Peonage is a status or condition of compulsory service based
upon the indebtedness of the peon to the master. The service is
enforced unless the debt be paid, and however created, it is
involuntary servitude within the prohibition of the Thirteenth
Amendment to the federal Constitution. While the ordinary relation
of individuals to individual are subject to the control of the
states and not to that of the general government, the Thirteenth
Amendment grants to Congress power to enforce the prohibition
Page 197 U. S. 208
against involuntary servitude, including peonage, and to punish
persons holding another in peonage, and §§ 1990, 5526,
Rev.Stat. are valid legislation under such power and operate
directly on every person violating their provisions, whether in
state or territory and whether there be or not any municipal
ordinance or state law sanctioning such holding. Conviction cannot
be had under an indictment charging defendants with returning
certain persons to a condition of peonage unless there is proof
that the persons so returned had actually been in such condition
prior to the alleged act of returning them thereto.
Where the bill of exceptions, after referring to the empaneling
of the jury, contains recitals that the plaintiff produced
witnesses, followed in each case by the testimony of the witness at
the close of all of which there were farther recitals that the
parties rested, these statements are sufficient, even in the
absence of a technical affirmative recital to that effect, to show
that the bill of exceptions contains all the testimony, and
defendant is not to be deprived of a full consideration of the
question of his guilt by such omission, and even in the absence of
a motion to instruct the jury to find for the defendant, this Court
may examine the question where it is plain that error has been
committed.
No matter how severe may be the condemnation due to the conduct
of a party charged with crime, it is the duty of the court to see
that all the elements of the crime are proved or that testimony is
offered which justifies a jury in finding those elements.
Sections 1990 and 5526, Rev.Stat., read:
"SEC. 1990. The holding of any person to service or labor under
the system known as peonage is abolished and forever prohibited in
the Territory of New Mexico, or in any other territory or state of
the United States, and all acts, laws, resolutions, orders,
regulations, or usages of the Territory of New Mexico, or of any
other territory or state, which have heretofore established,
maintained, or enforced, or by virtue of which any attempt shall
hereafter be made to establish, maintain, or enforce, directly or
indirectly, the voluntary or involuntary service or labor of any
persons as peons, in liquidation of any debt or obligation, or
otherwise, are declared null and void."
"SEC. 5526. Every person who holds, arrests, returns, or causes
to be held, arrested, or returned, or in any manner aids in the
arrest or return of any person to a condition of peonage shall be
punished by a fine of not less than one thousand nor
Page 197 U. S. 209
more than five thousand dollars, or by imprisonment not less
than one year nor more than five years, or by both."
On November 21, 1901, the grand jury returned into the Circuit
Court of the United States for the Northern District of Florida an
indictment in two counts, the first of which is as follows:
"The grand jurors of the United States of America impaneled and
sworn within and for the district aforesaid, on their oaths
present, that one Samuel M. Clyatt, heretofore, to-wit: on the
eleventh day of February, in the year of our Lord one thousand nine
hundred and one, in the County of Levy, State of Florida, within
the district aforesaid, and within the jurisdiction of this Court,
did then and there unlawfully and knowingly return one Will Gordon
and one Mose Ridley to a condition of peonage by forcibly and
against the will of them, the said Will Gordon and the said Mose
Ridley, returning them, the said Will Gordon and Mose Ridley, to
work to and for Samuel M. Clyatt, D. T. Clyatt, and H. H. Tift,
copartners doing business under the firm name and style of Clyatt
& Tift, to be held by them, the said Clyatt & Tift, to work
out a debt claimed to be due to them, the said Clyatt & Tift,
by the said Will Gordon and Mose Ridley; contrary to the form of
the statute in such case made and provided, and against the peace
and dignity of the United States."
The second count differs only in charging that defendant caused
and aided in returning Gordon and Ridley. A trial resulted in a
verdict of guilty, and thereupon the defendant was sentenced to
confinement at hard labor for four years. The case was taken on
appropriate writ to the Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit,
which certified to this Court three questions. Subsequently the
entire record was brought here on a writ of certiorari, and the
case was heard on its merits.
Page 197 U. S. 215
MR. JUSTICE BREWER delivered the opinion of the Court.
The constitutionality and scope of §§ 1990 and 5526
present the first questions for our consideration. They prohibit
peonage. What is peonage? It may be defined as a status or
condition of compulsory service, based upon the indebtedness of the
peon to the master. The basal fact is indebtedness. As said by
Judge Benedict, delivering the opinion in
Jaremillo v.
Romero, 1 N.M.190, 194: "One fact existed universally: all
were indebted to their masters. This was the cord by which they
seemed bound to their master's service." Upon this is based a
condition of compulsory service. Peonage is sometimes classified as
voluntary or involuntary, but this implies simply a difference in
the mode of origin, but none in the character of the servitude. The
one exists where the debtor voluntarily contracts to enter the
service of his creditor. The other is forced upon the debtor by
some provision of law. But peonage, however created, is compulsory
service -- involuntary servitude. The peon can release himself
therefrom, it is true, by the payment of the debt, but otherwise
the service is enforced. A clear distinction exists between peonage
and the voluntary performance of labor or rendering of services in
payment of a debt. In the latter case, the debtor, though
contracting to pay his indebtedness by labor or service, and
subject, like any other contractor, to an action for damages for
breach of that contract, can elect at any time to break it, and no
law or force compels
Page 197 U. S. 216
performance or a continuance of the service. We need not stop to
consider any possible limits or exceptional cases, such as the
service of a sailor,
Robertson v. Baldwin, 165 U.
S. 275, or the obligations of a child to its parents, or
of an apprentice to his master, or the power of the legislature to
make unlawful, and punish criminally, an abandonment by an employee
of his post of labor in any extreme cases. That which is
contemplated by the statute is compulsory service to secure the
payment of a debt. Is this legislation within the power of
Congress? It may be conceded, as a general proposition, that the
ordinary relations of individual to individual are subject to the
control of the states, and are not entrusted to the general
government; but the Thirteenth Amendment, adopted as an outcome of
the Civil War, reads:
"SEC. 1. Neither slavery nor involuntary servitude, except as a
punishment for crime whereof the party shall have been duly
convicted, shall exist within the United States, or any place
subject to their jurisdiction."
"SEC. 2. Congress shall have power to enforce this article by
appropriate legislation."
This amendment denounces a status or condition, irrespective of
the manner or authority by which it is created. The prohibitions of
the Fourteenth and Fifteenth Amendments are largely upon the acts
of the states, but the Thirteenth Amendment names no party or
authority, but simply forbids slavery and involuntary servitude and
grants to Congress power to enforce this prohibition by appropriate
legislation. The differences between the Thirteenth and subsequent
amendments have been so fully considered by this Court that it is
enough to refer to the decisions. In the
Civil Rights
Cases, 109 U. S. 3,
109 U. S. 20-23,
Mr. Justice Bradley, delivering the opinion of the Court, uses this
language:
"This amendment, as well as the Fourteenth, is undoubtedly
self-executing without any ancillary legislation, so far as its
terms are applicable to any existing state of circumstances. By its
own unaided force and effect, it abolished slavery, and
Page 197 U. S. 217
established universal freedom. Still, legislation may be
necessary and proper to meet all the various cases and
circumstances to be affected by it, and to prescribe proper modes
of redress for its violation in letter or spirit. And such
legislation may be primary and direct in its character, for the
amendment is not a mere prohibition of state laws establishing or
upholding slavery, but an absolute declaration that slavery or
involuntary servitude shall not exist in any part of the United
States. . . ."
"We must not forget that the province and scope of the
Thirteenth and Fourteenth Amendments are different; the former
simply abolished slavery: the latter prohibited the states from
abridging the privileges or immunities of citizens of the United
States, from depriving them of life, liberty, or property without
due process of law, and from denying to any the equal protection of
the laws. The amendments are different, and the powers of Congress
under them are different. What Congress has power to do under one
it may not have power to do under the other. Under the Thirteenth
Amendment, it has only to do with slavery and its incidents. Under
the Fourteenth Amendment, it has power to counteract and render
nugatory all state laws and proceedings which have the effect to
abridge any of the privileges or immunities of citizens of the
United States, or to deprive them of life, liberty, or property
without due process of law, or to deny to any of them the equal
protection of the laws. Under the Thirteenth Amendment, the
legislation, so far as necessary or proper to eradicate all forms
and incidents of slavery and involuntary servitude, may be direct
and primary, operating upon the acts of individuals, whether
sanctioned by state legislation or not; under the Fourteenth, as we
have already shown, it must necessarily be, and can only be,
corrective in its character, addressed to counteract and afford
relief against state regulations or proceedings. "
Page 197 U. S. 218
In
Plessy v. Ferguson, 163 U.
S. 537,
163 U. S. 542,
MR. JUSTICE BROWN, delivering the opinion of the Court, said;
"That it does not conflict with the Thirteenth Amendment, which
abolished slavery and involuntary servitude except as a punishment
for crime, is too clear for argument. Slavery implies involuntary
servitude -- a state of bondage, the ownership of mankind as a
chattel, or at least the control of the labor and services of one
man for the benefit of another, and the absence of a legal right to
the disposal of his own person, property, and services. This
amendment was said in the
Slaughter House Cases, 16
Wall. 36, to have been intended primarily to abolish slavery, as it
had been previously known in this country, and that it equally
forbade Mexican peonage or the Chinese coolie trade, when they
amounted to slavery or involuntary servitude, and that the use of
the word 'servitude' was intended to prohibit the use of all forms
of involuntary slavery, of whatever class or name."
Other authorities to the same effect might be cited. It is not
open to doubt that Congress may enforce the Thirteenth Amendment by
direct legislation, punishing the holding of a person in slavery or
in involuntary servitude except as a punishment for crime. In the
exercise of that power, Congress has enacted these sections
denouncing peonage, and punishing one who holds another in that
condition of involuntary servitude. This legislation is not limited
to the territories or other parts of the strictly national domain,
but is operative in the states and wherever the sovereignty of the
United States extends. We entertain no doubt of the validity of
this legislation or its applicability to the case of any person
holding and wherever the sovereignty of the United whether there be
a municipal ordinance or state law sanctioning such holding. It
operates directly on every citizen of the Republic, wherever his
residence may be.
Section 5526 punishes "every person who holds, arrests, returns,
or causes to be held, arrested, or returned." Three distinct acts
are here mentioned -- holding, arresting, returning.
Page 197 U. S. 219
The disjunctive "or" indicates the separation between them, and
shows that either one may be the subject of indictment and
punishment. A party may hold another in a state of peonage without
ever having arrested him for that purpose. He may come by
inheritance into the possession of an estate in which the peon is
held, and he simply continues the condition which was existing
before he came into possession. He may also arrest an individual
for the purpose of placing him in a condition of peonage, and this
whether he be the one to whom the involuntary service is to be
rendered or simply employed for the purpose of making the arrest.
Or he may, after one has fled from a state of peonage, return him
to it, and this whether he himself claims the service or is acting
simply as an agent of another to enforce the return.
The indictment charges that the defendant did
"unlawfully and knowingly return one Will Gordon and one Mose
Ridley to a condition of peonage by forcibly, and against the will
of them, the said Will Gordon and the said Mose Ridley, returning
them, the said Will Gordon and the said Mose Ridley, to work to and
for Samuel M. Clyatt."
Now a "return" implies the prior existence of some state or
condition. Webster defines it "to turn back; to go or come again to
the same place or condition." In the Standard dictionary, it is
defined "to cause to take again a former position; put, carry, or
send back, as to a former place or holder." A technical meaning in
the law is thus given in Black's Law Dictionary: "The act of a
sheriff, constable, or other ministerial officer, in delivering
back to the court a writ, notice, or other paper."
It was essential, therefore, under the charge in this case, to
show that Gordon and Ridley had been in a condition of peonage to
which, by the act of the defendant, they were returned. We are not
at liberty to transform this indictment into one charging that the
defendant held them in a condition or state of peonage, or that he
arrested them with a view of placing them in such condition or
state. The pleader has seen
Page 197 U. S. 220
fit to charge a return to a condition of peonage. The defendant
had a right to rely upon that as the charge, and to either offer
testimony to show that Gordon and Ridley had never been in a
condition of peonage or to rest upon the government's omission of
proof of that fact.
We must therefore examine the testimony, and the first question
that arises is whether the record sufficiently shows that it
contains all the testimony. The bill of exceptions, after reciting
the impaneling of the jury, proceeds in these words:
"And thereupon the plaintiff, to maintain the issues upon its
part, produced and offered as a witness, James R. Dean, who, being
first duly sworn, did testify as follows."
That recital is followed by what purports to be the testimony of
the witness. Then follows in succession the testimony of several
witnesses, each being preceded by a statement in a form similar to
this: "The plaintiff then introduced and offered as a witness, H.
S. Sutton, who, being first duly sworn, did testify as follows." At
the close of the testimony of the last witness named is this
statement:
"Whereupon the plaintiff rests its case."
"Defendant rests -- introduces no testimony."
"And the said judge, after charging the jury on the law in the
case, submitted the said issues and the evidence so given on the
trial, to the jury, and the jury aforesaid then and there gave
their verdict for the plaintiff."
It is true there is no affirmative statement in the bill of
exceptions that it contains all the testimony, but such omission is
not fatal. This question was presented in
Gunnison County
Commissioners v. Rollins, 173 U. S. 255, a
civil case, brought to this Court on certiorari to the circuit
court of appeals, which court had held that the bill of exceptions
did not purport to contain all the evidence adduced at the trial,
and for that reason did not consider the question whether error was
committed in instructing the jury to find for the defendant. MR.
JUSTICE HARLAN, delivering the unanimous opinion
Page 197 U. S. 221
of the Court, disposed of that question in these words (p.
173 U. S.
261):
"We are of opinion that the bill of exceptions should be taken
as containing all the evidence. It appears that, as soon as the
jury was sworn to try the issues in the cause, 'the complainants,
to sustain the issues on their part, offered the following oral and
documentary evidence.' Then follow many pages of testimony on the
part of the plaintiffs, when this entry appears: 'Whereupon
complainants rested.' Immediately after comes this entry:
'Thereupon the defendants, to sustain the issues herein joined on
their part, produced the following evidence.' Then follow many
pages of evidence given on behalf of the defendant, and the
evidence of a witness recalled by the defendant, concluding with
this entry: 'Whereupon the further proceedings herein were
continued until the 20th day of May, 1896, at 10 o'clock A.M.'
Immediately following this entry: 'Wednesday, May 20th at 10
o'clock, the further trial of this cause was continued as follows.'
The transcript next shows some discussion by counsel as to the
exclusion of particular evidence, after which is this entry:"
"Thereupon counsel for defendant made a formal motion under the
evidence on both sides that the court instruct the jury to return a
verdict for the defendant."
"Although the bill of exceptions does not state in words that it
contains all the evidence, the above entries sufficiently show that
it does contain all the evidence."
The present case is completely covered by that decision. If, in
a civil case, such recitals in the bill of exceptions are
sufficient to show that it contains all the testimony,
a
fortiori should this be the rule in a criminal the question of
his guilt by an omission from not be deprived of a full
consideration of the question of his guilty by an omission from the
bill of the technical recital that it contains all the
evidence.
While no motion or request was made that the jury be instructed
to find for defendant, and although such a motion is the proper
method of presenting the question whether there is evidence to
sustain the verdict, yet
Wiborg v. United
States,
Page 197 U. S. 222
163 U. S. 632,
163 U. S. 658,
justifies us in examining the question in case a plain error has
been committed in a matter so vital to the defendant.
The testimony discloses that the defendant, with another party,
went to Florida, and caused the arrest of Gordon and Ridley on
warrants issued by a magistrate in Georgia for larceny, but there
can be little doubt that these criminal proceedings were only an
excuse for securing the custody of Gordon and Ridley and taking
them back to Georgia to work out a debt. At any rate, there was
abundant testimony from which the jury could find that to have been
the fact. While this is true, there is not a scintilla of testimony
to show that Gordon and Ridley were ever theretofore in a condition
of peonage. That they were in debt, and that they had left Georgia
and gone to Florida without paying that debt does not show that
they had been held in a condition of peonage, or were ever at work,
willingly or unwillingly, for their creditor. We have examined the
testimony with great care to see if there was anything which would
justify a finding of the fact, and can find nothing. No matter how
severe may be the condemnation which is due to the conduct of a
party charged with a criminal offense, it is the imperative duty of
a court to see that all the elements of his crime are proved, or at
least that testimony is offered which justifies a jury in finding
those elements. Only in the exact administration of the law will
justice in the long run be done and the confidence of the public in
such administration be maintained.
We are constrained, therefore, to order a reversal of the
judgment, and remand the case for a new trial.
MR. JUSTICE McKENNA concurs in the judgment.
MR. JUSTICE HARLAN:
I concur with my brethren in holding that the statutes in
question relating to peonage are valid under the Constitution of
the United States. I agree also that the record sufficiently shows
that it contains all the evidence introduced at the trial.
Page 197 U. S. 223
But I cannot agree in holding that the trial court erred in not
taking the case from the jury. Without going into the details of
the evidence, I care only to say that, in my opinion, there was
evidence tending to make a case within the statute. The opinion of
the court concedes that there was abundant testimony to show that
the accused, with another, went from Georgia to Florida to arrest
the two negroes, Gordon and Ridley, and take them, against their
will, back to Georgia to work out a debt. And they were taken to
Georgia by force. It is conceded that peonage is based upon the
indebtedness of the peon to the master. The accused admitted to one
of the witnesses that the negroes owed him. In any view, there was
no motion or request to direct a verdict for the defendant. The
accused made no objection to the submission of the case to the
jury, and it is going very far to hold in a case like this,
disclosing barbarities of the worst kind against these negroes,
that he trial court erred in sending the case to the jury.