In Re Baiz

135 U.S. 403, 10 S. Ct. 854, 34 L. Ed. 222, 1890 U.S. LEXIS 2028
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedMay 5, 1890
Docket11. Original
StatusPublished
Cited by83 cases

This text of 135 U.S. 403 (In Re Baiz) 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
In Re Baiz, 135 U.S. 403, 10 S. Ct. 854, 34 L. Ed. 222, 1890 U.S. LEXIS 2028 (1890).

Opinion

Mr. Chief Justice Fuller

delivered the opinion of the court.

The judicial power of the United States extends to “áll cases affecting ambassadors, other public ministers, and consuls.” Const. Art. III, sec. 2.

By section 687 of the Revised Statutes, it is provided that the Supreme Court “ shall hate exclusively all such jurisdiction of. suits or proceedings against ambassadors, or other. public ministers, or their domestics, or domestic servants, as a. court of law can have consistently with the law of nations; *418 and original, but not exclusive, jurisdiction of all suits brought by ambassadors, or other public ministers, or in which • a consul or a vice-consul is a party.” By section 563, it is provided that “ the District Courts shall hav,e jurisdiction as follows: . . . Seventeenth. Of'all suits against consuls or vice-consuls,” except for certain offences. The petitioner 1ms been, since July, 1887, .the consul general of the BepUblic ot‘ Guatemala, and therefore the District Court had jurisdiction of the' action in question, unless he belonged to the class of official personages subject to suits or proceedings only in this court. This he insists was the fact, and avers in his petition, as he did in his plea in the District Court,, that at the time of the commencement. of the action and until and including the 10th day of- July, 1889, which was the eighth day after service of process upon him, he was “the acting minister and sole representative of said .republic [of Guatemala] in the United States,” and for that reason came within the words of section 687, “ other public ministers.”

The exemption asserted ceased on the 10th of July, 1889, and on the 17th of July the petitioner gave a general notice' of appearance in the action, but did not set up the want of jurisdiction until the 25th of the following September. _ Suit could have been brought-in that court against him on the 11th day of July, but as in his view this could not have been done on the 29th of June or the 2d of July, he contends that the District Court should be ordered to dismiss the suit, though it .could at once be recommenced therein. But it is said that the appearance did not waive the right to be sued in this court rather than in the District Court, because that was the privilege of the country or government which he represented. "Without pausing to inquire how far this is á correct application of the international privilege of not being sued at all, its assertion, even in this restricted form, serves to' emphasize petitioner’s contention that he was at that time the minister or. diplomatic agent of the republics of Guatemala, Salvador and Honduras in the United States, entrusted by virtue of his office with authority to -represent those republics in their negotiations and to vindicate their prerogatives.

*419 Under section 2, Art- II, of the Constitution, the President is-vested with power to “appoint ambassadors, other public ministers and consuls,” and by section 3 it is provided that he shall receive ambassadors and other public ministers.”

These words are descriptive of a cla,ss existing by the law of nations, and apply to diplomatic agents whether accredited by the United States to a foreign power or by a foreign power to the United States, and the words are so used'in section 2 of Art. III. These agents may be called ambassadors, envoys, ministers, commissioners, chargés d’affaires, agents, or otherwise, but they possess in substance the same functions, rights and privileges as agents of their respective governments for the transaction of its diplomatic business abroad. Their designations are chiefly significant in the relation of rank, precedence or dignity. 7 Opinions Attys. Gen. (Cushing), 186.

Hence, when in subdivision fifth of section 1674 of the Revised Statutes we find “diplomatic officer” defined as including “ ambassadors, envoys extraordinary, ministers plenipotentiary, ministers resident, commissioners, chargés d’affaires, agents and secretaries of legation, and none others,” we understand that to express the view of Congress as to what are included within the term “public ministers,5’ although the section relates to diplomatic officers of the United States.

But the scope of the words “ public ministers ” is defined in the • legislation embodied in Title XLVII, “ Foreign Relations,” Rev. Stat., 2d ed. 783. Section 4062 provides that “ every person who violates any safe conduct or passport duly' obtained and issued under authority of the United States ; or who assaults, strikes, wounds, imprisons or in any other manner offers violence to the person of a public minister, ,in violation of the law of nations, shall be imprisoned for not more than three years, and. fined, at the- discretion of the court.” Section 4063 enacts that whenever any writ or process is sued out or prosecuted by any person in any court of the United States, or of a State, or by any judge or justice, whereby the person of any public minister of any foreign prince or state, authorized and received as such by the President, or any domestic or domestic servant of any such minis *420 ter, is arrested or imprisoned, or his goods or chattels' are distrained, seized or attached, such writ or process shall be deemed void. Section 4064 imposes penalties for suing, out any . writ or process in violation'of the preceding section ; and section 4065 says that the two preceding sections' shall not apply to any case where the person against whom the process' is issued is a citizen or inhabitant of the United States “ in the service of a public minister,” and process is founded upon a debt contracted before he entered upon such service; nor shall the preceding' section apply to any ease whei’e the person against whom the process is issued is a “ domestic servant of a public minister,” unless the name of the servant has been registered and posted as therein prescribed.

. Section 4130,, which is the last section of the title, is as follows : “ The word ‘ minister,’ when used in this title, shall be understood to mean the person invested with, and exercising, the principal diplomatic functions. The word ‘ consul ’ shall be understood to mean a,ny person invested by the United States with, and exercising, the functions of consul general, vice-consul general, consul or vice-consul.”

. Sections 4062, 4063, 4064 and 4065 were originally sections 25, 26, 27 and 28 of the Crimes Act of April 30, 1790, c. 9, 1 Stat. 118; and these were drawn from the statute 7 Anne, c. 12, which was declaratory simply of the law of nations, which Lord Mansfield observed, in Heathfield v. Chilton, 4 Burrow, 2015, 2016, the act did not intend to alter and could not alter.

In that case, involving the discharge of the defendant from custody, as a domestic servant to the minister of the Prince Bishop of Liége, Lord Mansfield said: “ I should desire to know in what manner this minister was accredited — certainly, he is' Uipt an ambassador, which is the first rank — envoy, indeed, is á second class ;• but he is not shown to be even an envoy. He is called ‘ minister,’ ’tis true; but minister (alone) is an equivocal term.” The statute of Anne was passed in consequence of the arrest of an ambassador of Peter the Great for debt, and the demand by the Czar that the sheriff of Middlesex and all others concerned in the arrest should be punished with instant death, 1 Bl. Com.

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Bluebook (online)
135 U.S. 403, 10 S. Ct. 854, 34 L. Ed. 222, 1890 U.S. LEXIS 2028, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-baiz-scotus-1890.