Case of Fries

9 F. Cas. 826, 3 Dall. 515
CourtU.S. Circuit Court for the District of Pennsylvania
DecidedApril 15, 1799
DocketCase No. 5,126
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 9 F. Cas. 826 (Case of Fries) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Case of Fries, 9 F. Cas. 826, 3 Dall. 515 (circtdpa 1799).

Opinion

IREDELL, Circuit Justice

(charging jury).1 Gentlemen of the Grand Jury; The importance of the duties you are now called upon to fulfil, naturally increases with the increasing difficulties of our country. But however great those difficulties may be,' I am persuaded you will meet them with a firm and intrepid step, resolved, so far as you are concerned, that no dishonor or calamity (if any should await us) shall be ascribable to a weak or partial administration of justice.

If ever any people had reason to be thankful for a long and happy enjoyment of peace, liberty and safety, the people of these states surely have. While every other country almost has been convulsed with foreign or domestic war, and some of the finest countries on the globe have been the scene of every species of vice and disorder, where no life was safe, no property was secure, no innocence had protection, and nothing but the basest crimes gave any chance for momentary preservation; no citizen of the United States could truly say that in his own country any oppression had been permitted with impunity, or that he had any grievance to complain of, but that he was required to obey those laws which his own representatives had made, and under a government which the people themselves had chosen. But in the midst of this envied situation, we have heard the government as grossly abused as if it had been guilty of the vilest tyranny; as if common sense or common virtue bad [828]*828fled from our country; and those pure principles of republicanism, which have so strongly characterized its councils, could only be ■found in the happy soil of France, where the •sacred fire is preserved by five directors on ordinary occasions, and three on extraordinary ones — who, with the aid of a republican army, secure its purity from violation by the legislative representatives of the people. The external conduct of that government is upon a par with its internal. Liberty, like the religion of Mahomet, is propagated by the sword. Nations are not only compelled to be free, but to be free on the French model, and placed under French guardianship. French arsenals are the repository of their arms, French treasuries of their money, the city of Paris of their curiosities; and they are honoui’ed with the constant support of French enterprises in any other part of the world. Such is the progress of a power which began by declarations that it abhorred all conquests for itself, and sought no other felicity but to emancipate the world from tyrants, and leave each nation free to choose a government of its own. Those who take no warning by such an awful example, may have deeply to lament the consequences of neglecting it. The situation in which wo now stand with that country is peculiarly [829]*829critical. Conscious of giving no real cause of offence, but irritated with injuries, and full of resentment for insults: desirous of peace, if it can be preserved with honour and safety, but disdaining a security equally fallacious and ignominious at the expense of either; still holding the rejected olive branch in one hand, but a sword in the other — we now remain in a sort of middle path between peace and war, where one false step may lead to the most ruinous consequences, and nothing can be safely relied on but unceasing vigilance, and persevering firmness in what we think right, leaving the event to Heaven, which seldom suffers the destruetion of nations, without some capital fault of their own.

Among other measures of defence and precaution which the exigency of the crisis, and the magnitude of the danger suggested to-those to whom the people have • entrusted all authority in such cases, were certain acts of the legislature of the United States, not. only highly important in themselves, but deserving of the most particular attention, on account of the great discontent which has-been excited against them, and especially as some of the state legislatures have publicly pronounced them to be in violation :of the constitution of the United States. I [830]*830deem it my duty, therefore,- on this occasion, to state to you the nature of those laws which have been so grossly misrepresented, and to deliver my deliberate opinion as a judge, in regard to the objections arising from the constitution. The acts to which I refer, you will readily suppose to be what are commonly called the alien and sedition acts. I shall speak of each separately, so far as no common circumstances belonging to them may make a joint discussion proper.

• I. The alien laws, there being two. To these laws, in particular, it has been objected: 1. That an alien ought not to be removed on suspicion, but on proof of some crime. 2. That an alien coming into the country,- on the faith of an act stipulating that in a certain time, and on certain conditions, he may become a citizen, to remove him in an arbitrary manner before that time, would be a breach of public faith. 3. That it is inconsistent with the following clause in the constitution (article 1, § 9): “The migration or importation of such persons as any of the states now existing shall think proper to admit, shall not be prohibited by the congress prior to the year one thousand eight hundred and eight, but a tax or duty may be imposed on such importation, not exceeding ten dollars for each person.”

With regard to the first objection, viz., [831]*831“That an alien -ought not to be removed on suspicion, but on proof of some crime.” j It is believed that it never was suggested in any other country, that aliens had a-right to go into a foreign country, and stay at their will and pleasure without any leave from the government./ The law of nations undoubtedly is, that when an alien goes into a foreign country, he goes under either an express or ■implied safe conduct In most countries in Europe, I believe, an express passport is necessary for strangers. Where greater liberality is observed, yet it is always understood that the government may order away any alien whose stay is deemed incompatible with the safety of the country. /Nothing is more common than to order away, on the eve of a war, all aliens or subjects of the nation with whom the war is to take place.) Why is that, done, but that it is deemed unsafe to retain in the country, men whose prepossessions are naturally so strong in favour of the enemy, that it may be apprehended they will either join in arms, or do mischief by intrigue, in his favour? How many such instances took place at the beginning of the war with Great Britain, no body then objecting to the authority of the measure, and the expediency of it being alone in contemplation! In cases like this, it is ridiculous to talk of a crime; because perhaps the only crime that a man can then be [832]*832charged with, is his feeing born in another country, and having a strong attachment to it. He is not punished íor a crime that he has committed, but deprived of the power of committing one hereafter to which even a sense of patriotism may tempt a warm and misguided mind. Nobody who has ever heard of Major Andr6, that possesses any liberality of mind, but must believe that he did what he thought right at the time, though in my opinion it was a conduct in no manner justifiable.

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Bluebook (online)
9 F. Cas. 826, 3 Dall. 515, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/case-of-fries-circtdpa-1799.