The expressed declarations of the President in Military Order,
No. 58, of April 23, 1900, and in the act of July 1, 1902,
establishing a civil government in the Philippine Islands, both
adopting with little alteration the provisions of the Bill of
Rights, show that it was intended to carry to the Philippine
Islands those principles of our Government which the President
declared to be established as rules of law for the maintenance of
individual freedom, and those expressions were used in the sense
which has been placed upon them in construing the instrument from
which they were taken.
It is a well settled rule of construction that language used in
a statute which has a settled and well known meaning, sanctioned by
judicial decision, is presumed to be used in that sense by the
legislative body.
It is a well settled principle of construction that specific
terms covering the given subject matter will prevail over general
language of the same or another statute which might otherwise prove
controlling.
Although a right of appeal was given to the Government by
Military Order, No. 58, in criminal cases in the Philippine
Islands, § 5 of the act of July 1, 1902, establishing a civil
government in the Islands, specifically provided that no person
should be put twice in jeopardy for the same offense, thereby
repealing the provision in the military order and nothing in §
9 of the act of 1902 can be construed as intending to prevail over
the specific guaranty contained in § 5.
In ascertaining the meaning of a phrase in the Constitution
taken from the Bill of Rights, it must be construed with reference
to the common law from which it was taken.
Page 195 U. S. 101
At common law, protection from second jeopardy for the same
offense clearly included immunity from second prosecution where the
court having jurisdiction had acquitted the accused of the offense,
and it is the settled law of this court that former jeopardy
includes one who has been acquitted by a verdict duly rendered,
although no judgment be entered on the verdict and it was found
upon a defective indictment. The second jeopardy is not against the
peril of second judgment, but against being again tried for the
same offense.
The facts, which involved the application of the constitutional
immunity provision of the Constitution of the United States to the
Philippine Islands, are stated in the opinion of the court.
Page 195 U. S. 110
MR. JUSTICE DAY delivered the opinion of the court.
Thomas E. Kepner, a practicing lawyer in the city of Manila,
Philippine Islands, was charged with a violation of the law in the
embezzlement of the funds of his client (
estafa). Upon
trial, in November, 1901, in the court of first instance, without a
jury, he was acquitted, it being the judgment of the court that he
was not guilty of the offense charged. Upon appellate proceedings
by the United States to the Supreme Court of the Philippine
Islands, the judgment of the court of first instance, finding the
accused not guilty, was reversed, and Kepner was found guilty and
sentenced to a term of imprisonment of one
Page 195 U. S. 111
year, eight months and twenty-one days, suspended from any
public office or place of trust, and deprived of the right of
suffrage.
Error was assigned in the appellate court upon the ground that
the accused had been put in jeopardy a second time by the appellate
proceedings, in violation of the law against putting a person twice
in jeopardy for the same offense, and contrary to the Constitution
of the United States.
The appeal was taken by the United States on December 20, 1901.
A motion to dismiss the appeal was made on January 1, 1902. The
motion was finally overruled on October 11, 1902; the final
decision in the case, finding the accused guilty and imposing the
sentence, was rendered on December 3, 1902.
A proper consideration of the question herein made renders it
necessary to notice some of the steps by which the jurisdiction of
the courts in which the accused was tried was established.
The United States acquired the Philippine Islands by cession
under the treaty of peace executed at Paris, between the United
States and Spain, on December 10, 1898, the final ratifications
being exchanged April 11, 1899.
The islands after American occupation had been under military
rule prior to the creation of the Philippine Commission.
Under the control of the military government, orders had been
issued, among others, military order number 58, dated April 23,
1900, which order was in part as follows:
"
General Orders, No. 58"
"Manila, P.I., April 23, 1900"
"In the interests of justice and to safeguard the civil
liberties of the inhabitants of these islands, the criminal code of
procedure now in force therein is hereby amended in certain of its
important provisions as indicated in the following enumerated
sections:"
"
* * * *
Page 195 U. S.
112
"
"SEC. 3. All public offences triable in courts of first instance
or in courts of similar jurisdiction, now established or that
hereafter may be established, must be prosecuted by complaint or
information."
"
* * * *"
"
Rights of accused at the trial"
"SEC. 15. In all criminal prosecutions, the defendant shall be
entitled:"
"1. To appear and defend in person and by counsel at every stage
of the proceedings."
"2. To be informed of the nature and cause of the
accusation."
"3. To testify as a witness in his own behalf; but if a
defendant offers himself as a witness, he may be cross-examined as
any other witness. His neglect or refusal to be a witness shall not
in any manner prejudice or be used against him."
"4. To be exempt from testifying against himself."
"5. To be confronted at the trial by and to cross-examine the
witnesses against him. Where the testimony of a witness for the
prosecution has previously been taken down by question and answers
in the presence of the accused or his counsel, the defence having
had an opportunity to cross-examine the witness, the deposition of
the latter may be read, upon satisfactory proof to the court that
he is dead or insane, or cannot with due diligence be found in the
islands."
"6. To have compulsory process issue for obtaining witnesses in
his own favor."
"7. To have a speedy and public trial."
"8. To have the right of appeal in all cases."
"
* * * *"
"SEC. 43. From all final judgments of the courts of first
instance or courts of similar jurisdiction, and in all cases in
which the law now provides for appeals from said courts, an appeal
may be taken to the Supreme Court as hereinafter prescribed."
"SEC. 44. Either party may appeal from a final judgment
Page 195 U. S. 113
or from an order made after judgment affecting the substantial
rights of the appellant or in any case now permitted by law. The
United States may also appeal from a judgment for the defendant
rendered on a demurrer to an information or complaint, and from an
order dismissing a complaint or information."
"
* * * *"
"SEC. 50. It shall not be necessary to forward to the Supreme
Court the record, or any part thereof, of any case in which there
shall have been an acquittal, or in which the sentence imposed does
not exceed confinement in prison for one year, or a fine of 250
pesos, exclusive of costs, unless such case shall have been duly
appealed. But such sentences shall be executed upon the order of
the court in which the trial was had. The record in cases in which
the death penalty, or imprisonment exceeding one year, or a fine
exceeding 250 pesos, exclusive of costs of trial, shall have been
imposed, shall be forwarded to the clerk of the criminal branch of
the Supreme Court within twenty days, but not earlier than fifteen
days after the rendition of the sentence. All cases involving
sentence of death, or of imprisonment exceeding six years, or of
fine exceeding 1250 pesos, or in which an appeal shall have been
taken, shall be submitted to the criminal branch of the Supreme
Court, and shall thereafter take the same course as is now provided
by law. Cases forwarded to the Supreme Court involving sentences
less serious than those hereinbefore last mentioned, and not
appealed, shall be referred by the clerk to the ministerio fiscal
for consideration, and if the latter return the same concurring in
the sentence imposed, the record shall immediately be returned to
the trial court for execution of sentence. If the ministerio fiscal
shall not concur in the sentence, the case shall be submitted to
the criminal branch of the Supreme Court, and shall thereafter take
the same course as is now provided by law when that officer shall
recommend a sentence in any respect more severe than that imposed
by the trial judge, and for the consideration of the
Page 195 U. S. 114
court, without the necessity of a further defence or hearing,
when that officer recommends a lighter sentence."
This order was amended by an act of the commission (No.194),
passed August 10, 1901, and is as follows:
"(G) No.194. An act conferring jurisdiction on justices of the
peace, &c."
"SEC. 1. Every justice of the peace in the Philippine Islands is
hereby invested with authority to make preliminary investigation of
any crime alleged to have been committed within his municipality,
jurisdiction to hear and determine which is by law now vested in
the judges of courts of first instance."
"SEC. 4. So much of section fifty of said general order number
fifty-eight as requires courts of first instance, or clerks
thereof, to forward to the Supreme Court or the ministerio fiscal
the record of all criminal cases for revision or consideration,
except where the death penalty is imposed as the judgment or part
of the judgment of such court of first instance, is hereby
repealed, and it shall not be necessary to forward to the Supreme
Court or the ministerio fiscal the record, or any part thereof, of
any case in which there shall have been an acquittal, or in which
the penalty imposed is not death, unless such case shall have been
duly appealed as provided in such order. The records of all cases
in which the death penalty shall have been imposed by any court of
first instance, whether the defendant shall have appealed or not,
shall be forwarded to the Supreme Court for investigation and
judgment as law and justice shall dictate."
Courts were established for the islands under an act passed by
the commission June 11, 1901:
"SEC. 2. The judicial power of the government of the Philippine
Islands shall be vested in a Supreme Court, courts of first
instance, and courts of justices of the peace, together with such
special jurisdictions of municipal courts, and other special
tribunals as now are or hereafter may be authorized by law. The two
courts first named shall be courts of record."
"
* * * *
Page 195 U. S.
115
"
"SEC. 16. The jurisdiction of the Supreme Court shall be of two
kinds:"
"1. Original; and"
"2. Appellate."
"SEC. 17. The Supreme Court shall have original jurisdiction to
issue writs of mandamus, certiorari, prohibition, habeas corpus and
quo warranto in the cases and in the manner prescribed in the Code
of Civil Procedure, and to hear and determine the controversies
thus brought before it, and in other cases provided by law."
"SEC. 18. The Supreme Court shall have appellate jurisdiction of
all actions and special proceedings properly brought to it from
courts of first instance, and from other tribunals from whose
judgment the law shall specially provide an appeal to the Supreme
Court."
"SEC.19. The Supreme Court shall have power to issue writs of
certiorari and all other auxiliary writs and process necessary to
the complete exercise of its original or appellate
jurisdiction."
"
* * * *"
"SEC. 39. The existing audiencia or Supreme Court is hereby
abolished, and the Supreme Court provided by this act is
substituted in place thereof."
"
* * * *"
"SEC. 55. The jurisdiction of courts of first instance shall be
of two kinds:"
"1. Original; and"
"2. Appellate."
"SEC. 56. Courts of first instance shall have original
jurisdiction. . . . 6. In all criminal cases in which a penalty of
more than six months' imprisonment or a fine exceeding one hundred
dollars may be imposed."
"
* * * *"
"SEC. 65. The existing courts of first instance are hereby
abolished, and the courts of first instance provided by this act
are substituted in place thereof. "
Page 195 U. S. 116
"SEC. 66. There shall be courts of justice of the peace as in
this section provided: "
"1. The existing courts of justices of the peace, established by
military orders since the thirteenth day of August, eighteen
hundred and ninety-eight, are hereby recognized and continued, and
the justices of such courts shall continue to hold office during
the pleasure of the commission."
"2. In every province in which there now is, or shall hereafter
be established, a court of first instance, courts of justice of the
peace shall be established in every municipality thereof which
shall be organized under the municipal code, or which has been
organized and is being conducted as a municipality when this act
shall take effect, under and by virtue of the municipal code."
"
* * * *"
"SEC. 68. A justice of the peace shall have original
jurisdiction for the trial of all misdemeanors and offences arising
within the municipality of which he is a justice, in all cases
where the sentence might not by law exceed six months' imprisonment
or a fine of one hundred dollars; . . ."
On July 1, 1902, Congress passed an act, 32 Stat. 691:
"An Act temporarily to provide for the administration of the
affairs of civil government in the Philippine Islands, and for
other purposes."
"
Be it enacted by the Senate and House of Representatives of
the United States of America in Congress assembled, That the
action of the President of the United States in creating the
Philippine Commission and authorizing said commission to exercise
the powers of government to the extent and in the manner and form
and subject to the regulation and control set forth in the
instructions of the President to the Philippine Commission, dated
April seventh, nineteen hundred, and in creating the offices of
civil governor and vice-governor of the Philippine Islands, and
authorizing said civil governor and vice-governor to exercise the
powers of government to the extent and in the manner and form set
forth in the executive
Page 195 U. S. 117
order dated June twenty-first, nineteen hundred and one, and in
establishing four executive departments of government in said
islands as set forth in the act of the Philippine Commission,
entitled 'An act providing an organization for the departments of
the interior, of commerce and police, of finance and justice, and
of public instruction,' enacted September sixth, nineteen hundred
and one, is hereby approved, ratified, and confirmed, and until
otherwise provided by law the said islands shall continue to be
governed as thereby and herein provided, and all laws passed
hereafter by the Philippine Commission shall have an enacting
clause as follows: 'By authority of the United States, be it
enacted by the Philippine Commission.' The provisions of section
eighteen hundred and ninety-one of the Revised Statutes of eighteen
hundred and seventy-eight shall not apply to the Philippine
Islands."
"Future appointments of civil governor, vice-governor, members
of said commission, and heads of executive departments shall be
made by the President, by and with the advice and consent of the
Senate."
"
* * * *"
"SEC. 5. That no law shall be enacted in said islands which
shall deprive any person of life, liberty or property without due
process of law, or deny to any person therein the equal protection
of the laws."
"That in all criminal prosecutions the accused shall enjoy the
right to be heard by himself and counsel, to demand the nature and
cause of the accusation against him, to have a speedy and public
trial, to meet the witnesses face to face, and to have compulsory
process to compel the attendance of witnesses in his behalf."
"That no person shall be held to answer for a criminal offence
without due process of law, and no person for the same offence
shall be twice put in jeopardy of punishment, nor shall be
compelled in any criminal case to be a witness against
himself."
"That all persons shall before conviction be bailable by
sufficient sureties, except for capital offences. "
Page 195 U. S. 118
"That no law impairing the obligation of contracts shall be
enacted."
"That no person shall be imprisoned for debt."
"That the privilege of the writ of habeas corpus shall not be
suspended, unless when in cases of rebellion, insurrection or
invasion the public safety may require it, in either of which
events the same may be suspended by the President, or by the
governor, with the approval of the Philippine Commission, whenever
during such period the necessity for such suspension shall
exist."
"That no
ex post facto law or bill of attainder shall
be enacted."
"That no law granting a title of nobility shall be enacted, and
no person holding any office of profit or trust in said islands
shall, without the consent of the Congress of the United States,
accept any present, emolument, office or title of any kind whatever
from any king, queen, prince or foreign State."
"That excessive bail shall not be required, nor excessive fines
imposed, nor cruel and unusual punishment inflicted."
"That the right to be secure against unreasonable searches and
seizures shall not be violated."
"That neither slavery nor involuntary servitude, except as a
punishment for crime whereof the party shall have been duly
convicted, shall exist in said islands."
"That no law shall be passed abridging the freedom of speech or
of the press, or the right of the people peaceably to assemble and
petition the Government for redress of grievances."
"That no law shall be made respecting an establishment of
religion or prohibiting the free exercise thereof, and that the
free exercise and enjoyment of religious profession and worship,
without discrimination or preference, shall forever be
allowed."
"That no money shall be paid out of the treasury except in
pursuance of an appropriation by law."
"That the rule of taxation in said islands shall be uniform.
"
Page 195 U. S. 119
"That no private or local bill which may be enacted into law
shall embrace more than one subject, and that subject shall be
expressed in the title of the bill."
"That no warrant shall issue but upon probable cause, supported
by oath or affirmation, and particularly describing the place to be
searched and the person or things to be seized."
"That all money collected on any tax levied or assessed for a
special purpose shall be treated as a special fund in the treasury
and paid out for such purpose only."
"
* * * *"
"SEC. 9. That the Supreme Court and the courts of first instance
of the Philippine Islands shall possess and exercise jurisdiction
as heretofore provided, and such additional jurisdiction as shall
hereafter be prescribed by the government of said islands, subject
to the power of said Government to change the practice and method
of procedure. The municipal courts of said islands shall possess
and exercise jurisdiction as heretofore provided by the Philippine
Commission, subject in all matters to such alteration and amendment
as may be hereafter enacted by law, and the chief justice and
associate justices of the Supreme Court shall hereafter be
appointed by the President, by and with the advice and consent of
the Senate, and shall receive the compensation heretofore
prescribed by the commission until otherwise provided by Congress.
The judges of the court of first instance shall be appointed by the
civil governor, by and with the advice and consent of the
Philippine Commission:
Provided, That the admiralty
jurisdiction of the Supreme Court and courts of first instance
shall not be changed except by act of Congress."
"SEC. 10. That the Supreme Court of the United States shall have
jurisdiction to review, revise, reverse, modify or affirm the final
judgments and decrees of the Supreme Court of the Philippine
Islands in all actions, cases, causes and proceedings now pending
therein or hereafter determined thereby in which the Constitution
or any statute, treaty, title, right or privilege of the United
States is involved, or in causes in
Page 195 U. S. 120
which the value in controversy exceeds twenty-five thousand
dollars, or in which the title or possession of real estate
exceeding in value the sum of twenty-five thousand dollars, to be
ascertained by the oath of either party or of other competent
witnesses, is involved or brought in question, and such final
judgments or decrees may and can be reviewed, revised, reversed,
modified or affirmed by said Supreme Court of the United States on
appeal or writ of error by the party aggrieved, in the same manner,
under the same regulations, and by the same procedure, as far as
applicable, as the final judgments and decrees of the Circuit
Courts of the United States."
The act just quoted became a law before the final conviction of
the accused in the Supreme Court of the islands.
It is contended by the Government that that part of the law
under immediate consideration, which provides that no person, for
the same offense, shall be twice put in jeopardy, must be construed
in view of the system of laws prevailing in the islands before the
same were ceded to the United States, and that the purpose of
Congress was to make effectual the jurisprudence of the islands as
known and established before American occupation, and that the
provision against double jeopardy must be read in the light of the
understanding of that expression in the civil law, or rather the
Spanish law as it was then in force.
The citations in the brief of the learned counsel for the
Government seem to establish that, under the Spanish law, as
theretofore administered, one who had been convicted by a judgment
of the court of last resort could not again be prosecuted for the
same offense. We notice some of these provisions:
In Spanish law, the doctrine found expression in the Fuero Real
(A.D. 1255) and the Siete Partidas (A.D. 1263).
"After a man, accused of any crime, has been acquitted by the
court, no one can afterwards accuse him of the same offence (except
in certain specified cases). Fuero Real, lib. iv, tit. xxi, 1, 13.
"
Page 195 U. S. 121
"If a man is acquitted by a valid judgment of any offence of
which he has been accused, no other person can afterwards accuse
him of the offence (except in certain cases). Siete Partidas, Part
VII, tit. i, 1. xii."
In the encyclopedia of Spanish law, published by Don Lorenzo
Arrazola in 1848, it is said, in considering the persons who may be
accused of crime:
"It is another of the general exceptions that a person cannot be
accused who has formerly been accused and adjudged of the same
crime, since the most essential effect of all judicial decisions
upon which execution can issue is to constitute unalterable law.
Tomo I, pag. 511."
Under that system of law, it seems that a person was not
regarded as being in jeopardy in the legal sense until there had
been a final judgment in the court of last resort. The lower courts
were deemed examining courts, having preliminary jurisdiction, and
the accused was not finally convicted or acquitted until the case
had been passed upon in the audiencia, or Supreme Court, whose
judgment was subject to review in the Supreme Court at Madrid for
errors of law, with power to grant a new trial. The trial was
regarded as one continuous proceeding, and the protection given was
against a second conviction after this final trial had been
concluded in due form of law. The change introduced under military
order No. 58, as amended by act 194 of the commission, made the
judgment of the court of first instance final, in cases other than
capital, whether the accused be convicted or acquitted, unless an
appeal was prosecuted by the Government or the accused in the
manner pointed out.
In order to determine what Congress meant in the language used
in the act under consideration, "No person for the same offence
shall be twice put in jeopardy of punishment," we must look to the
origin and source of the expression and the judicial construction
put upon it before the enactment in question was passed. A
consideration of the events preceding this regulation makes evident
the intention of Congress to
Page 195 U. S. 122
carry some at least of the essential principles of American
constitutional jurisprudence to these islands, and to engraft them
upon the law of this people, newly subject to our jurisdiction.
That it was the intention of the President, in the instructions
to the Philippine Commission, to adopt a well known part of the
fundamental law of the United States, and to give much of the
beneficent protection of the bill of rights to the people of the
Philippine Islands, is not left to inference, for, in his
instructions, dated April 7, 1900, (
see Public Laws and
Resolutions of Philippine Com. 6-9,) he says:
"In all the forms of government and administrative provisions
which they are authorized to prescribe, the commission should bear
in mind that the government which they are establishing is designed
not for our satisfaction or for the expression of our theoretical
views, but for the happiness, peace and prosperity of the people of
the Philippine Islands, and the measures adopted should be made to
conform to their customs, their habits, and even their prejudices
to the fullest extent consistent with the accomplishment of the
indispensable requisites of just and effective government;"
But he was careful to add:
"At the same time, the commission should bear in mind, and the
people of the islands should be made plainly to understand, that
there are certain great principles of government which have been
made the basis of our governmental system which we deem essential
to the rule of law and the maintenance of individual freedom, and
of which they have, unfortunately, been denied the experience
possessed by us; that there are also certain practical rules of
government which we have found to be essential to the preservation
of these great principles of liberty and law, and that these
principles and these rules of government must be established and
maintained in their islands for the sake of their liberty and
happiness, however much they may conflict with the customs or laws
of procedure with which they are familiar. It is evident that the
most
Page 195 U. S. 123
enlightened thought of the Philippine Islands fully appreciates
the importance of these principles and rules, and they will
inevitably within a short time command universal assent. Upon every
division and branch of the government of the Philippines,
therefore, must be imposed these inviolable rules:"
"That no person shall be deprived of life, liberty or property
without due process of law; that private property shall not be
taken for public use without just compensation; that, in all
criminal prosecutions, the accused shall enjoy the right to a
speedy and public trial, to be informed of the nature and cause of
the accusation, to be confronted with the witnesses against him, to
have compulsory process for obtaining witnesses in his favor, and
to have the assistance of counsel for his defence; that excessive
bail shall not be required, nor excessive fines imposed, nor cruel
and unusual punishment inflicted; that no person shall be put twice
in jeopardy for the same offence or be compelled in any criminal
case to be a witness against himself; that the right to be secure
against unreasonable searches and seizures shall not be violated;
that neither slavery nor involuntary servitude shall exist except
as a punishment for crime; that no bill of attainer or
ex post
facto law shall be passed; that no law shall be passed
abridging the freedom of speech or of the press or of the rights of
the people to peaceably assemble and petition the government for a
redress of grievances; that no law shall be made respecting an
establishment of religion or prohibiting the free exercise thereof,
and that the free exercise and enjoyment of religious profession
and worship without discrimination or preference shall forever be
allowed."
These words are not strange to the American lawyer or student of
constitutional history. They are the familiar language of the Bill
of Rights, slightly changed in form, but not in substance, as found
in the first nine amendments to the Constitution of the United
States, with the omission of the provision preserving the right to
trial by jury and the right of the people to bear arms, and adding
the prohibition of the Thirteenth Amendment against slavery or
involuntary servitude
Page 195 U. S. 124
except as a punishment for crime, and that of Art. 1, § 9,
to the passage of bills of attainder and
ex post facto
laws. These principles were not taken from the Spanish law; they
were carefully collated from our own Constitution, and embody
almost verbatim the safeguards of that instrument for the
protection of life and liberty.
When Congress came to pass the act of July 1, 1902, it enacted,
almost in the language of the President's instructions, the Bill of
Rights of our Constitution. In view of the expressed declaration of
the President, followed by the action of Congress, both adopting,
with little alteration, the provisions of the Bill of Rights, there
would seem to be no room for argument that, in this form, it was
intended to carry to the Philippine Islands those principles of our
Government which the President declared to be established as rules
of law for the maintenance of individual freedom, at the same time
expressing regret that the inhabitants of the islands had not
theretofore enjoyed their benefit.
How can it be successfully maintained that these expressions of
fundamental rights, which have been the subject of frequent
adjudication in the courts of this country, and the maintenance of
which has been ever deemed essential to our Government, could be
used by Congress in any other sense than that which has been placed
upon them in construing the instrument from which they were
taken?
It is a well settled rule of construction that language used in
a statute which has a settled and well known meaning, sanctioned by
judicial decision, is presumed to be used in that sense by the
legislative body.
The Abbotsford, 98 U. S.
440.
It is not necessary to determine in this case whether the
jeopardy provision in the Bill of Rights would have become part of
the law of the islands without Congressional legislation. The power
of Congress to make rules and regulations for territory
incorporated in or owned by the United States is settled by an
unbroken line of decisions of this court, and is no longer open to
question.
American Ins. Co. v.
Canter, 1
Page 195 U. S. 125
Pet. 511;
Murphy v. Ramsey, 114 U. S.
15;
Mormon Church v. United States,
136 U. S. 1,
136 U. S. 42,
136 U. S. 43;
Downes v. Bidwell, 182 U. S. 244;
Hawaii v. Mankichi, 190 U. S. 197.
This case does not call for a discussion of the limitations of such
power, nor require determination of the question whether the
jeopardy clause became the law of the islands after the
ratification of the treaty without Congressional action, as the act
of Congress made it the law of these possessions when the accused
was tried and convicted.
It is argued that, in the act of July 1, 1902, Congress
recognized the jurisdiction of the Philippine courts in section 9
as follows:
"SEC. 9. That the Supreme Court and the courts of first instance
of the Philippine Islands shall possess and exercise jurisdiction
as heretofore provided, and such additional jurisdiction as shall
hereafter be prescribed by the government of said islands, subject
to the power of said government to change the practice and method
of procedure."
The argument is that Congress intended to leave the right of
appeal as provided by military order, No. 58, as amended by the
commission, in full force.
But Congress, in section 5, had already specifically provided
that no person should be put twice in jeopardy of punishment for
the same offense. While section 9 recognizes the established
jurisdiction of the courts of the islands, it was not intended to
repeal the specific guaranty of section 5, which is direct
legislation pertaining to the particular subject. It is a well
settled principle of construction that specific terms covering the
given subject matter will prevail over general language of the same
or another statute which might otherwise prove controlling.
In
re Rouse, Hazard & Co., 91 Fed.Rep. 96, 100, and cases
therein cited;
Townsend v. Little, 109 U.
S. 504,
109 U. S.
512.
In ascertaining the meaning of the phrase taken from the Bill of
Rights, it must be construed with reference to the common law from
which it was taken. 1 Kent, Com. 336.
United
Page 195 U. S. 126
States v. Wong Kim Ark, 169 U.
S. 649 in which this court said:
"In this, as in other respects, it [a constitutional provision]
must be interpreted in the light of the common law, the principles
and history of which were familiarly known to the framers of the
Constitution.
Minor v. Happersett, 21
Wall. 162;
Ex parte Wilson, 144 U. S.
417,
144 U. S. 422;
Boyd v.
United States, 116 U. S. 616,
116 U. S.
624,
116 U. S. 625;
Smith v.
Alabama, 124 U. S. 465. The language of
the Constitution, as has been well said, could not be understood
without reference to the common law. 1 Kent's Com. 336; Bradley,
J., in
Moore v. United States, 91 U. S.
270,
91 U. S. 274."
At the common law, protection from second jeopardy for the same
offense clearly included immunity from second prosecution where the
court having jurisdiction had acquitted the accused of the offense.
The rule is thus stated by Hawkins in his Pleas of the Crown,
quoted by Mr. Justice Story in
United States v. Gibert et
al., 2 Sumner, 19, 39:
"The plea (says he) of
autre fois acquit is grounded on
this maxim, that a man shall not be brought into danger of his life
for one and the same offence more than once. From whence it is
generally taken by all our books as an undoubted consequence that,
where a man is once found not guilty on an indictment or appeal,
free from error and well commenced before any court which hath
jurisdiction of the cause, he may by the common law, in all cases,
plead such acquittal in bar of any subsequent indictment or appeal
for the same crime."
In this court, it was said by Mr. Justice Miller, in
Ex parte
Lange, 18 Wall. 163:
"The common law not only prohibited a second punishment for the
same offence, but went further and forbid a second trial for the
same offence, whether the accused had suffered punishment or not
and whether, in the former trial, he had been acquitted or
convicted."
And, in as late a case as
Wemyss v. Hopkins, L.R. 10
Q.B. 378, it was held that a conviction before a court of
competent
Page 195 U. S. 127
jurisdiction, even without a jury, was a bar to a second
prosecution.
In that case, the appellant had been summarily convicted before
a magistrate for negligently and by willful misconduct driving a
carriage against a horse ridden by the respondent, and was
afterwards convicted on the same facts for unlawful assault. It was
held that the first conviction was a bar to the second. In the
course of the opinion, it was said by Blackburn, J.: .
"I think the fact that the appellant had been convicted by
justices under one act of Parliament for what amounted to an
assault is a bar to a conviction under another act of Parliament
for the same assault. The defence does not arise on a plea of
autre fois convict, but on the well established rule at
common law that, where a person has been convicted and punished for
an offence by a court of competent jurisdiction,
transit in rem
judicatum, that is, the conviction shall be a bar to all
further proceedings for the same offence, and he shall not be
punished again for the same matter; otherwise, there might be two
different punishments for the same offence. The only point raised
is whether a defence in the nature of a plea of
autre fois
convict would extend to a conviction before two justices whose
jurisdiction is created by statute. I think the fact that the
jurisdiction of the justices is created by statute makes no
difference. Where the conviction is by a court of competent
jurisdiction, it matters not whether the conviction is by a summary
proceeding before justices or by trial before a jury."
In the same case, it was said by Lush, J.:
"I am also of opinion that the second conviction should be
quashed upon the ground that it violated a fundamental principle of
law that no person shall be prosecuted twice for the same offence.
The act charged against the appellant on the first occasion was an
assault upon the respondent while she was riding a horse on the
highway, and it therefore became an offence for which the appellant
might be punished under either of two
Page 195 U. S. 128
statutes. The appellant was prosecuted for the assault and
convicted under one of the statutes, 3 and 4, Wm. IV, c. 50, §
78, and fined, and he therefore cannot be afterwards convicted
again for the same act under the other statute."
It is true that some of the definitions given by the textbook
writers, and found in the reports, limit jeopardy to a second
prosecution after verdict by a jury; but the weight of authority,
as well as decisions of this court, have sanctioned the rule that a
person has been in jeopardy when he is regularly charged with a
crime before a tribunal properly organized and competent to try
him, certainly so after acquittal.
Coleman v. Tennessee,
97 U. S. 509.
Undoubtedly in those jurisdictions where a trial of one accused of
crime can only be to a jury, and a verdict of acquittal or
conviction must be by a jury, no legal jeopardy can attach until a
jury has been called and charged with the deliverance of the
accused. But, protection being against a second trial for the same
offense, it is obvious that, where one has been tried before a
competent tribunal having jurisdiction, he has been in jeopardy as
much as he could have been in those tribunals where a jury is alone
competent to convict or acquit.
People v. Miner, 144
Illinois 308;
State v. Bowen, 45 Minnesota 145;
State
v. Layne, 96 Tennessee 668.
In
United States v. Sanges, 144 U.
S. 310, it was held that a writ of error did not lie in
favor of the United States in a criminal case, Mr. Justice Gray
said:
"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.Ab.Trial, L. 9; Error, B; 1 Chit.Crim.Law,
657, 747; Stark.Crim. Pl. (2d ed.) 357, 367, 371; Archb.Crim. Pl.
(12th Eng. and 6th Am. ed.) 177, 199."
"But whatever may have been, or may be, the law of
Page 195 U. S. 129
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."
In the course of the opinion Justice Gray cites, among other
cases,
Com. v. Commings and
Same v. McGinnis,
opinion by Chief Justice Shaw, 3 Cush. 212. In Archbold Cr. Pl.
& Pr. Pomeroy's ed. 199, it was said: "There is no instance of
error being brought upon a judgment for a defendant after an
acquittal."
That the learned justice could not have intended to intimate
that a second prosecution could be allowed by statute after an
acquittal of the offense is shown by the subsequent decision of
this court in
United States v. Ball, 163 U.
S. 662, in which Mr. Justice Gray also delivered the
opinion of the court. In that case, an attempt was made to
prosecute for the second time one Millard F. Ball, who had been
acquitted upon a defective indictment, which had been held bad upon
the proceedings in error prosecuted by others jointly indicted with
Millard F. Ball, who had been convicted at the trial. The court
below held Ball's plea of former jeopardy to be bad. But this court
reversed the judgment, and in the course of the opinion it was
said:
"The Constitution of the United States, in the Fifth Amendment,
declares, 'nor shall any person be subject to be twice put in
jeopardy of life or limb.' The prohibition is not against being
twice punished, but against being twice put in jeopardy, and the
accused, whether convicted or acquitted, is equally put in jeopardy
at the first trial. An acquittal before a court having no
jurisdiction is, of course, like all the proceedings in the case,
absolutely void, and therefore no bar to subsequent indictment and
trial in a court which has jurisdiction of the offense.
Commonwealth v. Peters, 12 Met. 387; 2 Hawk.P.C.C.
Page 195 U. S. 130
35 § 3; 1 Bishop's Crim.Law, § 1028. But although the
indictment was fatally defective, yet, if the court had
jurisdiction of the cause and of the party, its judgment is not
void, but only voidable by writ of error; and, until so avoided,
cannot be collaterally impeached. If the judgment is upon a verdict
of guilty, and unreversed, it stands good and warrants the
punishment of the defendant accordingly, and he could not be
discharged by a writ of habeas corpus.
Ex parte Parks,
93 U. S.
18. If the judgment is upon an acquittal, the defendant,
indeed, will not seek to have it reversed, and the government
cannot.
United States v. Sanges, 144 U. S.
310. But the fact that the judgment of a court having
jurisdiction of the case is practically final affords no reason for
allowing its validity and conclusiveness to be impugned in another
case. . . .
As to the defendant who had been acquitted by the
verdict duly returned and received, the court could take no other
action than to order his discharge. The verdict of acquittal was
final, and could not be reviewed, on error or otherwise, without
putting him twice in jeopardy, and thereby violating the
Constitution. However it may be in England, in this country a
verdict of acquittal, although not followed by any judgment, is a
bar to a subsequent prosecution for the same offense.
United
States v. Sanges, 144 U. S. 310;
Commonwealth
v. Tuck, 20 Pick. 356, 365;
West v. State, 2
Zabriskie [22 N.J.Law], 212, 231; 1 Lead.Crim.Cas. 532."
It is, then, the settled law of this court that former jeopardy
includes one who has been acquitted by a verdict duly rendered,
although no judgment be entered on the verdict, and it was found
upon a defective indictment. The protection is not, as the court
below held, against the peril of second punishment, but against
being again tried for the same offense.
We are not here dealing with those statutes which give to the
Government a right of review upon the steps merely preliminary to a
trial and before the accused is legally put in jeopardy, as where a
discharge is had upon motion to quash or a demurrer to the
indictment is sustained before jeopardy
Page 195 U. S. 131
has attached. Such statutes have been quite generally sustained
in jurisdictions which deny the right of second trial where a
competent court has convicted or acquitted the accused.
People
v. Webb, 38 California 467. Mr. Bishop, in his work upon
Criminal Law, sums up the scope and authority of such statutes as
follows:
"A legislative provision for the rehearing of criminal causes
cannot be interpreted -- or, at least, it cannot have force -- to
violate the constitutional rule under consideration, whatever be
the words in which the provision is expressed. When, therefore, a
defendant has been once in jeopardy, the jeopardy cannot be
repeated without his consent, whatever statute may exist on the
subject. Such a statute will be interpreted with the Constitution,
and be held to apply only to cases where it constitutionally may.
And if it undertakes to give to the State the right of appeal, to
retry the party charged, after acquittal, it is invalid. And so the
writ of error, or the like, allowed to the State, can authorize the
State to procure the reversal of erroneous proceedings and commence
anew, only in those cases in which the first proceeding did not
create legal jeopardy."
1 Bishop Criminal Law (5th ed.), § 1026.
The author's conclusion has support in the case of
People v.
Miner, 144 Illinois 308,
supra, wherein a statute
giving an appeal when the accused had been acquitted before a
competent tribunal was held in violation of section 10, article 2,
of the constitution of that State, providing that no person shall
be put twice in jeopardy for the same offense. So, in the case of
People v. Webb, 38 California 467, a statute undertaking
to give the right of appeal to the people in criminal cases was
held to be limited to the cases in which errors in the proceedings
may occur before legal jeopardy has attached. In the course of a
well considered opinion, it was said:
"The question thus presented is of most grave importance, and,
so far as we are advised, has never been directly passed upon by
this court; hence, we have given it a most patient consideration,
and, after a careful examination of the authorities
Page 195 U. S. 132
as to the construction of similar provisions in the
constitutions of other States and the Constitution of the United
States, we are entirely satisfied that this court has no authority
in criminal cases, under our State constitution, to order a new
trial of a defendant at the instance of the prosecution for mere
errors in the ruling of the court during the progress of the trial
after the jury have been charged with the case and have rendered a
verdict of not guilty. No case has been called to our attention,
and, after a most diligent examination of authorities, we have not
been able to find a single American case where a retrial has been
ordered or sanctioned by an appellate court at the instance of the
prosecution, after the defendant had once been put upon his trial
for an alleged felony, upon a valid indictment before a competent
court and jury and acquitted by the verdict of such jury; but we
find a vast number of adjudications of the highest judicial
tribunals of the different States and many of the Federal courts to
the effect that no such retrial is authorized by the common law,
and is directly interdicted by the Constitution of the United
States, and also of most of the several States. The universal maxim
of the common law of England, as Sir William Blackstone expresses
it, '
that no man is to be brought into jeopardy of his life
more than once for the same offence,' is embraced in article V
of amendments to the Constitution of the United States, and in the
constitutions of several States, in the following language:
'
Nor shall any person be subject for the same offence to be
twice put in jeopardy of life or limb;' and in many other
States, the same principle is incorporated in the organic law, in
language substantially the same as hereinbefore quoted from the
constitution of this State. While the constitutions of some few
States are destitute of this or any similar provision, other state
constitutions, such as of New Hampshire, Rhode Island, New Jersey,
and Iowa merely interdict a second trial for the same offence after
acquittal."
The case of
State v. Lee, 65 Connecticut 265, in the
reasoning of the court, seems opposed to this view. But no
reference
Page 195 U. S. 133
is made in the course of the opinion to any constitutional
requirement in Connecticut as to double jeopardy. An examination of
the constitution of that State and amendments as published in
General Statutes of Connecticut Revision of 1902, discloses no
provision upon the subject of jeopardy, and we conclude there is
none.
The exceptional character of the decision in
State v.
Lee is stated by the learned editor of American State Reports
in a note to the case as reported in 48 Am.St.Rep. 202, in the
following language:
"This case, in its view of former jeopardy, stands out in bold
relief against the commonly understood meaning of what constitutes
once in jeopardy."
And further:
"The law almost universally prevalent is that a verdict of
acquittal in a criminal ease is final and conclusive, and that
there can be no new trial of a criminal prosecution after an
acquittal in it."
People v. Corning, 2 N.Y. 9; 49 Am.Dec. 364, and note;
48 Am.St.Rep. 213, 214.
The
Ball case, 163 U.S.
supra, establishes
that to try a man after a verdict of acquittal is to put him twice
in jeopardy, although the verdict was not followed by judgment.
That is practically the case under consideration, viewed in the
most favorable aspect for the Government. The court of first
instance, having jurisdiction to try the question of the guilt or
innocence of the accused, found Kepner not guilty; to try him again
upon the merits, even in an appellate court, is to put him a second
time in jeopardy for the same offense, if Congress used the terms
as construed by this court in passing upon their meaning. We have
no doubt that Congress must be held to have intended to have used
these words in the well settled sense as declared and settled by
the decisions of this court.
It follows that military order No. 58, as amended by act of the
Philippine Commission, No.194, insofar as it undertakes to permit
an appeal by the government after acquittal, was
Page 195 U. S. 134
repealed by the act of Congress of July, 1902, providing
immunity from second jeopardy for the same criminal offense.
This conclusion renders it unnecessary to consider, if the
question was presented in this case, whether the accused was
entitled to the right of a trial by jury.
Judgment reversed and prisoner discharged.
MR. JUSTICE HOLMES, with whom concurred MR. JUSTICE WHITE and
MR. JUSTICE McKENNA, dissenting.
I regret that I am unable to agree with the decision of the
majority of the court. The case is of great importance, not only in
its immediate bearing upon the administration of justice in the
Philippines, but, since the words used in the Act of Congress are
also in the Constitution, even more because the decision
necessarily will carry with it an interpretation of the latter
instrument. If, as is possible, the constitutional prohibition
should be extended to misdemeanors,
Ex parte
Lange, 18 Wall. 163,
85 U. S. 173,
we shall have fastened upon the country a doctrine covering the
whole criminal law, which, it seems to me, will have serious and
evil consequences. At the present time in this country, there is
more danger that criminals will escape justice than that they will
be subjected to tyranny. But I do not stop to consider or to state
the consequences in detail, as such considerations are not supposed
to be entertained by judges, except as inclining them to one of two
interpretations or as a tacit last resort in case of doubt. It is
more pertinent to observe that it seems to me that, logically and
rationally, a man cannot be said to be more than once in jeopardy
in the same cause, however often he may be tried. The jeopardy is
one continuing jeopardy from its beginning to the end of the cause.
Everybody agrees that the principle, in its origin, was a rule
forbidding a trial in a new and independent case where a man
already had been tried once. But there is no rule that a man may
not be tried twice in the same case. It has been decided by this
court that he may be tried a second time, even for his life, if the
jury
Page 195 U. S. 135
disagree,
United States v.
Perez, 9 Wheat. 579;
see Simmons v. United
States, 142 U. S. 148;
Logan v. United States, 144 U. S. 263;
Thompson v. United States, 155 U.
S. 271, or, notwithstanding their agreement and verdict,
if the verdict is set aside on the prisoner's exceptions for error
in the trial.
Hopt v. People, 104 U.
S. 631,
104 U. S. 635;
110 U. S. 110 U.S.
574;
114 U. S. 114 U.S.
488,
114 U. S. 492;
120 U. S. 120 U.S.
430,
120 U. S. 442;
United States v. Ball, 163 U. S. 662,
163 U. S. 672.
He even may be tried on a new indictment if the judgment on the
first is arrested upon motion.
Ex parte
Lange, 18 Wall. 163,
85 U. S. 174; 1
Bish.Crim.Law (5th ed.), § 998. I may refer further to the
opinions of Kent and Curtis in
People v. Olcott, 2
Johns.Cas. 301;
S.C. 2 Day, 507, n.;
United States v.
Morris, 1 Curtis, 23, and to the well reasoned decision in
State v. Lee, 65 Connecticut 265.
If a statute should give the right to take exceptions to the
Government, I believe it would be impossible to maintain that the
prisoner would be protected by the Constitution from being tried
again. He no more would be put in jeopardy a second time when
retried because of a mistake of law in his favor than he would be
when retried for a mistake that did him harm. It cannot matter that
the prisoner procures the second trial. In a capital case, like
Hopt v. People, a man cannot waive, and certainly will not
be taken to waive without meaning it, fundamental constitutional
rights.
Thompson v. Utah, 170 U.
S. 343,
170 U. S. 353,
170 U. S. 354.
Usually no such waiver is expressed or thought of. Moreover, it
cannot be imagined that the law would deny to a prisoner the
correction of a fatal error unless he should waive other rights so
important as to be saved by an express clause in the Constitution
of the United States.
It might be said that, when the prisoner takes exceptions, he
only is trying to get rid of a jeopardy that already exists --
that, so far as the verdict is in his favor, as when he is found
guilty of manslaughter upon an indictment for murder, according to
some decisions, he will keep it and can be retried only for the
less offense, so that the jeopardy only is continued
Page 195 U. S. 136
to the extent that it already has been determined against him,
and is continued with a chance of escape. I believe the decisions
referred to to be wrong, but, assuming them to be right, we must
consider his position at the moment when his exceptions are
sustained. The first verdict has been set aside. The jeopardy
created by that is at an end, and the question is what shall be
done with the prisoner. Since, at that moment, he no longer is in
jeopardy from the first verdict, if a second trial in the same case
is a second jeopardy even as to the less offense, he has a right to
go free. In view of these difficulties, it has been argued that, on
principle, he has that right if a mistake of law is committed at
the first trial. 1 Bish.Crim.Law (5th ed.), §§ 999, 1047.
But even Mr. Bishop admits that the decisions are otherwise, and
the point is settled in this court by the cases cited above. That
fetish happily being destroyed, the necessary alternative is that
the Constitution permits a second trial in the same case. The
reason, however, is not the fiction that a man is not in jeopardy
in case of a misdirection, for it must be admitted that he is in
jeopardy, even when the error is patent on the face of the record,
as when he is tried on a defective indictment, if judgment is not
arrested.
United States v. Ball, 163 U.
S. 662. Moreover, if the fiction were true, it would be
equally true when the misdirection was in favor of the prisoner.
The reason, I submit, is that there can be but one jeopardy in one
case. I have seen no other, except the suggestion of waiver, and
that, I think, cannot stand.
If what I have said so far is correct, no additional argument is
necessary to show that a statute may authorize an appeal by the
Government from the decision by a magistrate to a higher court, as
well as an appeal by the prisoner. The latter is everyday practice,
yet there is no doubt that the prisoner is in jeopardy at the trial
before the magistrate, and that a conviction or acquittal not
appealed from would be a bar to a second prosecution. That is what
was decided, and it is all that was decided or intimated, relevant
to this case, in
Wemyss
Page 195 U. S. 137
v. Hopkins, L.R. 10 Q.B. 378. For the reasons which I
have stated already, a second trial in the same case must be
regarded as only a continuation of the jeopardy which began with
the trial below.
MR. JUSTICE BROWN dissenting.
Under our Anglo-Saxon system of jurisprudence, I have always
supposed that a verdict of acquittal upon a valid indictment
terminated the jeopardy, that no further proceedings for a review
could be taken either in the same or in an appellate court, and
that it was extremely doubtful whether even Congress could
constitutionally authorize such review.
Conceding all this, however, I think that, in applying the
principle to the Philippine Islands, Congress intended to use the
words in the sense in which they had theretofore been understood in
those Islands. By that law, in which trial by jury was unknown, the
jeopardy did not terminate, if appeal were taken to the audiencia
or Supreme Court, until that body had acted upon the case. The
proceedings before the court of first instance were in all
important cases reviewable by the Supreme Court upon appeal, which
acted finally upon the case and terminated the jeopardy. This was
evidently the view of the military commander in General Order, No.
58, and of the Philippine Commission in the act of August 10, 1901
(No. 194), in both of which an appeal to the Supreme Court was
contemplated, even after a judgment of acquittal. I think this also
must have been the intention of Congress, particularly in view of
sec. 9 of the Philippine act of July l, 1902, which provided
that
"the Supreme Court and the courts of first instance of the
Philippine Islands shall possess and exercise jurisdiction as
heretofore provided . . . subject to the power of said government
to change the practice and method of procedure."
It seems to me impossible to suppose that Congress intended to
place in the hands of a single judge the great and dangerous power
of finally acquitting the most notorious criminals.