Ex parte McLeod

120 F. 130, 1903 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 356
CourtDistrict Court, N.D. Alabama
DecidedFebruary 13, 1903
StatusPublished
Cited by24 cases

This text of 120 F. 130 (Ex parte McLeod) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, N.D. Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ex parte McLeod, 120 F. 130, 1903 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 356 (N.D. Ala. 1903).

Opinion

JONES, District Judge

(after stating the facts as above). The evil example of the offender, and the improper inferences the lawless may draw from the inability to punish him by indictment, make it a duty to inquire whether the assault upon the commissioner because of past discharge of duty constitutes a contempt of the authority of the court, which should be punished, to prevent a repetition of such offenses in the future. A right understanding of the things which lie at the root of this matter is so vital to the good of society that full discussion cannot be out of place.

Civilized society abhors the arbitrament of private or interested force. It sets up its own tribunals to determine whether there is any reason for exerting the forces of society in the settlement of disputes, and, if so, in whose favor, and to what extent. The reason and conscience of officers calléd “judges” wield and direct the awful power of administering justice, which in so many ways controls the destinies of men. Violence to punish the free exercise of the reason and conscience of such tribunals is a blow at all order, and strikes at the very existence of justice. Separated from its officers, the court “is invisible, intangible, and exists only in contemplation of law.” It “lives and moves and has its being,” only in the acts and personality of living men. The ideal thing called the “court” is beyond the reach of force or fear or fraud. Bearing in mind what the court is, and how it is constituted, it is unreasonable, in the extreme, in seeking the principle for ascertaining and preventing obstructions to the justice the tribunal administers, to insist that this legal abstraction, which' can neither breathe nor stir save in the bodies of living men, can be dissevered, for any practical purpose, in a matter of this kind, fromh the only personality in which it can exist as a living force. What reasoning being can deny that assaults upon court officers, because they discharge or have discharged their duty, are subversive of the independence of courts, and destructive of their authority and usefulness ? Why are officers protected, if not to safeguard the administration of justice? There is generally no reason for protecting an officer as to the discharge of duty, which does not apply with equal force as well after it is done as while it is being performed. What a man fears may happen to him in the future because of doing his duty, if contemplated at the time the duty is being considered, may, and generally does, influence the discharge of that duty. The desire for vengenance frequently arises only after the duty is performed, because of its performance, creating greater need for protection to the officer than while he is executing the duty. In Divine and human laws the effective means relied on to restrain the acts of men is to hold up before their eyes the consequences which may result from their acts. Will the ordinary officer discharge his duty, fearlessly and unawed, [132]*132against the powerful, the vicious, and the desperate, when he knows that, the moment the duty is done, the power he serves will withdraw its protection, and leave him naked to the vengeance his act arouses? Will the lawbreaker dread.to give loose rein to his passion, when he feels that the court cannot or will not punish assaults upon its officers because of past discharge of duty?

So firmly is recognition of the truth imbedded in our jurisprudence, that officers should be protected from improper consequences of discharge of duty, that it has always shielded judicial officers, on the highest considerations of the public good, from being called in question in civil actions for things done in a judicial capacity, even when corruptly performed. Hamilton v. Williams, 26 Ala. 529; Busteed v. Parsons, 54 Ala. 403, 25 Am. Rep. 688. The reason is nowhere as well stated as by Chief Justice Kent in the memorable case of Yates v. Lansing, 5 Johns. 282, where he says:

“Whenever we subject the established courts of the land to the degradation of private prosecution, we subdue their independence and destroy their authority. Instead of being venerable before the public, they become contemptible, and we thereby embolden the licentious to trample upon everything sacred in society, and to overturn those institutions which have heretofore been deemed the best guardians of civil liberty.”

Greater still must be the sweep of the evil, if judicial officers can with impunity be subjected, without resort to any court, to responsibility for judicial acts, and punished therefor by private vengeance, administered by persons who in the past have come in harsh contact with their power. Who would have any respect for the authority of a court whose judge, the moment he left the courthouse, could be subjected, with impunity, to insult and assault because of acts done in his judicial capacity while on the bench? Is it in the power of any person, by insulting or assaulting the judge because of official acts, if only the assailant restrains his passion until the judge leaves the court building, to compel the judge to forfeit either his own self-respect and the regard of the people by tame submission to the indignity, or else set in his own person the evil example of punishing the insult by taking the law into his own hands? If he forbear for the time, and resort to the criminal law, the remedy is hardly better than the wrong, since then he must become a private prosecutor in some other court, and depend on it to vindicate the independence of his own court. Unless the court, whose officer he is, can and will punish such conduct and acts towards the person of the judge, when past discharge of duty is the motive for the indignity, the judge must submit to some of these alternatives; and any of them degrade his office, and bring the administration of justice into scandal. No high-minded, manly man would hold judicial office under such con'ditions. Justice would depend not alone on the learning and integrity ■of the judge. His ability and will to fight unto death, even in a street brawl, would be equally, if not more, important. Are not these things of grave concern to the court, which can exercise its functions of administering justice only through the judge who is thus badgered, assaulted, and” intimidated because of judicial acts ?

When the duty and power of the court to deal with such evils are [133]*133considered in the light of principle and reason, the real question is not where the indignity occurred, but whether it related to the discharge of duty, and has t|je evil consequences in the administration of justice to which we have adverted. If these results follow, it is not at all material, so long as the judge is assailed for official acts, where the judge is at the time of the assault, nor whether he is then engaged in the discharge of any duty, nor whether the court is then sitting, nor whether the assault was with reference to a past, instead of a pending, case. These things are not of the essence of the offense and evil. Viewing the offense on principle, the sitting of the court is material only in determining when its power can be put in motion against the offender. The evil is that the judge has been held to accountability for his judicial acts, and punished, contrary to the law, because he has performed them. That acts like this, which degrade the judicial office, unfit judicial officers for calm deliberation, awe them in the exercise of their functions, and undermine their independence, must recoil fearfully on the orderly and decent administration of justice, cannot be denied.

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Bluebook (online)
120 F. 130, 1903 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 356, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ex-parte-mcleod-alnd-1903.