United States v. Hoxie

26 F. Cas. 397, 1 Paine 265
CourtU.S. Circuit Court for the District of Vermont
DecidedOctober 15, 1808
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 26 F. Cas. 397 (United States v. Hoxie) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Vermont primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
United States v. Hoxie, 26 F. Cas. 397, 1 Paine 265 (circtdvt 1808).

Opinion

LIVINGSTON, Circuit Justice

(charging jury). A very solemn and important office now devolves on yon, no less than that of deciding whether a fellow citizen has forfeited his life to the laws of his country. It is not often that we are called to the discharge of a more interesting, and at the same time, more painful and delicate duty. It must, however, whenever it occurs, be met with firmness; and, while it is performed with all the humanity and caution due to a party accused, sight must not be lost of those claims which, if a crime has been committed, the public have upon us. The of-fence charged in the present instance is that of treason. The indictment having been recently read in your hearing, I will not, at this late hour, trouble you with repeating it. To this charge, the prisoner has pleaded not guilty, and for trial has put himself on a jury of his country. Nor will I detain you with a recapitulation of the facts, as they have appeared in evidence, about which there is no dispute, and on which you are now to say, whether the prisoner at the bar be guilty of the crime of treason. But, although there be little, if any. controversy in relation to the facts on which the public prosecutor relies, you will naturally expect some direction from the court, how far, in point of law, they support the charge alleged in the indictment. This direction, with its reasons, the court will now proceed to give you.

Treason, not only holds a conspicuous, and generally the first place in every catalogue of crimes, but is almost universally punished with death. Government is so high a blessing, and its preservation and support are so essential to the welfare of every member of the body politic, that to attempt its subver-sitm. has ever been regarded a most aggra-voted offence But. the resentment so nat[398]*398urally enkindled against those who are supposed to aim at the destruction of the only security which we enjoy for life, liberty, and estate, leads us frequently to include, under this high crime, offences greatly inferior in turpitude, much less dangerous in their effects, and in every respect, of a different description and tendency. To prevent, therefore, as far as possible every abuse by the extension of treason to offences, which, in times of public agitation, might, by violent or corrupt constructions, be pretended to belong to it, there was inserted in our national compact, a rule which was to be binding on every department of government. To define and provide punishments for other crimes of federal cognizance, is left to congress; but, with a jealousy on this subject, which a full knowledge of the excesses that had so often been committed in other countries by parties contending for dominion, was well calculated to excite, no other trust was here reposed in the legislature, than that of prescribing in what way treason was to be punished. For its definition, resort was ever to be had to that great fundamental law, which was to be binding at all times: and was not liable to be changed on a sudden emergency, so as to gratify the vengeance, or promote the views of aspiring or designing men. In the constitution we accordingly find this very limited definition of it: “Treason against the United States, shall consist only in levying war against them, or in adhering to their enemies, giving them aid and comfort.”

The United States having no public enemy, it is only the first branch of this definition which will require your attention. With all the solicitude which was felt by the framers of our constitution to produce certainty, and to exclude interpretation in a matter so momentous, and with all their circumspection to avoid the use of terms in any degree vague or indefinite, cases have already occurred in this country, and will, no doubt, again arise, in which it will -be difficult to say, whether the acts in question amount to a "levying of war.” within -lie meaning of this instrument. Such is the imperfection of language, and so limited human foresight, that it is very difficult. whatever care be employed, always so to describe an offence, as not to leave some doubt of the meaning of the legislature, and still more so. to anticipate every case of a similar nature, which it might have been proper to provide for. To a system of laws so perfect, that Being, who takes in at one view, the past, present, and to come, is alone competent. When doubts, however, arise, as they often must, whether an offence belongs to the class assigned to it in the indictment, their solution in the first instance devolves on the court, whose duty it then is. to give a jury such instructions as it may deem necessary. for their correct understanding of the law.

Having a constitutional regulation on the subject before us, it may lie expected by | some, that the court will compare with the terms of that instrument alone, the facts which have appeared in proof, and by such test, determine whether the crime of treason nas been commuted. Were our examination thus restricted, it is impossible a moment’s doubt could be harboured of the true character of this transaction. “A levying of war," without having recourse to rules of construction, or artificial reasoning, would seem to be nothing short of the employment, or at least, of the embodying of a military force, armed and arrayed, in a warlike manner, for the purpose of forcibly subverting the government, dismembering the Union, or destroying the legislative functions of congress. These troops should be so armed, and so directed, as to leave no doubt, that the United States, or their government, were the immediate object of their attack.

But, a wider range has been taken at the bar. Not only the constitution, but precedents have been resorted to, to furnish a rule for the present case. The court, so far from feeling a disposition to find fault with this mode of treating the subject, has no objection to adopt it. in its remarks to you. It has already been observed, that, taking the constitution as our guide, not a doubt can be entertained of the prisoner’s innocence of treason. Let us see, then, whether the different acts, which in England, or in this country, have been regarded as constituting the crime of “levying war,” will make any difference.

In taking notice of precedents, set by British tribunals, the court does not mean to give any opinion on their binding effect in the United States; or discuss a question which has been much agitated—whether, by the use of these terms, it was intended to adopt the technical meaning which they had already received in England: or whether, considering treason as a new offence against a newly created government, the constitution on this point was to be interpreted by itself, without reference to. or with the aid of any common law decisions whatever? These questions will be left unconsidered—a decision of them now not being thought material. For. if the court does not greatly err, no construction in England, and certainly none in America, has yet carried this doctrine the length to which we are at present expected to go.

In the first place, it is well understood, in both countries, that war must be actually levied, and that no consultation or conspiracy to subvert the government, or laws, however atrocious the offence, can amount to treason.

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Bluebook (online)
26 F. Cas. 397, 1 Paine 265, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-hoxie-circtdvt-1808.