1. Where a person convicted of an offense against the United
States is sentenced to imprisonment for a term longer than one
year, the court may, in its discretion, direct his confinement in a
state penitentiary.
2. Imprisonment at hard labor, when prescribed by statute as
part of the punishment, must be included in the sentence of the
person so convicted; but, where fine and imprisonment or
imprisonment alone is required, the court
is authorized, in its discretion, to order its sentence to be
executed at a place where, as part of the discipline of the
institution, such labor is exacted from the convicts.
3. Where a court, in passing sentence of imprisonment in the
penitentiary, finds that in the district or territory where the
court is holden these is no penitentiary suitable for the
confinement of convicts or available therefor, such finding is
conclusive, and cannot be reviewed here upon a petition for habeas
corpus, and where the Attorney-General has designated a
penitentiary in another state or territory, for the confinement of
persons convicted by such court, it may order the execution of its
sentence at the place so designated.
4. It is no objection to the validity of the order that the
state has not given its consent to the use of its penitentiary as a
place of confinement of a convicted offender against the laws of
the United States. So long as the state suffers him to be detained
by its officers in its penitentiary, he is rightfully in their
custody, under a sentence lawfully passed.
Page 93 U. S. 397
MR. CHIEF JUSTICE WAITE delivered the opinion of the Court.
Karstendick, the petitioner, was indicted for a conspiracy, and
convicted May 1, 1876, in the Circuit Court of the United States
for the District of Louisiana, under sec. 5440 of the Revised
Statutes. The punishment for his offense, prescribed by the
statute, is a penalty of not less than $1,000 nor more than
$10,000, and imprisonment not more than two years. The sentence, as
passed by the court, so far as it is material to the present
inquiry, is as follows:
"And, it having been in due form determined and ascertained that
there is no penitentiary within the district of Louisiana, suitable
for the confinement of persons convicted of crime in the courts of
the United States, in said District of Louisiana, and the
Attorney-General of the United States having, in due form, and by
and with competent authority, designated the penitentiary at
Moundsville, in West Virginia, as the place of confinement,
subsistence, and employment of all persons convicted, or who may
hereafter be convicted, by the courts of the United States, of
crime against the United States of America, in said district of
Louisiana, and such designation having been in due form notified to
the court and entered upon the record thereof, . . . it is
considered, by reason of the verdict herein, . . . that the said
Otto H. Karstendick be confined in the penitentiary of the State of
West Virginia, at Moundsville, in said state, for and during the
full period of sixteen calendar months from and after this day, and
that he do also further pay a fine of $2,000,"
&c.
In execution of this sentence, Karstendick is now imprisoned in
the penitentiary at Moundsville, and he seeks through this
application to obtain a discharge, alleging for cause that the
order of the court for his imprisonment in a penitentiary, and
without the State of Louisiana, is not authorized by law, and
consequently void.
Sec. 5440 of the Revised Statutes is a reproduction of sec. 30
of an Act of Congress, passed March 2, 1867, "to amend
Page 93 U. S. 398
existing laws relating to internal revenue, and for other
purposes." 14 Stat. 484. At that time, another act, passed March 3,
1865, "regulating proceedings in criminal cases, and for other
purposes," was in force, which provided, in sec. 3, that
"In every case where any person convicted of any offense against
the United States shall be sentenced to imprisonment for a period
longer than one year, it shall be lawful for the court, by which
the sentence is passed, to order the same to be executed in any
state prison or penitentiary within the district or state where
such court is held, the use of which prison or penitentiary is
allowed by the legislature of such state for such purposes."
13 Stat. 500. This provision is also reproduced in sec. 5541 of
the Revised Statutes, save only that the words "state jail" are
substituted for the words "state prison," where they occur in the
original act.
As early as 1834 Congress enacted that, whenever any criminal
convicted of any offense against the United States shall be
imprisoned in pursuance of such conviction, or of the sentence
thereupon, in the prison or penitentiary of any state or territory,
such criminal shall, in all respects, be subject to the same
discipline and treatment as convicts sentenced by the courts of the
state or territory in which such prison or penitentiary is
situated, and, while so confined in such prison, shall also be
exclusively under the control of the officers having charge of the
same, under the laws of such state or territory. 4 Stat. 739.
This provision is reenacted in sec. 5539 of the Revised
Statutes, the word "jail," however, being substituted in the
revision for "prison," where it occurs in the original.
All these several statutes, being
in pari materia,
were, when in force before the revision, to be construed together.
The same is true of the corresponding revised sections, and, under
this rule, the same effect must be given to sec. 5440, that it
would have if it read as follows:
"All the parties to such a conspiracy shall be liable to a
penalty of not less than $1,000 and not more than $10,000, and to
imprisonment not more than two years."
Sec. 5440. If the sentence of imprisonment shall be for a longer
term than one year, the court passing the same may order it to be
executed in any state jail or penitentiary
Page 93 U. S. 399
within the district or state where said court is held (sec.
5541), and the criminal so imprisoned shall in all respects be
subject to the same discipline and treatment as convicts sentenced
by the courts of the state or territory in which such jail or
penitentiary is situated, and shall, while so confined therein, be
exclusively under the control of the officers having charge of the
same under the laws of the state. Sec. 5539.
This language is explicit, and, taken by itself, is certainly
sufficient to authorize imprisonment in a penitentiary, at the
discretion of the court, in all cases where the sentence is for a
longer term than one year. But the counsel for the petitioner, in
their argument, refer to other sections of the statute, which in
terms provide for punishment by imprisonment at hard labor, and
they seek to confine the power of imprisonment in a penitentiary to
such cases; because, as they claim, imprisonment in a penitentiary
necessarily implies imprisonment at hard labor; and where the
punishment provided for by the statute is imprisonment alone, a
sentence to confinement at a place where hard labor is imposed as a
consequence of the imprisonment, is in excess of the power
conferred.
We have not been able to arrive at this conclusion. In cases
where the statute makes hard labor a part of the punishment, it is
imperative upon the court to include that in its sentence. But
where the statute requires imprisonment alone, the several
provisions which have just been referred to place it within the
power of the court, at its discretion, to order execution of its
sentence at a place where labor is exacted as part of the
discipline and treatment of the institution or not, as it pleases.
Thus, a wider range of punishment is given, and the courts are left
at liberty to graduate their sentences so as to meet the
ever-varying circumstances of the cases which come before them. If
the offense is flagrant, the penitentiary, with its discipline, may
be called into requisition; but if slight, a corresponding
punishment may be inflicted within the general range of the
law.
This view of the case is strengthened by a further examination
of the legislation upon this subject. As early as 1825, in an "Act
more effectually to provide for the punishment of crimes against
the United States, and for other purposes," 4 Stat.
Page 93 U. S. 400
118, it was enacted (sec. 15) that
"In every case where any criminal convicted of any offense
against the United States shall be sentenced to imprisonment and
confinement at hard labor, it shall be lawful for the court by
which the sentence is passed to order the same to be executed in
any state prison or penitentiary within the district or state where
such court is holden, the use of which prison or penitentiary may
be allowed or granted by the legislature of such state for such
purposes."
With this statute in force, the act of 1865, which has already
been referred to, was passed, giving the same power in nearly the
same words where the punishment was by imprisonment for a longer
term than one year, without any special requirement as to hard
labor.
These two acts are separately reenacted in the Revised Statutes.
The act of 1825 is reproduced in sec. 5542, and that of 1865 in
sec. 5541, the language of the two original acts being
substantially retained in the revision. With this legislation in
full force, it is impossible to believe that it was the intention
of Congress to confine imprisonment in penitentiaries exclusively
to cases in which hard labor is in express terms made by statute a
part of the punishment.
Without extending the argument further upon this branch of the
case, we are clearly of the opinion that the order of the court
directing the imprisonment in a penitentiary is not void. It still
remains to consider whether that part of the sentence which
directed that the imprisonment should be in the penitentiary at
Moundsville can be sustained.
It is conceded that Congress has the power to provide that
persons convicted of crimes against the United States in one state
may be imprisoned in another. Congress can cause a prison to be
erected at any place within the jurisdiction of the United States,
and direct that all persons sentenced to imprisonment under the
laws of the United States shall be confined there, or it may
arrange with a single state for the use of its prisons, and require
the courts of the United States to execute their sentences of
imprisonment in them. All this is left to the discretion of the
legislative department of the government, and is beyond the control
of the courts.
Acting under this power, Congress, while recognizing as
Page 93 U. S. 401
a rule the propriety of sentencing those convicted of crime
against the United States to imprisonment in the jails or prisons
of the state where their conviction was had, did, in 1864, to meet
contingencies that might arise, enact that
"All persons who have been, or may hereafter be, convicted of
crime by any court of the United States, not military, the
punishment whereof shall be imprisonment in a district or territory
where at the time of such conviction there may be no penitentiary
or other prison suitable for the confinement of convicts of the
United States, or available therefor, shall be confined, during the
term for which they may have been, or may be, sentenced, in some
suitable prison, in a convenient state or territory, to be
designated by the Secretary of the Interior."
13 Stat. 74. In 1872, the power of designating was transferred
to the Attorney-General. This provision is also reenacted in sec.
5546 of the Revised Statutes, the word "jail" being substituted for
"other prison," and "suitable jail or penitentiary" for "suitable
prison," in the original act. This section is to be construed in
connection with the other sections which have been referred to. In
fact, it may be treated as a proviso to secs. 5541 and 5542.
The counsel for the petitioner do not dispute the validity of
this legislation, but they claim the in this case the conditions
precedent to the execution of the sentence in a prison outside of
the state have not been complied with, and consequently that the
case is not brought within the power of the court to make such an
order.
It is first insisted, that, as the State of Louisiana permits
the use of its jails and penitentiaries for the punishment of
criminals convicted in the courts of the United States, the
sentences of imprisonment by those courts cannot be executed
elsewhere. It is not enough that the jails and penitentiaries of
the state may be used: they must also be suitable. Whether suitable
or not, is a question of fact. In this case, the court passing the
sentence has determined this question, and found that in the State
of Louisiana there was no penitentiary suitable for the confinement
of persons convicted of crime against the United States.
This finding is conclusive until reversed, and it cannot be
Page 93 U. S. 402
reviewed in this form of proceeding. To justify a discharge,
under any writ to be issued upon this application, it must appear
upon the face of the record that the order of commitment was
void.
The court also decided that, under the circumstances of this
case, the punishment should be by imprisonment in a penitentiary.
This made it necessary to ascertain whether any penitentiary
outside the state had been designated by the Attorney-General of
the United States for use when that in the state was found to be
unsuitable.
As to this, the record shows, that, on the first day of April,
1876, the Attorney-General addressed the following communication to
the United States Attorney at Louisiana:
"Under the authority granted by sec. 5546 of the Revised
Statutes of the United States, I designate the penitentiary at
Moundsville, in West Virginia, as the place for the confinement,
subsistence, and employment of all persons convicted, by the courts
of the United States for the District of Louisiana, of crime
against the United States, and sentenced by said courts to
imprisonment longer than one year, on and after this instant. You
will bring this designation to the notice of the courts, and have
this order entered, if possible, on the records."
This action of the Attorney-General was brought to the attention
of the circuit court, and the desired entry made.
This, as it seems to us, is clearly a designation under the
statute, and we are unable to agree with the counsel for the
petitioner in the opinion that it applies only to persons under
conviction and sentence at the time the order was issued. It is
true the language is, "all persons convicted . . . and sentenced,"
and that certainly includes persons already convicted, but it does
not necessarily exclude persons thereafter to be convicted. The
statute makes it the duty of the Attorney-General to designate
other places of confinement, whenever the jails or penitentiaries
of a state are unsuitable or unavailable. That it was his intention
to act in reference to future convictions as well as to past, is
evident from the form of his communication, which is not addressed
to, or, so far as appears, intended for the marshal of the
district, but to the attorney of the United States, for the purpose
of being brought by him to
Page 93 U. S. 403
the attention of the courts. An order from the Attorney-General
to the marshal was all that was necessary to effect a removal after
sentence passed. No action of the courts was required. A
notification to the courts was therefore only necessary for the
purpose of influencing their conduct in the future. A sentence in
this case for imprisonment in a state penitentiary would not have
been void, but it might not have prevented the Attorney-General,
acting under the statute, from directing a removal of the convict
to some penitentiary outside of the state. Until such removal, the
imprisonment in Louisiana would have been good. But if the court
finds that the state penitentiary is unsuitable in fact, and the
Attorney-General has designated another for use on that account, we
can see no reason why the court may not sentence the person
convicted to imprisonment at the place designated. Suppose there
had been no penitentiary at all in the state, and under the law the
Attorney-General had made his designation, would it for a moment be
doubted that a sentence to imprisonment at the designated place
would be good? But if a penitentiary is unsuitable within the
meaning of the statute, how is the case different in principle from
what it would be if there were none? The order of the
Attorney-General is equivalent to a finding by him that the
penitentiary of the state was unsuitable or unavailable for the
confinement of criminals convicted under the laws of the United
States, and when this action of the Attorney-General is
supplemented by a finding of the same fact by the court, it seems
to us to be as much within the power of the court to order the
imprisonment at Moundsville, as it would have been if there had
been no penitentiary at all in Louisiana. It certainly could not
have been contemplated that the courts must in all cases sentence
to confinement in the state where the conviction was had, without
regard to the fact whether it could be executed there or not, and
that the sole power of directing the sentence to be executed in
another state was vested in the Attorney-General. That is neither
within the letter not the spirit of the statute. The sole power of
designation is in the Attorney-General, but when he has designated,
if the facts which authorize the change of place exist, it is as
much within the power of the court to order its
Page 93 U. S. 404
sentence to be executed at the designated place, as to determine
which of two prisons in a state, equally suitable and equally
available for the punishment to be inflicted, shall be employed for
that purpose. The policy of the law is to avoid circuity of action,
and to permit the courts to do directly, as far as possible, all
that they may do indirectly.
Neither is it an objection to the order, as made, that the
designation of the Attorney-General is of a penitentiary alone. If
the sentence of the court had been imprisonment in a jail, and the
jails of the State of Louisiana had been found unavailable or
unsuitable, a designation of some jail outside of the state might
have been necessary before the court could have ordered a
confinement outside of the state. But here, the sentence is for
imprisonment in a penitentiary, and as to that, as has been seen,
there was a sufficient designation.
It is further insisted on behalf of the petitioner that the
legislature of the State of West Virginia has not given its consent
to the use of the penitentiary of the state by the United States
for the punishment of their criminals, and that for this reason the
order for his confinement there is void. The petitioner is actually
confined in the penitentiary, and neither the state nor its
officers object. Congress has authorized imprisonment, as a
punishment for crimes against the United States, in the state
prisons. So far as the United States can do so, they have made the
penitentiary at Moundsville a penitentiary of the United States,
and the state officers having charge of it their agents to enforce
the sentences of imprisonment passed by their courts. The question
is not now whether the state shall submit to this use of its
property by the United States, nor whether these state officers
shall be compelled to act as the custodians of those confined there
under the authority of the United States, but whether this
petitioner can object of they do not. We think he cannot. So long
as the state permits him to remain in its prison as the prisoner of
the United States, and does not object to his detention by its
officers, he is rightfully detained on custody under a sentence
lawfully passed.
Neither do we think the objection tenable, that there can be no
imprisonment in a penitentiary outside of Louisiana, if there
Page 93 U. S. 405
are within that state jails that are both suitable and
available. It is for the court to determine whether the
imprisonment shall be in a jail or a penitentiary. If in a
penitentiary, then a penitentiary must be found inside of the state
suitable and available, in order that the sentence to be pronounced
may be executed there. If there is none, resort may be had to those
of another state. Imprisonment need not necessarily be ordered in a
jail because the penitentiary of the state is unsuitable.
As the whole record is before us, and the case has been fully
argued upon the merits, the writ is
Denied.
NOTE -- In
Ex parte Henderson, the application for a
writ of habeas corpus was denied, for the reasons assigned in the
foregoing opinion.