made only for argument's sake -- that it could be made a
criminal offense, punishable by fine or imprisonment, or both, for
such employees to quit their employment before the expiration of
the term for which they agreed to serve, it would not follow that
they could be compelled, against their will and in advance of trial
and conviction, to continue in such service. But the decision today
logically leads to the conclusion that such a power exists in
Congress. Again, as the legislatures of the states have all
legislative power not prohibited to them, while Congress can only
exercise certain enumerated powers for accomplishing specified
objects, why may not the states, under the principles this day
announced, compel all employees of railroads engaged in domestic
commerce, and all domestic servants, and all employees in private
establishments, within
Page 165 U. S. 303
their respective limits, to remain with their employers during
the terms for which they were severally engaged under the penalty
of being arrested by some sheriff or constable and forcibly
returned to the service of their employers? The mere statement of
these matters is sufficient to indicate the scope of the decision
this day rendered.
The Thirteenth Amendment, although tolerating involuntary
servitude only when imposed as a punishment for crime of which the
party shall have been duly convicted, has been construed by the
decision just rendered as if it contained an additional clause
expressly excepting from its operation seamen who engage to serve
on private vessels. Under this view of the Constitution, we may now
look for advertisements not for runaway servants as in the days of
slavery, but for runaway seamen. In former days, overseers could
stand with whip in hand over slaves, and force them to perform
personal service for their masters. While, with the assent of all,
that condition of things has ceased to exist, we can but be
reminded of the past, when it is adjudged to be consistent with the
law of the land for freemen, who happen to be seamen, to be held in
custody that they may be forced to go aboard private vessels and
render personal services against their will.
In my judgment, the holding of any person in custody, whether in
jail or by an officer of the law, against his will for the purpose
of compelling him to render personal service to another in a
private business places the person so held in custody in a
condition of involuntary servitude forbidden by the Constitution of
the United States; consequently, that the statute as it now is, and
under which the appellants were arrested at Astoria and placed
against their will on the barkentine
Arago, is null and
void, and their refusal to work on such vessel after being forcibly
returned to it could not be made a public offense, authorizing
their subsequent arrest at San Francisco.
I dissent from the opinion and judgment of the Court.
MR. JUSTICE GRAY was not present at the argument, and took no
part in the decision of this case.