Carlesi v. New York

233 U.S. 51, 34 S. Ct. 576, 58 L. Ed. 843, 1914 U.S. LEXIS 1269
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedApril 6, 1914
Docket679
StatusPublished
Cited by151 cases

This text of 233 U.S. 51 (Carlesi v. New York) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of the United States primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Carlesi v. New York, 233 U.S. 51, 34 S. Ct. 576, 58 L. Ed. 843, 1914 U.S. LEXIS 1269 (1914).

Opinion

Mr. Chief Justice White

delivered the opinion of the court.

The plaintiff in error was accused of the crime “of forgery in the second degree as a second offense.” The indictment contained a recital of the prior offense relied on, that is, a conviction in the Circuit Court of the United States for the. Southern District of New York, and a sentence for three and one-half years in the penitentiary for the crime of selling and having in possession counterfeit coin. The statute of the State of New York, which was the authority for referring to the prior conviction was as follows:

“A person, who, after having been convicted within this State, of a felony, or an attempt to commit a felony, or of petit larceny, or, under the laws of any other State, government, or country,. of a crime which, if committed within this State, would be a felony, commits any crime, within this State, is punishable upon conviction of such second offense, as follows:

“1. If the subsequent crime is such that, upon a first conviction, the offender might be punished, in the discretion of the court, by imprisonment for life, he must be sentenced to imprisonment in a state prison for life;

*56 “2. If the subsequent crime is such that, upon a first conviction, the offender would'be punishable by imprisonment for any term less than his natural life, then such person must be sentenced to imprisonment for a term not less than the longest term, nor more than twice the longest term, prescribed upon a first conviction.’* (Penal Law, § 1941.)

The accused pleaded not guilty and while admitting the truth of the recitals in the indictment as to his prior conviction, sentence and service of time in the penitentiary, moved to strike from the indictment all reference to those subjects and insisted on his right to be tried without at all considering or in any manner referring to the prior conviction and sentence on the ground of a pardon granted to him by the President of the United States after he had completed his term of service under the prior conviction. The pardon relied upon was offered in evidence. On the trial which followed the refusal of the court to grant the motion to strike out or to rule as requested, the alleged Federal right based upon the pardon was further urged upon the court in every conceivable form and was adversely acted upon, and after conviction was also pressed and adversely passed upon in both the Appellate Division (154 App. Div. 481) and in the Court of Appeals of New York (208 N. Y. 547). And it is the adverse ruling of the Court of Appeals concerning such asserted Federal right which forms the sole basis for this writ of error, addressed to the trial court because of the action of the Court of Appeals in remitting the entire record to that court.

The arguments at bar cover a wider field than is essential to be considered in order to pass upon the question for decision. As the state courts held that the statute directed the consideration of the prior conviction despite the pardon, we must treat the case as if the statute so expressly commanded and test its repugnancy to the Constitution *57 of the United States upon that assumption. The issue is a narrow one and involves not the determination of the operation and effect of a pardon within the jurisdiction of the sovereignty granting it, but simply requires it to be decided how far a pardon granted as to an offense committed against the United States operates so to speak extra-territorially as a limitation upon the States, excluding them from considering the conviction of a prior and pardoned offense against the United States in a prosecution for a subsequent state offense. It may not be questioned that the States are without right directly or indirectly to restrict the National Government in the exertion of its legitimate powers. It is therefore to be conceded that if the act of the State in taking into consideration' a prior conviction of an offense committed by the same offender against the laws of the United States despite a pardon was in any just sense a punishment for such prior crime, that.the act of the State would be void because destroying or circumscribing the effect of the pardon granted under the Constitution and laws of the United States. And of course, conversely, it must be conceded that if it be that the act of the State in taking into con-. sideration a prior offense committed against the Unitéd States after pardon under the circumstances stated was not in any degree a punishment for the prior crime but was simply an exercise by the State of a local power within its exclusive cognizance, there could be no violation of the Constitution of the United States. The whole controversy therefore is to be resolved by fixing the nature and character of the action of the State under the circumstances for the purpose of deciding under which of these two categories it is to be classed. When the issue is thus defined and-limited its solution is free from difficulty as it has been repeatedly and conclusively foreclosed by the prior adjudications of this court.

In McDonald v. Massachusetts, 180 U. S. 311, the court *58 considered and adversely disposed of a contention that ¡a statute of the State of Massachusetts was repugnant to the Constitution of the United States because it provided for a punishment as an habitual criminal of any person convicted of a felony in Massachusetts who was found to have been “twice convicted of crime, sentenced and committed to prison, in this or any other State, or once in this and once at least in any other State, . . .” In holding that the statute was not in conflict with the Constitution, the.court said, pp. 312, 313:

“The fundamental mistake of the plaintiff in error is his assumption that the judgment below imposes an additional punishment on crimes for which he had already been convicted and punished in Massachusetts and New Hampshire.

“But it does no such thing. The statute under which it was rendered is aimed at habitual criminals; and simply imposes a heavy penalty upon conviction of a felony committed in Massachusetts since its passage, by one who had been twice convicted and imprisoned for crime for not less than three years, in this, or in another State, or once in each. The punishment is for the new crime only, but is the heavier if he is an habitual criminal. . . . It is within the discretion of the legislature of the State to treat former imprisonment in another State,. as having the like effect as imprisonment in Massachusetts, to show that the man is an habitual criminal. . . . The statute, imposing a punishment oh none but future crimes, is not ex post facto. It affects alike all persons similarly situated, and therefore does not deprive any one of the equal protection of the laws. Moore v. Missouri, 159 U. S. 673; Ross’s Case, 2 Pick. 165; Commonwealth v. Graves, 155 Massachusetts, 163; Sturtevant v. Commonwealth, 158 Massachusetts, 598; Commonwealth v. Richardson, 175 Massachusetts, 202.

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Bluebook (online)
233 U.S. 51, 34 S. Ct. 576, 58 L. Ed. 843, 1914 U.S. LEXIS 1269, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/carlesi-v-new-york-scotus-1914.