Ex parte Farley

40 F. 66, 1889 U.S. App. LEXIS 2435
CourtU.S. Circuit Court for the District of Western Arkansas
DecidedOctober 14, 1889
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 40 F. 66 (Ex parte Farley) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Western Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ex parte Farley, 40 F. 66, 1889 U.S. App. LEXIS 2435 (circtwdar 1889).

Opinion

Paricer, J.,

(after stating the facts as above.) This court has no jurisdiction, by writ of error or appeal, to pass even on the jurisdiction of the court at Muskogee. By such means it would have no right to inquire into the cause of imprisonment of a party restrained of his liberty, no matter how illegal such restraint might be. But if the illegality of restraint grows out of a sentence imposed, or any order of imprisonment which the court could not make for want of jurisdiction, the want of jurisdiction may be inquired into by this court by a habeas corpus proceeding) and upon the hearing of such a case the court, or any judge thereof, may make such inquiry as is necessary to enable it to see Avhether the jurisdiction of the court has been exceeded, or that there is no authority to hold the petitioner under sentence. The court may grant this great “writ of right” in every case where a party is restrained of his liberty anywhere in the territorial jurisdiction of the court, against the constitution and laws of the United States, or the petitioner is deprived of his liberty without due process of law. This may be so done by an order or proceeding of a state court, or any United States court, or by a person outside of a court; and if so done in the territorial jurisdiction of a United States circuit or district court, such courts, or any judge thereof, may, upon proper application, issue a writ of habeas corpus to inquire into the jurisdiction of a court, or the want of authority in such court, to restrain a party of his liberty. The jurisdiction of the circuit and district courts within their territorial jurisdictions to issue this writ is the same as the supreme court of the United States within its territorial jurisdiction, which is the whole United States.

When the supreme court will review the proceedings of an inferior court by habeas corpus, a United States circuit or district court has the power, within their territorial jurisdictions, to inquire, in a case where a party is restrained of liberty by the order of a court, whether that court had jurisdiction to make the order, or had authority to restrain the party of his liberty. The state of case which must exist to warrant the invocation of this writ is clearly settled in Ex parte Wilson, 114 U. S. 421, 5 Sup. Ct. Rep. 935, and the numerous authorities there cited. All these authorities give to the courts having jurisdiction the right by habeas corpus to inquire whether the court restraining the party of his liberty has jurisdiction to do so. The court, in its inquiry to ascertain the existence of jurisdiction, will look into so much of the proceeding as will enable it to determine whether jurisdiction exists or not. Ex parte Lange, 18 Wall. 163; Ex parte Parks, 93 U. S. 18.

It was claimed in argument that each court is the judge of its own jurisdiction. That is true to a certain extent. But it cannot so adjudge its jurisdiction as to deprive a person of the right, by habeas corpus, to ask a court having jurisdiction to issue the writ to make inquiry to see if there has been a rightful exercise of jurisdiction. This is sufficient on the motion to dismiss the proceedings in these cases for want of jurisdiction in this court to issue the writ.

[69]*69Tlio casos of James Farley and Robert Wilson, who petition for a writ of habeas corpus, are exactly alike as far as the question of jurisdiction is concerned. They were charged by an indictment found by a grand jury impaneled by the court at Muskogee with the crime of larceny. Jurisdiction in a court to try a case means jurisdiction over the place, the person, and the subject-matter. That there may be a subject-matter there must be an act that is a crime, and this act must be properly and legally presented before a court. Those petitioners were tried .and convicted upon an indictment, and sentenced to jail upon that conviction, where they now are. As far as these two cases are concerned, it will be sufficient to inquire whether the indictment against them was legally found, as they wore charged in no other way than by indictment. The lirst question is, was the indictment in the case of Wilson and Farley legally found: that is, was the grand jury that found it a legal body? Has the court at Muskogee the power to impanel a grand jury? Tf it has not such power, the grand jury that found this indictment was an illegal body, and it had no power to accuse any one by indictment. All courts of the United States, whether they be the supreme court of the United States, circuit courts, district courts, United States territorial courts in the territories, or the court for the Indian Territory, established by the act of March 1, 1889, are creatures of the constitution, and the statu!es passed in pursuance thereof, and they have only such jurisdictional powers as are conferred by the constitution or by statute, lias the court at Muskogee the power to impanel a grand jury? If it has not this power, there was no subject-matter properly presented in the case of Farley and Wilson upon which the court could proceed to try them. It must get this power from the statutes of the United States. It has no such inherent power, because it is a court created by a statute of the United States. AH of its pow'ers, as fundamental as that of impaneling a grand jury, must be found in the statute law of the United States, or they do not exist. Then this right'of the court at Muskogee to impanel a grand jury must be found either in the act of congress of March 1, 1889, creating the court, or it must come 'from some other statute of the United States. The reading of the act creating the court show's an entire absence of any prp vision for a grand jury. This ivas no mere oversight in congress, as Mr. Culberson, chairman of the judiciary committee of the house of representatives, when, on February 28, 1889, presenting the final conference report of the two houses to the house of representatives, on the subject of the bill providing for a grand jury, said: “As the court is limited in its criminal jurisdiction to offenses below the grade of felony, no grand juries will be needed, and none are provided for.” Congressional Record, vol. 20, p. 2459. This is the language of one of the law-makers; the language of the gentleman who, as chairman of the judiciary committee of the house, had charge of the bill in that branch of the law-making power. The statements of those who had charge of the law, made to the legislative body passing it, as to its meaning and purpose, are always competent. This statement as to the power conferred is fully borne out by the act itself. Unless there [70]*70⅛ in this act express provision for a grand jury, tire court does not have, by virtue of it, the power to impanel one. There is no express power of this kind in the law creating the court.

Does the court have that power by the general law of the United States? The only general law upon the subject of grand juries is found in sections 808 and 810 of the Revised Statutes of the United States. Section 808 provides that “every grand jury impaneled before any district or circuit court shall consist of not less than sixteen nor more than twenty-three persons. * ⅝ *” The remainder of the section provides a method for idling up the panel when a sufficient number do not attend, or whore a challenge is sustained to the panel. Section 810 provides, when a grand jury shall be summoned to attend any circuit or district court, that it is to be done when ordered by one of the judges of the circuit court, or the judge of such district court.

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Bluebook (online)
40 F. 66, 1889 U.S. App. LEXIS 2435, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ex-parte-farley-circtwdar-1889.