In habeas corpus proceedings, this Court is confined to the
examination of fundamental and jurisdictional questions; the writ
cannot be employed as a substitute for a writ of error.
Refusal of the trial court to permit a proffered defense, even
if erroneous, does not ordinarily affect the jurisdiction or amount
to more than error.
An averment of arbitrary action in judicial ruling merely states
a conclusion of law, and has no effect in the absence of facts
alleged sufficient to show that the ruling was actually
arbitrary.
Even though the question whether the judgment was rendered by a
properly constituted court were open here, this Court sees no
reason to disagree with the meaning attributed by the state courts
of California
Page 237 U. S. 503
to Art. VI, §§ 6 and 8 of the constitution of that
state in regard to a judge of the superior court of one county
holding a court in another county on the request of the governor
of.the state.
An amendment of the constitution giving authority where it
existed before may be adopted from abundant caution and not as
recognizing and supplying a
casus omissus.
A sentence of fourteen years' imprisonment for one duly
convicted of perjury does not amount to a deprivation of liberty
without due process of law where it does not exceed the limit
authorized by the statute.
Comparative gravity of criminal offenses is a matter for the
state itself to determine, and the fact that some offenses are
punished with less severity than other does not amount to a denial
of equal protection of the law.
The prohibition in the Eighth Amendment of cruel and unusual
punishments is a limitation upon the federal government, and not on
the states.
A person extradited from Great Britain is not protected by
§ 5275, Rev.Stat., from being tried and convicted for a crime
committed in the state after extradition, and so held in this case
as to perjury committed on the trial of the crime for which the
party was extradited.
The facts, which involve questions raised under the Eighth and
Fourteenth Amendments, and under an extradition treaty, as to the
validity of the conviction and sentence of appellant in a criminal
court of California, are stated in the opinion.
MR. JUSTICE PITNEY delivered the opinion of the Court.
This is an appeal, taken under § 238, Judicial Code to
review a final order of the District Court of the United
Page 237 U. S. 504
states for the Northern District of California denying
appellant's petition for a writ of habeas corpus to be addressed to
appellee, as warden of the state prison of the State of California,
in whose custody appellant alleges he is held in violation of the
Constitution, laws, and treaties of the United States. The petition
was based upon § 753, Rev.Stat., and was denied under §
755 upon the ground that, on the face of it, the petitioner was not
entitled to the writ.
Appellant is held under the authority of a judgment of the
Superior Court in and for the City and County of San Francisco, in
the State of California, imposing a sentence of imprisonment for
the term of fourteen years upon his conviction for perjury upon an
indictment presented December 29, 1905. The allegations of fact
upon which the federal questions are raised are somewhat involved,
and not easily understood without reference to previous proceedings
set forth in
Collins v. O'Neil, 214 U.
S. 113, of which appellant asks us to take judicial
notice. Reading the averments of the petition with this aid, the
following facts appear: on July 13, 1905, appellant was indicted by
the grand jury of the City and County of San Francisco for the
crime of perjury, committed in the giving of testimony in an action
pending in a court of that county wherein one Charlotta Collins was
plaintiff and appellant was defendant, in which she sought to
obtain maintenance, support, and alimony for herself and her child,
the alleged false testimony being that the said Charlotta and
appellant did not intermarry on May 15, 1889, or at any other time,
and were never husband and wife. To answer this indictment,
appellant was extradited from Canada, and he was put upon trial in
the month of December before the Superior Court of the City and
County of San Francisco. The jury disagreed, and while appellant
was in custody awaiting a further trial he was, on December 29,
1905, again indicted for perjury, the offense being alleged to
Page 237 U. S. 505
have been committed in the giving of evidence upon the trial of
the first indictment, in that he falsely testified that, on May 15,
1889, at a specified place in the City of San Francisco, a marriage
ceremony was performed between him and one Agnes Newman, whereas,
in truth, at the time and place specified, a marriage ceremony was
performed between him and one Charlotta Newman. Before being placed
on trial upon the second indictment, appellant applied to the
United States Circuit Court for the Northern District of California
for a writ of habeas corpus, which was denied. 149 F. 573. He was
then tried, found guilty, and sentenced; the judgment was affirmed
by the district court of appeal, and a petition to have the cause
heard in the supreme court was denied. 6 Cal. App. 492. Meanwhile,
successive applications for habeas corpus were made to the United
States District and Circuit Courts for the Northern District of
California and denied. 151 F. 358, 154 F. 980. And the Supreme
Court of California, having entertained such an application,
overruled his contentions and remanded him to the custody of the
sheriff. 151 Cal. 340, 351. This Court reviewed the decision of the
state supreme court and the decision of the United States circuit
court, reported in 154 F. 980, with the result that both were
affirmed.
214 U. S. 113.
It is unnecessary to enlarge upon the doctrine, thoroughly
established and recently restated, that in habeas corpus
proceedings we are confined to the examination of fundamental and
jurisdictional questions, and that the writ cannot be employed as a
substitute for a writ of error.
Frank v. Mangum,
237 U. S. 309.
In his petition and in voluminous briefs, appellant raises
numerous questions, of which it is sufficient to mention the
following:
Page 237 U. S. 506
(1) He contends that he was deprived of due process of law, in
violation of the Fourteenth Amendment, in that the trial court
arbitrarily denied and refused to consider a valid and legally
conclusive defense offered by him upon the trial of the second
indictment, which resulted in the conviction upon which he is now
held in custody. The alleged defense was that testimony relating to
the question of fact whether a ceremonial marriage took place on
May 15, 1889, between him and Charlotta Newman could not be
material to the issue upon the first indictment, nor furnish valid
or competent foundation for a charge of perjury, because the
marriage, if performed, was a nullity, and this because, at a
previous time, appellant and Agnes Newman intermarried by written
and mutual contract of marriage
per verba de praesenti,
followed by consummation and a public and mutual assumption of
marital rights, duties, and obligations, which marriage continued
to exist until dissolved by the death of Agnes in the month of May,
1901, and because of this previous marriage, any marriage ceremony
between appellant and Charlotta on May 15, A.D. 1889, was void by
§ 61 of the Civil Code of California. But, plainly, the
question whether testimony respecting the alleged ceremony was
material upon the trial of the first indictment was to be
determined by considering the nature of the issue that was then
being tried, and the state of the other evidence that had been
introduced at the time the alleged false testimony was given, not
by reexamining the merits of that issue or the truth of the other
evidence. The principal questions at issue upon the former trial,
so far as appears, were (a) did appellant enter into a ceremonial
marriage with Charlotta on the date named? (b) was he at that time,
already married to Agnes, then still living? These were questions
of fact; if both were answered in the affirmative, the marriage
with Charlotta, although made in fact, was void in law. In order
for the prosecution to succeed, the
Page 237 U. S. 507
first must be answered in the affirmative, the second in the
negative; hence, testimony bearing upon either was material. The
alleged false testimony of appellant tended to prove the negative
of the first question. Manifestly, when he was afterwards tried
upon an indictment for perjury based upon that testimony, no
legitimate light could be thrown upon the question of its
materiality or of its falsity by retrying the second question of
fact or the legal conclusions resulting therefrom. This matter was
sufficiently disposed of by the state court of appeal in 6 Cal.
App. 492, 498, 500, 503.
Nor are we able to see that the refusal of the proffered
defense, even were such refusal erroneous, could at all affect the
jurisdiction of the court, or amount to more than an error
committed in the exercise of jurisdiction. The averment that the
defense was "arbitrarily refused" merely states a conclusion of
law, and is of no effect in the absence of facts sufficient to show
that the ruling was in truth arbitrary, and no such facts are
alleged.
(2) A second contention is that the judgment under which
appellant is held in custody is not the judgment of the Superior
Court in and for the City and County of San Francisco, or of any
legally constituted court of judicature, because Judge Burnett, who
presided at the trial and rendered the judgment, was not a judge
de facto or
de jure of that court, but was a
judge of the superior court for another county in said state, and
presided at appellant's trial at the request of the governor, and
without the consent or stipulation of appellant, or any request of
the judges of the San Francisco Superior Court. This contention is
to to be tested by the state constitution, of which the pertinent
provisions, as they stood at the time of appellant's conviction,
are as follows:
"Art. VI, Sec. 6. There shall be in each of the organized
Page 237 U. S. 508
counties, or cities and counties of the state, a superior court,
for each of which at least one judge shall be elected by the
qualified electors of the county, or city and county at the general
state election;
provided . . . that in the City and County
of San Francisco there shall be elected twelve judges of the
superior court, any one or more of whom may hold court. There may
be as many sessions of said court at the same time as there are
judges thereof. . . . The judgments, orders, and proceedings of any
session of the superior court held by any one or more of the judges
of said courts, respectively shall be equally effectual as if all
the judges of said respective courts presided at such session. . .
."
"Sec. 8. A judge of any superior court may hold a superior court
in any county at the request of a judge of the superior court
thereof, and, upon the request of the governor, it shall be his
duty so to do. . . ."
Of course, these sections are to be read together, and their
natural meaning is that, where a judge of a superior court of one
county holds a superior court in another county upon the request of
the governor, the court so held by him constitutes a session of the
superior court, with the same jurisdiction as if one of the elected
judges were sitting.
Gardner v. Jones, 126 Cal. 614, 620,
is to this effect. And when we add that Judge Burnett presided at
appellant's trial upon the request of the governor, that the
district court of appeal affirmed the judgment, and the supreme
court refused to review its decision (6 Cal. App. 492, 507), and
that the latter court, in the habeas corpus proceeding, upheld the
jurisdiction of the trial court (151 Cal. 340), no reasonable doubt
remains that the state courts advisedly adopted such a construction
of § 8 as to sustain Judge Burnett's authority, even though
appellant's present contention was not raised, and therefore not
distinctly passed upon. Assuming the question to be open here, we
see no reason
Page 237 U. S. 509
to disagree with the meaning thus attributed to the constitution
by the courts of the state.
According to appellant's construction of § 8,
supra, a superior court judge elected in one county, when
holding a superior court in another county upon the request of the
governor, would be without jurisdiction, and incapable even of
holding a "session" of the court, because of the absence of express
provision in the constitution to that effect. This is so plainly
unreasonable that it might be dismissed as absurd except for the
insistence that, by a constitutional amendment adopted November 8,
1910 (several years after appellant's conviction), the people
themselves recognized a
casus omissus in § 8 of
Article VI, and supplied it by adding these clauses:
"There may be as many sessions of a superior court at the same
time as there are judges thereof, including any judge or judges
acting upon request, or any judge or judges
pro tempore.
The judgments, orders, acts, and proceedings of any session of any
superior court held by one or more judges acting upon request, or
judge or judges
pro tempore, shall be equally effective as
if the judge or all of the judges of such court presided at such
session."
But, in view of the settled construction of the section as it
previously stood, we must regard the amendment as having been
adopted from abundant caution, to remove all question of doubt,
rather than as recognizing and supplying a
casus
omissus.
(3) It is contended that a sentence of fourteen years'
imprisonment for the crime of perjury is grossly excessive, and
therefore illegal, and prohibited by the Fourteenth Amendment of
the Constitution of the United States. The sentence was based upon
§ 126 of the California Penal Code, which reads: "Perjury is
punishable by imprisonment in the state prison not less than one
nor more than fourteen years." This is not a case, therefore, of a
sentence exceeding the limit authorized by law.
In re
Snow, 120 U. S. 274;
Hans Nielsen, Petitioner, 131 U.
S. 176.
Page 237 U. S. 510
To establish appropriate penalties for the commission of crime,
and to confer upon judicial tribunals a discretion respecting the
punishment to be inflicted in particular cases, within limits fixed
by the lawmaking power, are functions peculiarly belonging to the
several states, and there is nothing to support the contention that
the sentence imposed in this case violates the provisions of the
Fourteenth Amendment either in depriving appellant of his liberty
without due process of law or in denying to him the equal
protection of the laws.
In re Kemmler, 136 U.
S. 436,
136 U. S. 448;
Coffey v. Harlan County, 204 U. S. 659,
204 U. S.
662.
The argument under the equal protection clause is based
principally upon the averment that the false testimony to the
effect that a ceremonial marriage between appellant and Charlotta
Newman did not take place on May 15, 1889,
"could not by any possibility induce or influence any order,
judgment, or decree of any court or judge, nor any verdict or
judicial proceedings, and did not and could not by any possibility
injure or tend to injure anyone in his or her rights or status in
law."
Since the petition shows that the natural tendency and
presumably the intended result of the perjury was to improperly
procure appellant's acquittal upon the first indictment, the
present contention is so manifestly frivolous as not to require
further discussion. It is argued also that, in the case of other
felonies denounced by the laws of California,
"many of them offenses of greater gravity and of more injurious
consequences than perjury, the average maximum penalty is five
years' imprisonment in the penitentiary, and no more."
But it is hardly necessary to say that the comparative gravity
of criminal offenses, and whether their consequences are more or
less injurious, are matters for the state itself to determine.
The Eighth Amendment is also invoked, with its prohibition of
cruel and unusual punishments, but, as has been often pointed out,
this is a limitation upon the federal
Page 237 U. S. 511
government, not upon the states.
Barron v.
Baltimore, 7 Pet. 243,
32 U. S. 247;
Pervear v.
Massachusetts, 5 Wall. 475,
72 U. S. 480;
McElvaine v. Brush, 142 U. S. 155,
142 U. S. 158;
O'Neil v. Vermont, 144 U. S. 323,
144 U. S. 332;
Ensign v. Pennsylvania, 227 U. S. 592,
227 U. S.
597.
(4) It is contended, upon the authority of
United States v.
Rauscher, 119 U. S. 407,
119 U. S. 430;
Cosgrove v. Winney, 174 U. S. 64, and
other cases that the conviction and imprisonment of appellant under
the second indictment are in contravention of the treaty of
extradition between the United States and Great Britain in that he
was extradited for the sole purpose of being brought to trial upon
the first indictment, and that, while that charge was awaiting
trial and final disposition, he could not, without violence to the
treaty and § 5275 of the Revised Statutes, be tried,
convicted, sentenced, and imprisoned upon another charge. It is
alleged that the first indictment was dismissed upon motion of the
prosecution on July 12, 1909, and that, under the treaty and law,
he was entitled to a reasonable time thereafter in which to return
to the country from which he was extradited. In this form, and in
others too numerous for mention, appellant reiterates the points
that were decided against him by the Supreme Court of California
(
In re Collins,151 Cal. 340), whose judgment was affirmed
by this Court in
Collins v. O'Neil, 214 U.
S. 113, where the Court said (p.
214 U. S.
122):
"The contention of the plaintiff in error that the duty to
afford opportunity to return after a trial or other termination of
the case upon which he was extradited is unaffected by any
subsequent crime he may have committed is not even plausible,"
and further (p.
214 U. S.
123):
"The contention is also without merit that he has, at any rate,
the right to a trial to a conclusion of the case for which he was
extradited before he can be tried for a crime subsequently
committed. The matter lies within the jurisdiction of the state
whose laws he has violated
Page 237 U. S. 512
since his extradition, and we cannot see that it is a matter of
any interest to the surrendering government. There is nothing in
§ 5275, Rev.Stat.,
supra, which gives the least
countenance to the claims of the plaintiff in error."
Appellant's other points and arguments are but variations of
those that have been mentioned.
The final order of the district court refusing the application
for a writ of habeas corpus is
Affirmed.