United States v. Benner

24 F. Cas. 1084
CourtU.S. Circuit Court for the District of Eastern Pennsylvania
DecidedOctober 15, 1830
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 24 F. Cas. 1084 (United States v. Benner) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Eastern Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
United States v. Benner, 24 F. Cas. 1084 (circtedpa 1830).

Opinion

BALDWIN. Circuit

Justice (charging jury). By the constitution of the United States, the power of receiving ambassadors and other . public ministers, is vested in the president of the United States; this power is plenary and supreme, with which no other department of the govemmeni can interfere, and when exercised by the president, carries with it all the sanction which the constitution can give to an act done by its authority. In the reception of ambassadors and ministers, the president is the government, he judges of the mode of reception, and by the act of reception, the person so received, becomes at once clothed with all the immunities which the law of nations and the United States, attach to the diplomatic character.

The evidence of the reception of Mr. Bran-dis in this character, is the certificate from the secretary of the state which has been read. By the law organizing the department of state, it is the special duty of this officer, to perform all such duties as shall be entrusted to him by the president, to conduct the business of the department in such manner as he shall order and instruct, also to fake an oath for the faithful performance of his duties. He is denominated in the law, “the secretary- of foreign affairs;” his appropriate duties are, correspondence and communication with foreign ministers under the orders of the president; he has the custody of all the papers and archives of the department in relation to the concerns of the United States with foreign nations. Whatever act then is done by that department must be taken to be done by the orders or instructions of the president; the certificate of the secretary under the seal, oath, and responsibility of office, must also be taken as full evidence of the act certified. The president acts in that department through the secretary, the one directs; the other performs the duties assigned; the law makes that department with all its officers, the ^.gent of the executive branch of the government, so that a certificate under its seal by the secretary is full evidence, that what has been done by the department has .been done by it in that capacity. If the law imposed on that department any duties upon subjects over which the president had no control, or none exclusive of the other branches of the government, a certificate from its chief officer would not be evidence that it was done by the president; but as it can act on no subject unless under his orders, its acts must be taken to be his, especially as to the reception of ministers, as to which congress has no power to enjoin any duties on the department, or its officers.

You will therefore consider Mr. Brandis as having been recognised by the president in the character of an attaché to the legation of Denmark in the United States; and that such recognition is. per se. an authorization and reception of him, within the meaning of the act of congress, for we cannot presume, that the president would recognise a minister, without receiving him. In the case of U. S. v. Liddle [Case No. 15,598], it was held by this court, that a certificate from the secretary of state, that a charge d’affaires of Spain, had introduced a person to the president as an attaché and secretary to that legation, was evidence of his reception as such. U. S. v. Liddle [supra]; U. S. v. Ortega [Case No. 15,971]. Such recognition invests him with the immunities of a minister, in whatever form it may be done, and no court or jury can require any other evidence of a reception: we instruct you then as a matter of law, that at the time of the alleged arrest, Mr. Brandis was a minister of Denmark in. the character stated in the certificate.

The only remaining question is, whether he was arrested, imprisoned, or violence offered to his person by the defendant. An ar-jrest is the taking, seizing or detaining the (person of another, touching or putting hands upon him in the execution of process, or any [1087]*1087act indicating an intention to arrest. Imprisonment is the detention of another against his will, depriving him of the power of locomotion: if you believe the witnesses, the evidence fully establishes these charges in the indictment.. Whether Mr. Brandis submitted or consented to the arrest is not material. The privileges of a foreign minister are not personal,- nor is their violation punished as an injury to himself, the immunity from arrest is the privilege of the sovereign who sends him. the injury is done to him, in the person of his representative. The laws ef nations protect the minister, that he may not be obstructed in the business of his mission, his person is as inviolable as his sover eign, within whose territory he is presumed to reside.

Hence the laws of the country to which he is sent, can no more be enforced against him, than in the country from whence he came; being considered as in the territory of his own sovereign, no other has any jurisdiction over him. The consent of the sovereign to fhe violation of the rights and privileges which belong to himself, either in person or in his representative, are equally necessary, whether the minister resides in a foreign country or his own. The general law of all nations, as well as the municipal laws of each, exempt ministers from all jurisdiction or control over their persons, so long as their representative character is recognised by the government which sends or receives them; if they exercise the functions of ministers, or retain that character, their exemptions attach to their office whether they claim them or not. There is no principle of national law, or any word in the act of congress, which justifies the arrest of a minister who waives the privileges of the diplomatic character, you will therefore dismiss all considerations of this kind from your minds. But though the person of a minister is inviolable,-yet he is not exempted from the law of self defence; if he unlawfully assaults another, the attack may be repelled by as much force as will prevent its continuance or repetition. The counsel for the defendant has endeavour-ed to bring his ease within this principle, by evidence that he received a blow from Mr. Brandis; were the fact so, however, it would be no justification of the arrest on process, which is not a right of self defence.

It is objected to this prosecution, that the defendant was not an officer within the meaning of the law; but this objection cannot avail him. the warrant was directed “to the constable of-ward.” the defendant assumed and acted in that character in the execution of the warrant, and must be considered as one de facto estopped by his acts from denying it.

It is next contended that it must be proved that the defendant knew Mr. Brandis to be a minister at the time of the arrest; the law does not make knowledge an ingredient in the offence, the case meets fully the definition of the offence prohibited by the act of congress, which, as a general rule, is all that is requisite to find a verdict of guilty; this objection has been overruled by this court in other cases, — U. S. v. Liddle [supra]; U. S. v. Ortega [supra], — and, we think, very properly.

The jury found the defendant guilty -on the second count, charging, “that the said Peter R. Benner, afterwards, to wit, &c. with ■ force and arms, did imprison the said Louis R. Brandis, he, the said Louis R. Brandis, then and there being a public minister, to wit, an attaché to the legation of his majesty the king of Denmark, near the United States of America, in manirest infraction of the law of nations, contrary,” &c.

Mr. Ingersoll then moved for a new trial, which was overruled. He then moved in arrest of judgment.

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Bluebook (online)
24 F. Cas. 1084, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-benner-circtedpa-1830.