Holmes v. Jennison

39 U.S. 540, 10 L. Ed. 579, 14 Pet. 540, 1840 U.S. LEXIS 387
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedMarch 18, 1840
StatusPublished
Cited by144 cases

This text of 39 U.S. 540 (Holmes v. Jennison) 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
Holmes v. Jennison, 39 U.S. 540, 10 L. Ed. 579, 14 Pet. 540, 1840 U.S. LEXIS 387 (1840).

Opinion

*561 Mr. Chief Justice Taney:

The Court have held this case under consideration for some time;, and as the end of the term is now approaching, it is proper to dis'pose of it. The members of the Court, after the fullest discussions, are.so divided that' no opinion'can be delivered as the opinion of the Court. . It is, however, deemed advisable, in order to prevent' mistakes or misconstruction, to state the opinions we have respectively formed. And in the opinion which I am now about to express, I am authorized to say, that my Brothers Story, M'Lean, arid Wayne, entirely concur.

This case presents a question of .great importance, upon which eminent jurists have differed in opinion. Can a. state, since the adoption of the Constitution of the United States, deliver up an individual found within its territory, to a foreign government, to be. there tried for offences alleged to have been committed against it ? This involves an inquiry into-the relative powers of the federal and state governments, upon a subject which is .sometimes one of great delicacy. In the case before us the party concerned is an obscure individual, not a citizen of the United States; and who is not likely to attract any great share of public attention. But in times of war and of high excitement, the principle now to be decided may reach cases where great public interests are • concerned; and where the surrender may materially affect the peace of the Union. We are fully sensible of the importance of the inquiry, and of the necessity of approaching it with the utmost deliberation and caution.

There is, however, a preliminary point to be disposed of. It has,been suggested that the question above mentioned cannot be brought here, in the form in which it appears in this record; and that we have not jurisdiction to re-examine the judgment of the Supreme Court of Vermont, pronounced in a summary proceeding by habeas corpus.

The case in the record is this: George Holmes, the plaintiff in error, was arrested in the state of Vermont, on a warrant or order issued by Silas H. Jennison, as Governor of the state, and directed to John Starkweather, sheriff of the county of Washington, in said state, setting forth, that an indictment had been found by a grand jury of the District of Quebec, in the British province of Lower Canada, against the said Holmes, for the crime of murder, alleged to have been committed within the said District of Quebec; and that as it was fit and expedient, that he should be made amenable to the laws of the country where the offence was charged to have been committed, the said Starkweather was commanded to convey the body of the said Holmes to some convenient place on the confines of the state of Vermont, and the province of Lower Canada, and there deliver him to suchrpersons as might be empowered by the Canadian authorities to receive him; to the end that he might be there dealt with as to law and justice appertained.

On the application of Holmes, a writ of habeas corpus was issued by the Supreme Court of the State of Vermont, commanding the *562 said Starkweather to bring into Court the body of the said Holmes: and in the return to this writ, the warrant or order of the Governor of the state, as above described, was set forth as the cause of the said arrest and detention.

Holmes being brought into Court, in obedience to the said writ of habeas corpus, his counsel moved for his discharge.; and at the same time introduced in evidence certain documents which appear in the record, (but which it is unnecessary to state here,) for the purpose of showing that the Governor had no lawful right to surrender him.

The record then proceeds to state the judgment of the Court in the following words: “Wherefore, after a full hearing of the parties, and all and singular the premises aforesaid being seen and fully examined, it is adjudged by the Court here, that the aforesaid cause of detention and imprisonment of the said George Holmes is good and sufficient in law; and that he be remanded and held accordingly, under the process set forth in the return to this writ of habeas corpus,” •

, ■ It will be seen from the foregoing statement, that the proceedings in question were in the highest Court of the state of Vermont-; that the judgment is formally and fully entered- on its records; and it is evident from the very terms of the judgment, that the validity of the Governor’s warrant was drawn in question,and decided by the Court. It will hardly be said after this judgment, that the Governor was not, acting in-this business under the authority of the state. There is indeed no statute of Vermont giving him the power he exercised. Butrhis conduct has been fully examined by the highest judicial tribunal in the state, and they have adjudged that the warrant issued by-him was authorized by law, and bound the sheriff to hold the prisoner, and deliver him in the manner directed to the Canadian authorities. We must receive this decision as conclusive evidence of the laws of Vermont upon this subject; and, consequently, the proceedings of the Governor must be taken as justified by the laws of the state, and treated as an authority exercised under it. Here, then, is precisely one of the cases in which the writ of error is given in the twenty-fifth section of the act of 1789.

The authority was exercised by Governor Jennison, under the state. That authority has been drawn in question in the highest Court of law in the state, upon the ground that it was repugnant to the Constitution of the United States;.and the decision was'in favour of the validity of the authority so exercised. The only inquiry, therefore, upon the question of jurisdiction,- is, whether there has been such a judgment in such a proceeding as is described in that, -section; in other words, whether the judgment of the Supreme Court of Vermont,-above stated, was a “final judgment” “in a suit,” within the meaning of the act of Congress.

As to the final character'of the judgment, the question maybe disposed of in a few words. In order to determine whether a judgment is final or not, we must first inquire what is in controversy. *563 In this case, the validity of the Governor’s warrant was the only question before the Supreme Court of Vermont, and that question was certainly finally settled: for the Court, in so many words, adjudged that the causé of the detention and imprisonment of Holmes was good and sufficient in law; and nothing more remained in the case for the action of the Court. The sheriff, upon their judgment, must have proceeded to execute the warrant, and have delivered the prisoner to the Canadian authorities without further delay; if the proceedings had not been suspended in consequence of the writ of error to this Court.

In the case of Weston and others vs. The City Council of Charleston, 2 Peters, 464, this Court, speaking of the meaning of the word final,- in the section in question, say, “.If it (the word final) were-applicable to those judgments and decrees only in which the right was finally decided, and could never again be litigated between the parties, the provisions of the section would be confined within much narrower limits than the words import, or than Congress could have intended.

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Bluebook (online)
39 U.S. 540, 10 L. Ed. 579, 14 Pet. 540, 1840 U.S. LEXIS 387, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/holmes-v-jennison-scotus-1840.