Ex parte Hunter

2 W. Va. 122
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 15, 1867
StatusPublished
Cited by27 cases

This text of 2 W. Va. 122 (Ex parte Hunter) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering West Virginia Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ex parte Hunter, 2 W. Va. 122 (W. Va. 1867).

Opinion

Broavn, President.

This is an application by the above named gentlemen to be admitted to practice as counsellors and attorneys at law in this court, upon taking the oath to support the constitution of the United States and of this State; but, without taking the oath prescribed by the act of February 14th, 1866, entitled “An act in relation to the oaths of attorneys at law.”

All of them had been regularly licensed and practicing lawyers in the State of Virginia antecedent to and at the breaking out of the rebellion, and all resident, then and now, Avithin the territory embraced in the State of West Virginia. All had adhered to and taken part in the rebellion from the beginning, and continued till after Lee’s surrender, when they respectively surrendered themselves as prisoners to the military forces of the United States on the same terms extended by General Grant to the forces under the rebel chief. All have received the Executive clemency, and all accepted the Executive pardon, upon the terms prescribed in the amnesty [140]*140proclamation of President Johnson. And it is now claimed in support of their application' — 'that the act of February 14th, 1866, is unconstitutional and void. Also, That the terms of surrender and the President’s pardon restored them to whatever rights and privileges they may have forfeited in the premises, and therefore, they are entitled to be admitted to the bar, and enrolled among the attorneys of this court upon the terms proposed.

In entering upon the consideration of this case, it is necessary to group together the facts and circumstances connected with, and which induced the act, which the court is asked to invalidate.

A civil war existed between the government of the United States and a portion of her citizens. The war was prosecuted on the part of the government to suppress the rebellion and restore the Union, and on the part of the rebels to disrupt the Union and establish an independent government over part of the States of the Union. The State of West Virginia, in common with the other loyal States, lent her aid in the general effort, but in addition thereto she was from the day of her foundation engaged in a war of self-defence on her own responsibility, against her enemies, who invaded her territory and sought by military force her overthrow and extinction.

To this end, in addition to near thirty thousand troops furnished to the National government, she raised and equipped numerous independent forces of State troops on her own account, and for her own defence, officered and paid by the State, and acting under the command of the State authorities. These are matters of such public notoriety and general concernment, as require the court to take judicial notice of them, so far as they have connection with, or bearing upon the statute under review.

By the Constitution of the United States, Art. 1, sec. 8, it is provided that a State may keep troops and engage in war when invaded, or when in such imminent danger as not to admit of delay.

There can be no doubt, therefore, of the existence and [141]*141legality of the war, on the part of the State, against her enemies who sought by military force to subjugate her people, overthrow her government and annihilate her existence.

Pending this state of war the act in question was passed, not for the purpose of punishing the guilty parties, but to guard the State against the supposed danger likely, or at least possible, to arise from admitting enemies, or those who but recently had been so, to hold places of public confidence and influence both towards the people and the courts.

It may not have been the best policy in the legislature to attempt such means of safeguard as that adopted; but it cannot be denied that the object was within the legislative power, and the means within the legislative discretion.

It was, therefore, a war measure, rather than a peace offering, a precautionary measure to guard against prospective danger made a matter of some interest and solicitude by recent experiences.

It cannot be denied that the confidential and peculiar relations of the legal profession to the courts and people, their talents, learning and influence make them potent for good or evil, as they may be loyal or disloyal, in sustaining or subverting the government under which they exercise their great privileges. And if the history of the times were entirely silent on the subject, the act in question shows how the legislature regarded the sympathies and conduct of not a few of the profession in a most trying and critical period. And the legislature would doubtless answer, if questioned for the act, that those who had once done the things, which endangered the public safety, would not likely be very averse to attempt it again, if opportunity offered. It is the argument by which the common mind is satisfied that the sun will rise on the morrow, and is an application of the rule of judging the future by the past. But whether wisely or unwisely applied is a matter not for review by the court. It is at least sufficiently plausible, when taken in connection with the temper and spirit of the times, to save the legislature from the charge of wanton persecution.

It was contended that the war ended with the surrender [142]*142of the rebel chiefs, Messrs. Lee and Johnson, and the terms of the surrender were read to show the right of the vanquished to return home and pursue their usual avocations.

But that surrender was only to irresistible force, and not a voluntary, or even an involuntary, submission to the laws ■of the land — nor an admission even of any obligation so to submit; but, on the contrary, it contained an express assertion of the 'rights of war, and the right reserved to be exchanged as prisoners of war. The belligerent rights secured under that cartel lasted while the parties maintained the attitude of enemies in actual war — though prisoners on parole — but ceased when the prisoner grounded his opposition, as well as his arms, and submitted himself to his lawful, but offended government, and availed himself of the Executive clemency.

Eo benefit can be claimed here by the applicants, or either of them, from that cartel, after having availed themselves of the Executive pardon. As paroled prisoners they could not have any civil rights under the laws, nor be entertained in the courts of the other belligerent. Eor it would not be less repugnant to the laws of nature and of nations than to the common law, to permit public enemies to avail themselves of the use of the courts they were fighting to destroy, or act as officers and advisors of such courts, in expounding the laws which the expoundei’s set at defiance.

War does not of itself, necessarily, forfeit the enemies’ property and rights, so as prop'io vigore to divest them, but it gives .to the sovereign power the right' to declare the forfeiture and make it effective by positive law; or, in the language of Chief Justice Marshal], in delivering the opinion of the court in the case of Armitz Brown vs. The United States, 8 Cranch, 110, “It may be considered as the opinion of all who have written on the jus belli, that war gives the right to ■confiscate, but does not of itself confiscate the property of the enemy.”

nevertheless, without such positive declaration, the rights remain suspended until the war ends, and then what the war leaves may be resumed and enjoyed as before.

[143]

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
2 W. Va. 122, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ex-parte-hunter-wva-1867.