Section 939 of the District of Columbia Code, providing that, if
any person charged with a criminal offense shall have been
committed or held to bail to await the action of the grand jury,
and the grand jury does not act within nine months the prosecution
on the charge shall be deemed to be abandoned and the accused set
free or his bail discharged, is not a statute of limitations, and
does not repeal or affect the general statute of limitations in
force in the District, § 1044 Rev.Stat., and a person, who in
this case had not made any application under § 939 to be
released from bail, may be held to answer upon an indictment found
more than nine months after he was arrested and held to bail.
It would require clear and specific language to indicate a
legislative intent
Page 197 U. S. 476
to bar the prosecution of all offense for the failure of the
grand jury to act within nine month of the arrest of the accused
when the latter is at large under bail.
The facts are stated in the opinion.
MR. JUSTICE DAY delivered the opinion of the Court.
The respondents were indicted for conspiracy in the Supreme
Court of the District of Columbia on March 31, 1902. On April 4,
1902, Cadarr, Keating, and Myers were arraigned, and entered pleas
of not guilty. On April 7, 1902, Parker entered a plea of not
guilty; on May 1, 1902, he withdrew this plea, and filed a motion
to quash. The ground of this motion was that the indictment was not
returned to the court within nine months from the twenty-fifth day
of April, 1901, on which day the defendants were held to bail to
await the action of the grand jury on the charge of conspiracy, the
time for taking action in the case not having been extended by the
court or any judge thereof, as provided in § 939 of the act to
establish a code for the District of Columbia, approved March 3,
1901. The motion was sustained, and it was directed that Parker's
bail be discharged, and all the defendants were allowed to go
without day.
Upon appeal by the United States, the Court of Appeals affirmed
this judgment. Thereupon this writ of certiorari was granted.
This case raises the question whether § 939 of the Code of
the District of Columbia is intended to bar further prosecution of
crimes and offenses where the grand jury has failed to act thereon
within the period named in the statute, or whether
Page 197 U. S. 477
the failure to take such action is intended to and does end
further prosecution, so as to discharge the accused from bail, or
from imprisonment, in cases of commitment. The supreme court, whose
judgment was sustained by the Court of Appeals, construed the
statute as one of limitations, and held that failure to take action
within the period limited was a final bar to further prosecution.
The section directly involved is number 939 of the District of
Columbia Code, and is as follows:
"SEC. 939.
Abandonment of prosecution. -- If any person
charged with a criminal offense shall have been committed or held
to bail to await the action of the grand jury, and within nine
months thereafter the grand jury shall not have taken action on the
case, either by ignoring the charge or by returning an indictment
into the proper court, the prosecution of such charge shall be
deemed to have been abandoned, and the accused shall be set free,
or his bail discharged, as the case may be;
Provided,
however, That the Supreme Court of the District of Columbia,
holding a special term as a criminal court, or, in vacation, any
justice of said court, upon good cause shown in writing, and when
practicable, upon due notice to the accused, may, from time to
time, enlarge the time for the taking action in such case by the
grand jury."
31 Stat. 1189, 1342.
The general statute of limitations is in force in the District,
and is § 1044, Revised Statutes of the United States, which is
as follows:
"No person shall be prosecuted, tried, or punished for any
offense not capital, except as provided in § one thousand and
forty-six, unless the indictment is found, or the information is
instituted, within three years next after such offense shall have
been committed."
It is the contention of respondents' counsel that § 939
operates as a special statute of limitation for cases within its
terms wherein the accused has been arrested and committed to prison
or released on bail. On the other hand, the government contends
that it is not a statute of limitation, but is intended to limit
the time within which the grand jury must act
Page 197 U. S. 478
upon a charge upon which the accused has been arrested and
committed or admitted to bail. At the common law, and in the
absence of special statutes of limitations, the mere failure to
find an indictment will not operate to discharge the accused from
the offense, nor will a
nolle prosequi entered by the
government, or the failure of the grand jury to indict. It is
doubtless true that, in some cases, the power of the government has
been abused, and charges have been kept hanging over the heads of
citizens, and they have been committed for unreasonable periods,
resulting in hardship. With a view to preventing such wrong to the
citizen, statutes have been passed in many states similar to the
one under consideration, in aid of the constitutional provisions,
national and state, intended to secure to the accused a speedy
trial. These statutes differ so much in purpose and phraseology
that we cannot derive much aid from decisions under them in
determining the correct construction of the one under
consideration. With a few exceptions, they relate to the bringing
to trial of the accused after indictment found, and are intended to
speed the trial of the cause. Whether the failure to bring on the
trial within the time limited shall have the effect of discharging
the accused from further prosecution for the crime or offense, or
shall operate merely to put an end to the pending prosecution,
depends upon the terms used in the different statutes. Generally
speaking, where the statute has provided that the discharge shall
be from imprisonment or bail, without other language, it has been
held not to operate as a statute of limitation. On the other hand,
where the statute has provided that the failure to prosecute shall
discharge the accused so far as relates to the offense, or from the
crime, or he shall be acquitted of the offense charged in the
indictment, failure to prosecute has been held to work a final
discharge from the offense. Of the former class of cases are
State v. Garthwaite, 23 N.J.L. 143; of the latter class
are
Ex Parte McGehan, 22 Ohio St. 442;
Commonwealth v.
Cawood, 2 Va.Cases 527;
State v. Wear, 145 Mo. 162;
In re Edwards, 35 Kan. 99-103.
Page 197 U. S. 479
Turning to the particular statute under consideration, we find
it is one in terms dealing with the status of the accused before
indictment, after he has been committed or held to bail, and limits
the time within which the grand jury may take action in such cases,
whether the same results in ignoring the charge or the return of an
indictment, and for the failure of the grand jury to take action
within the time limited it is provided "that the prosecution of
such charge shall be deemed to have been abandoned, and the accused
shall be set free or his bail discharged, as the case may be." This
statute is not one of limitations, having effect upon the time in
which the particular case may be prosecuted after the commission of
the crime, but relates solely to the right of action by the grand
jury as to one who has been committed or held to bail, wherein it
is provided that the grand jury must act within the time named or
the accused shall be set free, if imprisoned, or his bail
discharged, if out on bond. We think this act was not intended to
amount to a repeal
pro tanto of the statute of limitation,
as contained in § 1044. For failure to indict within the time
limited it is not provided, as in the cases where the statute has
been construed to finally discharge the accused, that he shall be
discharged from the offense, or he shall be deemed acquitted of the
charge, he shall be deemed acquitted of the charge, but the result
of the failure to prosecute has reference solely to the right in
the pending prosecution to be freed, if imprisoned, or released
from bail, if under bond. If it had been the purpose of Congress to
work so radical a change in the law as to end the right of further
prosecution for the offense, we think it would have used language
apt for that purpose, and the failure so to do indicates the
intention to deal only with delays in action by the grand jury
against persons under arrest or bonds. It is delay in the action of
the grand jury, not the cutting down of the time of prosecution for
offenses, that is aimed at in this statute. Much stress is laid in
the argument of counsel for the respondents upon the expression,
"the prosecution of such charge shall be deemed to
Page 197 U. S. 480
have been abandoned." But having reference to the previous part
of the section, "such charge" relates to the one under which the
accused has been committed or held to bail. The section prescribes
the time within which the grand jury must act, and failing so to
do, it is decreed that the prosecution shall be deemed to have been
abandoned, and the effect upon the accused is not that he shall be
discharged from prosecution for the offense, but that he shall be
set free, if imprisoned, or his bail discharged, if released on
bond. The statute, it is observed, acts upon persons committed to
prison, and, with like effect, upon those not incarcerated, but
only held to bail. We think it would require clear and specific
language to indicate a legislative intent to bar the prosecution of
all offenses for the failure of the grand jury to act within nine
months of the arrest of the accused, when the latter is at large
upon bond. Again, if the contention of counsel for the accused is
adopted, one will be discharged from further prosecution if the
grand jury does not act upon the case, but if the grand jury does
act, and the charge against the accused is found to be unwarranted,
he is still subject to indictment until the three years of the
statute of limitations have run, while the person whose case has
not been wholly investigated will be forever released from the
offense. Furthermore, § 1044 does not apply to capital
offenses, for such are expressly excluded from the operation of
that section; but § 939, under consideration, makes no
exception, and applies alike to all offenses, and would operate to
discharge a person accused of murder as well as one accused of
petty theft. But, it is urged, § 939 permits the court to
control and extend the time for taking action by the grand jury,
thereby indicating the purpose of Congress to make this statute one
of limitation. But we do not think the control of the time for
taking action before the grand jury, given in this paragraph,
enlarges the statute so as to make it applicable beyond the effect
prescribed, which is upon the liberty of the accused or his freedom
from the requirement to give bail. It is urged that, if the
construction insisted upon
Page 197 U. S. 481
by the government is given to this statute, the accused may be
discharged for failure of the grand jury to act, and then
immediately rearrested, so that the statute will be defeated of its
purpose to protect the accused. The question of whether one who has
made application to the court, and been discharged for failure to
find an indictment against him within the time limited, could again
be arrested without indictment is not involved in this case. The
question is is the prosecution of the offense finally barred by
this statute, so that the accused may not be held to answer upon an
indictment found after the nine months' period has elapsed? It is
urged by counsel for the respondents that the power given the court
to enlarge the time for taking action by the grand jury is not
limited, and that the time may be extended beyond the period of
three years fixed by the general statute of limitations. We cannot
agree to this contention. We think the general statute of
limitations has not been repealed or modified by this section. The
purpose of statutes of limitation is to finally bar all
prosecution, and the purpose of the act under consideration, as we
view it, is to control the prosecution by requiring action by the
grand jury, and, in default thereof, release the person of the
accused or discharge him from bail, so far as the pending
prosecution is concerned. While the construction of this section is
not free from difficulty, we think the view herein expressed best
effectuates the purpose and intention of Congress in enacting this
statute, viewed in the light of the language used and the objects
intended. This view of the case renders it unnecessary to pass upon
other questions raised in the record.
The judgment of the Court of Appeals will be reversed, and
the cause remanded with directions to reverse the judgment of the
Supreme Court of the District of Columbia, and remand the cause to
that court for further proceedings in accordance with this
opinion.