United States v. Mackenzie

30 F. Cas. 1160, 1 N.Y. Leg. Obs. 371
CourtDistrict Court, S.D. New York
DecidedJuly 1, 1867
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 30 F. Cas. 1160 (United States v. Mackenzie) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, S.D. New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
United States v. Mackenzie, 30 F. Cas. 1160, 1 N.Y. Leg. Obs. 371 (S.D.N.Y. 1867).

Opinion

BETTS, District Judge

(charging grand jury). In my charge' to you on your organization, in leading your attention to subjects that might probably be brought before you, I stated, in substance, that you had cognizance of all crimes and offences in violation of the laws of the United States, and triable before the civil tribunals, whether committed within this territorial district, or within the admiralty and maritime jurisdiction of our laws. It was intended so to guard and qualify that instruction as to avoid asserting or denying a jurisdiction over crimes committed on the high seas on board a ship of war of the United States; the court wishing to leave that question, if it should be agitated before you. open for deliberate consideration and decision.

In the progress of your deliberations you came into court, and submitted in writing two inquiries, and prayed the advice and instruction of the court upon the points of law involved in them: First. Whether the grand jury has jurisdiction or is to make inquiry into offences committed on board of American ships of war on the high seas? Second. If so, is it their province to inquire into the offence alleged to have, been committed by Captain Mackenzie, or any other person on board the ship of war-Somers?

With these inquiries you submitted to the court three several charges in writing, which had been laid before your body, and which supply, in part, the foundation upon which the specific advice is requested: One is a complaint by Henry Morris against Alexander Slidell Mackenzie and Guert Gansevoort “for the murder of Philip Spencer, committed on the high seas, on board the United States brig Somers, within the admiralty and maritime jurisdiction of the United States, and out of the jurisdiction of any particular state, on the first day of December, 1842”; one by Margaret H. Cromwell, charging, in the same terms, the murder of Samuel Cromwell at the same time and place; and one by Charles Cleveland, charging the same persons with “the crime of manslaughter, in putting to death Elisha Small, at the same time and place.”

No other facts are communicated by your body to the court, but the observations I shall proceed to offer, in reply to these questions, will be on the assumption that the parties named in these charges were, at the time of the alleged offences, all regularly attached to the brig of war Somers as officers and seamen, in the service of the United States, and that their several, deaths were produced by the public execution of the deceased, under the orders of Mackenzie, commander of the brig, and that Gansevoort was a commissioned lieutenant in the navy, serving in that rank on board, and in that capacity aided and assisted in the executions. It will also be taken as connected with the facts of the case that on the return of the brig to the United States a court of inquiry was ordered by the secretary of the navy to investigate this transaction, and that court found and reported to the secretary that the conduct of Commander Mackenzie and Lieutenant Gansevoort in the matter was fully justified by the circumstances in which they and the ship were placed. That thereupon a court martial was ordered and convened by direbtions of the secretary of the navy, for the trial of Commander Mackenzie on a charge of murder, and that the court is now in session at Brooklyn, proceeding with -the hearing and trial of the complaint now brought before your body.

These facts, in substance, are admitted by the prosecutors in court, and this dispenses with the necessity of referring to you- the investigation and decision of the facts, in order to give application „to the rules of law that will be stated to you. The right of a grand jury to apply to the court with which they are connected for advice and direction, in aid of the duties they are called upon to discharge, is fully recognized by the laws of this country and of England, and its free exercise is cherished and encouraged. For, although a jury, without a satisfactory certainty that the facts proved before them fall within any provision of the criminal law, may excusably direct an indictment, and leave it to the court afterward to decide whether the matter presented be a criminal offence, yet it is more consonant to a humane administration of justice to exempt the citizen from the pain and obloquy of a public accusation, where it is plain that no crime has been committed.

What has been said by great authorities with respect to imperfect or uncertain proof in support of a criminal charge applies with equal force when there is defective evidence that any law exists punishing the act; it being an indispensable ingredient to a criminal accusation that there be clear law both against the act charged as an offence, and to sustain the prosecution as presented. Lord Hale, Blackstone, and Chitty, in adverting to the ancient dogma that the grand jury ought to find the bill where there is probable evidence to support it, because it is only an accusation, and [1161]*1161the prisoner will afterwards defend -himself before a-more public tribunal,, have all recommended a more merciful view of the subject, and, considering the ignominy, the dangers of perjury, the anxiety of delay, and. the misery -of a prison, insist that the grand jury should be well convinced of the guilt of the accused before subjecting him to a trial. 2 Hale, P. C. 61, 167; 4 Bl. Comm. 303; 1 Chit. Cr. Law, 318. The same reason should restrain the jury from finding an indictment, unless satisfied that the facts they present will subject the accused' to a legal arraignment and punishment. ...

These considerations render appeals by grand juries to the court for preliminary counsel and direction proper and commendable, whenever they are not thoroughly satisfied that the case justifies their interference, in order that the citizen need not stand exposed to the reproach and terror of an infamous and perhaps capital -charge, where there is a want of probable cause, either in law or evidence, to support it; as, also, that they may have the countenance and support of the court in unusual or difficult cases, or those of exciting interest,. to help them to a clear .understanding-of their duties and an efficient execution-of them. . The practice to which you have been most accustomed in similar instances has undoubtedly been for the court to respond at once, or after a slight consideration, and without argument, to the inquiries propounded. But as the questions you submitted involve.an inquiry into the constitutionality of an act of congress, and also into the just powers and duties of this court in the administration of criminal law in capital cases, together with the determination of the rightful authority of naval courts martial, and the effect of trials and sentences by those courts, I have thought these points to be of such weight ,and importance as to require, not only a mature and careful examination by me, and to justify the suspension of the other business of the court for that purpose, but also that they presented a proper occasion for me to invite counsel, as well representing those who prefer these complaints as the parties affected by them, to afford the court the benefit of an argument in aid of the decision to be rendered. The request has been acceded to, and most satisfactorily fulfilled, by the-eminent gentlemen who have discussed the various and interesting topics arising out of these questions.

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Bluebook (online)
30 F. Cas. 1160, 1 N.Y. Leg. Obs. 371, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-mackenzie-nysd-1867.