United States v. Joe

26 F. Cas. 612, 4 Chi. Leg. News 105
CourtDistrict Court, D. Washington
DecidedSeptember 15, 1871
StatusPublished

This text of 26 F. Cas. 612 (United States v. Joe) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Washington primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
United States v. Joe, 26 F. Cas. 612, 4 Chi. Leg. News 105 (washd 1871).

Opinion

GREENE, J.

The attorney of the United States comes and files a criminal information, charging one Cultus Joe with the offense of sel'ing spirituous liquor to an Indian, contrary to the statute; and moves that a warrant of arrest issue against the accused, that he may be imprisoned or bailed for trial before this court. It is contended that the proceeding by information is concurrent in such cases as this with that by indictment, and is preferable as being the less expensive and more simple mode. There is no doubt in my mind that, if this court can take cognizance of crimes not capital nor infamous, upon information of the United States attorney, a warrant of arrest may properly issue in this case. It is not uiged by the prosecuting officer, and does not appear to me, that there is any authority of law which would allow the proceeding by information in this case, which would not also allow it in every case of an offense not capital nor infamous. Nor does there appear to be any reason why an information should not lie in this case, if properly lying in any other. In short, the offense charged is one of a large class of offenses, and the argument before me is, that this class of offenses, and this particular offense, because one of the class, may, under the constitution and laws of the United States, properly be prosecuted by information. Although no* infrequent in England and some of the states, the proceeding by criminal information in the United States courts, so far as I am aware, is (with perhaps a single exception, which I will hereafter specify) entirely unknown. By English common law, the attorney-general, or in [613]*613the vacancy of his office, the solicitor-general, can prosecute by information, without leave of court, for any misdemeanor whatever, except misprision of treason. Cole, Cr. Inf. 9. The master of the crown office, though now required first to obtain leave of court, had originally, on the relation of a common informer or private person, like pbwer. 4 Bl. Comm. 308. The exercise of this power is, however, rarely resorted to by the attorney-general, unless moved to it by a house of parliament, the lords of the treasury, the commissioners of some public department or the very serious nature of the case. Cole, Cr. Inf. 9, 10; Bish. Cr. Proc. § 605. Our prosecuting attorneys correspond in function rather to the English attorney-general than to the master of the crown office, and according to this analogy, it would seem proper, whatever may be the power, that in practice, if criminal informations are to be allowed in United States cases at all, they should only be exhibited in cases of great urgency, or by direction of congress, or of some department. But as the exhibition of an information in England is. notwithstanding the practical limitations. really at the absolute discretion of the attorney-general, the practice of that officer, and the restriction of the master of the crown office, are alluded to here, chiefly as the basis of an inference, that the proceeding by indictment has met with more favor among the English bar and the English people than that by information, and being concurrent was not unlikely to be preferred exclusively by the original law-makers of our national government. If Lord Coke is to be trusted, the provision of Magna Charta that no English subject should be deprived of life, liberty or property, save by the law of the land and the judgment of his peers, is decisive of the preference of the English people at the date of that concession; for. he says, the trae sense and exposition of the words “by the law of the land” is “by indictment or presentment of good and lawful men.” 2 Inst. 50; and see 2 Hale. P. C. c. 20. And there is good reason to suppose that such a preference did exist in the minds of our first legislators, strengthened and justified by the oppressive use made in this country by the English crown of criminal informations, immediately preceding the colonial struggle for independence.

Certain it seems to be, that the proceeding by indictmen* has. as matter of fact, had preference given it, not only by the first, but by all subsequent congresses, as is evident from even a hasty survey of the body of our criminal law and the power delegated to our courts. The supreme court is the only court of the United States which derives any part of its power directly from the constitution. The circuit and district courts of the United States are. by authority of the constitution, the creatures of the national legislature, having such jurisdiction, and only such, as congress has been pleased to confer upon them, and having no common law jurisdiction, though drawing upon the common law for modes of procedure and practice, when necessary to carry into effect the jurisdiction given by statute. The district courts of this territory, although they may in a sense be said to be of general jurisdiction, yet in the exercise of their jurisdiction and the settlement of their practice as circuit and district courts of the United States, are obviously subject to like limitations w*th the circuit and district courts themselves. The entire jurisdiction and practice of the circuit and district courts is given them either by express letter of written law, or by necessary implication from that letter. The act of 1789 [1 Stat. 73] to establish the judiciary system of the United States is at once an example of an express grant—since in so many words it gives jurisdiction over crimes and other matters in itself expressly enumerated,—and is also an example of grant by implication, for in the express grant of criminal jurisdiction is contained impliedly a grant of authority to summon and regulate grand juries. U. S. v. Hill [Case No. 15,364]. These are instances of the only possible ways in which a circuit or district court has acquired, or can acquire, power or jurisdiction in any ease or proceeding. If the circuit and district courts have authority to proceed in criminal causes upon information, then that authority must spring from the constitution and statutes of the United States, either expressly or by necessary implication.

But the power to proceed by criminal information is nowhere expressly granted. Search the constitution and statutes from beginning to end. and it is believed there can be found no provision mentioning or expressly referring to a proceeding by criminal information. The only provision of the constitution that can be construed to hint at such an information is in the fifth amendment, which says, that: “No person shall be held to answer for a capital or otherwise infamous crime, unless on a presentment or indictment of a grand jury, except in cases arising in the land or naval forces, or in the militia when in actual service, in time of war or public danger;.” The history of this amendment does not. so far as I am informed, disclose the reason of it; that, we are left to gather mainly or wholly from the words themselves. The wording, together with the historical fact, that at the time of its adoption our country had but newly emerged from a condition of military rule, might plausibly be held to indicate a mere design authoritatively to put an end to and prevent any assumption of power by military tribunals to punish persons guilty of capital or otherwise infamous crimes, in time of peace and public security. Yet it can not be denied, that the words are really susceptible of a broader meaning. A broader meaning I think they have, but not the construction counsel has put upon them.

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26 F. Cas. 612, 4 Chi. Leg. News 105, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-joe-washd-1871.