Forsyth v. United States

50 U.S. 571, 13 L. Ed. 262, 9 How. 571, 1850 U.S. LEXIS 1444
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedMay 28, 1850
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 50 U.S. 571 (Forsyth v. United States) 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
Forsyth v. United States, 50 U.S. 571, 13 L. Ed. 262, 9 How. 571, 1850 U.S. LEXIS 1444 (1850).

Opinion

Mr. Justice NELSON

delivered the opinion of the court.

This is a motion by the Attorney-General, on behalf of the United States, to dismiss the writ of error for want of jurisdiction, it having been taken out in a criminal case 10 bring up a judgment on an indictment for cutting timber upon government lands.

The indictment was returned by the grand jury, at the October term, 1845, of the Superior Court of the District of West Florida, in the late Territory of Florida, in the County of Escambia, and was founded upon the act of Congress passed March 2, 1831, entitled- “An act-to provide for the punishment of offences committed in cutting, destroying, or removing live-oak and other timber or trees reserved for naval purposes.”

The prisoner was arrested by a bench warrant issued upon the indictment on the 5th of November, 1845: but was taken out of the custody of the marshal by virtue of a writ of habeas corpus issued from the Circuit Court of the State of Florida, at the November term, 1845, of that court, and discharged from the arrest.

He was afterwards arrested on an alias bench warrant, issued by the District Court of the United States for the Northern District of the State of Florida,-on the 7th of February, 1848; and at the March term thereafter of the court was arraigned, and pleaded not guilty.

*572 • Previous to the trial, a motion was made on behalf of the prisoner to quash the indictment, on the ground, —

1. That it was found in the late Superior Court of the District of West Florida by a grand jury, impanelled at the October term, 1845. of said court, it being after the admission of the Territory of Florida into the Union as a State, and therefore that neither the court nor the grand jury thereof had jurisdiction over the oifence, or authority .to find the indictment.

2. That the act of Congress of March 2, 1831, under which the indictirient was found, prohibited the cutting of timber only on land reserved for the use. of the navy of the United States, and on none other.

This motion was denied, and the case ordered for trial.

The jury found the prisoner guilty, and assessed the value of the timber cut by him at sixty-one dollars. And thereupon the court pronounced judgment, that.he be imprisoned for one day, and pay a fine of two hundred and fifty dollars, and the costs of the prosecution, which were taxed at $ 299.27..

The .proceedings before us have been brohght up on a writ of error to this judgment; and the question is, whether there is any act of Congress conferring authority upon this court to review them' in this form, or in any other.

The Judiciary Act of 1789 (1 Stat. at Large, 73) made no provision for the revision of judgments of the Circuit or District Courts in criminal cases; and as the cases in which the appellate jurisdiction of this court can be exercised depend upon the regulation of Congress, it followed that no appeal or writ of error. would lie. United States v. Moore, 3 Cranch, 159; 7 Wheat. 38; Ex parte Kearney, 3 Peters, 201.

The act of Congress passed 29th April, 1802 (2 Stat. at Large, 156), which provided for a certificate to this court of the point, in case of a division of opinion in the Circuit Court, embraced cases in which the opinions were opposed in criminal as well as in civil trials; and since that act, questions of law in criminal cases have occasionally been the subject of examination here for the instruction of the courts below (Ibid., p. 159, § 6). United States v. Tyler, 7 Cranch, 285; The Same v. Wiltberger, 5 Wheat. 76; The same v. Smith, Ibid. 153; The Same v. Holmes, Ibid. 412; The Same v. Marigold, ante, p. 560.

There is no general law, therefore, upon which a revision of the judgment in this case can be maintained; and the only question is, whether, in a peculiar class of. cases, to which this belongs, a writ of error is specially provided for by the act of Congress passed February 22, 1847 (Sess. Laws, 1847, ch. 17). *573 It is insisted, on the part of-the plaintiff in error, that the case is embraced in the eighth section of that act.

It is an act entitled “ An act to regulate the exercise of the appellate jurisdiction of the-Supreme Court in certain cases.” The previous sections of the act provide for the transfer of the records of. the proceedings, including the judgments and decrees of all cases not appropriately belonging to State jurisdiction, pend-. ing in the Superior Courts or Court of Appeals, in the Territory of Florida, on the 3d of March, 1845 (the date of her admission into the Union), into the District Court of the United States for the State of Florida; and also for the hearing and decision of all cases or writs of error and appeals that had before been brought into the Supreme Court of the United States under any existing law, and which were pending here at the period above mentioned; and further, for the bringing of writs of error and appeals in all cases of judgments and decrees which were pending at the period aforesaid, and were by the act transferred, .to the District Court, in which writs'of error or appeals had not, but might have been taken to this court if the Territory had not been admitted into the Union.

The eighth' section then provides, that in all cases pending in any Of the Superior Courts of the Territory or Court of Appeals on the 3d of March, 1845, not legally transferred to the State courts, and wh-ich the said Territorial courts continued to take cognizance of, and proceeded to hear and determine after that day, and which were claimed as still pending therein as courts of the United States; and in all cases of a Federal character and jurisdiction commenced in said Territorial courts after that day, and in which'judgments and decrees were rendered therein, the records and proceedings thereof, and the judgments and decrees therein, are hereby transferred to the United States District Court for the State of Florida; and'writs_of error and appeals may be taken" by either party to remove the judgments or decrees that have been or may be rendered in such cases into the Supreme Court of the United States, and such court may hear and determine such cases on such writ of error or appeal, and issue its mandate to such District Court, with a proviso that the writ of error or appeal shall be taken within one year from the passage of the act, or from the rendition of the judgment or decree, and with the further proviso, that nothing in the act shall be construed as affirpning or disaffirming the jurisdiction or authority of the Territorial judges to proceed in or to determine such cases after the 3d of March, 1845; but the same shall be referred to the Supreme Court for its decision in th.e matter.

*574

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Bluebook (online)
50 U.S. 571, 13 L. Ed. 262, 9 How. 571, 1850 U.S. LEXIS 1444, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/forsyth-v-united-states-scotus-1850.