Various state criminal charges were brought against the
individual petitioners, members of groups engaging in civil rights
activities in Mississippi in 1964, and they filed petitions to
remove their cases to the Federal District Court alleging under 28
U.S.C. § 1443(1) that they were denied or could not enforce in
the state courts rights under laws providing for the equal civil
rights of citizens, and under 28 U.S.C. § 1443(2) that they
were being prosecuted for acts done under color of the authority of
the Constitution and laws of the United States. The § 1443(1)
removal claims were fundamentally based on allegations (1) that the
individual petitioners were arrested because they were Negroes or
were helping Negroes assert their rights and that they were
innocent of the charges against them, or (2) that they would be
unable to obtain fair state trials. The § 1443(2) removal
claims were based on the contention that the various federal
constitutional and statutory provisions (including 42 U.S.C. §
§ 1971 and 1981) invoked in the removal petitions conferred
"color of authority" on the individual petitioners to commit the
acts for which they are being prosecuted. The District Court, on
motion, remanded the cases to the city police court for trial. The
Court of Appeals reversed, holding that a valid removal claim under
§ 1443(1) had been stated by allegations that a state statute
had been applied before trial so as to deprive an accused of his
equal civil rights where the arrest and charge thereunder were
effected for reasons of racial discrimination, and remanded the
cases to the District Court for a hearing on the truth of the
allegations. The court rejected the § 1443(2) contentions,
holding that provision available only to those who have acted in an
official or
quasi-official capacity under federal law.
Held:
1. The individual petitioners had no removal right under 28
U.S.C. § 1443(2), since, as the legislative history of that
provision makes clear, that provision applies only in the case of
federal
Page 384 U. S. 809
officers and persons assisting such officers in performing their
duties under a federal law providing for equal civil rights. Pp.
384 U. S.
814-824.
2. Section 1443(1) permits removal only in the rare situation
where it can be clearly predicted by reason of the operation of a
pervasive and explicit law that federal rights will inevitably be
denied by the very act of bringing the defendant to trial in the
state court. Such not being the case here, the individual
petitioners are not entitled to removal under § 1443(1). Pp.
384 U. S.
824-828.
(a) Some of the rights invoked by the removal petitions, such as
those of free expression under the First Amendment, clearly cannot
meet the statutory definition of "equal civil rights." P.
384 U. S.
825.
(b) Neither the two federal laws specifically referred to in the
removal petitions (42 U.S.C. § § 1971, 1981), nor any
others confer an absolute right on private citizens to commit the
acts involved in the charges against the individual petitioners or
grant immunity from state prosecution on such charges.
Georgia
v. Rachel, ante, p.
384 U. S. 780,
distinguished. Pp.
384 U. S.
826-827.
(c) Removal under § 1443(1) cannot be supported merely by
showing that there has been an illegal denial of civil rights by
state officials in advance of trial, that the charges against the
defendant are false, or that the defendant cannot obtain a fair
trial in a particular state court. Pp.
384 U. S.
827-828.
3. Section 1443(1) does not work a wholesale dislocation of the
historic relationship between the state and federal courts in the
administration of the criminal law, as the line of decisions from
Strauder v. West Virginia, 100 U.
S. 303, to
Kentucky v. Powers, 201 U. S.
1, makes clear. If changes are to be made in the
long-settled interpretation of § 1443(1), it is for Congress,
not this Court, to make them. Pp.
384 U. S.
832-835.
347 F.2d 679, 986, reversed.
Page 384 U. S. 810
MR. JUSTICE STEWART delivered the opinion of the Court.
These consolidated cases, sequels to
Georgia v. Rachel,
ante, p.
384 U. S. 780,
involve prosecutions on various state criminal charges against 29
people who were allegedly engaged in the spring and summer of 1964
in civil rights activity in Leflore County, Mississippi. In the
first case, 14 individuals were charged with obstructing the public
streets of the City of Greenwood in violation of Mississippi law.
[
Footnote 1] They filed
petitions to remove their cases to the United States District Court
for the Northern District of Mississippi under 28 U.S.C. §
1443(1964 ed). [
Footnote 2]
Alleging
Page 384 U. S. 811
that they were members of a civil rights group engaged in a
drive to encourage Negro voter registration in Leflore County,
their petitions stated that they were denied or could not enforce
in the courts of the State rights under laws providing for the
equal civil rights of citizens of the United States, and that they
were being prosecuted for acts done under color of authority of the
Constitution of the United States and 42 U.S.C. § 1971
et
seq. (1964 ed.). [
Footnote
3] Additionally, their removal petitions alleged that the
statute under which they were charged was unconstitutionally vague
on its face, that it was unconstitutionally
Page 384 U. S. 812
applied to their conduct, and that its application was a part of
a policy of racial discrimination fostered by the Mississippi and
the City of Greenwood. The District Court sustained the motion of
the City of Greenwood to remand the cases to the city police court
for trial. The Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit reversed,
holding that
"a good claim for removal under § 1443(1) is stated by
allegations that a state statute has been applied prior to trial so
as to deprive an accused of his equal civil rights in that the
arrest and charge under the statute were effected for reasons of
racial discrimination."
Peacock v. City of Greenwood, 347 F.2d 679, 684.
Accordingly, the cases were remanded to the District Court for a
hearing on the truth of the defendants' allegations. At the same
time, the Court of Appeals rejected the defendants' contentions
under 28 U.S.C. § 1443(2), holding that removal under that
subsection is available only to those who have acted in an official
or
quasi-official capacity under a federal law, and who
can therefore be said to have acted under "color of authority" of
the law within the meaning of that provision. [
Footnote 4]
In the second case, 15 people allegedly affiliated with a civil
rights group were arrested at different times in July
Page 384 U. S. 813
and August of 1964 and charged with various offenses against the
laws of Mississippi or ordinances of the City of Greenwood.
[
Footnote 5] These defendants
filed essentially identical petitions for removal in the District
Court, denying that they had engaged in any conduct prohibited by
valid laws and stating that their arrests and prosecutions were for
the
"sole purpose and effect of harassing Petitioners and of
punishing them for and deterring them from the exercise of their
constitutionally protected right to protest the conditions of
racial discrimination and segregation"
in Mississippi. As grounds for removal, the defendants
specifically invoked 28 U.S.C. § § 1443(1) [
Footnote 6] and 1443(2). [
Footnote 7] The District Court held that the
cases
Page 384 U. S. 814
had been improperly removed, and remanded them to the police
court of the City of Greenwood. In a per curiam opinion finding the
issues "identical with" those determined in the
Peacock
case, the Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit reversed and
remanded the cases to the District Court for a hearing on the truth
of the defendants' allegations under § 1443(1).
Weathers
v. City of Greenwood, 347 F.2d 986.
We granted certiorari to consider the important questions raised
by the parties concerning the scope of the civil rights removal
statute. 382 U.S. 971. [
Footnote
8] As in
Georgia v. Rachel, ante, p.
384 U. S. 780, we
deal here not with questions of congressional power, but with
issues of statutory construction.
I
The individual petitioners contend that, quite apart from 28
U.S.C. § 1443(1), they are entitled to remove their cases to
the District Court under 28 U.S.C. § 1443(2), which authorizes
the removal of a civil action or criminal prosecution for "any act
under color of authority derived from any law providing for equal
rights. . . ." The core of their contention is that the various
federal constitutional and statutory provisions invoked in their
removal petitions conferred "color of authority" upon them to
perform the acts for which they
Page 384 U. S. 815
are being prosecuted by the State. We reject this argument
because we have concluded that the history of § 1443(2)
demonstrates convincingly that this subsection of the removal
statute is available only to federal officers and to persons
assisting such officers in the performance of their official
duties. [
Footnote 9]
The progenitor of § 1443(2) was § 3 of the Civil
Rights Act of 1866, 14 Stat. 27. Insofar as it is relevant here,
that section granted removal of all criminal prosecutions
"commenced in any State court . . . against any
officer, civil or military,
or other person, for
any arrest or imprisonment, trespasses, or wrongs done or committed
by virtue or under color of authority derived from this act or the
act establishing a Bureau for the relief of Freedmen and Refugees,
and all acts amendatory thereof. . . ."
(Emphasis added.)
The statutory phrase "officer . . . or other person"
characterizing the removal defendants in § 3 of the 1866 Act
was carried forward without change through successive revisions of
the removal statute until 1948, when the revisers, disavowing any
substantive change, eliminated the phrase entirely. [
Footnote 10] The definition of the persons
entitled
Page 384 U. S. 816
to removal under the present form of the statute is therefore
appropriately to be read in the light of the more expansive
language of the statute's ancestor.
See Madruga v. Superior
Court, 346 U. S. 556,
346 U. S. 560,
n. 12;
Fourco Glass Co. v. Transmirra Products Corp.,
353 U. S. 222,
353 U. S.
227-228.
In the context of its original enactment as part of § 3 of
the Civil Rights Act of 1866, the statutory language "officer . . .
or other person" points squarely to the conclusion that the phrase
"or other person" meant persons acting in association with the
civil or military officers mentioned in the immediately preceding
words of the statute. That interpretation stems from the obvious
contrast between the "officer . . . or other person" phrase and the
next preceding portion of the statute, the predecessor of the
present § 1443(1), which granted removal to "any . . . person"
who was denied or could not enforce in the courts of the State his
rights under § 1 of the 1866 Act. The dichotomy between
"officer . . . or other person" and "any . . . person" in these
correlative removal provisions persisted through successive
statutory revisions until 1948, even though, were we to accept the
individual petitioners' contentions, the two phrases would in fact
have been almost entirely coextensive.
It is clear that the "other person" in the "officer . . . or
other person" formula of § 3 of the Civil Rights Act of 1866
was intended as an obvious reference to certain categories of
persons described in the enforcement provisions, § § 4-7,
of the Act. 14 Stat. 28-29. Section 4 of the Act specifically
charged both the officers
Page 384 U. S. 817
and the agents of the Freedmen's Bureau, [
Footnote 11] among others, with the duty of
enforcing the Civil Rights Act. As such, those officers and agents
were required to arrest and institute proceedings against persons
charged with violations
Page 384 U. S. 818
of the Act. [
Footnote 12]
By the "color of authority" removal provision of § 3 of the
Civil Rights Act, "agents" who derived their authority from the
Freedman's Bureau legislation would be entitled as "other persons,"
if not as "officers," to removal of state prosecutions against them
based upon their enforcement activities under both the Freedmen's
Bureau legislation and the Civil Rights Act. [
Footnote 13] Section 5 of the Civil Rights Act,
now 42 U.S.C. § 1989 (1964 ed.), specifically authorized
United States commissioners to appoint "one or more suitable
persons" to execute warrants and other process issued by the
commissioners. [
Footnote 14]
These "suitable persons" were, in turn, specifically
Page 384 U. S. 819
authorized "to summon and call to their aid the bystanders or
posse comitatus of the proper county." [
Footnote 15] Section 6 of the Act provided criminal
penalties for any individual who obstructed
"any officer, or other person charged with the execution of any
warrant or process issued under the provisions of this act, or any
person or persons lawfully assisting him or them,"
or who rescued
Page 384 U. S. 820
or attempted to rescue prisoners "from the custody of the
officer, other person or persons, or those lawfully assisting."
[
Footnote 16] Finally,
§ 7 of the Act, now 42 U.S.C. § 1991 (1964 ed.), awarded
a fee of five dollars for each individual arrested by the "person
or persons authorized to execute the process" --
i.e., the
"one or more suitable persons" of § 5. Thus, the enforcement
provisions of the 1866 Act were replete with references to "other
persons" in context obviously relating to positive enforcement
activity under the Act. [
Footnote 17]
Page 384 U. S. 821
The derivation of the statutory phrase "For any act" in §
1443(2) confirms the interpretation that removal under this
subsection is limited to federal officers and those acting under
them. The phrase "For any act" was substituted in 1948 for the
phrase "for any arrest or imprisonment or other trespasses or
wrongs." Like the "officer . . . or other person" provision, the
language specifying the acts on which removal could be grounded
had, with minor changes, persisted until 1948 in the civil rights
removal statute since its original introduction in the 1866 Act.
The language of the original Civil Rights Act -- " arrest or
imprisonment, trespasses, or wrongs" -- is preeminently the
language of enforcement. The
Page 384 U. S. 822
words themselves denote the very sorts of activity for which
federal officers, seeking to enforce the broad guarantees of the
1866 Act, were likely to be prosecuted in the state courts. As the
Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit has put it,
"'Arrest or imprisonment, trespasses, or wrongs,' were precisely
the probable charges against enforcement officers and those
assisting them; and a statute speaking of such acts 'done or
committed by virtue of or under color of authority derived from'
specified laws reads far more readily on persons engaged in some
sort of enforcement than on those whose rights were being enforced.
. . ."
New York v. Galamison, 342 F.2d 255, 262.
The language of the "color of authority" removal provision of
§ 3 of the Civil Rights Act of 1866 was taken directly from
the Habeas Corpus Suspension Act of 1863, 12 Stat. 755, which
authorized the President to suspend the writ of habeas corpus and
precluded civil and criminal liability of any person making a
search, seizure, arrest, or imprisonment under any order of the
President during the rebellion. [
Footnote 18] Section 5 of the 1863 Act provided for the
removal of all suits or prosecutions
"against any officer, civil or military, or against any other
person, for any arrest or imprisonment made, or other trespasses or
wrongs done or committed, or any act omitted to be done at any time
during the present rebellion, by virtue or under color of any
authority derived from or exercised by or under the President of
the United States, or any act of Congress."
12 Stat. 756.
See The Mayor v.
Cooper, 6 Wall. 247;
Phillips v. Gaines,
131 U.S.App. clxix. Since the 1863 Act granted no rights to private
individuals, its removal provision was concerned solely with the
protection of federal officers and persons acting
Page 384 U. S. 823
under them in the performance of their official duties.
[
Footnote 19] Thus at the
same time that Congress expanded the availability of removal by
enacting the "denied or cannot enforce" clause in § 3 of the
Civil Rights Act of 1866, it repeated almost verbatim in the "color
of authority" clause the language of the 1863 Act [
Footnote 20] -- language that was clearly
limited to enforcement activity by federal officers and those
acting under them. [
Footnote
21]
Page 384 U. S. 824
For these reasons, we hold that the second subsection of §
1443 confers a privilege of removal only upon federal officers or
agents and those authorized to act with or for them in
affirmatively executing duties under any federal law providing for
equal civil rights. [
Footnote
22] Accordingly, the individual petitioners in the case before
us had no right of removal to the federal court under 28 U.S.C.
§ 1443(2).
II
We come, then, to the issues which this case raises as to the
scope of 28 U.S.C. § 1443(1). In
Georgia v. Rachel,
decided today, we have held that removal of a state court trespass
prosecution can be had under § 1443(1) upon a petition
alleging that the prosecution stems exclusively from the
petitioners' peaceful exercise of their right to equal
accommodation in establishments covered by the Civil Rights Act of
1964, § 201
et seq., 78 Stat. 243, 42 U.S.C. §
2000a
et seq. (1964 ed.). Since that Act
Page 384 U. S. 825
itself, as construed by this Court in
Hamm v. City of Rock
Hill, 379 U. S. 306,
379 U. S. 310,
specifically and uniquely guarantees that the conduct alleged in
the removal petition in
Rachel may "not be the subject of
trespass prosecutions," the defendants inevitably are "denied or
cannot enforce in the courts of [the] State a right under any law
providing for . . . equal civil rights," by merely being brought
before a state court to defend such a prosecution. The present
case, however, is far different.
In the first place, the federal rights invoked by the individual
petitioners include some that clearly cannot qualify under the
statutory definition as rights under laws provided for "equal civil
rights." The First Amendment rights of free expression, for
example, so heavily relied upon in the removal petitions, are not
rights arising under a law providing for "equal civil rights"
within the meaning of § 1443(1). The First Amendment is a
great charter of American freedom, and the precious rights of
personal liberty it protects are undoubtedly comprehended in the
concept of "civil rights."
Cf. Hague v. CIO, 307 U.
S. 496,
307 U. S.
531-532 (separate opinion of Stone, J.). But the
reference in § 1443(1) is to "equal civil rights." That
phrase, as our review in
Rachel of its legislative history
makes clear, does not include the broad constitutional guarantees
of the First Amendment. [
Footnote 23] A precise definition of the limitations of
the phrase "any law providing for . . . equal civil rights" in
§ 1443(1) is not a matter we need pursue to a conclusion,
however, because we may proceed here on the premise that at least
the two federal statutes specifically referred to in the removal
petitions, 42 U.S.C. § 1971 and 42 U.S.C. § 1981, do
qualify under the statutory definition. [
Footnote 24]
Page 384 U. S. 826
The fundamental claim in this case, then, is that a case for
removal is made under § 1443(1) upon a petition alleging: (1)
that the defendants were arrested by state officers and charged
with various offenses under state law because they were Negroes or
because they were engaged in helping Negroes assert their rights
under federal equal civil rights laws, and that they are completely
innocent of the charges against them, or (2) that the defendants
will be unable to obtain a fair trial in the state court. The basic
difference between this case and
Rachel is thus
immediately apparent. In
Rachel, the defendants relied on
the specific provisions of a preemptive federal civil rights law --
§§ 201(a) and 203(c) of the Civil Rights Act of 1964, 42
U.S.C. § § 2000a(a) and 2000a-2(c) (1964 ed.), as
construed in
Hamm v. City of Rock Hill, supra -- that,
under the conditions alleged, gave them: (1) the federal statutory
right to remain on the property of a restaurant proprietor after
being ordered to leave, despite a state law making it a criminal
offense not to leave, and (2) the further federal statutory right
that no State should even attempt to prosecute them for their
conduct. The Civil Rights Act of 1964 as construed in
Hamm
thus specifically and uniquely conferred upon the defendants an
absolute right to "violate" the explicit terms of the state
criminal trespass law with the impunity under the conditions
alleged in the
Rachel removal petition, and any attempt by
the State to make them answer in a court for this conceded
"violation" would directly deny their federal right "in the courts
of [the] State." The present case differs from
Rachel in
two significant respects. First, no federal law confers an absolute
right on private citizens -- on civil rights advocates, on Negroes,
or on anybody else -- to obstruct a public street, to contribute to
the delinquency of a minor, to drive an automobile without a
license, or to bite a
Page 384 U. S. 827
policeman. Second, no federal law confers immunity from state
prosecution on such charges. [
Footnote 25]
To sustain removal of these prosecutions to a federal court upon
the allegations of the petitions in this case would therefore mark
a complete departure from the terms of the removal statute, which
allow removal only when a person is "denied or cannot enforce" a
specified federal right "in the courts of [the] State," and a
complete departure as well from the consistent line of this Court's
decisions from
Strauder v. West Virginia, 100 U.
S. 303, to
Kentucky v. Powers, 201 U. S.
1. [
Footnote 26]
Those cases all stand for at least one basic proposition: it is not
enough to support removal under § 1443(1) to allege or show
that the defendant's federal equal civil rights have been illegally
and corruptly denied by state administrative officials in advance
of trial, that the charges against the defendant are false, or that
the defendant is unable to obtain a fair trial in a particular
state court. The motives of the officers bringing the charges may
be corrupt, but that does not show that the state trial court will
find the defendant guilty if he is innocent, or that in any other
manner the defendant will
Page 384 U. S. 828
be "denied or cannot enforce in the courts" of the State any
right under a federal law providing for equal civil rights. The
civil rights removal statute does not require and does not permit
the judges of the federal courts to put their brethren of the state
judiciary on trial. Under § 1443(1), the vindication of the
defendant's federal rights is left to the state courts except in
the rare situations where it can be clearly predicted by reason of
the operation of a pervasive and explicit state or federal law that
those rights will inevitably be denied by the very act of bringing
the defendant to trial in the state court.
Georgia v. Rachel,
supra; Strauder v. West Virginia, 100 U.
S. 303.
What we have said is not for one moment to suggest that the
individual petitioners in this case have not alleged a denial of
rights guaranteed to them under federal law. If, as they allege,
they are being prosecuted on baseless charges solely because of
their race, then there has been an outrageous denial of their
federal rights, and the federal courts are far from powerless to
redress the wrongs done to them. The most obvious remedy is the
traditional one emphasized in the line of cases from
Virginia
v. Rives, 100 U. S. 313, to
Kentucky v. Powers, 201 U. S. 1 --
vindication of their federal claims on direct review by this Court,
if those claims have not been vindicated by the trial or reviewing
courts of the State. That is precisely what happened in two of the
cases in the
Rives-Powers line of decisions, where removal
under the predecessor of § 1443(1) was held to be
unauthorized, but where the state court convictions were overturned
because of a denial of the defendants' federal rights at their
trials. [
Footnote 27] That
is precisely what has happened in
Page 384 U. S. 829
countless cases this Court has reviewed over the years -- cases
like
Shuttlesworth v. Birmingham, 382 U. S.
87, to name one at random decided in the present
Term.
"Cases where Negroes are prosecuted and convicted in state
courts can find their way expeditiously to this Court, provided
they present constitutional questions."
England v. Medical Examiners, 375 U.
S. 411,
375 U. S. 434
(DOUGLAS, J., concurring).
But there are many other remedies available in the federal
courts to redress the wrongs claimed by the individual petitioners
in the extraordinary circumstances they allege in their removal
petitions. If the state prosecution or trial on the charge of
obstructing a public street or on any other charge would itself
clearly deny their rights protected by the First Amendment, they
may, under some circumstances, obtain an injunction in the federal
court.
See Dombrowski v. Pfister, 380 U.
S. 479. If they go to trial and there is a complete
absence of evidence against them, their convictions will be set
aside because of a denial of due process of law.
Thompson v.
Louisville, 362 U. S. 199. If
at their trial, they are in fact denied any federal constitutional
rights, and these denials go uncorrected by other courts of the
State, the remedy of federal habeas corpus is freely available to
them.
Fay v. Noia, 372 U. S. 391. If
their federal claims at trial have been denied through an unfair or
deficient factfinding process, that, too, can be corrected by a
federal court.
Townsend v. Sain, 372 U.
S. 293.
Other sanctions, civil and criminal, are available in the
federal courts against officers of a State who violate the
petitioners' federal constitutional and statutory rights. Under 42
U.S.C. § 1983 (1964 ed.) the officers may be made to respond
in damages not only for violations of rights conferred by federal
equal civil rights laws, but for violations of other federal
constitutional and
Page 384 U. S. 830
statutory rights as well. [
Footnote 28]
Monroe v. Pape, 365 U.
S. 167. And, only this Term, we have held that the
provisions of 18 U.S.C. § 241 (1964 ed.), a criminal law that
imposes punishment of up to 10 years in prison, may be invoked
against those who conspire to deprive any citizen of the "free
exercise or enjoyment of any right or privilege secured to him by
the Constitution or laws of the United States" by "causing the
arrest of Negroes by means of false reports that such Negroes had
committed criminal acts." [
Footnote 29]
United States v. Guest,
383 U. S. 745,
383 U. S.
756.
Page 384 U. S. 831
But the question before us now is not whether state officials in
Mississippi have engaged in conduct for which they may be civilly
or criminally liable under federal law. The question, precisely, is
whether the individual petitioners are entitled to remove these
state prosecutions to a federal court under the provisions of 28
U.S.C. § 1443(1). Unless the words of this removal statute are
to be disregarded and the previous consistent decisions of this
Court completely repudiated, the answer must clearly be that no
removal is authorized in this case. In the
Rachel case,
decided today, we have traced the course of those decisions against
the historic background of the statute they were called upon to
interpret. And in
Rachel, we have concluded that removal
to the federal court in the narrow circumstances there presented
would not be a departure from the teaching of this Court's
decisions, because the Civil Rights Act of 1964, in those narrow
circumstances, "substitutes a right for a crime."
Hamm v. Rock
Hill, 379 U. S. 306,
379 U. S.
315.
We need not and do not necessarily approve or adopt all the
language and all the reasoning of every one of this Court's
opinions construing this removal statute, from
Strauder v. West
Virginia, 100 U. S. 303, to
Kentucky v. Powers, 201 U. S. 1. But we
decline to repudiate those decisions, and we decline to do so not
out of a blind adherence to the principle of
stare
decisis, but because, after independent consideration, we have
determined, for the reasons expressed in this opinion and in
Rachel, that those decisions were correct in their basic
conclusion that the provisions of § 1443(1) do not operate to
work a wholesale dislocation of the historic relationship between
the state and the federal courts in the administration of the
criminal law.
Page 384 U. S. 832
It is worth contemplating what the result would be if the
strained interpretation of § 1443(1) urged by the individual
petitioners were to prevail. In the fiscal year 1963, there were 14
criminal removal cases of all kinds in the entire Nation; in fiscal
1964, there were 43. The present case was decided by the Court of
Appeals for the Fifth Circuit on June 22, 1965, just before the end
of the fiscal year. In that year, fiscal 1965, there were 1,079
criminal removal cases in the Fifth Circuit alone. [
Footnote 30] But this phenomenal increase
is no more than a drop in the bucket of what could reasonably be
expected in the future. For if the individual petitioners should
prevail in their interpretation of § 1443(1), then every
criminal case in every court of every State -- on any charge from a
five dollar misdemeanor to first-degree murder -- would be
removable to a federal court upon a petition alleging (1) that the
defendant was being prosecuted because of his race [
Footnote 31] and that he was completely
innocent of the charge brought against him, or (2) that he would be
unable to obtain a fair trial in the state court. On motion to
remand, the federal court would be required in every case to hold a
hearing, which would amount to at least a preliminary trial of the
motivations of the state officers who arrested and charged the
defendant, of the quality of the state court or judge before whom
the charges were filed and of the defendant's innocence or guilt.
And the federal court might, of course, be located hundreds of
miles away from the place where the charge was brought. This
hearing could be followed either by a full trial in the federal
court or by a remand order. Every remand order would be
Page 384 U. S. 833
appealable as of right to a United States Court of Appeals and,
if affirmed there, would then be reviewable by petition for a writ
of certiorari in this Court. If the remand order were eventually
affirmed, there might, if the witnesses were still available,
finally be a trial in the state court, months or years after the
original charge was brought. If the remand order were eventually
reversed, there might finally be a trial in the federal court, also
months or years after the original charge was brought.
We have no doubt that Congress, if it chose, could provide for
exactly such a system. We may assume that Congress has
constitutional power to provide that all federal issues be tried in
the federal courts, that all be tried in the courts of the States,
or that jurisdiction of such issues be shared. [
Footnote 32] And, in the exercise of that
power, we may assume that Congress is constitutionally fully free
to establish the conditions under which civil or criminal
proceedings involving federal issues may be removed from one court
to another. [
Footnote
33]
But before establishing the regime the individual petitioners
propose, Congress would no doubt fully consider many questions. The
Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit has mentioned some of the
practical questions that would be involved:
"If the removal jurisdiction is
Page 384 U. S. 834
to be expanded and federal courts are to try offenses against
state laws, cases not originally cognizable in the federal courts,
what law is to govern, who is to prosecute, under what law is a
convicted defendant to be sentenced and to whose institution is he
to be committed . . .?"
Baines v. Danville, 357 F.2d 756, 768-769. To these
questions, there surely should be added the very practical inquiry
as to how many hundreds of new federal judges and other federal
court personnel would have to be added in order to cope with the
vastly increased caseload that would be produced.
We need not attempt to catalog the issues of policy that
Congress might feel called upon to consider before making such an
extreme change in the removal statute. But prominent among those
issues, obviously, would be at least two fundamental questions: has
the historic practice of holding state criminal trials in state
courts -- with power of ultimate review of any federal questions in
this Court -- been such a failure that the relationship of the
state and federal courts should now be revolutionized? Will
increased responsibility of the state courts in the area of federal
civil rights be promoted and encouraged by denying those courts any
power at all to exercise that responsibility?
We postulate these grave questions of practice and policy only
to point out that, if changes are to be made in the long-settled
interpretation of the provisions of this century-old removal
statute, it is for Congress, and not for this Court, to make them.
Fully aware of the established meaning the removal statute had been
given by a consistent series of decisions in this Court, Congress,
in 1964, declined to act on proposals to amend the law. [
Footnote 34]
Page 384 U. S. 835
All that Congress did was to make remand orders appealable, and
thus invite a contemporary judicial consideration of the meaning of
the unchanged provisions of 28 U.S.C. § 1443. We have accepted
that invitation, and have fully considered the language and history
of those provisions. Having done so, we find that § 1443 does
not justify removal of these state criminal prosecutions to a
federal court. Accordingly the judgment of the Court of Appeals is
reversed.
It is so ordered.
* Together with No. 649,
Peacock et al. v. City of
Greenwood, also on certiorari to the same court.
[
Footnote 1]
The defendants were charged with violating paragraph one of
§ 2296.5 of the Mississippi Code (1964 Cum.Supp.), Laws 1960,
c. 244, § 1, which provides:
"It shall be unlawful for any person or persons to wilfully
obstruct the free, convenient and normal use of any public
sidewalk, street, highway, alley, road, or other passageway by
impeding, hindering, stifling, retarding or restraining traffic or
passage thereon, and any person or persons violating the provisions
of this act shall be guilty of a misdemeanor, and upon conviction
thereof, shall be punished by a fine of not more than five hundred
dollars ($500.00) or by confinement in the county jail not
exceeding six (6) months, or by both such fine and
imprisonment."
[
Footnote 2]
"
Civil rights cases."
"Any of the following civil actions or criminal prosecutions,
commenced in a State court may be removed by the defendant to the
district court of the United States for the district and division
embracing the place wherein it is pending:"
"(1) Against any person who is denied or cannot enforce in the
courts of such State a right under any law providing for the equal
civil rights of citizens of the United States, or of all persons
within the jurisdiction thereof;"
"(2) For any act under color of authority derived from any law
providing for equal rights, or for refusing to do any act on the
ground that it would be inconsistent with such law."
28 U.S.C. § 1443(164 ed.).
See Georgia v. Rachel,
ante, p.
384 U. S. 780.
[
Footnote 3]
The removal petitions specifically invoked rights to freedom of
speech, petition, and assembly under the First and fourteenth
Amendments to the Constitution, as well as additional rights under
the Equal Protection, Due Process, and Privileges and Immunities
Clauses of the Fourteenth Amendment. 42 U.S.C. § 1971(a)(1)
(1964 ed.), which guarantees the right to vote, free from racial
discrimination, provides:
"All citizens of the United States who are otherwise qualified
by law to vote at any election by the people in any State,
Territory, district, county, city, parish, township, school
district, municipality, or other territorial subdivision, shall be
entitled and allowed to vote at all such elections, without
distinction of race, color, or previous condition of servitude; any
constitution, law, custom, usage, or regulation of any State or
Territory, or by or under its authority, to the contrary
notwithstanding."
42 U.S.C. § 1971(b) (1964 ed.) provides:
"No person, whether acting under color of law or otherwise,
shall intimidate, threaten, coerce, or attempt to intimidate,
threaten, or coerce any other person for the purpose of interfering
with the right of such other person to vote or to vote as he may
choose. . . ."
See also § 11(b) of the Voting Rights Act of 1965,
79 Stat. 443, 42 U.S.C. § 1973i(b) (1964 ed., Supp. I).
[
Footnote 4]
" . . . § 1443(2) . . . is limited to federal officers and
those assisting them or otherwise acting in an official or
quasi-official capacity."
Peacock v. City of
Greenwood, 347 F.2d 679, 686 (C.A.5th Cir.). In reaching this
conclusion, the Court of Appeals relied strongly on the decision of
the district Court in
City of Clarksdale v.
Gertge, 237 F.
Supp. 213 (D.C.N.D.Miss.). The Court of Appeals for the Fourth
Circuit has also adopted this construction of § 1443(2).
Baines v. City of Danville, 357 F.2d 756, 771-772. The
Courts of Appeals for the Second and Third Circuits have refused to
grant removal under § 1443(2) on allegations comparable to
those in the present case.
New York v. Galamison, 342 F.2d
255 (C.A.2d Cir.);
City of Chester v. Anderson, 347 F.2d
823 (C.A.3d Cir.).
See also Arkansas v.
Howard, 218 F.
Supp. 626 (D.C.E.D.Ark.).
[
Footnote 5]
The several defendants were charged variously with assault,
interfering with an officer in the performance of his duty,
disturbing the peace, creating a disturbance in a public place,
inciting to riot, parading without a permit, assault and battery by
biting a police officer, contributing to the delinquency of a
minor, operating a motor vehicle with improper license tags,
reckless driving, and profanity and use of vulgar language.
[
Footnote 6]
Under § 1443(1), the defendants alleged that they had been
denied and could not enforce in the courts of the State rights
under laws providing for equal civil rights, in that the courts and
law enforcement officers of the State were prejudiced against them
because of their race or their association with Negroes, and
because of the commitment of the courts and officers to the State's
declared policy of racial segregation. The defendants also alleged
that the trial would take place in a segregated courtroom, that
Negro witnesses and attorneys would be addressed by their first
names, that Negroes would be excluded from the juries, and that the
judges and prosecutors who would participate in the trial had
gained office at elections in which negro voters were excluded. The
defendants also urged that the statutes and ordinances under which
they were charged were unconstitutionally vague on their face, and
that the statutes and ordinances were unconstitutional as applied
to the defendants' conduct.
[
Footnote 7]
Under § 1443(2), the defendants alleged that they had
engaged solely in conduct protected by the First Amendment, by the
Equal Protection, Due Process, and Privileges and Immunities
Clauses of the Fourteenth Amendment, and by 42 U.S.C. § 1981
(1964 ed.), which provides:
"All persons within the jurisdiction of the United States shall
have the same right in every State and Territory to make and
enforce contracts, to sue, be parties, give evidence, and to the
full and equal benefit of all laws and proceedings for the security
of persons and property as is enjoyed by white citizens, and shall
be subject to like punishment, pains, penalties, taxes, licenses,
and exactions of every kind, and to no other."
[
Footnote 8]
The City of Greenwood, petitioner in No. 471, challenges the
Court of Appeals' interpretation of § 1443(1); the individual
petitioners in No. 649 challenge the court's interpretation of
§ 1443(2).
[
Footnote 9]
The provisions of what is now § 1443(2) have never been
construed by this Court during the century that has passed since
the law's original enactment. The courts of appeals that have
recently given consideration to the subsection have unanimously
rejected the claims advanced in this case by the individual
petitioners.
See, in addition to the present case in the
Fifth Circuit, 347 F.2d 679, the following cases:
New York v.
Galamison, 342 F.2d 255 (C.A.2d Cir.);
City of Chester v.
Anderson, 347 F.2d 823 (C.A.3d Cir.);
Baines v. City of
Danville, 357 F.2d 756 (C.A.4th Cir.).
See note 4 supra.
[
Footnote 10]
See Rev.Stat. § 641 (1874); Judicial Code of 1911,
c. 231, § 31, 36 Stat. 1096; 28 U.S.C. § 74 (1926 ed.);
28 U.S.C. § 1443(1952 ed.). Although the 1948 revision
modified the language of the prior provision in numerous respects,
including the elimination of the phrase "officer . . . or other
person," the reviser's note states simply that "Changes were made
in phraseology." H.R.Rep.No. 308, 80th Cong., 1st Sess., p. A134.
The statutory development of the civil rights removal provision is
set out in the Appendix to the Court's opinion in
Georgia v.
Rachel, supra.
[
Footnote 11]
By the Act of March 3, 1865, 13 Stat. 507, Congress established
a Bureau under the War Department, to last during the rebellion and
for one year thereafter, to assist refugees and freedmen from rebel
states and other areas by providing food, shelter, and clothing.
The Bureau was under the direction of a commissioner appointed by
the President with the consent of the Senate. Under § 4 of the
Act, the commissioner was authorized to set apart for loyal
refugees and freedmen up to 40 acres of lands that had been
abandoned in the rebel states or that had been acquired by the
United States by confiscation or sale. The section specifically
provided that persons assigned to such lands "shall be protected in
the use and enjoyment of the land." 13 Stat. 508. The Act was
continued for two years by the Act of July 16, 1866, c. 200, §
1, 14 Stat. 173. In addition, § 3 of the latter Act amended
the 1865 Act to authorize the commissioner to "appoint such agents,
clerks, and assistants as may be required for the proper conduct of
the bureau." The section also provided that military officers or
enlisted men might be detailed for service and assigned to duty
under the Act. 14 Stat. 174. Further, § 13 of the amendatory
Act of 1866 specifically provided that
"the commissioner of this bureau shall at all times cooperate
with private benevolent associations of citizens in aid of
freedmen, and with agents and teachers, duly accredited and
appointed by them, and shall hire or provide by lease buildings for
purposes of education whenever such associations shall, without
cost to the government, provide suitable teachers and means of
instruction; and he shall furnish such protection as may be
required for the safe conduct of such schools."
14 Stat. 176. Section 14 of the amendatory Act of 1866
established, in essentially the same terms for States where the
ordinary course of judicial proceedings had been interrupted by the
rebellion, the rights and obligations that had already been enacted
in § 1 of the Act of April 9, 1866 (the Civil Rights Act), and
provided for the extension of military jurisdiction to those States
in order to protect the rights secured. 14 Stat. 176-177. By the
Act of July 6, 1868, 15 Stat. 83, the Freedmen's Bureau legislation
was continued for an additional year.
[
Footnote 12]
"Sec. 4.
And be it further enacted, That . . . the
officers and agents of the Freedmen's Bureau . . . shall be, and
they are hereby, specially authorized and required at the expense
of the United States, to institute proceedings against all and
every person who shall violate the provisions of this act, and
cause him or them to be arrested and imprisoned, or bailed, as the
case may be, for trial before [the circuit] court of the United
States or territorial court as by this act has cognizance of the
offence."
Act of April 9, 1866, 14 Stat. 28. The same authorization was
extended to district attorneys, marshals, and deputy marshals of
the United States, and to commissioners appointed by the circuit
and territorial courts of the United States. In order to expedite
the enforcement of the Act, § 4 also authorized the circuit
courts of the United States and superior territorial courts to
increase the number of commissioners charged with the duties of
enforcing the Act.
[
Footnote 13]
Section 3 of the Civil Rights Act of 1866 provided for removal
by any "officer . . . or other person" for acts under color of
authority derived either from the Act itself or from the Freedmen's
Bureau legislation.
See p.
384 U. S. 815,
supra. Thus, removal was granted to officers and agents of
the Freedmen's Bureau for enforcement activity under both Acts. The
Civil Rights Act, however, made no specific provision for removal
of actions against freedmen and refugees who had been awarded
abandoned or confiscated lands under § 4 of the Freedmen's
Bureau Act.
See note
11 supra.
[
Footnote 14]
Section 5 also provided that,
"should any marshal or deputy marshal refuse to receive such
warrant or other process when tendered, or to use all proper means
diligently to execute the same, he shall, on conviction thereof, be
fined in the sum of one thousand dollars, to the use of the person
upon whom the accused is alleged to have committed the
offence."
14 Stat. 28. The Civil Rights Act of 1866 was passed over the
veto of President Johnson. Because of the hostility between
Congress and the President, it was feared that the United States
marshals, who were appointed by the President, would not enforce
the law. In § 5, therefore, Congress provided severe penalties
for recalcitrant marshals. At the same time, Congress ensured the
availability of process servers by providing for the appointment by
the commissioners of other "suitable persons" for the task of
enforcing the new Act.
Cf. In re Upchurch, 38 F. 25, 27
(C.C.E.D.N.C.).
[
Footnote 15]
Section 5 of the Civil Rights Act of 1866 provided:
". . . And the better to enable the said commissioners to
execute their duties faithfully and efficiently, in conformity with
the Constitution of the United States and the requirements of this
act, they are hereby authorized and empowered, within their
counties respectively, to appoint, in writing, under their hands,
any one or more suitable persons from time to time, to execute all
such warrants and other process as may be issued by them in the
lawful performance of their respective duties; and the persons so
appointed to execute any warrant or process as aforesaid shall have
authority to summon and call to their aid the bystanders or posse
comitatus of the proper county, or such portion of the land or
naval forces of the United States, or of the militia, as may be
necessary to the performance of the duty with which they are
charged, and to insure a faithful observance of the clause of the
Constitution which prohibits slavery, in conformity with the
provisions of this act; and said warrants shall run and be executed
by said officers anywhere in the State or Territory within which
they are issued."
Act of April 9, 1866, 14 Stat. 28.
Cf. Davis v. South
Carolina, 107 U. S. 597,
107 U. S.
600.
[
Footnote 16]
This aspect of § 6 thus draws a threefold distinction:
"officers," "other persons" (probably the "one or more suitable
persons" referred to in § 5), and those "lawfully assisting"
them. We have no doubt that the general "officer . . . or other
person" language in § 3 of the Act comprehended all three of
these categories.
[
Footnote 17]
"It thus appears that the statute contemplated that literally
thousands of persons would be drawn into its enforcement, and that
some of them otherwise would have little or no appearance of
official authority."
Baines v. City of Danville, 357 F.2d 756, 760 (C.A.4th
Cir.). No support for the proposition that "other person" includes
private individuals not acting in association with federal officers
can be drawn from the fact that the "color of authority" provision
of the Civil Rights Act of 1866 was carried forward together with
the "denied or cannot enforce" provision as § 641 of the
Revised Statutes of 1874, whereas other removal provisions
applicable to federal officers and persons assisting them were
carried forward in § 643. Prior to 1948, the federal officer
removal statute, as here relevant, was limited to revenue officers
engaged in the enforcement of the criminal or revenue laws. The
provision was expanded in 1948 to encompass all federal officers.
See 28 U.S.C. § 1442(a)(1) (1964 ed.). At the present
time, all state suits or prosecutions against "[a]ny officer of the
United States . . . or person acting under him, for any act under
color of such office" may be removed. Thus many, if not all, of the
cases presently removable under § 1443(2) would now also be
removable under § 1442(a)(1). The present overlap between the
provisions simply reflects the separate historical evolution of the
removal provision for officers in civil rights legislation. Indeed,
there appears to be redundancy even within § 1442(a)(1)
itself.
See Wechsler, Federal Jurisdiction and the
Revision of the Judicial Code, 13 Law & Contemp.Prob. 216, 221,
n. 18 (1948).
The limitation of 28 U.S.C. § 1443(2) to official
enforcement activity under federal equal civil rights laws draws
support from analogous provisions in the removal statutes available
to federal revenue officers. Long before 1866, federal statutes had
guaranteed certain federal revenue officers the right to remove to
the federal court state court proceedings instituted against them
because of their official actions. These statutes
characteristically used the "officer . . . or other person" formula
in defining those entitled to the benefit of removal. The Customs
Act of 1815, the primordial officer removal statute, described the
"other person" as one "aiding or assisting" the revenue officer.
Act of Feb. 4, 1815, c. 31, § 8, 3 Stat. 198.
See
also the Act of March 3, 1815, c. 94, § 6, 3 Stat. 233.
The removal clause of a subsequent statute, the Force Act of 1833,
was less specific with regard to the scope of the "other person"
language, but it focused upon the possibility that persons other
than federal officers or their deputies might find themselves faced
with the prospect of defending titles claimed under the federal
revenue laws against suits or prosecutions in state courts. Act of
March 2, 1833, c. 57, § 3, 4 Stat. 633. Thus, when Congress
desired to grant removal of suits and prosecutions against private
individuals, it knew how to make specific provision for it.
Cf. Act of Jan. 22, 1869, 15 Stat. 267 (Habeas Corpus
Suspension Act of 1863, 12 Stat. 755, amended to permit removal of
suits or prosecutions against carriers for losses caused by rebel
or Union forces).
[
Footnote 18]
Act of March 3, 1863, c. 81, § § 1, 4, 12 Stat. 755,
756.
See also the amendatory Act of May 11, 1866, 14 Stat.
46.
[
Footnote 19]
The provision in § 5 of the Act of March 3, 1863,
specifically extending removal to criminal as well as civil
proceedings, was added on the Senate floor. Cong.Globe, 37th Cong.,
3d Sess., 538. The debates focused on the need to protect federal
officers against state criminal prosecutions. See, e.g., id. at 535
(remarks of Senator Clark); id. at 537-538 (remarks of Senator
Cowan).
[
Footnote 20]
Although, in the revenue officer removal provision of the
Revenue Act of 1866, Act of July 13, c. 184, § 67, 14 Stat.
171, Congress expressly characterized the "other person" as one
"acting under or by authority of any [revenue] officer," that
statute obviously drew on the comparable characterization of the
"other person" in the Customs Act of 1815,
supra, note 17 And the "title" clause
included in the 1866 revenue officer removal provision was
obviously derived from the Force Act of 1833,
supra,
note 17 Thus, the same
legislative inertia that led the Reconstruction Congress not to
qualify "other person" in the Civil Rights Act of 1866 also led it
to retain such a qualification in the revenue officer removal
provision enacted later the same year. Compare § 16 of the Act
of February 28, 1871, 16 Stat. 438 ("title" clause included in the
officer removal provision of a civil rights statute).
Cf.
72 U. S.
Collector, 5 Wall. 720;
The Assessors v.
Osbornes, 9 Wall. 567.
[
Footnote 21]
The language "arrest or imprisonment, trespasses, or wrongs" is,
of course, easily read as describing the full range of enforcement
activities in which federal officers might be engaged under the
Civil Rights Act. In a case arising under § 5 of the Habeas
Corpus Suspension Act of 1863, this Court disallowed removal of an
action of ejectment brought in a Virginia state court by the heir
of a Confederate naval officer whose land had been seized under the
Confiscation Act of July 17, 1862, 12 Stat. 589. The confiscated
land had been sold at public auction, and the rights to the land
subsequently vested in a man named Bigelow, against whom the action
of ejectment was brought. In denying removal under § 5 of the
1863 Act, Mr. Justice Strong, for a unanimous Court, stated,
"The specification [in § 5] of arrests and imprisonments .
. . followed by more general words, justifies the inference that
the other trespasses and wrongs mentioned are trespasses and wrongs
ejusdem generis, or of the same nature as those which had
been previously specified."
Bigelow v.
Forrest, 9 Wall. 339,
76 U. S.
348-349.
[
Footnote 22]
The second phrase of 28 U.S.C. § 1443(2), "for refusing to
do any act on the ground that it would be inconsistent with such
law," has no relevance to this case. It is clear that removal under
that language is available only to state officers. The phrase was
added by the House of Representatives as an amendment to the Senate
bill during the debates on the Civil Rights Act of 1866. In
reporting the House bill, Representative Wilson, the chairman of
the House Judiciary Committee and the floor manager of the bill,
said,
"I will state that this amendment is intended to enable State
officers, who shall refuse to enforce State laws discriminating in
reference to [the rights created by § 1 of the bill] on
account of race or color, to remove their cases to the United
States courts when prosecuted for refusing to enforce those
laws."
Cong. Globe, 39th Cong., 1st Sess., 1367.
[
Footnote 23]
See Georgia v. Rachel, ante, at
384 U. S.
788-792.
See also New York v. Galamison, 342
F.2d 255, 266-268 (C.A.2d Cir.).
[
Footnote 24]
See note 3 and |
note 3 and S. 808fn7|>note
7,
supra.
[
Footnote 25]
Section 203(c) of the Civil Rights Act of 1964, 42 U.S.C. §
2000a-2(c) (1964 ed.), the provision involved in
Hamm v. City
of Rock Hill, 379 U. S. 306,
379 U. S. 310,
and
Georgia v. Rachel, ante, at
note 3 and S. 793|>793-794,
note 3 and S. 804|>804-805, explicitly provides that
no person shall "punish or attempt to punish any person for
exercising or attempting to exercise any right or privilege"
secured by the public accommodations section of the Act. None of
the federal statutes invoked by the defendants in the present case
contains any such provision.
See note 3 and |
note 3
and S. 808fn7|>note 7,
supra.
[
Footnote 26]
See also Virginia v. Rives, 100 U.
S. 313;
Neal v. Delaware, 103 U.
S. 370;
Bush v. Kentucky, 107 U.
S. 110;
Gibson v. Mississippi, 162 U.
S. 565;
Smith v. Mississippi, 162 U.
S. 592;
Murray v. Louisiana, 163 U.
S. 101;
Williams v. Mississippi, 170 U.
S. 213;
Dubuclet v. Louisiana, 103 U.
S. 550;
Schmidt v. Cobb, 119 U.
S. 286.
Cf. Georgia v. Rachel, ante, at
384 U. S. 797
et seq.
[
Footnote 27]
Neal v. Delaware, 103 U. S. 370;
Bush v. Kentucky, 107 U. S. 110.
[
Footnote 28]
"
Civil action for deprivation of rights"
"Every person who, under color of any statute, ordinance,
regulation, custom, or usage, of any State or Territory, subjects,
or causes to be subjected, any citizen of the United States or
other person within the jurisdiction thereof to the deprivation of
any rights, privileges, or immunities secured by the Constitution
and laws shall be liable to the party injured in an action at law,
suit in equity, or other proper proceeding for redress."
42 U.S.C. § 1983 (1964 ed.).
[
Footnote 29]
"
Conspiracy against rights of citizens"
"If two or more persons conspire to injure, oppress, threaten,
or intimidate any citizen in the free exercise or enjoyment of any
right or privilege secured to him by the Constitution or laws of
the United States, or because of his having so exercised the same;
or"
"If two or more persons go in disguise on the highway, or on the
premises of another, with intent to prevent or hinder his free
exercise or enjoyment of any right or privilege so secured --"
"They shall be fined not more than $5,000 or imprisoned not more
than ten years, or both."
18 U.S.C. § 241 (1964 ed.).
Criminal penalties for violations of federal rights are also
imposed by 18 U.S.C. § 242 (1964 ed.), which provides:
"
Deprivation of rights under color of law"
"Whoever, under color of any law, statute, ordinance, regulation
or custom, willfully subjects any inhabitant of any State,
Territory, or District to the deprivation of any rights,
privileges, or immunities secured or protected by the Constitution
or laws of the United States, or to different punishments, pains,
or penalties, on account of such inhabitant being an alien, or by
reason of his color, or race, than are prescribed for the
punishment of citizens, shall be fined not more than $1,000 or
imprisoned not more than one year, or both."
See United States v. Price, 383 U.
S. 787.
[
Footnote 30]
Annual Report of the Director of the Administrative Office of
the United States Courts 214, 216 (1965).
See Georgia v.
Rachel, ante, p.
384 U. S. 788,
n. 8.
[
Footnote 31]
Such removal petitions could, of course, be filed not only by
Negroes, but also by members of the Caucasian or any other
race.
[
Footnote 32]
See Romero v. International Terminal Operating Co.,
358 U. S. 354,
358 U. S.
359-380,
358 U. S.
389-412 (separate opinion of MR. JUSTICE BRENNAN).
[
Footnote 33]
See Martin v. Hunter's
Lessee, 1 Wheat. 304,
14 U. S.
348-350;
The Moses
Taylor, 4 Wall. 411,
71 U. S.
428-430;
Mayor v.
Cooper, 6 Wall. 247,
73 U. S.
251-254;
Railway Co. v. Whitton's
Adm'r, 13 Wall. 270,
80 U. S.
287-290;
Tennessee v. Davis, 100 U.
S. 257,
100 U. S.
262-271;
Strauder v. West Virginia,
100 U. S. 303,
100 U. S.
310-312. A number of bills enlarging the right of
removal to a federal court in civil rights cases are before the
present Congress.
See, for example: S. 2923, S. 3170, H.R.
12807, H.R. 12818, H.R. 12845, H.R. 13500, H.R. 13941, H.R. 14112,
H.R. 14113, H.R. 14770, H.R. 14775, H.R. 14836 (89th Cong., 2d.
Sess.).
[
Footnote 34]
Section 903 of H.R. 7702, 88th Cong., 1st Sess., would have
amended 28 U.S.C. § 1443 to enlarge the availability of
removal in civil rights cases. H.R. 7702, however, did not emerge
from the Judiciary Committee of the House of Representatives.
Cf. Georgia v. Rachel, ante, p.
384 U. S.
787.
MR. JUSTICE DOUGLAS, with whom THE CHIEF JUSTICE, MR. JUSTICE
BRENNAN and MR. JUSTICE FORTAS concur, dissenting.
These state court defendants who seek the protection of the
federal court were civil rights workers in Mississippi. Some were
affiliated with the Student Non-Violent Coordinating Committee
engaged in getting Negroes registered as voters. They were charged
in the state courts with obstructing the public streets. Other
defendants were civil rights workers affiliated with the Council of
Federated Organizations, which aims to achieve full and complete
integration of Negroes into the political and economic life of
Mississippi. Some alleged that, while peacefully picketing, they
were arrested and charged with assault and battery or interfering
with an officer. Others were charged with illegal operation of
motor vehicles, or for contributing to the delinquency of a minor
or parading without a permit. Some were charged with disturbing the
peace or inciting a riot.
All sought removal, some alleging in their motions that the
state prosecution was part and parcel of Mississippi's policy of
racial segregation. Others alleged that they were wholly innocent,
the state prosecutions being for the sole purpose of harassing them
and of punishing them for exercising their constitutional
rights
Page 384 U. S. 836
to protest the conditions of racial discrimination and
segregation. In all these cases, the District Court remanded to the
state courts. The Court of Appeals reversed (347 F.2d 679; 347 F.2d
986), holding that the allegations were sufficient to make out a
case for removal, and that hearings on the truth of the allegations
were required.
I agree with that result. As I will show, the federal regime was
designed from the beginning to afford some protection against local
passions and prejudices by the important pretrial federal remedy of
removal; and the civil rights legislation with which we deal
supports the mandates of the Court of Appeals.
I
The Federal District Courts were created by the First Congress
(1 Stat. 73), which designated a few heads of jurisdiction for the
District Courts (§ 9) and for the Circuit Courts (§ 11)
-- some being concurrent with those of the state courts, others
being exclusive. These categories of jurisdiction -- later enlarged
-- were largely for the benefit of plaintiffs. There was concern
that the rivalries, jealousies, and animosities among the States
made necessary and appropriate the creation of a dual system of
courts.
Lack of trust in some of the state courts for execution of
federal laws was reflected in the First Congress that established
the dual system. Thus, Madison said:
". . . a review of the constitution of the courts in many States
will satisfy us that they cannot be trusted with the execution of
the Federal laws. In some of the States, it is true, they might,
and would be safe and proper organs of such a jurisdiction; but in
others, they are so dependent on State Legislatures that to make
the Federal laws dependent on them would throw us back into all the
embarrassments
Page 384 U. S. 837
which characterized our former situation. In Connecticut, the
Judges are appointed annually by the Legislature, and the
Legislature is itself the last resort in civil cases."
1 Ann.Cong. 813.
Though federal question jurisdiction was originally limited to a
few classes of cases, the creation of diversity jurisdiction
(§ 11, 1 Stat. 78) was a significant manifestation of this
same feeling. As Chief Justice Marshall said in
Bank of
United States v. Deveaux, 5 Cranch 61,
9 U. S. 87:
"The judicial department was introduced into the American
constitution under impressions, and with views, which are too
apparent not to be perceived by all. However true the fact may be
that the tribunals of the states will administer justice as
impartially as those of the nation to parties of every description,
it is not less true that the constitution itself either entertains
apprehensions on this subject or views with such indulgence the
possible fears and apprehensions of suitors that it has established
national tribunals for the decision of controversies between aliens
and a citizen, or between citizens of different states."
And see 14 U. S. Hunter's
Lessee, 1 Wheat. 304,
14 U. S. 347.
The alternative -- the one India took -- was to let the state
courts be the arbiters of federal, as well as state, rights, with
ultimate review in the Federal Supreme Court. But the federal court
system was the choice we made, and those courts have functioned
throughout our history. In the years since 1789, the jurisdiction
of the federal courts where federal rights are in issue has been
steadily expanded (
see Hart & Wechsler, The Federal
Courts and the Federal System 727-733 (1953)) particularly with the
creation of a general "federal question" jurisdiction in 1875. 18
Stat. 470.
Page 384 U. S. 838
While the federal courts were, for the most part, custodians of
rights asserted by plaintiffs, from the very beginning. they were
also the haven of a restricted group of defendants as well. I refer
to § 12 of the Judiciary Act of 1789, 1 Stat. 79, which
permitted removal of cases from a state court to a federal court on
the ground of diversity of citizenship. Thus, from the very start,
we have had a removal jurisdiction for the protection of defendants
on a partial parity with federal jurisdiction for protection of
plaintiffs.
The power of a defendant to remove cases from a state court to a
federal court was not greatly enlarged until passage of the first
Civil Rights Act, [
Footnote 2/1]
§ 3 of which provided:
". . . the district courts of the United States, within their
respective districts, shall have, exclusively of the courts of the
several States, cognizance of all crimes and offences committed
against the provisions of this act, and also, concurrently with the
circuit courts of the United States, of all causes, civil and
criminal, affecting persons
who are denied or cannot enforce in
the courts or judicial tribunals of the State or locality where
they may be any of the rights secured to them by the first
section of this act; and if any suit or prosecution, civil or
criminal,
Page 384 U. S. 839
has been or shall be commenced in any State court, against any
such person, for any cause whatsoever . . . , such defendant shall
have the right to remove such cause for trial to the proper
district or circuit court in the manner prescribed by the 'Act
relating to habeas corpus and regulating judicial proceedings in
certain cases,' approved March three, eighteen hundred and
sixty-three, and all acts amendatory thereof. . . ."
(Emphasis added.)
With the coming of the Civil War, it became plain that some
state courts might be instruments for the destruction, through
harassment, of guaranteed federal civil rights. We have seen this
demonstrated in the flow of cases coming this way. But the
minorities who are the subject of repression are not only those who
espouse the cause of racial equality. Jehovah's Witnesses in many
parts of the country have likewise felt the brunt of majoritarian
control through state criminal administration. Before them were the
labor union organizers. Before them were the Orientals. It is in
this setting that the removal jurisdiction must be considered.
The removal laws passed from time to time have responded to two
main concerns: first, a federal factfinding forum is often
indispensable to the effective enforcement of those guarantees
against local action. [
Footnote
2/2]
Page 384 U. S. 840
The federal guarantee turns ordinarily upon contested issues of
fact. Those rights, therefore, will be of only academic value in
many areas of the country unless the facts are objectively found.
Secondly, swift enforcement of the federal right is imperative if
the guarantees are to survive and not be slowly strangled by long,
drawn-out, costly, cumbersome proceedings which the Congress feared
might result in some state courts. The delays of state criminal
process, the perilous vicissitudes of litigation in the state
courts, the onerous burdens on the poor and the indigent who
usually espouse unpopular causes -- these threaten to engulf the
federal guarantees. It is in that light that 28 U.S.C. §
1443(1) should be read and construed.
II
The critical words, so far as the present cases are concerned,
are "denied or cannot enforce in the courts or judicial tribunals"
of the State or locality where they may be those rights which, in
the most recent version of the removal statute, [
Footnote 2/3] are characterized as those
secured
Page 384 U. S. 841
by "any law providing for the equal civil rights of citizens of
the United States, or of all persons within the jurisdiction
thereof." [
Footnote 2/4]
It is difficult to discern whether the Court ascribes different
meanings to the words "is denied" and "cannot enforce" as used in
the statute. In my view, it is essential that these two aspects of
§ 1443(1) be distinguished. The words "is denied" refer to a
present deprivation of rights while the language "cannot enforce"
has reference to an anticipated state court frustration of equal
civil rights.
Virginia v. Rives, 100 U.
S. 313, and subsequent decisions of this Court which the
majority discusses, were concerned with claims of the "cannot
enforce" variety. [
Footnote
2/5]
Page 384 U. S. 842
The Court dealt, in those cases, with the issue of unequal
administration of justice in the process of jury selection. The
concern was that removal might be permitted on merely a speculation
that the state court would not, in the future, discharge its
obligation to follow the "law of the land." Whatever the
correctness of those decisions as to the "cannot enforce" clause,
they have no application whatever to a claim of a present denial of
equal civil rights.
A
A defendant "is denied" his federal right when "disorderly
conduct" statutes, "breach of the peace" ordinances, and the like
are used as the instrument to suppress his promotion of civil
rights. We know that such laws are sometimes used as a club against
civil rights workers. [
Footnote
2/6] Senator Dodd, who was the floor manager for that part of
the Civil Rights Act of 1964 which restored the right of appeal
from an order remanding a removed case (§ 901, 78 Stat. 266,
28 U.S.C. § 1447(d) (1964 ed.)) stated: [
Footnote 2/7]
"I think cases to be tried in State courts in communities where
there is a pervasive hostility to civil rights, and cases involving
efforts to use the court process as a means of intimidation, ought
to be removable under this section."
The examples are numerous. First is the case of prosecution
under a law which is valid on its face but
Page 384 U. S. 843
applied discriminatorily. [
Footnote
2/8] Second is a prosecution under, say, a trespass law for
conduct which is privileged under federal law. [
Footnote 2/9] Third is an unwarranted charge
brought against a civil rights worker to intimidate him for
asserting those rights, [
Footnote
2/10] or to suppress or discourage their promotion. The present
charges are initiated by prosecutors for the purpose, defendants
allege, of deterring or punishing the exercise of equal civil
rights. The Court of Appeals said:
". . . we do not read these cases [
Rives and
Powers] as establishing that the denial of equal civil
rights must appear on the face of the state constitution or
statute, rather than in its application where the alleged
denial of rights, as here, had its inception in the arrest and
charge. They dealt only with the systematic exclusion
question, a question which, in turn, goes to the very heart of the
state judicial process, and federalism may have indicated that the
remedy in such situations in the first instance should be left to
the state courts. We would not expand the teaching of these cases
to include state denials
Page 384 U. S. 844
of equal civil rights through the unconstitutional application
of a statute in situations which are not a part of the state
judicial system but which, on the contrary, arise in the
administration of a statute in the arresting and charging
process."
347 F.2d 679, 684. (Emphasis added.)
I agree with that conclusion.
There are two ways which § 1443(1) may be read, either of
which leads to the conclusion that these cases are covered by the
"is denied" clause. As Judge Sobeloff said dissenting in
Baines
v. Danville, 357 F.2d 756, 778, the clause in question may be
paraphrased in either of the following ways:
"Removal is permissible by:"
"[i] any person who is denied[,] or cannot enforce[,] in the
courts of such State a right under any law. . . ."
"or"
"[ii] any person who is denied[,] or cannot enforce in the
courts of such State[,] a right under any law. . . ."
If the latter construction is taken, a right "is denied" by
state action at any time -- before, as well as during, a trial. I
agree with Judge Sobeloff that this reading of the provisions is
more in keeping with the spirit of 1866, for the remedies given
were broad and sweeping:
"If a Negro's rights were denied by the actions of such state
officer, the aggrieved party was permitted to have vindication in
the federal court; either by filing an original claim or, if a
prosecution had already been commenced against him, by removing the
case to the federal forum."
Id. at 781.
Yet even if the "is denied" clause is read more restrictively,
the present cases constitute denials of federal civil
Page 384 U. S. 845
rights "in the courts" of the offending State within the meaning
of § 1443(1), for the local judicial machinery is implicated
even prior to actual trial by issuance of a warrant or summons, by
commitment of the prisoner, or by accepting and filing the
information or indictment. Initiation of an unwarranted judicial
proceeding to suppress or punish the assertion of federal civil
rights makes out a case of civil rights "denied" within the meaning
of § 1443(1). Prosecution for a federally protected act is
punishment for that act. The cost of proceeding court by court
until the federal right is vindicated is great. Restraint of
liberty may be present; the need to post bonds may be present; the
hire of a lawyer may be considerable; the gantlet of state court
proceedings may entail destruction of a federal right through
unsympathetic and adverse factfindings that are, in effect,
unreviewable. The presence of an unresolved criminal charge may
hang over the head of a defendant for years.
In early 1964, for example, the Supreme Court of Mississippi
affirmed convictions in harassment prosecutions arising out of the
May, 1961, Freedom Rides.
See Thomas v. State, 252 Miss.
527,
160 So. 2d
657;
Farmer v. State, 161 So.
2d 159;
Knight v. State, 248 Miss. 850,
161 So. 2d
521. More than another year was to pass before this Court
reached and reversed those convictions. [
Footnote 2/11]
Thomas v. Mississippi,
380 U. S. 524
(1965).
Continuance of an illegal local prosecution, like the initiation
of a new one, can have a chilling effect on a federal guarantee of
civil rights. We said in
NAACP v. Button, 371 U.
S. 415,
371 U. S. 433,
respecting some of these federal
Page 384 U. S. 846
rights, that "[t]he threat of sanctions may deter their exercise
almost as potently as the actual application of sanctions." In a
First Amendment context, we said:
"By permitting determination of the invalidity of these statutes
without regard to the permissibility of some regulation on the
facts of particular cases, we have, in effect, avoided making
vindication of freedom of expression await the outcome of
protracted litigation. Moreover, we have not thought that the
improbability of successful prosecution makes the case different.
The chilling effect upon the exercise of First Amendment rights may
derive from the fact of the prosecution, unaffected by the
prospects of its success or failure."
Dombrowski v. Pfister, 380 U.
S. 479,
380 U. S. 487.
The latter case was a suit to enjoin a state prosecution. The
present cases are close kin. For removal, if allowed, is equivalent
to a plea in bar granted by a federal court to protect a federal
right.
The threshold question -- whether initiation of the state
prosecution has "denied" a federal right -- is resolvable by the
federal court on a hearing on the motion to remove. As noted, it
is, in substance, a plea in bar to the prosecution, a plea grounded
on federal law. If the motion is granted, the removed case is
concluded at that stage, as a case of misuse of a state prosecution
has been made out.
Cf. O'Campo v. Hardisty, 262 F.2d 621;
De Busk v. Harvin, 212 F.2d 143. In other words, the
result of removal is not the transfer of the trial from the state
to the federal courts in this type of case. If, after hearing, it
does not appear that the state prosecution is being used to deny
federal rights, the case is remanded for trial in the state courts.
28 U.S.C. § 1447(c) (1964 ed.). But the removal statute
meanwhile serves a protective function. Filing of the petition
removes the case and automatically
Page 384 U. S. 847
stays further proceedings in the state court. 28 U.S.C. §
1446(e) (1964 ed.) Moreover, if the defendant is confined, the
removal judge must, without awaiting a hearing, issue a writ to
transfer the prisoner to federal custody, 28 U.S.C. § 1446(f)
(1964 ed.), and he may then enlarge him on bail.
The Court holds in
Rachel that a hearing must be held
as to whether, in the particular case, the trespass prosecution
constitutes a denial of equal civil rights. Inexplicably, no such
hearing is to be held in the present cases. For reasons not clear,
a baseless prosecution, designed to punish and deter the exercise
of such federally protected rights as voting, is not seen by the
majority to constitute a denial of equal civil rights. This seems
to me to overlook two very important federal statutes. The first,
42 U.S.C. § 1981 (1964 ed.) (the present version of § 1
of the Civil Rights Act of 1866 to which the original removal
statute referred), provides:
"All persons within the jurisdiction of the United States shall
have the same right in every State . . . to the full and equal
benefit of all laws and proceedings for the security of persons and
property as is enjoyed by white citizens, and shall be subject to
like punishment, pains, penalties, taxes, licenses, and exactions
of every kind, and to no other."
The other, § 11(b) of the Voting Rights Act of 1965, 79
Stat. 443, 42 U.S.C. § 1973i(b) (1964 ed., Supp. I),
provides:
"No person, whether acting under color of law or otherwise,
shall intimidate, threaten, or coerce, or attempt to intimidate,
threaten, or coerce any person for voting or attempting to vote, or
. . . urging or aiding any person to vote or attempt to vote. . . .
"
Page 384 U. S. 848
Those sections make clear beyond debate that, if the defendants'
allegations are true, these state prosecutions themselves
constitute a denial of "a right under any law providing for the
equal civil rights of citizens." [
Footnote 2/12]
B
Defendants also allege that they "cannot enforce" in the courts
of Greenwood, the locality in which their cases are to be tried,
their equal civil rights. This, unlike a claim of present denial of
rights, rests on prediction of the future performance of the state
courts; as such, it admittedly falls within the
Rives-Powers doctrine.
Page 384 U. S. 849
I agree with the majority that, in providing for appeal of
remand orders in civil rights removal cases, Congress meant for us
to reconsider that line of cases. [
Footnote 2/13] Unlike the majority, however, I believe
that those cases, to the extent that they limit removal to
instances where the inability to enforce equal civil rights springs
from a state statute or constitutional provision compelling the
forbidden discrimination, should not be followed. [
Footnote 2/14] That construction of § 1443(1)
resulted, I think, from a misreading of the removal provisions of
the Act of 1866.
Page 384 U. S. 850
I think that the words "cannot enforce" should be construed in
the spirit of 1866. Senator Lane, speaking for the first Civil
Rights Act, said: [
Footnote
2/15]
"The State courts already have jurisdiction of every single
question that we propose to give to the courts of the United
States. Why then the necessity of passing the law? Simply because
we fear the execution of these laws if left to the State courts.
That is the necessity for this provision."
Senator Trumbull, who was the Chairman of the Judiciary
Committee and who managed the bill on the floor, many times
reflected the same view. He stated that the person discriminated
against
"should have authority to go into the Federal courts in all
cases where a custom prevails in a State, or where there is a
statute law of the State discriminating against him."
Cong.Globe, 39th Cong., 1st Sess., 1759.
It was not the existence of a statute, he said, any more than
the existence of a custom discriminating against the person that
would authorize removal, but whether, in either case, it was
probable that the state court would fail adequately to enforce the
federal guarantees.
Ibid.
The Black Codes were not the only target of this law. Vagrancy
laws were another -- laws fair on their face which were enforced so
as to reduce free men to slaves "in punishment of crimes of the
slightest magnitude" (
id. at 1123), laws which declare men
"vagrants because they have no homes and because they have no
employment" in order "to retain them still in a state of real
servitude."
Id. at 1151.
In my view, § 1443(1) requires the federal court to decide
whether the defendant's allegation (that the state court will not
fairly enforce his equal rights) is true. [
Footnote 2/16]
Page 384 U. S. 851
If the defendant is unable to demonstrate this inability to
enforce his rights, the case is remanded to the state court. But if
the federal court is persuaded that the state court indeed will not
make a good-faith effort to apply the paramount federal law
pertaining to "equal civil rights," then the federal court must
accept the removal and try the case on the merits.
Such removal under the "cannot enforce" clause would occur only
in the unusual case. The courts of the States generally try
conscientiously to apply the law of the land. To be sure, state
court judges have, on occasion, taken a different view of the law
than that which this Court ultimately announced. But these honest
differences of opinion are not the sort of recalcitrance which the
"cannot enforce" clause contemplates. What Congress feared was the
exceptional situation. It realized that considerable damage could
be done by even a single court which harbored such hostility toward
federally protected civil rights as to render it unable to meet its
responsibilities. The "cannot enforce" clause is directed to that
rare case.
Execution of the legislative mandate calls for particular
sensitivity on the part of federal district judges; but the
delicacy of the task surely does not warrant
Page 384 U. S. 852
refusal to attempt it. I am confident that the federal district
judges would exercise care and good judgment in passing on "cannot
enforce" claims. A district judge could not lightly assume that the
state court would shirk its responsibilities, and should remand the
case to the state court unless it appeared by clear and convincing
evidence that the allegations of an inability to enforce equal
civil rights were true.
Cf. Amsterdam, Criminal
Prosecutions Affecting Federally Guaranteed Civil Rights: Federal
Removal and Habeas Corpus Jurisdiction to Abort State Court Trial,
113 U.Pa.L.Rev. 793, 854-863, 911- 912 (1965). A requirement that
defendants seeking removal demonstrate a basis for "firm
prediction" of inability to enforce equal civil rights in the state
court is the only necessary consequence of the revision of 1874
which silently deleted the provision for post-trial removal from
the statute. In this way, the legitimate interests of federalism
which
Rives sought to protect would be respected without
emasculating this statute.
III
The Court takes considerable comfort from the availability to
defendants of numerous other federal remedies, such as direct
review in this Court, federal habeas corpus, civil actions under 42
U.S.C. § 1983 (1964 ed.), and even federal criminal
prosecutions. But it is relevant to note when these alternative
remedies were conferred. The extension of the habeas corpus remedy
to state prisoners was enacted in 1867 by the Thirty-ninth
Congress, the same body which enacted the removal statute we here
consider. 14 Stat. 385. The criminal statutes involved in our
recent decisions in
United States v. Price, 383 U.
S. 787, and
United States v. Guest,
383 U. S. 745,
were first enacted in 1866 and 1870. 14 Stat. 27; 16 Stat. 141,
144. The civil remedy provided by 42 U.S.C. § 1983 was enacted
in 1871. 17 Stat. 13. If any inference is to be
Page 384 U. S. 853
drawn from the existence of these coordinate remedies, it is
that Congress was concerned at the time this removal statute was
passed, to protect from state court denial the equal civil rights
of United States citizens. Rather than take comfort from the broad
array of possible remedies, we should take instruction from it.
Moreover, the Court's many rhetorical questions respecting
implementation of removal, if it were allowed, are answered in
Tennessee v. Davis, 100 U. S. 257,
100 U. S.
271-272, a case decided the same day as
Rives:
"The imaginary difficulties and incongruities supposed to be in
the way of trying in the Circuit Court an indictment for an alleged
offence against the peace and dignity of a State, if they were
real, would be for the consideration of Congress. But they are
unreal. While it is true there is neither in sect. 643, nor in the
act of which it is a reenactment, any mode of procedure in the
trial of a removed case prescribed, except that it is ordered
[that] the cause when removed shall proceed as a cause originally
commenced in that court, yet the mode of trial is sufficiently
obvious. The circuit courts of the United States have all the
appliances which are needed for the trial of any criminal case.
They adopt and apply the laws of the State in civil cases, and
there is no more difficulty in administering the State's criminal
law. They are not foreign courts. The Constitution has made them
courts within the States to administer the laws of the States in
certain cases; and, so long as they keep within the jurisdiction
assigned to them, their general powers are adequate to the trial of
any case. The supposed anomaly of prosecuting offenders against the
peace and dignity of a State in tribunals of the general government
grows entirely out of the division of powers between that
government and the government
Page 384 U. S. 854
of a State -- that is, a division of sovereignty over
certain matters.
When this is understood (and it is time it
should be), it will not appear strange that, even in cases of
criminal prosecutions for alleged offences against a State, in
which arises a defence under United States law, the general
government should take cognizance of the case and try it in its own
courts, according to its own forms of proceeding."
(Emphasis added.)
IV
The federal court in a removal case plainly must act with
restraint. But to deny relief in the cases now before us is, in
view of the allegations made, to aggravate a wrong by compelling
these defendants to suffer the risk of an unwarranted trial and by
allowing them to be held under improper charges and in prison, if
the State desires, for an extended period pending trial. The risk
that the state courts will not promptly dismiss the prosecutions
was the congressional fear. The Court defeats that purpose by
giving a narrow, cramped meaning to § 1443(1). These
defendants' federal civil rights may, of course, ultimately be
vindicated if they persevere, live long enough, and have the
patience and the funds to carry their cases for some years through
the state courts to this Court. But it was precisely that burden
that Congress undertook to take off the backs of this persecuted
minority and all who espouse the cause of their equality.
[
Footnote 2/1]
Act of April 9, 1866, 14 Stat. 27. There were a handful of other
removal statutes passed in the interim.
See, e.g., Act of
February 4, 1815, § 8, 3 Stat. 198 (removal of civil and
criminal actions against federal customs officers for official
acts); Act of March 2, 1833, § 3, 4 Stat. 633 (removal of
civil and criminal actions against federal officers on account of
acts done under the revenue laws),
see Tennessee v. Davis,
100 U. S. 257; Act
of March 3, 1863, § 5, 12 Stat. 756 (removal of civil and
criminal actions against federal officers -- civil or military --
for acts done during the existence of the Civil War under color of
federal authority).
[
Footnote 2/2]
Madison, whose views on the establishment of the federal court
system prevailed, said in the debates:
"[U]nless inferior tribunals were dispersed throughout the
republic . . . , appeals would be multiplied to a most oppressive
degree; that, besides, an appeal would not in many cases be a
remedy. What was to be done after improper verdicts, in state
tribunals, obtained under the biased directions of a dependent
judge, or the local prejudices of an undirected jury? To remand the
cause for a new trial would answer no purpose. . . . An effective
judiciary establishment, commensurate to the legislative authority,
was essential. A government without a proper executive and
judiciary would be the mere trunk of a body, without arms or legs
to act or move."
5 Elliot's Debates 159 (1876).
His victory "destroyed the ability of the states to sabotage the
Union through their judiciary systems." 3 Brant, James Madison 42
(1950).
Cf. England v. Medical Examiners, 375 U.
S. 411,
375 U. S.
416-417.
[
Footnote 2/3]
28 U.S.C. § 1443(1964 ed.) provides:
"Any of the following civil actions or criminal prosecutions,
commenced in a State court may be removed by the defendant to the
district court of the United States for the district and division
embracing the place wherein it is pending:"
"(1) Against any person who is denied or cannot enforce in the
courts of such State a right under any law providing for the equal
civil rights of citizens of the United States, or of all persons
within the jurisdiction thereof;"
"(2) For any act under color of authority derived from any law
providing for equal rights, or for refusing to do any act on the
ground that it would be inconsistent with such law."
[
Footnote 2/4]
Whatever the full reach of the statutory language "any law
providing for the equal civil rights of citizens," the wrongs of
which these defendants and those in
Georgia v. Rachel,
ante, p.
384 U. S. 780,
complain (with the possible exception of pure First Amendment
claims) are well within its coverage.
See e.g., 42 U.S.C.
§ § 1971, 1973i(b) (1964 ed. & Supp. I) (statutes
adopted under Congress' power to assure equal access to the vote to
all citizens, regardless of "race, color, or previous condition of
servitude," U.S.Const. Amendment XV); 42 U.S.C. § 1981 (1964
ed.) (guaranteeing all persons the right not to be subjected to
"punishment, pains, penalties . . . [or] exactions" not suffered in
like circumstances by "white citizens"); 42 U.S.C. § §
2000a, 2000a-2 (1964 ed.) (discussed in
Georgia v. Rachel,
supra). I doubt that any meaningful distinction could be drawn
for removal purposes between, for example, rights secured by 42
U.S.C. § 1981 and those guaranteed by the Equal Protection
Clause, which largely reiterated § 1981 in constitutional
terms. But it is unnecessary, on my view of these cases, to settle
this question. I therefore do not reach the highly questionable
propositions relied upon by the majority in restricting the scope
of the rights which § 1443(1) encompasses.
[
Footnote 2/5]
Strictly speaking, the Court in
Virginia v. Rives,
supra, drew no distinction between the "is denied" and the
"cannot enforce" clauses. It is clear, if only in retrospect, that
the Court was there concerned solely with a claim of an
anticipated inability to enforce equal civil rights
because of the state court's tolerance of the exclusion of Negroes
from the jury. The Court held that pretrial removal could not reach
"a judicial [as opposed to a legislative] infraction of the
constitutional inhibitions, after trial or final hearing has
commenced." 100 U.S. at
100 U. S. 319.
Fairly read,
Rives applies only to claims for removal
arising under the "cannot enforce" clause of § 1443(1).
[
Footnote 2/6]
See, e.g., Edwards v. South Carolina, 372 U.
S. 229;
Henry v. Rock Hill, 376 U.
S. 776 (per curiam);
Cox v. Louisiana,
379 U. S. 536,
379 U. S. 559;
Shuttlesworth v. Birmingham, 382 U. S.
87.
[
Footnote 2/7]
110 Cong.Rec. 6955 (1964).
[
Footnote 2/8]
Administration of a law which appears fair on its face violates
the Equal Protection Clause if done in a way which is racially
discriminatory (
Yick Wo v. Hopkins, 118 U.
S. 356) or which prefers the proponents of certain ideas
over others (
Niemotko v. Maryland, 340 U.
S. 268,
340 U. S. 272;
Cox v. Louisiana, supra, 379 U.S. at
379 U. S.
553-558;
and see id. at
379 U. S.
580-581 (Black, J., concurring)). Both standards combine
in the case of discriminatory enforcement directed against civil
rights demonstrators.
And see 42 U.S.C. § 1981 (1964
ed.)
[
Footnote 2/9]
See, e.g., Hamm v. Rock Hill, 379 U.
S. 306,
379 U. S. 310;
Georgia v. Rachel, supra.
[
Footnote 2/10]
Cf. authorities cited,
384
U.S. 808fn2/8|>note 8,
supra. Various federal
statutes make it a crime to interfere with or punish the exercise
of federally protected rights.
See, e.g., § 11(b) of
the Voting Rights Act of 1965, 79 Stat. 443, 42 U.S.C. §
1973i(b) (1964 ed., Supp. I); § 203 of the Civil Rights Act of
1964, 78 Stat. 244, 42 U.S.C. § 2000a-2 (164 ed.).
See
infra at
384 U. S.
847-848 and
384
U.S. 808fn2/12|>note 12.
[
Footnote 2/11]
And see Edwards v. South Carolina, 372 U.
S. 229 (1963) (nearly two years from arrest to our
reversal of convictions);
Fields v. South Carolina,
375 U. S. 44 (1963)
(three and a half years from arrest to our reversal of
convictions);
Henry v. Rock Hill, 376 U.
S. 776 (1964) (more than four years from arrest to our
reversal of convictions).
[
Footnote 2/12]
Compare the language of § 203 of the Civil Rights
Act of 1964, 78 Stat. 244, 42 U.S.C. § 2000a-2 (1964 ed.),
relied upon by the Court in
Rachel as creating a right to
be free from a wrongful prosecution:
"No person shall . . . (b) intimidate, threaten, or coerce, or
attempt to intimidate, threaten, or coerce any person with the
purpose of interfering with any right or privilege secured by [the
public accommodations sections], or (c) punish or attempt to punish
any person for exercising or attempting to exercise any right or
privilege secured by [the public accommodations sections]."
The majority appears to distinguish this case from
Rachel on the ground that, in the latter case, the
defendants were "authorized" by the Civil Rights Act of 1964 to
enter a restaurant and receive equal accommodation. In my judgment,
that is a distinction without substance for purposes of §
1443(1). A person "is denied" rights which § 1443(1) protects
when the very prosecution of him is in violation of a federal
statute assuring equal civil rights. That is true whether the act
for which he is being prosecuted is specifically authorized by
statute or, rather, is merely one of the innumerable acts which
members of the community daily perform without either statutory
authorization or police interference.
It must be apparent that the action by the Revisers of 1874 in
eliminating the previous provision for post-trial removal is
irrelevant to interpretation of the "is denied" clause. Even on the
majority's own interpretation of the statute, where "any
proceedings in the courts of the State will constitute a denial" of
rights secured by a federal statute assuring equal civil rights, an
appropriate basis will have been shown for a "firm prediction" of
such denial.
Georgia v. Rachel, ante, at
384 U. S.
804.
[
Footnote 2/13]
The irrationality of the
Rives-Powers requirement that
removal be predicated on a facially unconstitutional statute was
known to Congress when it amended the law to make possible appeal
from an order remanding the case to the state court. As
then-Senator Humphrey, floor manager of the Civil Rights Act of
1964, put it:
"[T]he real problem at present is not a statute which is, on its
face, unconstitutional; it is the unconstitutional application of a
statute. When a State statute has been unconstitutionally applied,
most Federal district judges presently believe themselves bound by
these old decisions. . . .
Enactment of [the appeal provision]
will give the appellate courts an opportunity to reexamine this
question."
110 Cong.Rec. 6551 (1964). (Emphasis added.) Similar invitations
to overrule the
Rives-Powers line of cases were uttered by
Senator Dodd (110 Cong.Rec. 6955-6956) and Congressman Kastenmeier
(110 Cong.Rec. 2770), and it is fair to assume that Congress did
not reinstate the right to appeal from a remand order merely to
allow civil rights litigants the brutal luxury of an appeal, the
inevitable outcome of which would be an affirmance.
[
Footnote 2/14]
The majority's view of the
Rives-Powers doctrine is
none too clear. In
Rachel, it dispenses with the broad
statement of that doctrine that there be a facially
unconstitutional state statute or constitutional provision, for it
permits removal on a showing that a state statute is
unconstitutional only in application to those seeking relief. The
Court explains this by reliance on language in
Rives which
the Court thought warranted the conclusion that in certain
circumstances, removal might be justified even in the absence of a
discriminatory state statute. In this case, however, the majority
appears to adopt the whole sweep of the
Rives-Powers
doctrine, and makes the absence of facially unconstitutional state
action fatal to the petition for removal.
[
Footnote 2/15]
Cong.Globe, 39th Cong., 1st Sess., 602.
[
Footnote 2/16]
In support of its contrary result, the Court cites the number of
removal petitions filed in the year 1965. I am unaware of any
relevance this figure has in the interpretation of a statute
enacted in 1866. Indeed, if any contemporary incidents are to
provide guidance, I should think we would be aided by the debates
and votes in Congress on the Civil Rights Act of 1964. Opponents of
the provision allowing appeals from a remand order warned of
possible dilatory tactics and disruptions of the judicial processes
-- state and federal -- which might result; this was virtually the
only expressed basis of opposition to this proposed amendment.
See, e.g., H.R.Rep. No. 914, 88th Cong., 1st Sess., 59,
67, 111-112 (minority reports); 110 Cong.Rec. 2769-2784
(
passim) (House);
id. at 13468, 13879 (Senate).
Proposals to delete the appeal provision were decisively rejected,
118-76 in the House (
id. at 2784), and in the Senate on
two occasions, 51-31 (
id. at 13468) and 66-25
(
id. at 13879).