The power of the state to enact laws creating and defining
crimes against its sovereignty, regulating procedure in the trial
of those charged with committing them, and prescribing the
character of the sentence of those found guilty is absolute and
without limits other than those prescribed by the Constitution of
the United States.
The statute of Nebraska providing that one embezzling public
money shall be imprisoned and pay a fine equal to double the amount
embezzled, which shall operate as a judgment for the use of the
persons whose money was embezzled, is not unconstitutional as
depriving the person convicted of embezzlement of his property
without due process of law because it provides for such judgment
irrespective of whether restitution has been made or not.
In such a case the fine is a part of the punishment, and it is
immaterial whether it is called a penalty or a civil judgment, and
the only question on which defendant can be heard is as to the fact
and amount of the embezzlement, and if he has an opportunity to be
heard as to that, he is not denied due process of law.
The facts are stated in the opinion.
Page 204 U. S. 661
MR. JUSTICE MOODY delivered the opinion of the Court.
The plaintiff in error, a citizen of Kansas, brought an action
of ejectment against the defendant in error, a citizen of Nebraska,
in the Circuit Court for the District of Nebraska, where there was
judgment for the defendant, which is brought here by writ of error
on a constitutional question. The land sought to be recovered was
once the property of Ezra S. Whitney, through whom both parties
claim title -- the plaintiff through a deed of the land executed
and delivered by Whitney, on November 30, 1898, the defendant under
a sale of the land on execution in pursuance of a levy duly made on
April 12, 1898. The defendant's paper title is therefore the
earlier one, and must prevail if the sale upon execution was valid.
The validity of this sale is the only question in the case.
The execution issued on a judgment in a criminal case, in which,
by information, Whitney was charged with the
Page 204 U. S. 662
embezzlement, while County Treasurer of Harlan County, in the
State of Nebraska, of $11,190 of the public money in his possession
by virtue of his office. Upon trial by jury, Whitney was found
guilty as charged and sentenced to imprisonment for a term of
years, and to "pay a fine in one sum of $22,390," which was double
the amount of the embezzlement found by the jury. On appeal, the
conviction was affirmed by the Supreme Court of Nebraska.
Whitney v. State, 53 Neb. 287. The sentence awarded was
that prescribed by § 124 of the Nebraska Criminal Code, which
provides that a public officer who embezzles the public money
"
shall be imprisoned in the penitentiary not less than one
year nor more than twenty-one years, according to the magnitude of
the embezzlement, and also pay a fine equal to double the amount of
money or other property so embezzled as aforesaid, which fine shall
operate as a judgment at law on all of the estate of the party so
convicted and sentenced, and shall be enforced to collection by
execution or other process for the use only of the party or parties
whose money or other funds, property, bonds, or securities, assets
or effects of any kind as aforesaid has been so
embezzled."
Compiled Statutes of Nebraska, 1903, p. 1942.
The proceedings which ended in the sale on execution under which
the defendant claims title were in conformity with the Constitution
and laws of Nebraska, and the sheriff's deed vested title in the
defendant.
Everson v. State, 66 Neb. 154. It is within the
power of the state to enact laws creating and defining crimes
against its sovereignty, regulating the procedure in the trial of
those who are charged with committing them, and prescribing the
character of the sentence which shall be awarded against those who
have been found guilty. In these respects, the state is supreme and
its power absolute, and without any limits other than those
prescribed by the Constitution of the United States. The exercise
of the power of the state in this field cannot be drawn in question
in this Court or elsewhere than in its own courts, except for
Page 204 U. S. 663
the purpose of restraining it within the limits thus
established. One of the limitations upon the power of the state,
imposed by the Fourteenth Amendment, is that the state shall not
deprive any person of life, liberty, or property without due
process of law. The plaintiff contends that the sentence awarded
against Whitney violated this prohibition in that Whitney had no
opportunity to be heard upon and defend against that part of the
sentence which imposed a fine and authorized a judgment against his
estate for its collection. The plaintiff therefore insists that the
sale on execution of Whitney's land was bad because the execution
issued upon a judgment which was void. The short and conclusive
answer to the whole contention is that it is not true in fact.
Whitney was given an opportunity to be heard and to defend. The
information charged him with embezzling $11,190, the property of
Harlan County. The trial was had upon this information and the jury
returned a verdict in the following terms:
"We, the jury, duly impaneled and sworn in the above-entitled
cause, do find the defendant guilty, as charged in the information,
and we further find the sum so embezzled to be $11,190."
Thereupon it became the duty of the court to imposes a sentence
of imprisonment of not less than one year nor more than twenty-one
years, and of a fine that should be equal to double the amount of
the money embezzled. This was done. The case was then appealed to
the Supreme Court of Nebraska, argued by counsel, and the
conviction affirmed. It is idle to say that Whitney was denied a
hearing, or an opportunity for every defense permitted to him by
the laws of Nebraska.
The plaintiff in error rests his contention upon some language
used by the Supreme Court of Nebraska in
Everson v. State, ub.
sup. In that case, Everson was convicted of a trespass upon
the land in dispute. He defended against the charge by claiming
title through the deed from Whitney, under which, as Everson's
grantee, the plaintiff in this case claims title. The state, on the
other hand, contended that the title
Page 204 U. S. 664
was in Harlan County by virtue of the sale on execution
hereinbefore stated. Everson, asserting, as the plaintiff here
asserts, that the execution sale passed no title, attacked the
judgment upon which it was issued upon two grounds:
First, that the law under which it was rendered was repealed by
a subsequent provision of the Constitution of the state;
Second, that it was unconstitutional in inflicting a double
punishment, in that the fine was added to imprisonment.
In overruling these two contention, the court described the
statute as one giving a fixed sum "in the nature of liquidated
damages . . . to one who has suffered injury by the wrongful act of
a public officer," and said:
"We . . . do not care to put ourselves upon record as holding
that the return of the property of the value of the property which
the thief has embezzled or stolen, either voluntarily or by
compulsory process, should be considered any part of his punishment
within the meaning of our Bill of Rights."
P. 158. Seizing hold of this language, the plaintiff in error in
this case argues that, by an interpretation of the statute binding
upon us, it authorizes a mere civil judgment for damages, against
which the defendant has been denied the right to defend by showing
that his civil liability for the embezzlement had been discharged,
and that therefore the judgment was wanting in due process of law.
But this argument misinterprets the decision of the Supreme Court
of Nebraska by giving to its language a meaning not expressed or
intended.
As part of the consequences of a conviction of the crime of
embezzlement by a public officer, the law of Nebraska provides that
a fine double the amount embezzled shall be inflicted, which shall
operate as a judgment against the estate of the convict. It is not
of the slightest importance whether this fine is called a penalty,
a punishment, or a civil judgment. Whatever it is called, it comes
to the convict as the result of his crime. The amount of the
judgment is fixed by the amount of the embezzlement, and not by the
amount remaining
Page 204 U. S. 665
due on account of the embezzlement, and the only question left
open to the accused is the fact and amount of the embezzlement. It
is provided that the judgment shall issue for double that amount,
entirely irrespective of the question whether restitution has been
made in whole or in part. Upon the only question therefore open to
him, Whitney had an opportunity to be heard, and, in point of fact,
was heard. Upon his appeal, 53 Neb. 287, the amount of the
embezzlement was expressly affirmed by the court (p. 304), and the
claim that the restitution of the stolen property relieves the
offender from criminal liability was pronounced "a monstrous
doctrine," and it was said:
"Whether or not Harlan County has been successful in collecting
or securing the payment of the money which the defendant is charged
with having embezzled is of no consequence in this case."
Whitney had full opportunity to present every defense allowed to
him by the law of the state. The law itself was justified by the
plenary power of the state, and neither it nor its administration
in this case discloses any violation of a right secured by the
Constitution of the United States, and the judgment of the Circuit
Court is therefore
Affirmed.