Alberty, the accused, was a negro born in slavery, who became a
citizen of the Cherokee Nation under the ninth article of the
treaty of 1866. Duncan, the deceased, and alleged to have been
murdered, was the illegitimate child of a Choctaw Indian by a negro
woman who was not his wife, but a slave in the Cherokee Nation.
Held that for purposes of jurisdiction, Alberty must be
treated as a member of the Cherokee Nation, but not an Indian, and
Duncan as a colored citizen of the United States, and that, for the
purposes of this case, the court below had jurisdiction.
A man who finds another, trying to obtain access to his wife's
room in the night time by opening a window may not only remonstrate
with him, but may employ such force as may be necessary to prevent
his doing so, and if the other threatens to kill him, and makes a
motion as if so to do,
Page 162 U. S. 500
and puts him in fear of his life or of great bodily harm, he is
not bound to retreat, but may use such force as is necessary to
repel the assault.
The weight which a jury is entitled to give to the flight of a
prisoner, immediately after the commission of a homicide was
carefully considered in
Hickory v. United Statfs,
160 U. S. 408, and
without repeating what was there said, it was especially misleading
for the court in this case to charge the jury that from the fact of
absconding they might infer the fact of guilt, and that flight is a
silent admission by the defendant that he is unable to face the
case against him.
Defendant, a Cherokee negro who was known both by his father's
name of Burns and that of his former master, Alberty, was convicted
of the murder of one Phil Duncan at the Cherokee Nation, in the
Indian Territory. The indictment alleged the crime to have been
committed May 15, 1879, but it appeared by the evidence to have
been committed in 1880.
Upon judgment of death being pronounced, defendant sued out a
writ of error from this Court, assigning a want of jurisdiction in
the court below and various errors in the charge to the jury
connected with the law of homicide and the inference to be drawn
from the flight of the accused.
MR. JUSTICE BROWN, after stating the facts in the foregoing
language, delivered the opinion of the Court.
1. The question of jurisdiction in this case demands a primary
consideration. Although the prisoner, Alberty, was not a native
Indian, but a negro born in slavery, it was not disputed that he
became a citizen of the Cherokee Nation under the ninth article of
the treaty of 1866, 14 Stat. 799, 801, by which the Cherokee Nation
agreed to abolish slavery, and further agreed
"that all freedmen who have been liberated by voluntary act of
their former owners or by law, as well as all free colored persons
who were in the country at the commencement of the Rebellion and
are now residents therein or who may return within six months, and
their descendants, shall have all the rights of native
Cherokees."
While this article of the
Page 162 U. S. 501
treaty gave him the rights of a native Cherokee, it did not,
standing alone, make him an Indian within the meaning of Rev.Stat.
§ 2146 or absolve him from responsibility to the criminal laws of
the United States, as was held in
United
States v. Rodgers, 4 How. 567
45 U. S. 573,
and
Westmoreland v. United States, 155 U.
S. 545.
Duncan, the deceased, was the illegitimate child of a Choctaw
Indian by a colored woman who was not his wife, but a slave in the
Cherokee Nation. As his mother was a negro slave, under the rule
artus sequitur ventrem, he must be treated as a negro by
birth, and not as a Choctaw Indian. There is an additional reason
for this in the fact that he was an illegitimate child, and took
the status of his mother.
Williamson v.
Daniel, 12 Wheat. 568;
Fowler v.
Merrill, 11 How. 375.
He came, however, to the Cherokee Nation when he was about
seventeen years of age, and married a freed woman, and a citizen of
that Nation. It would seem, however, from such information as we
have been able to obtain of the Cherokee laws, that such marriage
would not confer upon him the rights and privileges of Cherokee
citizenship beyond that of residing and holding personal property
in the Nation, that the courts of the Nation do not claim
jurisdiction over such persons, either in criminal or civil suits,
and they are not permitted to vote at any elections.
For the purposes of jurisdiction, then, Alberty must be treated
as a member of the Cherokee Nation, but not an Indian, and Duncan
as a colored citizen of the United States.
By Revised Statutes § 2145, except as to certain crimes,
"the general laws of the United States as to the punishment of
crimes committed within the sole and exclusive jurisdiction of the
United States, except the District of Columbia, shall extend to the
Indian country,"
and, by § 2146,
"the preceding section shall not be construed to extend to
crimes committed by one Indian against the person or property of
another Indian, nor to any Indian committing any offense in the
Indian country who has been punished by the local law of the tribe,
or to any case where, by treaty stipulations, the exclusive
jurisdiction over such offenses is or may be secured to the
Indian
Page 162 U. S. 502
tribes respectively."
Obviously this case is not within the first class, because the
crime was not committed by one Indian against the person of another
Indiana, nor within the second class, because there was no evidence
that Alberty had been punished by the local law of the tribe, and
the only remaining question is whether, by treaty stipulations, the
exclusive jurisdiction over this offense has been secured to the
Cherokee Tribe.
By article 13 of the Cherokee Treaty of July 19, 1866, 14 Stat.
779-803, the establishment of a court of the United States in the
Cherokee Territory is provided for,
"with such jurisdiction and organized in such manner as may be
prescribed by law,
provided that the judicial tribunals of
the Nation shall be allowed to retain exclusive jurisdiction in all
civil and criminal cases arising within their country in which
members of the Nation, by nativity or adoption, shall be the only
parties or where the cause of action shall arise in the Cherokee
Nation, except as otherwise provided in this treaty."
It is admitted that the present case is not within the last
exception.
By the Act of May 2, 1890, to provide a temporary government for
the Territory of Oklahoma and to enlarge the jurisdiction of the
United States Court in the Indian Territory, 26 Stat. 81, it is
provided, § 30,
"that the judicial tribunals of the Indian Nations shall retain
exclusive jurisdiction in all civil and criminal cases arising in
the country in which members of the Nation, by nativity or by
adoption, shall be the only parties,"
and, by § 31, that
"nothing in this act shall be so construed as to deprive any of
the courts of the civilized Nations of exclusive jurisdiction over
all cases arising wherein members of said Nations, whether by
treaty, blood or adoption, are the sole parties, nor so as to
interfere with the right and power of said civilized Nations to
punish said parties for violation of the statutes and laws enacted
by their national councils where such laws are not contrary to the
treaties and laws of the United States."
It will be observed that while this act follows the treaty so
far as recognizing the jurisdiction of the Cherokee Nation as to
all cases arising in the country in which members of the
Page 162 U. S. 503
Nation, by nativity or by adoption, are the sole or only
parties, it omits that portion of the thirteenth article of the
treaty wherein is reserved to the judicial tribunals of the Nation
exclusive jurisdiction "where the cause of action shall arise in
the Cherokee Nation," and to that extent apparently supersedes the
treaty.
The real question as respects the jurisdiction in this case is
as to the meaning of the words "sole" or "only parties." These
words are obviously susceptible of two interpretations. They may
mean a class of actions as to which there is but one party, but as
these actions, if they exist at all, are very rare, it can hardly
be supposed that Congress intended to legislate with respect to
them to the exclusion of the much more numerous actions to which
there are two parties. They may mean actions to which members of
the Nations are the sole or only parties, to the exclusion of white
men, or persons other than members of the Nation, and as respects
civil cases at least, this seems the more probable
construction.
But the difficulty is with regard to criminal cases, to which
the defendant may be said to be the only party, and, if not, as to
who is the other party, the sovereignty in whose name the
prosecution is conducted (in this case, the United States), or the
prosecuting witness, or, in a homicide case, the person who was
killed. Some light is thrown upon this by the seventh article of
the same treaty, wherein a special provision is made for the
jurisdiction of the United States court to be created in the Indian
Territory, and until such court was created therein, the United
States district court nearest to the Cherokee Nation was given
"exclusive original jurisdiction of all cases, civil and
criminal, wherein an inhabitant of the district hereinbefore
described [meaning the Canadian District of the Cherokee Nation]
shall be a party and where an inhabitant outside of said district,
in the Cherokee Nation, shall be the other party, as plaintiff or
defendant in a civil cause, or shall be defendant or prosecutor in
a criminal case."
It is true that the homicide in this case was not committed
within the Canadian District, and therefore that this seventh
article has no direct application; but it has an indirect
Page 162 U. S. 504
bearing upon the thirteenth section as indicating an intention
on the part of Congress to treat the prosecutor in a criminal case
as the other party to the cause, and, so long as the party injured
is alive, it may be proper to speak of him as such, and this we
understand to have been the construction generally given. While it
is impossible to speak of the deceased in a murder case as a party,
in any proper sense, to a criminal prosecution against his
assailant, it can scarcely have been the intention of Congress to
vest jurisdiction in the federal courts of cases in which the
accused, an Indian, was guilty of a felonious assault upon a white
man not resulting in death, and deny it in case of a fatal
termination, upon the ground that the accused is the only party to
the cause.
In construing these statutes in their application to criminal
cases and in connection with the treaty, there are but three
alternative courses:
(1) To treat the defendant as the sole party, in which case the
Indian courts would have jurisdiction whether the victim of the
crime were an Indian or a white man. In the
Case of
Mayfield, 141 U. S. 107,
which was a case of adultery in which the name of the prosecuting
witness did not appear, we held that as there was no adverse party,
the woman being a consenting party, the defendant was to be
regarded as the sole party to the proceeding.
(2) To treat the United States as the other party to the cause,
in which case the federal courts would have jurisdiction of all
criminal cases, except as they might be limited by the clause of
Rev.Stat. § 2146, providing that such jurisdiction "shall not be
construed to extend to crimes committed by one Indian against the
person or property of another Indian."
(3) To treat the victim of the crime, whose person or property
has been invaded, as the other party, in which case the federal
courts would have jurisdiction in all cases in which the victim was
a white man or other than an Indian. Under this construction, the
word "parties" would really mean parties to the crime, and not
simply to the prosecution of the crime.
The last proposition harmonizes better with what seems
Page 162 U. S. 505
to have been the intention of Congress, as evinced in that
clause of Rev.Stat. § 2146 which reserves to the courts of the
Nation jurisdiction of "crimes committed by one Indian against the
person or property of another Indian," and at the same time avoids
the anomaly of holding a murdered man to be a party to the
prosecution of his slayer. Upon the whole, we think it affords the
most reasonable solution of the problem. For the purposes of this
case, therefore, we hold the court below had jurisdiction.
There were a number of exceptions taken to the charge of the
court, only two of which it will be necessary to discuss.
2. The eighth assignment of error is to the following
instruction:
"When he [the defendant] is in that condition, if he was in that
condition in this case, and was then attacked by Duncan, the
deceased, in such a way as to denote an intention upon the part of
the deceased to take away his (the defendant's) life, or to do him
some enormous bodily injury, he could kill Duncan (when?), provided
he use all the means in his power otherwise to save his own life
from the attack of Duncan, or preventing the intending harm, such
as retreating as far as he could, or disabling his adversary
without killing him. That is still a duty."
In the case of
Beard v. United States, 158 U.
S. 550, the doctrine of the necessity of retreating was
considered by this Court at very considerable length, and it was
held, upon a review of the authorities upon the subject, that a man
assailed upon his own premises, without provocation by a person
armed with a deadly weapon and apparently seeking his life is not
obliged to retreat, but may stand his ground and defend himself
with such means as are within his control, and so long as there is
no intent on his part to kill his antagonist, and no purpose of
doing anything beyond what is necessary to save his own life, is
not guilty of murder or manslaughter if death result to his
antagonist from the blow given him under such circumstances. In
delivering the opinion, it was said, p.
158 U. S.
559:
"But we cannot agree that the accused was under any greater
obligation, when on his own premises, near his dwelling
Page 162 U. S. 506
house, to retreat or run away from his assailant than he would
have been if attacked within his dwelling house. The accused being
where he had a right to be, on his own premises, constituting a
part of his residence and home at the time the deceased approached
him in a threatening manner, and not having by language or by
conduct provoked the deceased to assault him, the question for the
jury was whether, without fleeing from his adversary, he had at the
moment he struck the deceased reasonable grounds to believe, and in
good faith believed, that he could not save his life or protect
himself from great bodily harm except by doing what he did, namely,
strike the deceased with his gun and thus prevent his further
advance upon him."
In the case under consideration, it appeared that Duncan, the
deceased, had been paying such attentions to the defendant's wife
that it had caused them to separate, the wife living at a Mr.
Lipe's, where the killing occurred, and defendant making his home
with some colored people by the name of Graves. Defendant himself
worked during the day at Lipe's, was frequently with his wife, and,
upon the evening in question, had been to church with her and taken
her home to Lipe's after the service. She went into the house, and
defendant went back into the lot, where the stock was, as it was a
part of his duty to look after the stock. His version of the facts
was that while he was in the lot, he saw a window in the house,
which opened into his wife's room, raised, walked out into the
yard, and found the deceased at the window, and said to him, "Who
is that?" to which the deceased replied, with an oath,
"You will find out who it is; . . . and then made at me at that
time. That is the first time I had seen him there. And then I knew
his voice, and he made at me as if he had something, and was going
to kill me, and I had this little pistol in my pocket, and I run
backward towards the front yard, and told him to stand off; . . .
and I called Mr. Lipe, who got up, and came to the door, and asked
what was the matter,"
to which defendant replied:
"This man here was trying to get up in your window where my wife
sleeps. . . . And then I moved away. I started to move, and this
fellow says
Page 162 U. S. 507
to me, he says. 'I will kill you, God damn you,' and made for
me. He was between me and the house, and I was next to the gate,
and I broke for the gate, to try to get out of his way, and, as I
broke for the gate, he was coming at me; seemed like he was going
to cut me with something. I couldn't tell what it was, and I threw
myself around that way [illustrating], and fired."
In was in this connection that the court gave the charge covered
by the eighth assignment, adding thereto:
"If a man attacks us wrongfully, if he is seeking then and there
to make an attack upon us in such a way as to jeopardize life, and
we can turn aside that attack without destroying his life, it is
our duty to do it. It is our duty, in the first place, to get out
of the way of the attack, and that is a duty springing from our own
self-interest, because if a man can avoid a deadly result with due
regard to his own safety, is it not better for him to do it than to
rush rashly into a conflict where he may lose his life? He is doing
it in the interest of his own life. And then, aside from that, in
the interest of the life of the party who attacks him, he is
required to do it. Then, under this proposition, to give the
defendant the benefit of it, he must have been doing what he had a
right to do at the time; and, while so situated, he must have been
attacked by Phil Duncan, the deceased, in such a way as to indicate
from the nature of that attack, and the way he was executing it, a
purpose upon the part of Duncan then and there, by that conduct, to
take his life or to inflict upon him some great violence, and he
must have been so situated, so surrounded by danger, that he could
not get out of the way of it, or he could not turn it aside by an
act of less violence than what he did do. He must have exercised
reasonable means, in other words, to avoid the dreadful necessity
of taking human life, because the law says that he could kill,
provided he use all the means in his power otherwise to save his
own life."
We think the charge of the court in this connection is open to
the same objection that was made to the charge in the case of
Beard v. United States. The only difference suggested is
that in that case, the attack was made with firearms, and in
Page 162 U. S. 508
this case it would appear that the defendant supposed that the
deceased was about to attack him with a knife. Defendant, however,
was working at Lipe's, where his wife was staying, and if, as he
claims, he saw a man in the act of raising a window which led to
his wife's room, it was perfectly natural that he should wish to
investigate, and to ascertain for what purpose the man was there.
It appears to have been so dark at the time that defendant did not
recognize deceased except by his voice; that the deceased
threatened, with an oath, to kill him, and, as he says, "made for
him" with a knife. Under such circumstances, we think that a charge
to the jury that he was bound to retreat as far as he could or
disable his adversary without killing him was misleading. We think
that a man who finds another trying to obtain access to his wife's
room in the nighttime by opening a window may not only remonstrate
with him, but may employ such force as may be necessary to prevent
his doing so, and if the other threatens to kill him, and makes a
motion as if to do so, and puts him in fear of his life or of great
bodily harm, he is not bound to retreat, but may use such force as
is necessary to repel the assault. Of course, it is not intended to
intimate that these were the facts, but what the facts were was a
question for the jury, who had a right to believe the defendant's
version if it seemed probable to them. Upon the assumption that the
jury did believe him, we think the charge imposed upon the
defendant a responsibility and duty which he could not justly be
called upon to bear.
3. The fourteenth assignment of error was to the following
instructions, upon the subject of the flight of the accused after
the homicide:
"You take into consideration, in other words, the facts and
circumstances which led up to the killing, the facts and
circumstances that transpired at the time of the killing, and you
do not stop there, but you take into consideration the facts and
circumstances as affecting the defendant subsequently to the
killing. For instance, you take into consideration the defendant's
flight from the country -- his going into another part of the
country -- as evidence, and you are to pass upon the question
Page 162 U. S. 509
as to whether or not he has sufficiently explained away the
presumption which the law says arises from flight when a man has
taken human life. It is a principle of human nature -- and every
man is conscious of it, I apprehend -- that, if he does an act
which he is conscious is wrong, his conduct will be along a certain
line. He will pursue a certain course not in harmony with the
conduct of a man who is conscious that he has done an act which is
innocent, right, and proper. The truth is -- and it is an old
scriptural adage -- 'that the wicked flee when no man pursueth, but
the righteous are as bold as a lion.' Men who are conscious of
right have nothing to fear. They do not hesitate to confront a jury
of their country, because that jury will protect them. It will
shield them, and the more light there is let in upon their case,
the better it is for them. We're all conscious of that condition,
and it is therefore a proposition of the law that, when a man
flees, the fact that he does so may be taken against him, provided
he does not explain it away upon some other theory than that of his
flight because of his guilt."
"A man accused of crime hides himself and then absconds. From
this fact of absconding, we may infer the fact of guilt. This is a
presumption of fact, or an argument of a fact from a fact."
Again, upon that subject:
"Flight by a defendant is always relevant evidence when offered
by the prosecution, and that it is a silent admission by the
defendant that he is unwilling or unable to face the case against
him. It is in some sense, feeble or strong, as the case may be, a
confession, and it comes in with the other incidents, the
corpus delicti being proved, from which guilt may be
cumulatively inferred."
"Now, that is the figure that flight cuts in a case. It is a
question in this case whether this defendant has sufficiently
explained it here to take away the effect of the presumption
arising from flight."
In this connection, the evidence tended to show that, a day or
two after the crime, the defendant fled from the jurisdiction of
the court, went to St. Louis, and there resumed his father's
Page 162 U. S. 510
name, instead of that of his master, which he had previously
borne. Defendant gave his reason for fleeing as follows:
"My heart was broke, and I just did not care to stay. I thought
I would just go away from the country where I would never hear from
my people any more, because my heart was broke, and my children was
all young, and they had just commenced to love me, and my heart was
broke at that time, and that was the reason I went away."
The weight which the jury is entitled to give to the flight of a
prisoner immediately after the commission of a homicide was
carefully considered by this Court in the case of
Hickory v.
United States, 160 U. S. 408, in
which a charge, substantially in the language of the instruction
assigned as erroneous in this case, was held to be tantamount to
saying to the jury that flight created a legal presumption of guilt
so strong and so conclusive that it was the duty of the jury to act
on it as axiomatic truth, and, as such, that it was error.
We do not find it necessary to repeat the argument that was made
in that case, but we think it was especially misleading for the
court to charge the jury that from the fact of absconding they
might infer the fact of guilt, and that flight
"is a silent admission by the defendant that he is unwilling or
unable to face the case against him. It is in some sense, feeble or
strong, as the case may be, a confession, and it comes in with the
other incidents, the
corpus delicti being proved, from
which guilt may be cumulatively inferred."
While undoubtedly the flight of the accused is a circumstance
proper to be laid before the jury as having a tendency to prove his
guilt at the same time, as was observed in
Ryan v. People,
79 N.Y. 593,
"there are so many reasons for such conduct consistent with
innocence that it scarcely comes up to the standard of evidence
tending to establish guilt, but this and similar evidence has been
allowed upon the theory that the jury will give it such weight as
it deserves, depending upon the surrounding circumstances."
While there is no objection to that part of the charge which
permits the jury to take into consideration the defendant's flight
from the country as evidence bearing upon the question of his
Page 162 U. S. 511
guilt, it is not universally true that a man who is conscious
that he has done a wrong "will pursue a certain course not in
harmony with the conduct of a man who is conscious of having done
an act which is innocent, right, and proper," since it is a matter
of common knowledge that men who are entirely innocent do sometimes
fly from the scene of a crime through fear of being apprehended as
the guilty parties or from an unwillingness to appear as witnesses.
Nor is it true as an accepted axiom of criminal law that "the
wicked flee when no man pursueth, but the righteous are as bold as
a lion." Innocent men sometimes hesitate to confront a jury -- not
necessarily because they fear that the jury will not protect them,
but because they do not wish their names to appear in connection
with criminal acts, are humiliated at being obliged to incur the
popular odium of an arrest and trial, or because they do not wish
to be put to the annoyance or expense of defending themselves. The
criticism to be made upon this charge is that it lays too much
stress upon the fact of flight, and allows the jury to infer that
this fact alone is sufficient to create a presumption of guilt. It
certainly would not be contended as a universal rule that the fact
that a person who chanced to be present on the scene of a murder,
shortly thereafter left the city, would, in the absence of all
other testimony, be sufficient, in itself, to justify his
conviction of the murder.
We have found it impossible to reconcile these instructions with
the rulings of this Court in the two cases above cited, and are
therefore compelled to
Reverse the judgment of the court below, and remand the
case, with instructions to grant a new trial.