Whether the prisoner was properly arraigned is not a matter of
form but of substance, and should be shown by the record.
Crain
v. United States, 162 U. S. 625.
There is no explicit provision in the laws of the United States
describing what shall constitute an arraignment, but so far as it
is expressed, it has a definite meaning.
Where a word is used as comprehensively descriptive of certain
acts, it can be used in the record of a case as showing the
performance of those acts, and so
held as to "arraignment"
as used in § 1032, Rev.Stat.
In this case, what was done, as shown by the record, did
constitute an arraignment.
The record in a case imports verity, and cannot be contradicted
by affidavits.
Evans v. Stettnisch, 149 U.
S. 605.
As used to define the place where a crime may be committed, the
words, "within any fort, arsenal, dockyard, magazine, or any other
place or district of country under the exclusive jurisdiction of
the United States" include the District of Columbia.
The Act of January 15, 1897, 29 Stat. 487, c. 29, permitting the
jury in a capital case of murder or rape under § 5339 or 5345,
Rev.Stat., to qualify the verdict by adding "without capital
punishment" was applicable to the District of Columbia until
superseded by the special provisions on the same subject in the
District Code.
Winston v. United States, 172 U.
S. 303.
In framing a new statute, a change of language from that of a
former statute on the same subject is some evidence of a change of
legislative purpose.
Some of the provisions of the Criminal Code approved March 4,
1909, 35 Stat. 1088, c. 321, apply to the District of Columbia, and
other provisions do not.
Congress, in enacting the District Code, recognized the
expediency of separate provisions for the District of Columbia.
The provisions of the Criminal Code which deal with offenses
federal in nature, wherever committed, whether in places under
federal,
Page 225 U. S. 406
state, or territorial control, supersede the District Code;
provisions, however, in regard to offenses under state jurisdiction
if committed in a state or over which Congress has given local
control to the Territories, and in regard to which it has adopted a
separate code, as for Alaska, do not supersede the District
Code.
The provision in § 272 of the Criminal Code of 1909
permitting the jury to qualify the verdict of guilty in certain
cases punishable by death by adding "without capital punishment"
does not supersede the provisions in the District Code in regard to
punishment for murder.
Provision in earlier statutes in regard to matters which are
embraced in and superseded by a later statute are repealed by the
later statute; but where the two statutes have definite territorial
operation, they can exist together, and the earlier one is not
repealed or affected by the later.
An objection that the jury was not lawfully drawn must be
availed of at the trial; it cannot, under § 919 of the
District Code, be made the basis for setting aside the verdict on
appeal.
38 App.D.C. 347 affirmed.
The facts, which involve the validity of a conviction and
sentence for murder in the District of Columbia, are stated in the
opinion.
Page 225 U. S. 408
MR. JUSTICE McKENNA delivered the opinion of the Court.
Johnson was indicted, tried, and convicted in the Supreme Court
of the District of Columbia for the crime of murder for killing one
Ofenstein, and sentenced to death.
Page 225 U. S. 409
He moved for arrest of judgment and for new trial on certain
grounds, which, among others, present three questions -- (1)
whether he had been properly arraigned; (2) the action of the court
in giving and refusing instructions in regard to the power of the
jury to add to their verdict, if they found him guilty of murder,
the words "without capital punishment;" (3) the legality of the
manner of selecting the jury.
(1) The record recites the presence of the attorney for the
United States, the defendant in proper person and by his attorney,
and adds that,
"thereupon, the defendant, being arraigned upon the indictment,
pleads thereto not guilty, and for trial puts himself upon the
country, and the attorney of the United States doth the like."
The contention is that there is a fatal defect in that the
record does not show that the indictment was read to the defendant,
and, to establish that such reading was necessary, counsel invoke
the Sixth Amendment of the Constitution of the United States, which
provides, among other things, that, in all criminal prosecutions,
the accused shall be informed of the nature and cause of the action
against him. But to this it may be urged, as it is urged, that
information of the charge may be given without reading the
indictment. But we may pass that, and grant also that, in capital
and otherwise infamous crimes, both the arraignment and plea are a
matter of substance, and must be affirmatively shown by the record.
We think that they are shown, if such be the fair intendment of the
words of the record. And this is demonstrated by the case that is
relied on against it -- that is,
Crain v. United States,
162 U. S. 625. In
that case, the record did not show (and we quote from the opinion)
"that the accused was ever formally arraigned, or that he pleaded
to the indictment," except as an inference from a statement in the
bill of exceptions that the jury were "sworn and charged to try the
issues joined." It was held, after elaborate discussion,
Page 225 U. S. 410
three members of the court dissenting, that a plea to the
indictment was not a matter of form, but of substance, and should
be shown by the record. In the discussion and in the cases cited,
the arraignment was considered as distinct from the plea, and
consisted of formally calling the accused to the bar for the
purpose of a trial. We may quote as illustrative the following
paragraph from pages
162 U. S.
637-638:
"According to Sir Matthew Hale, the arraignment consists of
three parts, one of which, after the prisoner has been called to
the bar, and informed of the charge against him, is, the"
"demanding of him whether he be guilty or not guilty, and if he
pleads not guilty, the clerk joins issue with him,
cul.
prist, and enters the prisoner's plea; then he demands how he
will be tried; the common answer is,
by God and the
country, and thereupon the clerk enters
po. se, and
prays to God to send him a good deliverance."
2 Hale's Pl.Cr. 219. So, in Blackstone:
"To arraign is nothing else but to call the person to the bar of
the court to answer the matter charged upon him in the indictment.
. . . After which [after the indictment is read to the accused], it
is to be demanded of him whether he is guilty of the crime whereof
he stands indicted, or not guilty."
4 Bl.Com. 322, 323 to 341. Chitty says:
"The proper mode of stating the arraignment on the record is in
this form: 'And, being brought to the bar here in his own proper
person, he is committed to the marshal,' etc. And, being asked how
he will acquit himself of the premises (in case of felony, and of
'the high treasons' in case of treason) 'above laid to his charge,
saith,' etc. If this statement be omitted, it seems the record will
be erroneous."
"1 Chitty, Crim.Law. *419."
There is no explicit provision in the laws of the United States
describing what shall constitute an arraignment. But, so far as it
is expressed, it has a definite meaning. By § 1032 of the
Revised Statutes, it is provided that
Page 225 U. S. 411
"when any person indicted for any offense against the United
States, whether capital or otherwise, upon his arraignment, stands
mute or refuses to plead of answer thereto, it shall be the duty of
the court to enter the plea of not guilty on his behalf in the same
manner as if he had pleaded not guilty thereto. And when the party
pleads not guilty, or such plea is entered as aforesaid, the cause
shall be deemed at issue, and shall, without further form or
ceremony, be tried by a jury."
It will be observed that the word "arraignment" is used as
comprehensively descriptive of what shall precede the plea. If it
be so used in the law, it certainly can be used in the record as
showing the performance of that which the law prescribes by it. We
realize that both the Constitution and the law are careful to
direct that information be given to the accused of the charge
against him. By § 1033, it is provided that, when any person
is indicted for any capital offense, if it be treason, three days
before the trial, and if it be any other capital offense, two days
before the trial, a copy of the indictment and list of jurors and
witnesses shall be delivered to him. And this can be insisted on.
Logan v. United States, 144 U. S. 263;
Hickory v. United States, 151 U.
S. 303. We may presume that the law was complied with in
the present case, and that Johnson was given a copy of the
indictment as well as having had it read to him, which we think the
record sufficiently shows, and, as the record imports verity, it
cannot be contradicted by an affidavit which counsel filed in the
case, even if it had been filed for such purpose, which, according
to counsel, it was not, but "to call the attention of the court to
the defect on the face of the record."
Evans v.
Stettnisch, 149 U. S. 605,
149 U. S.
607.
(2) Prior to January 15, 1897, homicide, as a crime against the
United States, was divided into murder and manslaughter
"when committed within any fort, arsenal, dockyard, magazine, or
in any place or district or
Page 225 U. S. 412
country under the exclusive jurisdiction of the United
States,"
and upon the high seas and certain waters out of the
jurisdiction of any particular state. The punishment for murder was
death; for manslaughter, a certain term of imprisonment. Sections
5336, 5340, 5343. The crime of rape, when committed in any of the
specified places, was also punished by death. Section 5345.
By the act passed January 15, 1897, it was provided
"that in all cases where the accused is found guilty of the
crime of murder or of rape under sections fifty-three hundred and
thirty-nine or fifty-three hundred and forty-five, Revised
Statutes, the jury may qualify their verdict by adding thereto
'without capital punishment;' and whenever the jury shall return a
verdict qualified as aforesaid, the person convicted shall be
sentenced to imprisonment at hard labor for life."
29 Stat. 487, c. 29. It will be observed that § 5339 of the
Revised Statutes is made part of the act. By that section,
reenacting earlier acts of Congress,
"every person who commits murder . . . within any fort, arsenal,
dockyard, magazine, or in any other place or district or country
under the exclusive jurisdiction of the United States, . . . shall
suffer death."
The act was held applicable to the District of Columbia, and
under its provisions and § 5339 until January 1, 1902, the
date when the District Code became effective, murder was
prosecuted.
Winston v. United States, 172 U.
S. 303.
By the District Code, murder was divided into two degrees, and
it was provided that the punishment for murder in the first degree
should be "death by hanging." Punishment for manslaughter was fixed
at imprisonment for life, or for not less than twenty years.
Sections 798, 799 (this section made it murder in the first degree
to put obstructions on a railroad or street railroad), 800 and
801.
The District Code also changed the law as to rape, and fixed its
punishment at not less than five nor more than thirty years, the
jury having the power to add to their
Page 225 U. S. 413
verdict, if it be guilty, the words "with the death penalty."
Section 808.
It necessarily followed that the provision for the qualified
verdict ceased to apply in the District. Thereafter the definitions
and requirements of the District Code prevailed, and the death
penalty was imposed for conviction of murder in the first degree
for eight years.
In the meanwhile, a commission was at work revising and
codifying the criminal and penal laws of the United States, with
the result that a Criminal Code was approved March 4, 1909, 35
Stat. 1088, c. 321. It is the asserted clash between its provisions
giving power to the jury to qualify their verdict and those of the
District Code, under which, we have seen, the jury has not such
power, that constitutes the question in this case.
That some provisions of the Criminal Code are applicable to the
District is conceded. It is conceded by the government that the
first ten chapters are applicable just as they are to the states,
territories, and other districts, and that the same is true of
chapter 12. The concession is put upon the ground that those
chapters deal with offenses federal in their nature. Chapter 13, it
is said, relates to territorial jurisdiction, and deals with
certain offenses "when committed within any territory or district,
or within or upon any place within the exclusive jurisdiction of
the United States." So far as the District Code deals with the
offenses described in chapter 13, it is superseded by the Criminal
Code.
The government says:
"There seems to be no room for doubt of this. The offenses
defined are to be punished as prescribed 'when committed within any
territory or district, or within or upon any place within the
exclusive jurisdiction of the United States.'"
Sec. 311. The District of Columbia comes within this
description. Then we find in § 319 that "the provisions of
this section shall apply only within the territories of the United
States," and in
Page 225 U. S. 414
§ 320 that "the provisions of this section shall apply only
within the territories of the United States and the District of
Columbia."
The final concession of the government therefore is that "it
cannot be said broadly that, in the enactment of the Criminal Code,
there was no purpose to deal with or modify the District Code in
any respect." But the government turns from these concessions and
insists that chapter 11, in which murder is defined, was not
intended to apply to the District. This is deduced from the report
of the commission and § 272 of the chapter, which defines the
territorial extent and the application of the chapter. The
commission, in their report, said:
"In the revision of this chapter, we have deemed it important to
define with the greatest attainable precision the places within
which the jurisdiction of the United States over crimes shall be
exercised."
They adopted a definition by an enumeration of places. Among
others, the following:
"Any fort, arsenal, dockyard, magazine, other needful building,
structure, reservation, or other place under the exclusive
jurisdiction of the United States."
But the suggested definition was amended by the joint committee
of Congress and became § 272 of the Criminal Code, which is
less broad than the provision recommended by the commission. That
section provides:
"The crimes and offenses defined in this chapter [11] shall be
punished as herein prescribed. . . . Third. When committed within
or on any lands reserved or acquired for the exclusive use of the
United States, and under the exclusive jurisdiction thereof, or any
place purchased or otherwise acquired by the United States by
consent of the legislature of the state in which the same shall be,
for the erection of a fort, magazine, arsenal, dockyard, or other
needful building."
The difference to be observed between this provision and that
recommended by the commission is the
Page 225 U. S. 415
difference between "any fort . . . or other place under the
exclusive jurisdiction of the United States," and "any lands
reserved or acquired for the exclusive use of the United States,
and under the exclusive jurisdiction thereof." The word "lands" in
the latter is limited, as the word "place" was in the former, by
its association. It is further limited, and, indeed, specialized,
by the qualification "reserved or acquired for the exclusive use of
the United States." In other words, it has a proprietary, and not a
governmental, sense, and is very inapt, indeed, to describe the
District of Columbia.
This view is reinforced by a comparison of § 272 with
§§ 5339 and 5570 of the Revised Statutes, which preceded
it and of which it was intended to take the place. Section 5570 was
the predecessor of the fourth subdivision of § 272, and we
have no concern with it. The other three subdivisions were preceded
by § 5339, which provided as follows:
"Every person who commits murder --"
"First. Within any fort, arsenal, dockyard, magazine, or in any
other place or district of country under the exclusive jurisdiction
of the United States;"
"Second. . . ."
"Third. . . . shall suffer death."
It will be observed, therefore, how general and comprehensive
the first clause of § 5339 is, and in comparison how
restricted and special is subd. 3 of § 272. In other words,
there is omitted from the latter the words by which, we have seen,
it was decided in
Winston v. United States, supra, that
the Act of January 15, 1897,
supra, which was the first
legislation giving the power to a jury to qualify their verdict,
was applicable to the District of Columbia.
A change of language is some evidence of a change of purpose,
and certainly it could not have been supposed that the words "any
lands reserved or acquired for the exclusive use of the United
States," used in § 272, would
Page 225 U. S. 416
be regarded as the equivalent in meaning of the words "district
or country under the exclusive jurisdiction of the United States"
used in § 5339. And yet it is mainly on those words in §
272 that appellant relies. The District of Columbia can hardly be
said, as we have pointed out, to be in any proper or adequate sense
"lands reserved for the exclusive use of the United States," while
the words "district or country under the exclusive jurisdiction of
the United States" can be, as they had been, properly and
adequately held to include the District of Columbia.
Very little comment is necessary to show the purpose of the
restricted language of § 272. Chapter 11 deals, as said by the
government, with offenses of the kind subject to the jurisdiction
of the states severally where there are states, offenses not
distinctively federal in character, but subjects of local or
domestic police. The territories provided their own laws in such
cases, just as the states did, and there were distinct
congressional enactments for Alaska and the District of Columbia
which were not intended, we think, to be disturbed. This conclusion
gets strength from § 289, which provides that, if any act be
done or omitted in any of the places mentioned in § 272 which
is not made penal by a law of Congress, but is penal "within the
territorial limits of any state, recognized territory, or
district," shall remain penal notwithstanding a "subsequent repeal
or amendment thereof by any such state or territory or
district."
It follows therefore we think, that chapter 11 of the Criminal
Code, and necessarily § 272, which is a part of it, are not
applicable to the District of Columbia. And it is an immediate
inference that, if the chapter defining the crime of murder is not
applicable, chapter 14, which deals with its trial and incidents,
may not be applicable. There are circumstances which confirm the
inference.
In chapter 11, the definition of murder is essentially the same
as in the District Code, though there are some
Page 225 U. S. 417
differences in the manner of expression. It is divided into
murder in the first degree and murder in the second degree, and in
both the punishment is death, the District Code providing the
manner of death to be by hanging, as does the Criminal Code, in
§ 323 of chapter 14.
The punishment for murder in the second degree is different in
the different Codes. In the District Code, it is imprisonment for
life or for not less than twenty years; in the Criminal Code, for
life or for not more than ten years. The punishments for
manslaughter are also different, being for not more than ten years
in the Criminal Code and not exceeding fifteen years in the
District Code, or such imprisonment and a fine not exceeding
$1,000.
This brings us to the consideration of chapter 14, of which it
may be said that most of its sections are continuations of the
sections of the Revised Statutes or of former acts of Congress. For
instance, § 330, which provides for the qualified verdict, is
the same as the Act of January 15, 1897, c. 29, § 1, 29 Stat.
487, except that the words "murder in the first degree" are
added.
Further comparisons of the sections and provisions of the Codes
will not help us to clarify the situation, which, it must be
admitted, lends itself to controversy.
We think, however, that there are certain general considerations
which control. The Codes are separate instruments, and no certain
test can be deduced from pointing out particular likenesses or
differences. But the effect of separation is important, and
necessarily had its purpose. The Codes had in the main special
spheres of operation, and provisions accommodated to such spheres.
There is certainly nothing anomalous in punishing the crime of
murder differently in different jurisdictions. It is but the
application of legislation to conditions. But if it be anomalous,
very little argument can be drawn from it to solve the questions in
controversy. The difference
Page 225 U. S. 418
existed for a number of years between the District and other
places under national jurisdiction, for, as we have seen, the
qualified verdict has not existed in the District since the
enactment of the District Code, and did not exist when the Criminal
Code was enacted. There is certainly nothing in the mere act of
enacting that Code which declares an intention to give to the
provision conferring power on a jury to qualify their verdict
greater efficacy against the Code of the District than the same
provision in the Act of January 15, 1897, possessed. And the
difference between that act and the District Code we cannot assume
was overlooked, and all that it meant in the administration of
criminal justice, when Congress came to review the laws of the
country for the purpose of their codification and necessarily the
territorial extent of their operation.
Congress certainly, in enacting the District Code, recognized
the expediency of separate provisions for the District of Columbia.
It was said at the bar, and not denied, that the District Code was
not only the work of the lawyers of the District, having in mind
the needs of the District, but of its citizens as well, expressed
through various organizations and bodies of them. In yielding to
the recommendations, Congress made no new precedent. It had given
local control to the territories, and it enacted a separate Code
for Alaska.
But it is said that Congress recognized the incompleteness of
the District Code, and provided that all inconsistent acts of
Congress passed thereafter should be held to modify its provisions,
and to support this section, 1639 is cited. That section provides
as follows:
"The enactment of this Code is not to affect or repeal any act
of Congress which may be passed between the date of this act and
the date when this act is to go into effect, and all acts of
Congress that may be passed hereafter are to have full effect as if
passed after the enactment
Page 225 U. S. 419
of this Code; and, so far as such acts may vary from or conflict
with any provision contained in this Code, they are to have effect
as subsequent statutes and as repealing any portion of this act
inconsistent therewith."
In connection with this section, § 341 of the Criminal Code
is referred to, which is as follows:
"Also all other sections and parts of sections of the Revised
Statutes and acts and parts of acts of Congress, insofar as they
are embraced within and superseded by this act, are hereby
repealed, the remaining portions thereof to be and remain in force
with the same effect and to the same extent as if this act had not
been passed."
This section adds no force or explanation to § 1639. Of
course, what was "embraced within and superseded by" the Criminal
Code is repealed by it. But we have to consider, as we have
considered, whether the provision of the District Code in regard to
the punishment of murder was embraced within the Criminal Code, and
the discussion answers as well the contention based on § 1639.
There is no inconsistency of superseding or repealing effect
between the Code of the District and the Criminal Code, regarding
the latter as an act of Congress passed after the District Code.
Having definite territorial operation, they can exist together.
And, as said by the court of appeals, a cogent reason for the
conclusion that they were intended to exist together is found in
the repealing provisions of the Criminal Code, which, in chapter
15, enumerates in detail the provisions repealed, and no reference
is made to the District Code.
(3) The last contention of petitioner is that the jury was not
lawfully drawn. This contention is made as a makeweight at the last
minute. It was not made as a ground for new trial or arrest of
judgment, nor was it assigned as error in the court of appeals. The
contention has the broad basis, according to the argument of
petitioner, that there is no way of impaneling jurors in a
Page 225 U. S. 420
capital case in the District of Columbia without assenting to or
dissenting from the proposition. We think it constituted a ground
of objection to the competency of the jurors when they were called,
and should have been availed of at the trial. It is provided by
§ 919 of the District Code that no verdict shall be set aside
for any cause which might be alleged as ground of challenge before
a juror is sworn, except for disqualifying bias not discovered or
suspected by the defendant or his counsel before the juror was
sworn.
Judgment affirmed.