United States v. Morris

26 F. Cas. 1323, 1 Curt. 23
CourtU.S. Circuit Court for the District of Massachusetts
DecidedOctober 15, 1851
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 26 F. Cas. 1323 (United States v. Morris) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Massachusetts primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
United States v. Morris, 26 F. Cas. 1323, 1 Curt. 23 (circtdma 1851).

Opinion

CURTIS, Circuit Justice.

The first point raised by this plea is, whether this indictment has been lawfully remitted to this court, and is now regularly pending here. It is alleged that the district court had not power, under the act of 1846, a 98, § 3, to remit the indictment to this court,'for several reasons, the first of which is, that the order to remit was not made at the term when the indictment was presented. The clause of the statute under which the district court acted is as follows:—“And the sa'id district court may, moreover, in like manner, remit to the circuit court any indictment pending in said district court, when, in the opinion of the court, difficult and important questions of law are involved in the case; and the proceedings thereupon shall thereafter be the same in the circuit court, as if such indictment had been originally found and presented therein.” It is argued that the direction to remit “in like manner,” refers to the manner of remitting capital indictments, provided for just before, in the same section. ’ Of this there can be no doubt. It is further argued, that the “like manner” includes a direction to remit to the next term of the circuit court, because capital indictments are to be remitted to the next term of that court If it were admitted, that the authority to remit “in like manner” is an authority to remit to the next term of the circuit court, it would not follow that the remission must be to the term of the circuit court next following the presentment of the indictment in the district court.

The question would still remain, whether the order to remit must be made at the term at which the indictment is presented. The time when such order is to be entered may or may not be considered as part of the “manner” of remitting. Generally, the time of doing an act and the manner of doing an act are distinct things. The phrase, “at such times and in such manner,” is one of very frequent occurrence in legal language, and is strictly correct Still, it may be that, though not naturally included, congress intended to embrace the time of entering the order in the words “in like manner;” and therefore it is necessary to look carefully at the different parts of this statute, and see if such was the intention of congress. When the remission of capital indictments is provided for, the act says, “every indictment for a capital offence presented to the district court, shall, by order entered on the minutes of the court, be remitted,” &e. It is not intended that such indictment shall, in a legal sense, be pending in that court which has not power to try them; they are to be presented and then remitted, and the inference is a necessary one, that the order to remit is to be made when presented. But by the clause under consideration, the court has power to remit any indictment pending in that court; from which no such inference, but the contrary, is to be drawn; for indictments are pending only after they are presented, and their pendency continues till finally disposed of. It would seem, therefore, that the words “in like manner” were not intended to embrace the time when the [1325]*1325order is to be entered; for in one case it is to be when the indictment is presented, in the other while it is pending. If we look furtner at the subject-matter of the enactment, we find that the statute says, any indictment pending in the district court may be remitted, *‘when, in the opinion of the court, difficult and important questions of law are involved in the case.”

The natural meaning of this is, that the order may be made when the court shall have arrived at the opinion that such questions are involved in the case, and if so, there is no limit of time. When that opinion is formed the time is come, according to the statute, to make the order; till it is formed, the time , has not come; and whether formed at the first, or any subsequent term, it is equally a compliance with the statute to enter the order.

But it is also contended, that this order must be made before any proceedings have taken place under the indictment, and that to allow a remission after any proceedings would endanger the prisoner’s rights, and could not have been intended by congress. It is undoubtedly true that, to deprive a prisoner on trial for a crime of any substantial right, is so contrary to the general system of our law, that the legislative intention must be expressed with great clearness to induce the court to suppose that such was the design. But if, on the contrary, very important rights are secured; if the provision is in harmony with other modes of proceeding, which have been long in use and generally approved; and if the worst that can be imagined is not the loss of any right, but merely some danger of inconvenience in some possible cases, it would be going too far for the court to put a constrained interpretation upon the law, and deny to it its full meaning.

It has* already been stated, that the natural meaning of this clause is, that the order to-remit is to be made when the court has arrived at the opinion that difficult and important questions of law are involved in the case, and that the act prescribes no limit of time within which such opinion is to be formed. It may be added, that it is a fair, not to say a necessary inference, from the fact, that the remission is to be made as. a consequence of the opinion that difficult and important questions of law are involved' in the case; that such proceedings are to take place, as in the ordinary course of things are usually necessary to enable the court to form such an opinion, and these would certainly include some judicial investigation of the merits of the particular case, or, if there is a class of cases, of some one of them. It is suggested that the court may examine the indictment, and thus ascertain that important and difficult questions of law are involved; but the act does not confine the questions to the indictment; its language is, “questions involved in the case.” Besides, it is no part of the duty of the court, or of its ordinary action, and can scarcely be considered judicial, for the court to inspect indictments to foresee what questions may be raised; and congress cannot be supposed to have legislated for a class of cases to arise out of the formation, by the court, of an opinion, in a way which is entirely out of the usual course of judicial action, and which cases, therefore, could not justly be expected to arise at all. The sound construction of the clause is, that this opinion is to be arrived at, as other judicial opinions are, in the usual course of justice, after an issue is made, and the parties so far heard as to develop the questions which exist. The argument of the defendant’s counsel proceeds upon the basis that there are to be no proceedings in the district court, and this assumption is necessary; for if it be conceded that the accused is to be arraigned and plead, the whole basis of the argument must fail. But if there has been no plea, how can the court know that any question whatever is to arise. The defendant may plead guilty, and so there may be no questions at all.

It is suggested, however, that the construction contended for by the defendant ought to be adopted, because any other affects the rights of the accused, and this is in two ways. First, it is urged that the district judge may arbitrarily break off a trial after it has begun, and send the case to another court, perhaps for the very purpose of embarrassing the accused; though any Intention of imputing such motive in this case is wholly disavowed.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
26 F. Cas. 1323, 1 Curt. 23, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-morris-circtdma-1851.