The Judiciary Act of 1789 made no prevision for the revision, by
this Court, of judgments of the circuit or district courts in
criminal cases, and the Act of 1802, 2 Stat. 156, only embraced
cases in which the opinions of the judges were opposed in criminal
cases. There is therefore no general law giving appellate
jurisdiction to this Court in such cases.
But the Act of Congress passed on 22 February, 1847 Sess.Laws,
1847, chap. 17, providing that certain cases might be brought up
from the territorial courts of Florida to this Court, included all
cases, whether of civil or criminal jurisdiction.
Under this act, this Court can revise a judgment of the Superior
Court of the District of West Florida in a criminal case, which
originated in October, 1845, and was transferred to the District
Court of the United States for the Northern District of
Florida.
Proceeding, therefore, to revise the judgment, this Court
decides that the jurisdiction of the territorial courts, of which
the superior court was one, ceased on the erection of the territory
into a state, on 3 March, 1845. The proceedings before the court in
which the indictment was found were, consequently,
coram non
judice, and void.
The facts in this case are sufficiently set forth in the opinion
of the Court.
MR. JUSTICE NELSON delivered the opinion of the Court.
This is a motion by the Attorney General, on behalf of the
United States, to dismiss the writ of error for want of
jurisdiction, it having been taken out in a criminal case to bring
up a judgment on an indictment for cutting timber upon government
lands.
The indictment was returned by the grand jury at the October
term, 1845, of the Superior Court of the District of West Florida
in the late Territory of Florida, in the County of Escambia, and
was founded upon the Act of Congress passed March 2, 1831, entitled
"An act to provide for the punishment of offenses committed in
cutting, destroying, or removing live oak and other timber or trees
reserved for naval purposes."
The prisoner was arrested by a bench warrant issued upon the
indictment on 5 November, 1845, but was taken out of the custody of
the marshal by virtue of a writ of habeas corpus issued from the
Circuit Court of the State of Florida at the November term, 1845,
of that court, and discharged from the arrest.
He was afterwards arrested on an alias bench warrant issued by
the District Court of the United States for the Northern District
of the State of Florida on 7 February, 1848, and at the March term
thereafter of the court was arraigned and pleaded not guilty.
Page 50 U. S. 572
Previous to the trial, a motion was made on behalf of the
prisoner to quash the indictment on the ground
1. That it was found in the late Superior Court of the District
of West Florida by a grand jury empanelled at the October term,
1845, of said court, it being after the admission of the Territory
of Florida into the Union as a state, and therefore that neither
the court nor the grand jury thereof had jurisdiction over the
offense, or authority to find the indictment.
2. That the Act of Congress of March 2, 1831, under which the
indictment was found, prohibited the cutting of timber only on land
reserved for the use of the Navy of the United States, and on none
other.
This motion was denied, and the case ordered for trial.
The jury found the prisoner guilty, and assessed the value of
the timber cut by him at sixty-one dollars. And thereupon the court
pronounced judgment, that the be imprisoned for one day, and pay a
fine of two hundred and fifty dollars, and the costs of the
prosecution, which were taxed at $299.27.
The proceedings before us have been brought up on a writ of
error to this judgment, and the question is whether there is any
act of Congress conferring authority upon this Court to review them
in this form, or in any other.
The Judiciary Act of 1789, 1 Stat. 73, made no provision for the
revision of judgments of the circuit or district courts in criminal
cases, and as the cases in which the appellate jurisdiction of this
Court can be exercised depend upon the regulation of Congress, it
followed that no appeal or writ of error would lie.
United States v.
Moore, 3 Cranch 159;
20
U. S. 7 Wheat. 38;
Ex Parte
Kearney, 3 Pet. 201.
The Act of Congress passed 29 April, 1802, 2 Stat. 156, which
provided for a certificate to this Court of the point, in case of a
division of opinion in the circuit court, embraced cases in which
the opinions were opposed in criminal as well as in civil trials,
and since that act, questions of law in criminal cases have
occasionally been the subject of examination here for the
instruction of the courts below.
Ibid., 159, § 6.
United States v.
Tyler, 7 Cranch 285;
Same v.
Wiltberger, 5 Wheat. 76;
Same v.
Smith, 5 Wheat. 153;
Same v.
Holmes, 5 Wheat. 412;
Same v.
Marigold, 4 How. 560.
There is no general law, therefore, upon which a revision of the
judgment in this case can be maintained, and the only question is
whether, in a peculiar class of cases, to which this belongs, a
writ of error is specially provided for by the Act of Congress
passed February 22, 1847, Sess.Laws, 1847, ch. 17.
Page 50 U. S. 573
It is insisted on the part of the plaintiff in error that the
case is embraced in the eighth section of that act.
It is an act entitled "An act to regulate the exercise of the
appellate jurisdiction of the Supreme Court in certain cases." The
previous sections of the act provide for the transfer of the
records of the proceedings, including the judgments and decrees of
all cases not appropriately belonging to state jurisdiction,
pending in the superior courts or court of appeals, in the
Territory of Florida, on 3 March, 1845, the date of her admission
into the Union, into the District Court of the United States for
the State of Florida; and also for the hearing and decision of all
cases on writs of error and appeals that had before been brought
into the Supreme Court of the United States under any existing law,
and which were pending here at the period above mentioned, and
further, for the bringing of writs of error and appeals in all
cases of judgments and decrees which were pending at the period
aforesaid, and were by the act transferred to the district court,
in which writs of error or appeals had not, but might have been
taken to this Court if the territory had not been admitted into the
Union.
The eighth section then provides that in all cases pending in
any of the superior courts of the territory or court of appeals on
3 March, 1845, not legally transferred to the state courts, and
which the said territorial courts continued to take cognizance of,
and proceeded to hear and determine after that day, and which were
claimed as still pending therein as courts of the United States,
and in all cases of a federal character and jurisdiction commenced
in said territorial courts after that day, and in which judgments
and decrees were rendered therein, the records and proceedings
thereof, and the judgments and decrees therein, are hereby
transferred to the United States District Court for the State of
Florida, and writs of error and appeals may be taken by either
party to remove the judgments or decrees that have been or may be
rendered in such cases into the Supreme Court of the United States,
and such court may hear and determine such cases on such writ of
error or appeal, and issue its mandate to such district court, with
a proviso that the writ of error or appeal shall be taken within
one year from the passage of the act, or from the rendition of the
judgment or decree, and with the further proviso, that nothing in
the act shall be construed as affirming or disaffirming the
jurisdiction or authority of the territorial judges to proceed in
or to determine such cases after 3 March, 1845, but the same shall
be referred to the supreme court for its decision in the
matter.
Page 50 U. S. 574
We think it apparent, from this reference to the provisions of
the act of 1847, that Congress, in respect to the peculiar class of
cases particularly described in the eighth section, intended to
give to either of the parties to the suit or proceedings the right
to a revision by this Court of the judgments or decrees rendered by
the territorial judges therein, without limitation as to the amount
in controversy, or whether the case was of criminal or civil
jurisdiction.
The previous sections had provided for the transfer of the
records, judgments, and decrees into the United States district
court that had been rendered in the territorial courts before the
territory was admitted into the Union, and were pending in those
courts at the time of the admission; and in those cases the right
of the party to bring up the judgments and decrees for revision on
writs of error and appeals is specially restricted to those in
which the right would have existed under the acts of Congress if
the territory had not been admitted into the Union -- in other
words, if the territorial system of government had continued. Under
that system, the right of review by this Court was limited to civil
cases, and to those only where the amount in controversy exceeded
$1,000.
But we find no such restriction in the eighth section of the
act, which provides for the transfer of the records and proceedings
in cases in which the judgments and decrees were rendered in these
courts after the territorial system had become superseded by the
erection of the territory into a state. That section declares, that
in all cases pending in the superior courts and court of appeals on
3 March, 1845, and which said courts continued to take cognizance
of, and proceeded to determine after that day, and in all cases of
federal character and jurisdiction commenced in said courts after
that day, and in which judgments or decrees were rendered, the
records &c., shall be transferred to the district court, and
writs of error or appeals may be taken by either party to remove
the judgments or decrees, &c.
There can be no doubt but that the phraseology embraces all
civil cases of the class mentioned, and we think it sufficiently
comprehensive to include criminal cases also, and such was
undoubtedly the object of the provision. Every part of the section
shows that the principal design of providing for a revision of
these proceedings was to procure the judgment of this Court upon
the question of jurisdiction of the territorial judges after the
erection of the territory into a state; it having been insisted by
the parties against whom the proceedings were had, that their
judicial functions ceased with the territorial government.
Page 50 U. S. 575
And in this view, the reason for including the criminal cases in
the remedial law, of which these courts also took cognizance, is
quite as strong as that which led to the provision in civil
cases.
The peculiar situation of all the cases, civil and criminal, of
which cognizance was taken after the termination of the territorial
government, and previous to the establishment of the federal
courts, was supposed to make this special provision expedient, in
order that the question of jurisdiction might be settled speedily,
and in a way most convenient for the parties and at the least
expense. These considerations applied with peculiar force to the
criminal cases in which convictions had taken place, as the
prisoners were either undergoing the punishment of their offenses,
or were subject to its infliction.
We are of opinion, therefore, that the court has jurisdiction of
the case to revise the judgment of the court below on error, and
that the motion to dismiss must be denied.
It was agreed by the counsel, on the argument of the motion to
dismiss, that, if we arrived at the conclusion that the court had
jurisdiction, under the act of 1847, to revise the judgment of the
court below on error, we should proceed to examine the case upon
the merits, and make a final disposition of the same.
We have accordingly looked into the record for this purpose, and
find that the prisoner was indicted at the October term, 1845, of
the Superior Court of the district of West Florida, in the late
Territory of Florida. The session began on 3 October, at which time
a grand jury were drawn and empanelled and sworn; and that on 3
November following, during the same term, they came into court and
presented the indictment in question against the prisoner, which
was then and there received and filed in the court.
The indictment contained two counts, charging, substantially,
the same offense -- namely the cutting of timber trees then and
there standing and being on the government lands, the said lands
being other than those lands which, before that time, had been
reserved or purchased in pursuance of law for the use of the United
States for supplying and furnishing therefrom timber for the navy,
with intent to dispose of the same, &c.
The indictment was afterwards transferred from the superior
court, in which it was found, together with other papers in the
cause, in pursuance of the Act of Congress of 1847, to the District
Court of the United States for the Northern District of Florida,
and filed therein, and at the January term, 1848, of that court,
held at Tallahassee, the cause was docketed in said
Page 50 U. S. 576
court and ordered for trial at the next term thereof, to be held
at Pensacola on the first Monday of March next, notice of which
order was given to the prisoner. At this term, as we have already
stated in disposing of the motion to dismiss, the prisoner was
arraigned, tried, and convicted, after a motion had been made and
denied to quash the indictment on the ground that the court had no
jurisdiction.
It will be perceived that the proceedings were instituted in the
superior court in October, 1845, after the Territory of Florida was
erected into a state and the territorial government had ceased, and
that pending the indictment in that court, and before the trial,
the cause was transferred to the district court in pursuance of the
act of 1847 and there tried and the prisoner convicted.
We have already held at this term, in the case of
Hiram
Benner v. Joseph Y. Porter ante, 50 U. S. 235, that
the jurisdiction of these territorial courts ceased on the erection
of the territory into a state, on 3 March, 1845, and consequently
the proceedings before the court in which the indictment was found
were
coram non judice, and void.
Whether Congress possessed the power to confer afterwards upon
the United States district court jurisdiction to arraign and try
the prisoner on this indictment, thus giving effect to it
ex
post facto, we need not stop to inquire, as the act of 1847
does not profess to confer any such authority. We have no doubt
they possess no such power. An indictment upon which a prisoner can
be held to answer must be found by a grand jury empanelled and
sworn in pursuance of law, and before a court of competent
jurisdiction.
The act of 1847 provided simply for the transfer of those cases
pending in the superior courts, and which those courts claimed to
exercise jurisdiction over after the territorial government had
ceased, to the federal district court of the state, and for writs
of error or appeals to remove the judgments or decrees therein to
this Court for review, taking care, at the same time, to guard
against any construction that might be given to the act tending to
affirm the jurisdiction, but referring the question to this Court
to be determined.
Nor is there any provision in the eighth section conferring any
special authority upon the district court, in respect to criminal
cases pending in the superior courts, the records and proceedings
of which were directed to be transferred, to take up those that
remained unfinished, and to proceed therein to trial and judgment.
We refer to those criminal cases of which the superior courts took
cognizance after the territorial government ceased, and with it the
jurisdiction of these courts.
Page 50 U. S. 577
We do not doubt but that it was competent for Congress to have
provided for the transfer of pending criminal cases, as well as
civil, at the termination of the territorial government, to the
federal courts, with authority to proceed therein to a final
disposition, the same as if the cases had originated in those
courts. A provision of this kind is not only fit and proper, but
one that should always be made in respect to all the pending
business remaining in the courts at the change of government.
But the case here is different. The section relates to cases
pending in the courts that had taken cognizance of them, and
proceeded therein, after it is alleged their jurisdiction had
ceased. And hence we find no provision for taking up the unfinished
cases after the transfer, and proceeding in the same to a final
disposition.
We are satisfied, therefore, that the district court had no
jurisdiction to arraign and try the prisoner on the indictment
previously found in the superior court of the late Territory of
Florida, or to pronounce judgment thereon, and that the judgment
accordingly should be reversed, and the proceeding remitted to the
court below, with directions to quash the indictment and discharge
the prisoner from his recognizance, or imprisonment, as the case
may be.
The Act of Congress passed March 2, 1831, 4 Stat. 472, upon
which the indictment in this case is founded, has been before us at
this term for consideration, in the case of
United States v.
Briggs, and in which we have held that an indictment in all
respects corresponding with the present one was well warranted by
the provisions of that act. It makes the cutting of trees or timber
standing on any lands belonging to the government, by any person,
whether such lands be or be not reserved or purchased, in pursuance
of law, for the use of the navy, with the intent to convert the
same to his own use, a criminal offense, punishable by fine and
imprisonment.
There is no distinction made between the acts of trespass in
cutting the timber on lands reserved and not reserved for the use
of the navy. Each is made a misdemeanor, and subjected to the same
penalty. There is no ambiguity in the act in this respect or room
for a different interpretation. Had the question in this case
turned upon the merits, we should not have entertained a doubt upon
it, or have considered it open after the decision in the case
already referred to.
The act of 1817, 3 Stat. 347 was nearly as comprehensive as the
one in question. The only difference is that there the offense of
cutting on lands belonging to the government other than those
reserved for the use of the navy was
Page 50 U. S. 578
limited to the cutting of live oak or red cedar timber; here, it
is enlarged to the cutting of live oak or red cedar trees "or other
timber," thereby removing the restriction in the act of 1817. In
other respects, the two acts are substantially the same.
Order
This cause came on to be heard on the transcript of the record
from the District Court of the United States for the Northern
District of Florida, and was argued by counsel. On consideration
whereof, it is now here ordered and adjudged by this Court that the
judgment of the said district court in this cause be and the same
is hereby reversed and annulled for the want of jurisdiction in
that court, and that this cause be and the same is hereby remanded
to the said district court with directions to quash the indictment
and discharge the prisoner.