Maryland v. Soper, Judge

270 U.S. 36, 46 S. Ct. 192, 70 L. Ed. 459, 1926 U.S. LEXIS 393
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedFebruary 1, 1926
Docket24 Original
StatusPublished
Cited by33 cases

This text of 270 U.S. 36 (Maryland v. Soper, Judge) 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
Maryland v. Soper, Judge, 270 U.S. 36, 46 S. Ct. 192, 70 L. Ed. 459, 1926 U.S. LEXIS 393 (1926).

Opinion

*39 Mr. Chief Justice Taft

delivered the opinion of the Court.

This is a petition for mandamus by the State of Maryland to require the District Court of . the United States for that State to remand to the state Circuit Court for Harford County an indictment by the grand jury of that county for obstructing justice of the State by false testimony. The indictment had been removed from the circuit court to the federal court in asserted compliance with § 33 of the Judicial Code. The amended petition of removal, upon the sufficiency of which the application of § 33 turns, discloses the same state of facts as that shown in the mandamus case between the same parties, just decided. The indictment charges that the same defendants as were there charged with murder conspired in a hearing before a justice of the peace of Harford County, acting as the coroner-with a jury and engaged in the official duty of inquiring into the manner of the death of Lawrence Wenger on November 20, 1924, to deceive the coroner and jury by withholding the facts concerning Wenger’s death, and falsely asserting ignorance thereof, in order to induce them to return a false and erroneous verdict, and thus to obstruct justice in violation of a criminal statute of Maryland. This testimony was given the day after Wenger’s death while the defendants were under arrest on the charge of murder, and the indictment in this case was returned at the same time as the indictment for murder.

*40 The amended petition of defendants for removal avers that “ on the afternoon of November twentieth your petitioners were called before the Coroner’s Inquest heretofore described in the indictment, and freely and without reservation in accordance with their duty as investigating and reporting officers of the Federal Government and acting under the direction of the Maryland Federal Prohibition Director, related the facts before mentioned. And thereupon they were again placed in the. Harford County jail and held for the action of the Harford County Grand Jury.” The amended petition concludes with the statement that “The said indictment is now pending in the Circuit Court for Harford County and is a criminal prosecution on account of acts alleged to have been done by your petitioners at a time when they were engaged in the performance of their duties as Federal Prohibition Officers and chauffeur for Federal Prohibition Officers as set forth in the aforegoing paragraphs.”

The record in this case is in all respects like that iii' the case just decided, except that the prosecution, is for obstruction of justice. The orders of the federal District Court, the other proceedings, the stipulation as to evidence, the petition for mandamus, and the return of Judge Soper to the rule issued on the petition of the State for mandamus, are all similar.

Counsel for the State of Maryland argue that the accused officers were .in no sense acting in their official capacity when engaged in the alleged conspiracy to deceive the coroner, that their duty had been discharged when they destroyed the still, that their subsequent reports of what had happened to their federal superiors are not the subject of this prosecution, that the indictments for ‘conspiracy and perjury were based not on acts which the defendants had done in pursuance of federal law and in discharge of their duty to the federal Government, but on testimony given by them under their obligations to *41 the State as individuals and for which they were detained in'jail. To this it is answered, on behalf of the United States, as follows:

“ But how did the officers come to be in jail? If they had not been engaged in the performance of their duties as federal officers they would never have been there. When they found Wenger’s body, they had just come from performing their duty and were on their way back to report officially to their superior. At that time they were still acting in their official capacity. United States v. Gleason, 1 Wool. C. C. 128. In immediately seeking for a physician and in reporting Wenger’s death at once to the State’s Attorney, they were doing the only reasonable act which could be expected of them, both as public officers and as private citizens. But, as their petition alleges, the State’s Attorney, on being informed by them that ‘ your petitioners . . . were prohibition officers,’ ordered them to be at once placed under arrest.
“ If they had not discovered Wenger and reported his murder, there would have been no need for them to testify before the Coroner’s jury, and there yould have been no occasion for any charge of conspiracy. The two charges, it is submitted, are so closely inter-related that they can not properly be separated. The charge of murder gave rise to the charge of conspiracy. If the former charge is removable to the Federal court, it is submitted that the latter should be removable also.
Considerable danger would be involved in a contrary holding. If charges of murder alleged to have been committed by Federal officers are removable, and charges of conspiracy and similar offenses are not removable, an obvious expedient would suggest itself. In localities where the administration of particular Federal laws is unpopular, Federal officers need no longer be dragged before hostile state tribunals on charges such as murder, on which they may successfully claim removal and plead self-defense. *42 The charge can readily be altered to conspiracy ’ or to some other crime, which the accused officers deny having committed at all, but on which it will be clear that removal can not be obtained. The actual charge will serve merely as a cloak to obtain the desired end, namely, incarceration of an unpopular officer. In this way the functions of the Federál Government ma!y be harassed or impeded and its officers withdrawn from their duty as effectively as by prosecutions for homicide actually committed in self-defense. This method may easily become as effective as out-and-out nullification of Federal laws.”

We may concede that the reports of the officers to their federal superiors were within their official duty, but it does not follow that whatever happened between the events at the place of the still and the return to Baltimore to make report was within the protection of their official immunity. It depends upon the nature of that which they did in the interval. The right of the State to inquire into suspected crime in its territory justifies the use of investigation by its officers and the questioning of suspected persons under oath. The response of the federal officer under suspicion to such questioning is not an act of his under federal authority.

Of course one can state a case in which acts not expressly authorized by the federal statutes are such an inevitable outgrowth of the officer’s discharge of his federal duty and so closely interrelated with it as necessarily to- be within the.protection of § 33.

Thus removals of prosecutions on account of acts done in enforcement of the revenue or prohibition laws or under color of them properly include those for acts committed by a federal officer in defense of his life, threatened while enforcing or attempting to enforce the law.

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Bluebook (online)
270 U.S. 36, 46 S. Ct. 192, 70 L. Ed. 459, 1926 U.S. LEXIS 393, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/maryland-v-soper-judge-scotus-1926.