A crime punishable by imprisonment in a state prison or
penitentiary, with or without hard labor, is an infamous crime
within the provision of the Fifth Amendment of the Constitution
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."
This was an information filed by the district attorney, on
January 20, 1885, in the District Court of the United States for
the Northern District of Illinois, on § 5440 of the Revised
Statutes, which is as follows:
"If two or more persons conspire either to commit any
Page 117 U. S. 349
offense against the United States or to defraud the United
States in any manner or for any purpose, and one or more of such
parties do any act to effect the object of the conspiracy, all the
parties to such conspiracy shall be liable to a penalty of not less
than one thousand dollars and not more than ten thousand dollars,
and to imprisonment not more than two years."
The information contained seven counts, which were respectively
for conspiracies to commit offenses within §§ 5512, 5511, and 5403.
The substance of the offense, as alleged in different forms in the
various counts, was the breaking open of a package containing a
return, by the judges and clerks of election, of an election held
in a district of the City of Chicago to choose a representative in
Congress and certain state and county officers, the alteration of
the certificate of the result of the election, the poll-book, the
tally list of the votes cast for each candidate, and a large number
of the ballots, and the substitution of spurious papers in their
stead.
In the district court, the defendants were tried by a jury and
convicted, and on March 21, 1885, were sentenced to pay a fine of
$5,000 each, and to be imprisoned for two years in the penitentiary
of the State of Illinois at Joliet, in said district.
A writ of error was sued out by the defendants, returnable at
May term, 1885, of the circuit court. At the hearing in that court,
the two judges presiding were divided in opinion upon five
questions of law, and at the request of the counsel for both
parties, certified to this Court those questions, two of which were
as follows:
"1. Whether the crimes, or any of them, charged against the
defendants in the counts of the information are infamous crimes,
within the meaning of the Fifth Article of Amendment to the
Constitution of the United States."
"2. Whether the defendants can or not be held to answer in the
courts of the United States for the crimes charged, or any of them,
against them herein otherwise than on the presentment or indictment
of a grand jury."
The other questions certified related to the sufficiency of the
several counts as setting forth any offense, and need not be
particularly stated.
Page 117 U. S. 350
MR. JUSTICE GRAY, after stating the case as above reported,
delivered the opinion of the Court.
In
Ex Parte Wilson, 114 U. S. 417, it
was adjudged by this Court upon full consideration that a crime
punishable by imprisonment for a term of years at hard labor was an
infamous crime within the meaning of the Fifth Amendment of the
Constitution of the United States, which declares 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," and
therefore could not be prosecuted by information in any court of
the United States.
The reasons for that judgment, without undertaking to
recapitulate them in detail or to restate the authorities cited in
their support, may be summed up as follows:
The Fifth Amendment had in view the rule of the common law
governing the mode of prosecuting those accused of crime, by which
an information by the attorney general, without the intervention of
a grand jury, was not allowed for a capital crime nor for any
felony, rather than the rule of evidence by which those convicted
of crimes of a certain character were disqualified to testify as
witnesses. In other words, of the two kinds of infamy known to the
law of England before the Declaration of Independence, the
constitutional amendment looked to the one founded on the opinions
of the people respecting the mode of punishment, rather than to
that founded on the construction of law respecting the future
credibility of the delinquent. The leading word "capital"
describing the crime by its punishment only, the associated words,
"or otherwise infamous crime," must, by an elementary rule of
construction, be held to include any crime subject to an infamous
punishment, even if they should be held to include also crimes
infamous in their nature independently
Page 117 U. S. 351
of the punishment affixed to them. Having regard to the object
and the terms of the amendment as well as to the history of its
proposal and adoption, and to the early understanding and practice
under it, no person can be held to answer, without presentment or
indictment by a grand jury, for any crime for which an infamous
punishment may lawfully be imposed by the court. The test is
whether the crime is one for which the statutes authorize the court
to award an infamous punishment, not whether the punishment
ultimately awarded in an infamous one. When the accused is in
danger of being subjected to an infamous punishment if convicted,
he has the right to insist that he shall not be put upon his trial
except on the accusation of a grand jury. The Constitution
protecting everyone from being prosecuted in a court of the United
States without the intervention of a grand jury for any crime which
is subject by law to an infamous punishment, no declaration of
Congress is needed to secure, or competent to defeat, the
constitutional safeguard. What punishment shall be considered as
infamous may be affected by the changes of public opinion from one
age to another, and for more than a century, imprisonment at hard
labor in the state prison or penitentiary has been considered an
infamous punishment in England and America.
The argument by which the soundness of those conclusions has
been now impugned is in substance the same as the one submitted in
that case, and has not convinced us that there was any error in the
decision.
The judgments in
Hurtado v. California, 110 U.
S. 516, and
United States v. Waddell,
112 U. S. 76, on
which the counsel for the government rely, are quite in accord with
the decision in
Wilson's Case.
In
Hurtado v. California, the point decided was that
the provision of the Fourteenth Amendment of the Constitution which
forbids any state to "deprive any person of life, liberty, or
property without due process of law" did not require an indictment
by a grand jury in a prosecution for a capital crime in a state
court. One of the reasons for so deciding was that the insertion in
the Fifth Amendment, addressed to the United
Page 117 U. S. 352
States only, of a specific provision requiring indictments for
capital or otherwise infamous crimes, as well as the general
provision securing due process of law, showed that the latter was
not intended to include the former, and the former must be taken to
have been purposely omitted in the Fourteenth Amendment. 110 U.S.
110 U. S.
534.
In
United States v. Waddell, the prosecution was upon
an act of Congress providing that any person convicted under it
should be fined and imprisoned, and should "moreover be thereafter
ineligible to any office or place of honor, profit, or trust
created by the Constitution or laws of the United States." The only
suggestion in the opinion bearing upon the question before us was
the expression of a serious doubt whether the disqualification so
declared did not make the crime an infamous one. 112 U.S.
112 U. S. 82.
That disqualification was in the nature of an additional
punishment, which could only take effect upon conviction.
Kurtz
v. Moffitt, 115 U. S. 487,
115 U. S.
501.
By the express provisions of acts of Congress, either a sentence
"to imprisonment for a period longer than one year" or a sentence
"to imprisonment and confinement to hard labor" may be ordered to
be executed in a state prison or penitentiary, and the convict,
while thus imprisoned, is "subject to the same discipline and
treatment as convicts sentenced by courts of the state." Rev.Stat.
§§ 5539, 5541, 5542;
Ex Parte Karstendick, 93 U. S.
396.
How far a convict sentenced by a court of the United States to
imprisonment in a state prison or penitentiary, and not in terms
sentenced to hard labor, can be put to work, either as part of his
punishment or as part of the discipline and treatment of the
prison, was much discussed at the bar, but we have not found it
necessary to dwell upon it, because we cannot doubt that at the
present day, imprisonment in a state prison or penitentiary, with
or without hard labor, is an infamous punishment. It is not only so
considered in the general opinion of the people, but it has been
recognized as such in the legislation of the states and
territories, as well as of Congress.
In most of the states and territories, by constitution or
Page 117 U. S. 353
statute (as is shown in the supplemental brief of the plaintiffs
in error), all crimes, or at least statutory crimes, not capital,
are classed as felonies or as misdemeanors, accordingly as they are
or are not punishable by imprisonment in the state prison or
penitentiary. The acts of Congress referred to at the argument
clearly show that the opinion of the legislative branch of the
national government, so far as it has been expressed, is in full
accordance with what we hold to be the true judicial construction
of the Constitution.
The provision of § 1022 of the Revised Statutes of the United
States by which "all crimes and offenses" against the elective
franchise or the civil rights of citizens, under §§ 5506-5532,
"which are not infamous, may be prosecuted either by indictment, or
by information filed by a district attorney," does not undertake to
define which of those crimes and offenses are infamous, and
therefore not to be persecuted by information, but leaves that to
be regulated by the paramount authority of the Constitution. So the
provisions of §§ 1044 and 1046 of the Revised Statutes, in the
nature of a statute of limitations, by which no person can
Page 117 U. S. 354
be prosecuted, tried, or punished for any offense not capital,
or for any crime under the revenue laws or the slave trade laws,
"unless the indictment is found or the information is instituted"
within a certain time after the committing of the crime or offense,
do not prescribe or indicate what offenses must be prosecuted by
indictment and what may be prosecuted by information. Nor can any
such effect be attributed to the similar phrase in the Act of July
5, 1884, c. 225, by which no person shall be prosecuted, tried, or
punished for any offense under the internal revenue laws
"unless the indictment is found or the information instituted
within three years next after the commission of the offense, in all
cases where the penalty prescribed may be imprisonment in the
penitentiary, and within two years in all other cases. "
23 Stat. 122. The including in a single clause of two classes of
offenses, one of which may be prosecuted by information, is a
sufficient reason for mentioning informations as well as
indictments, without attributing to Congress an intention that both
classes should be prosecuted by information, and imprisonment in
the penitentiary is made the line of distinction between the two
classes.
But the most conclusive evidence of the opinion of Congress upon
this subject is to be found in the act conferring on the Police
Court of the District of Columbia
"original and exclusive jurisdiction of all offenses against the
United States committed in the District, not deemed capital or
otherwise infamous crimes; that is to say, of all simple assaults
and batteries, and all other misdemeanors not punishable by
imprisonment in the penitentiary."
Act of June 17, 1870, c. 133, § 1; 16 Stat. 153; Rev.Stat. D.C.
§ 1049. "Infamous crimes" are thus in the most explicit words
defined to be those "punishable by imprisonment in the
penitentiary."
The result is that all the crimes charged against the defendants
in this information are infamous crimes within the meaning of the
Fifth Amendment of the Constitution, and that the defendants cannot
be held to answer in the courts of the United States for any of
those crimes otherwise than on a presentment or indictment of a
grand jury, and therefore the first question
Page 117 U. S. 355
certified must be answered in the affirmative and the second
question in the negative, and the other questions certified become
immaterial.
Ordered accordingly.