Kellogg v. Warmouth

14 F. Cas. 257, 1872 U.S. App. LEXIS 1362
CourtU.S. Circuit Court for the District of Louisiana
DecidedDecember 6, 1872
StatusPublished

This text of 14 F. Cas. 257 (Kellogg v. Warmouth) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kellogg v. Warmouth, 14 F. Cas. 257, 1872 U.S. App. LEXIS 1362 (circtdla 1872).

Opinion

DURELL, District Judge.

This application comes before me under a bill to preserve evidence to enable the complainant to prosecute a suit at law. This bill is well known to the courts of chancery, and is founded upon the statute, being chapter 104 of the 2d Session of the 41st Congress (16 Stat. 140), entitled “An act to enforce the rights of citizens of the United States to vote in the several states of this Union and for other purposes”; and upon the amendment to the same, being chapter 99 of the 3d Session of the same Congress (16 Stat. 433). Section 1 of the first act cited provides as follows: “That all citizens of the United States who are or shall be otherwise qualified by law to vote at any election by the people in any state, territory, district, county, city, parish, township, school-district. municipality or other territorial subdivision, shall be entitled and allowed to vote at all such elections without distinction of race, color, or previous condition of servitude, any constitution, law, custom, usage, or regulation of any State or territory, or by or under its authority to the contrary notwithstanding.” Section 3 of the same act provides: “That whenever by, or under the authority or laws of any state, or the laws of any territory, any act is or shall be required to be done by any citizen as a pre-requisite to qualify or entitle him to vote, the offer of any such citizen to perform the act required to'be done as aforesaid shall if it fail to be carried into execu[258]*258tion by reason of the wrongful act or omission aforesaid of the person or officer char-geil with the duty of receiving or permitting such performance or offer to perform or acting thereon be deemed and held as a performance in law of such act. And the person so offering and failing as aforesaid being otherwise qualified shall be entitled to vote in the same manner and to the same extent as if he had in fact performed such act.” Section 23 provides as follows: “That whenever any person shall be defeated or deprived of his election to any office except elector of president or vice-president, representative, or delegate in congress, or member of a state legislature by reason of the denial to any citizen or citizens who shall offer to vote of the right to vote on account of race, color, or previous condition of servitude, his right to hold and enjoy such office and the emoluments thereof shall not be impaired by such denial.” And section 15 of the amending act provides as follows: “That the jurisdiction of the circuit court of the United States shall extend to all cases in law or equity arising under the provisions of this act, or the act hereby amended, and if any person shall receive any injury to his person or property for, or on account of any act by him done, under any of the provisions- of this act or the act hereby amended, he shall be entitled to maintain a suit for damages therefor in the circuit court of the United States in the district wherein the party doing the injury may reside or shall be found.”

These two acts were passed by congress to enforce the provision of the constitution of the United States known as the “Fifteenth Amendment” (1C Stat. 1131), which reads as follows:

“Section 1. The right of citizens of the United States to vote shall not be denied or j abridged by the United States, or by any ¡ state on account of race, color, or previous j condition of servitude.” !

“Sec. 2. The congress shall have power to | enforce this article by appropriate legislation.”

The whole matter involved in the discus- j sion which has occupied more than a week ¡ before me, has been presented on both sides j with such ability, research, and fulness that I I feel greatly indebted to the solicitors of j both the complainant and the respondents ! for the aid which they have rendered in enabling me to come to an early decision.

The first question to be solved is. are the acts referred to constitutional? Do they fall within the appropriate legislation authorized and imposed as a duty upon congress by the second section of the amendment? To solve this question, we must look to the object proposed to be attained by the amendment. It was to protect all citizens of the United States, including the recently emancipated and enfranchised colored citizens, in the full and free exercise of the right to vote. Nine years previous to the adoption of the amendment, and the enactment of the statutes passed to enforce the same, four millions of those who now constitute the great body of the citizens of the United States were slaves. It is not necessary here to repeat the history of slavery in this country; how it was, and continued to be. from the very foundation of our government, a source of internal disquiet, increasing year by year, until it culminated in a most bitter and devastating civil war. The result of that war was the emancipation and enfranchisement of four millions of people, who thus passed rapidly from a state of bondage to the possession of all the civil and political rights of citizens of the United States. It was impossible that so large a body of people should be suffered to remain exposed to the assaults of the prejudices naturally growing out of their former condition, without securing to them, through congressional legislation, a free and perfect use of the vote which the fifteenth amendment gave to them as a shield and a sword of protection for their persons, their liberties, and their property.

Congress has legislated and given us the acts referred to as the means most appropriate for effecting the object proposed. These acts have been highly eulogized by the solicitors on both sides, and they seem to me to be most wise and in the highest sense appropriate. (The provision of the constitution, that no state shall pass a law impairing the obligations of contracts, needed no legislation to enforce it, beyond giving the right of review in the supreme court of the United States to the party feeling himself aggrieved.) It is to be remarked that the fifteenth amendment is most broad in its comprehensiveness. Though called into existence in order to protect the freedman, it protects as well all other citizens, both native and foreign. It would protect the foreigner who had become a citizen, should another Know Nothing excitement agitate the nation; and it would protect the native-born, should the foreign-born citizen ever gain in any state or locality an ascendancy, and attempt to uso that ascendancy oppressively. The same may be said of the acts of congress to give practical effect to the amendment. But. in the case of the fifteenth amendment, “the helplessness of the party to be protected rendered a larger and peculiar legislation necessary.

Congress, then, in the acts under consideration, threw around all classes of citizens these effective laws, and secured obedience thereto —First, by criminal punishment; and, second. by clothing the candidate of the voter with the right to prevent or redress the wrong attempted or perpetrated upon the voter, by an appropriate civil action or procedure.

Now. what are the grievances set forth in this ease? What are the allegations made [259]

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Bluebook (online)
14 F. Cas. 257, 1872 U.S. App. LEXIS 1362, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kellogg-v-warmouth-circtdla-1872.