Where plaintiff in error, defendant below, in a suit for penalty
under a state law, asks, and the court refuses, an instruction
that, if the jury find that the default occurred within a navy
yard, over which the United States had exclusive jurisdiction, the
recovery could not be had under the state law, this Court has
jurisdiction to review the judgment.
The Norfolk Navy Yard is one of the places over which, under
Art. I, § 8, par. 17, of the Constitution, Congress possesses
exclusive power of legislation, and that exclusive power
necessarily includes exclusive jurisdiction, and it is of the
highest importance that the jurisdiction of the state should be
resisted at the border of such places.
Fort Leavenworth R. Co.
v. Lowe, 114 U. S. 525.
The state cannot inflict a penalty for the nondelivery of a
telegram within the limits of a place under the exclusive
jurisdiction of the United States, and so
held that, under
the statute of Virginia in that regard, the penalty cannot be
collected for the nondelivery of a telegram
Page 214 U. S. 275
to an addressee within the limits of the Norfolk Navy Yard.
Congress alone can prescribe penalties in such a case.
107 Va. 60 reversed.
The facts are stated in the opinion.
MR. JUSTICE MOODY delivered the opinion of the Court.
The defendant in error, a gunner in the Navy, was stationed on
board the U.S.S.
Abarenda, which was lying at the Norfolk
Navy Yard. A telegram addressed to him aboard the ship was received
for transmission at Richmond, Virginia, thence transmitted, so far
as appears, with due dispatch, to Portsmouth, Virginia, which
adjoins the Norfolk Navy Yard, and is the place to which telegrams
directed to the navy yard are commonly sent. The message was never
received by the defendant in error. He brought this action in the
Court of Hustings of the City of Portsmouth against the plaintiff
in error, the telegraph company, to recover a penalty imposed by
the laws of Virginia. The Virginia Code 1904, pp. 696, 697, after
providing for a penalty for failure duly to transmit a message,
contains the following provision:
"(6) . . ."
"It shall be the duty of every telegraph company, upon the
arrival of a dispatch or message at the point to which it is to be
transmitted, to cause the same to be forwarded by a messenger to
the person to whom the same is addressed, or his agent, and, upon
the payment of any charges due on this dispatch or message, to
deliver it; provided, such person or agent reside within the city
or incorporated town in which such station is, or that at such
point the regulations of the company require such delivery. "
Page 214 U. S. 276
"It shall also be the duty of such company to forward a dispatch
or message promptly, as directed, where the same is to be
forwarded. For every failure to deliver or forward a dispatch or
message as promptly as practicable the company shall forfeit one
hundred dollars to the person sending the dispatch or message, or
the person to whom it was addressed."
The plaintiff's declaration contained two counts, the first for
failure to transmit the telegram in conformity with the law of
Virginia, and the second for failure to deliver it in accordance
with the part of the law just quoted. As there was no proof in
support of the first count, and it was apparently not submitted to
the jury at the trial, it may pass out of view.
The second count, after alleging the receipt of the message at
the point of origin, and its transmission, and receipt at the
office at Portsmouth, avers that it was the duty of the telegraph
company to deliver it to the plaintiff on the U.S.S.
Abarenda at the navy yard as promptly as practicable, and
that the defendant failed to perform its duty in that regard,
wherefore it became indebted to the plaintiff for the amount of the
statutory penalty. There was a demurrer to the declaration, and one
of the reasons alleged was
"that the place at which the message was to be delivered was on
board a government vessel at a yard which is under the jurisdiction
and control of the United States, and neither the state nor this
honorable court has jurisdiction to impose any penalty for failure
to deliver a message at such place."
The demurrer was overruled, and the case was tried before a
jury. There was testimony in behalf of the defendant that,
seasonably after the message was received at Portsmouth, it was
entrusted to a messenger boy for delivery to the plaintiff on board
the ship; that it was taken to the gangway of the ship, and there,
in accordance with the practice in such cases, delivered to the man
on duty at that place, who receipted for it. With the weight of
this testimony we have no concern. It also appeared that the
message never reached the plaintiff. The defendant requested the
presiding judge to instruct the jury, in substance,
Page 214 U. S. 277
that, if the default in delivery occurred within the limits of
the territory of the Norfolk Navy Yard, plaintiff could not recover
by virtue of the Virginia law, which had no authority within those
limits. The court declined, under exception, to give this
instruction, and the jury returned a verdict for the plaintiff for
the amount of the penalty. There was judgment for the plaintiff,
which, upon writ of error duly raising the questions which have
been stated, was affirmed by the Supreme Court of Appeals of the
state. Thereupon a writ of error from this Court was allowed.
Part of the land composing the Norfolk Navy Yard, formerly known
as the Gosport Navy Yard, was once owned by the State of Virginia.
Title to the remainder of it was acquired by the United States by
purchase from the owners. Title to the land owned by the state was
acquired by the United States under the provisions of an Act of
Assembly passed January 25, 1800, which authorized the Governor of
the commonwealth to convey by deed the title to the state land and
"all the jurisdiction which this commonwealth possesses over the
public lands commonly called and known by the name of Gosport,"
reserving only the right of the officers of the state to execute
process within the jurisdiction authorized to be ceded. The files
of the Department of the Navy contain a deed of Governor James
Monroe, dated June 15, 1801, executing in precise conformity with
the act the authority which it conferred. The United States had
purchased from the owners other land for the purpose of extending
the navy yard. That purchase was recognized by the State of
Virginia by an Act of Assembly passed February 27, 1833, and the
Governor of the commonwealth was authorized to cede the same
jurisdiction, with the same reservation. The files of the
Department of the Navy contain also a deed by Governor Littleton W.
Tazewell, dated April 1, 1835, fully executing the provisions of
the last-named act.
The case does not call for the consideration of the effect of a
contract made within the State of Virginia for the seasonable
Page 214 U. S. 278
transmission and delivery of a telegram. The record presents the
single question whether a law of the State of Virginia imposing a
penalty has any effect or operation within the limits of the navy
yard. This question, if not fully raised by the demurrer, was
distinctly raised by the request for instructions, which was
refused. On one aspect of the evidence, it might have been found
that the only default of the defendant was entirely within the
limits of the navy yard, and the defendant was entitled to an
appropriate instruction on the issue thus raised. By the refusal to
give the instruction requested, the jury in effect was permitted to
find for the plaintiff, even if the default was entirely within the
navy yard. We think this was clearly erroneous. By the terms of the
Constitution, Congress is given the power
"to exercise exclusive legislation in all cases whatsoever . . .
over all places purchased by the consent of the legislature of the
state in which the same shall be, for the erection of forts,
magazines, arsenals, dockyards, and other needful buildings."
Art. 1, § 8, par. 17, of the Constitution.
It is apparent from the history of the establishment of the
Norfolk Navy Yard, already given, that it is one of the places
where the Congress possesses exclusive legislative power. It
follows that the laws of the State of Virginia, with the exception
referred to in the acts of assembly, cannot be allowed any
operation or effect within the limits of the yard. The exclusive
power of legislation necessarily includes the exclusive
jurisdiction. The subject is so fully discussed by Mr. Justice
Field, delivering the opinion of the Court in
Fort Leavenworth
R. Co. v. Lowe, 114 U. S. 525,
that we need do no more than refer to that case and the cases cited
in the opinion. It is of the highest public importance that the
jurisdiction of the state should be resisted at the borders of
those places where the power of exclusive legislation is vested in
the Congress by the Constitution. Congress already, with the design
that the places under the exclusive jurisdiction of the United
States shall not be freed from the restraints of the law, has
enacted for them
Page 214 U. S. 279
(Revised Statutes, LXX, chapter 3) an extensive criminal code,
ending with the provision (§ 5391) that where an offense is
not specially provided for by any law of the United States, it
shall be prosecuted in the courts of the United States and receive
the same punishment prescribed by the laws of the state in which
the place is situated for like offenses committed within its
jurisdiction. We do not mean to suggest that the statute before us
creates a crime in the technical sense. If it is desirable that
penalties should be inflicted for a default in the delivery of a
telegram occurring within the jurisdiction of the United States,
Congress only has the power to establish them.
Judgment reversed.