Gusman v. Marrero

180 U.S. 81, 21 S. Ct. 293, 45 L. Ed. 436, 1901 U.S. LEXIS 1285
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedJanuary 7, 1901
Docket223
StatusPublished
Cited by22 cases

This text of 180 U.S. 81 (Gusman v. Marrero) 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
Gusman v. Marrero, 180 U.S. 81, 21 S. Ct. 293, 45 L. Ed. 436, 1901 U.S. LEXIS 1285 (1901).

Opinion

Mr. Justice McKenna

delivered the opinion of the court.

The appellant has not ventured to give a specific name to this action. The appellee claims that it is not an application for a writ of habeas corpus, nor for writ of mandamus, (this word is used in the prayer of the petition,) but that.it is “an ordinary action of which the appellant has no concern.”

The purpose of the proceeding is to deliver from the custody of the sheriff of the parish of Jefferson, State of Louisiana, one Samuel Wright, who is under sentence of death for the crime of assault, with intent to commit rape, for which he was convicted in the twenty-first judicial district court for the parish of Jefferson.

The appellant’s petition was filed in the Circuit Court of the United States for the Eastern District of Louisiana, and alleges that he appeared on behalf of. Nathan Wright. It further alleges that Wright was convicted of criminal assault with intent to commit rape and sentenced to death, and that Marrero (appellee) as sheriff “ proposes, under said sentence, and an order of execution lately received by him from Murphy J. Foster, governor, so called, of the State of Louisiana, to hang said • Wright on February 9,1900, until dead, and will do' so unless restrained therefrom by this honorable court; . . . that said conviction was obtained and sentence passed without due process of law, in direct violation of' the Fourteenth Amendment of the Constitution of these United States; that the grand jury that indicted Wright consisted of only twelve members, whilst the fundamental law of the State, the constitution of 1879,. imperatively requires that the grand jury shall consist of sixteen members, and that the assent of at least thirteen of these members shall be secured for the presentation of a true bill; ” and “that these fatal departures from an indispensable due *83 process of law arose from the very erroneous beliefs of the hon. judge of said district court and of .Governor Foster, that a so-called constitution of 1898 is the fundamental law of the State, and not that of 1879; that they erred, and that the latter is the real and valid constitution of Louisiana,' petitioner in proof presents the following counts and pleas.”

There is a specification of reasons, under eight “ counts and pleas,” why the constitution of 1898 is not the constitution of the State. The reasons are all reducible to the general and ultimate one that the constitution of 1898 was not adopted in pursuance of the provisions of the constitution of 1879, and “hence act No. 52 of 1896, (an act of the legislature,) generally known as the constitutional convention law, goes far beyond the limits of legislative authority, is ultra vires and absolutely null and void, and everything done under it equally null and void.”

It is also alleged that certain other acts, to wit, acts Nos. 89 and 13 of 1896, are unconstitutional, because they reduce the number of registered voters, and therefore are not in any sense an expression of sovereignty, and therefore of no force, effect or validity.” The particular reasons given are that the acts are bills of attainder, ex post facto laws, violate the guarantees of the Fourteenth Amendment to the Constitution of the United States, take away suffrage without dué process of law, make sweeping exemptions from additional qualifications • of the suffrage based upon wealth and money, do not provide for ratification by the people of the State in compliance “ with the provisions of the Federal Constitution exacting from every State of the Union a republican form of government.”

The petition concludes as follows:

“Petitioner further shows in behalf of said Wright that the aforesaid insurrectionary, revolutionary, usurpative and unconstitutional proceedings compel him to go outside of the state courts, and to appeal to this hon. court for protection against an ordered extrajudicial murder, under the well-established maxim of constitutional law that state courts are not competent to pass upon the validity of the constitution under which *84 they themselves exist and from which, they derive all their' power. ' \
“Wherefore,, the above duly considered, petitioner prays for citation and service of petition. upon the aforesaid Lucien H. Marrero, sheriff of the-parish of Jéfferson, State of Louisiana, commanding him to show .cause, if any he has, why the -said Nathan Wright, now in his illegal and -wrongful custody, should not be by him set at liberty.
“Petitioner further prays that, after all necessary Services, legal delays ahd due trial, there be-judgment by this hon. court mandamusing and ordering the said. Lucien. H; Marrero, sheriff of the parish of Jefferson, to restore Nathan Wright to that liberty he has been wr’ongfully depriving him of.
“ Finally, petitioner prays for such general and special relief for said Wright as the law and evidence may on trial show him entitled to receive.
“ Respectfully submitted.
(Signed)' “A.- L. Gusman.
“Before me, the undersigned authority, personally appeared A. L. Gusman, to me known, who, being first by me duly sworn, says that the above facts and allegations are true and correct; that the aforesaid Wright has no adequate legal remedy in the state courts of Louisiana for the denial of due’process of law, of which he is the victim, and that his only avenue of escape from an unconstitutional sentence of death is an appeal to this hon. court for justice and. protection.
(Sighed) “A. L. Gusman.
“ This done and subscribed in iny office, city of New Orleans, this 2d day of January, A. D. 1900.
[seal.] (Signed) . “ W. B. Barnett, Not'. Pub?

Upon the filing of the petition and without any action of the cburt or of the Circuit Judge, the clerk or the court issued a citatioh, entitled in the. cause and in the name of the President of the United States, to Lucien H. Marrero, sheriff of the parish of, Jefferson, and summoned him to comply with the demand of the petition, (a copy of which accompanied the citation,) or *85 to deliver his answer in the office of the clerk of the- court within ten days after service thereof, with increase of one day for every ten miles Marrero’s residence was distant from New Orleans, the place where the court was held.

In due time Marrero, by attorney; filed exceptions to the pe-~ tition on the ground that the court had no jurisdiction in the case, and on the ground that the petition disclosed no cause of action.

The answer concluded as follows:

“In the event that defendant’s exception be overruled, and only then, defendant answers that he holds no prisoner named Martin Wright nor Nathan Wright, as alleged in plaintiff’s petition, but that a man named Sam.

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Bluebook (online)
180 U.S. 81, 21 S. Ct. 293, 45 L. Ed. 436, 1901 U.S. LEXIS 1285, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gusman-v-marrero-scotus-1901.