Ohio v. Bliss
Ohio v. Bliss
Opinion of the Court
This is a petition filed under and by virtue of the provisions of the act of Congress, approved March 3,1863; entitled “An act relating to habeas corpus and regulating judicial proceedings in certain cases.” The questions involved are of vast and solemn importance and significance, whether looked at in behalf of_the powers of the President of the United States, as sought to be established by this law, or of the rights of the citizens of the States, and the sovereign powers of the States themselves. If this law, to the extent in which it seeks to establish the executive powers of the nation, is authorized by the Constitution' of the United States, and if Congress has not exceeded the just powers granted to them by that instrument in the enactment of its provisions, then, no matter what may be the consequences to the individual’ citizen, or its effect upon the
It has been said by the argument of counsel, that this court cannot look into anything in the determination of this question beyond the facts alleged in the petition, the provisions of the law of Congress upon which that petition is based, and the warrant issued by the Secretary of War ordering the arrest of Édson B. Olds, and his imprisonment in Fort Lafayette. In this narrow view of the subject I do not entirely concur with the counsel; although I acknowledge the investigation should not, and cannot, be extended much beyond these limits. To test the constitutionality of this law, and this is the main question before us, several other things are to be taken into consideration : The Constitution of the State of Ohio, the State criminal law upon our statute books under and by virtue of the Constitution of the United States, and it may be the constitutional powers of. the President, so far as they are sought to be declared by this act of March 3, 1863.
Counsel has also said, and very truly, that the question involved in this application is simply one of jurisdiction between this court and the Circuit Court of the United States. The announcement is merely the statement of the legal fact; but it is no solution of the constitutional principle required to be passed upon: because it will not, I apprehend, be denied, that as grave and direct a question of constitutional power may arise upon a question of the jurisdiction of the forum as upon any other proposition in the whole range of constitutional law.
Counsel for the petitioner has cited the judiciary act of 1789, as bearing upon the question now before the court by way of construction, upon the theory of some analogy supposed to exist; but .the analogy subsisting between a law giving civil jurisdiction by virtue of the 1st and 2d sections of the 3d article of the Constitution of the United States, and that conferring criminal jurisdiction, seeking to oust the State courts of their jurisdiction over the local criminal law of a State, cannot be considered as of very great force or pertinence. The statutes alluded to, of 1815 and 1816, in relation to the public revenues, are entitled to more consideration. But what is the clear distinction arising upon the law now under consideration and these several other Federal statutes cited in the argument of counsel for the petitioner, when taken in connection with the acknowledged facts of the case ¿it bar ? It is this: that in the cases under these statutes of 1815 and 1833, the corpus delicti complained of, and sought to be enforced in the State courts, grew out of an attempt to enforce the provisions of a law of Congress, by the proper officers whose official duty it was to carry those provisions into execution within the State where the conflict of jurisdiction arose, and as to which law there was no serious question as to its constitutionality, being laws for the collection of the public maritime revenues of the United States. The law of March 3,1815, was “ an act further to provide for the collection of duties on imports.” The case of Wetherbee v. Johnson and others, 10 Mass. Rep. 412, cited by the counsel,,arose under the law of 1815; and even in that case the constitutionality of the law was brought in question ; but the court very properly held that the law was warranted by the Oonstitution of the United States. The defendant Johnson was inspector of customs for the district of Boston and Charlestown, and in the State court plead that fact in justification of the alleged trespass in taking and carrying away certain goods and chattels of the plain
It will be observed that the Chief Justice puts the right of the petitioner to a transfer of jurisdiction uponi the distinct ground that the act complained of in the original prosecution in the State court was committed by the proper officers in the execution of some law of the United States. In such case, the court held that Congress may by law provide, that the suit shall be removed to the Federal courts, when the petitioner shall make it appear that his case is a proper subject of their jurisdiction. But how is it in the case at bar ? It is very clear that the corpus delicti did not grow -out of an attempt by a proper officer to carry into execution a law of the Congress of the States,not even the provisions of this act of March 3,1863, but arose in the execution of a mere order of the President, authorized by no law of Congress, and which order came in'direct conflict with the Constitution of the State of Ohio, and of a law existing in pursuance thereof. -N ow, what is the legal status of the claim made by this petitioner to remove his case into the Circuit Court of-the United States ? It is, in my opinion, nothing more or less than an attempt to transfer the criminal jurisdiction of the State courts into that of the Federal tribunals. If such ia the scope and effect of this act of March 3d, 1863, or if such would be the-result of its proper application to facts in the case at bar, then I have no hesitation in pronouncing it unconstitutional.
Might not Congress as clearly repeal or abolish a State law creating an offence, not forbidden by the Federal Constitution, asito dictate to such State the mode or place of trial of such offence ? Would they not have the same power to measure and fix the punishment of crime under a State law, or to enact a code of evidence or practice for its prosecution, as to erect the fprum for its trial ? It is clear to my mind that the sovereign legislative power of a State has just as exclusive jurisdiction over the forum as they have«^he exclusive constitutional power to declare what shall be the crime itself. And if the Congress of the United States have no constitutional power to modify, abolish, or repeal the law of a State, creating the crime, it is a logical deduction, in my opinion, from which there is no escape, that they are equally powerless in changing the forum of tried of such crimes, unless the wrongful act charged grows out of the execution of, or is connected at the time with some law of the United States. In such case, there exists a concurrent jurisdiction over the subject, and of the two, the inferior must yield to the superior jurisdiction, upon a question of undisputed sovereignty, and where a demand is made for the transfer of the jurisdiction. Such were the cases which arose under the acts of Congress of 1815 and 1833. The alleged wrongful acts done were committed under and by virtue of the authority of those laws. Whether the acts done by the inspectors and collectors of the customs were trespasses or not, depended upon the validity of the laws which they were in the act of executing. It was when such a state of things as this occurred, that Congress
I cannot perceive that the case of Worcester v. The State of Georgia, 5 Peters’ Rep. 515, has any application to the question raised upon this petition in the case at bar. That was a case where a State law, by the legislature of Georgia, was in clear violation of treaties made between the IJnited States and the Cherokee nation of Indians, in which they were recognized as a sovereign and independent nation, and in which the United States guaranteed that the Cherokees should be authorized to govern themselves, and all persons who had settled within their territory, free from any right of legislative interference by the several States composing the United States, in reference to acts done within their own territory. The State of Georgia, therefore, had no more power to pass a criminal law to operate in the territory thus recognized by the sovereignty of the United States, than they had to pass a law to operate in the territory of her sister States.
It is by no means clear to my mind that this law now under considera- ' tion covers or includes the case at bar. It certainly does not use very apt or precise language to reach it: Counsel for the State alluded to certain proposed and rejected amendments to the law, to show the motives operating upon the legislative mind in its passage. Courts, in the interpretation of laws, cannot look into or scan the motives which induced their enactment, unless they lead to a proper sustainment of the law itself. I think the true interpretation, according to the legal canons of construction to be put upon the word “ authority,” as used in the 5th sections of this act, is a proper legal and constitutional authority. It is not to be presumed, judicially at least, that the legislature intended so startling a proposition as to make the mere private will of the President, the simple volition of the individual, a law by which the liberty of the citizen is to be regulated and controlled, in despite of the clear and explicit guarantees of the Constitution in that behalf.
If this is a proper interpretation of this law, then it is clear to my apprehension that the case at bar does not fill within its provisions. Some doubts might also be entertained as to whether the retroactive provisions of this law, so far as it applies to criminal prosecutions, are to be sustained as valid and obligatory. To that extent it is an ex post facto law; and if sought to be applied to or against the petitioner, would likely be pronounced unconstitutional and void. Whether this is a proposition of mutual right, as between the State and the petitioner, is a.point never raised or decided within my recollection. There is another most remarkable want of mutuality in this law, even in cases of civil jurisdiction as between individuals, that, in my opinion, makes it void. In a civil suit between A and B, for damages, B, at any time after entering his appearance to the action, upon filing his petition in the State court, stating that in the act complained of he acted under color of authority derived'from the President, may have the case transferred to the Circuit Court of the United States; and yet A has no such right under this law until after judgment shall have been rendered in the action pending in the State court. But apart from these questions of doubt, what are the facts and legal questions in the case at bar, which render this law unconstitutional, if intended to be applied to such a case ? The plain statement of the question is this : The Constitution of the State of Ohio provides that “ no person shall be transported out of the State for any offence committed within the same.” A law of the State makes it a crime to “ kidnap, or forcibly or fraudulently carry off or decoy out of this State any white person or persons.”
This provision in our State Constitution, and this statute in pursuance thereof, is the supreme law of the case at bar, and of the present motion of the petitioner, unless there is some provision in the Constitution of the
The prayer of the petition is refused-, and the motion overruled.
Reference
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