Where the writ of error is prosecuted directly from this Court
on constitutional grounds, but there are errors assigned as to
other subjects, this Court has jurisdiction to review the whole
case if any constitutional question is adequate to the exercise of
jurisdiction.
Burton v. United States, 196 U.
S. 283.
An objection taken by a member of Congress that he cannot be
sentenced during his term of office on the ground that it would
interfere with his constitutional privilege from arrest is not
frivolous, even though taken during recess of Congress, and such a
claim involves a constitutional question sufficient to give this
Court jurisdiction to review the judgment by writ of error.
Burton v. United States, 196 U. S. 283.
The jurisdiction of this Court to review on direct writ of error
depends on the existence of a constitutional question at the time
when the writ of error is sued out, and even if that question
subsequently and before the
Page 207 U. S. 426
case is reached becomes an abstract one, jurisdiction remains,
and this Court must review the whole case.
If a sentence on a member of Congress is illegal when pronounced
because in conflict with his constitutional privilege, it does not
become valid by the expiration of the term for which he was
elected.
The words "treason, felony and breach of the peace" were used by
the framers of the Constitution in § 6, Art. I, and should be
construed in the same sense as those words were commonly used and
understood in England as applied to the parliamentary privilege,
and as excluding from the privilege all arrests and prosecutions
for criminal offenses, and confining the privilege alone to arrests
in civil cases.
Under § 540, Rev.Stat., the conspiracy to commit a crime against
the United States is itself the offense, without reference to
whether the crime which the conspirators have conspired to commit
is consummated, or agreed upon by the conspirators in all its
details. And an indictment charging the accused with a conspiracy
to commit the crime of subornation of perjury in proceedings for
the purchase of public lands was held in this case to be
sufficient, although the precise persons to be suborned, and the
time and place of such suborning were not particularized.
On the trial of one charged with conspiracy to commit a crime
against the United States in connection with the purchase of public
lands, testimony showing the character of the lands and an attempt
by the accused to acquire state lands is competent as tending to
establish guilty intent, purpose, design, or knowledge, and is
admissible if the trial judge so limits its application as to
prevent it from improperly prejudicing the accused by showing the
commission of other crimes.
Holmes v. Goldsmith,
147 U. S.
164.
The rule that where it plainly appears in a criminal case that
there is no evidence justifying conviction, this Court will so hold
despite a failure to request an instruction for acquittal does not
apply to a case where it is not certified, and this Court is not
otherwise satisfied, that the bill of exceptions contains the
entire evidence, or where the bill of exceptions recites that the
plaintiff offered evidence to go to the jury on every material
allegation in the indictment.
While one honestly following advice of counsel, which he
believes to be correct, cannot be convicted of crime which involves
willful and unlawful intent, even if such advice were an inaccurate
construction of the law, no man can willfully and knowingly violate
the law and excuse himself from the consequences thereof by
pleading that he followed advice of counsel.
In a criminal case, doubt must be resolved in favor of the
accused, and in this case,
held that an indictment for
conspiracy to suborn perjury related to statements under § 2 of the
Timber and Stone Act, and not in respect to making of final
proofs.
Under the Timber and Stone Act of June 3, 1878, 20 Stat. 89, an
applicant is not required, after he has made his preliminary sworn
statement concerning the
bona fides of his application and
the absence of any contract
Page 207 U. S. 427
or agreement in respect to the title, to additionally swear to
such facts on final proof, and a regulation of the Land
Commissioner exacting such additional statement at the time of
final hearing is invalid.
While Congress has given the Land Commissioner power to
prescribe regulations to give effect to the Timber and Stone Act,
the rules prescribed must be for the enforcement of the statute,
and not destructive of the rights which Congress has conferred by
the statute.
The facts are stated in the opinion.
Page 207 U. S. 432
MR. JUSTICE WHITE delivered the opinion of the Court.
The writ of error to review a criminal conviction is prosecuted
directly from this Court upon the assumption that rights under the
Constitution are involved. The errors assigned, however, relate not
only to such question, but also to many other subjects. If there be
a constitutional question adequate to the exercise of jurisdiction,
the duty exists to review the whole case.
Burton v. United
States, 196 U. S. 283.
The constitutional question relied on thus arose:
On February 11, 1905, Williamson, plaintiff in error, while a
member of the House of Representatives of the United States, was
indicted, with two other persons, for alleged violations of
Rev.Stat. § 5440, in conspiring to commit the crime of subornation
of perjury in proceedings for the purchase of public land under the
authority of the law commonly known as the Timber and Stone Act.
The defendants were found guilty in the month of September, 1905.
On October 14, 1905, when the court was about to pronounce
sentence, Williamson, whose term of office as a member of the House
of Representatives did not expire until March 4, 1907, protested
against the court's passing sentence upon him, and especially to
any sentence of imprisonment, on the ground that thereby
Page 207 U. S. 433
he would be deprived of his constitutional right to go to,
attend at, and return from the ensuing session of Congress. The
objection was overruled, and Williamson was sentenced to pay a fine
and to imprisonment for ten months. Exceptions were taken both to
the overruling of the preliminary objection and to the sentence of
imprisonment. Upon these exceptions, assignments of error are based
which, it is asserted, present a question as to the scope and
meaning of that portion of Article I, section 6, clause 1, of the
Constitution relating to the privilege of senators and
representatives from arrest during their attendance on the session
of their respective houses, and in going to and returning from the
same.
At the threshold, it is insisted by the government that the writ
of error should be dismissed for want of jurisdiction. This rests
upon the proposition that the constitutional question urged is of
such a frivolous character as not to furnish a basis for
jurisdiction, or, if not frivolous at the time when the sentence
was imposed, it is now so. The first proposition assumes that it is
so clear that the constitutional privilege does not extend to the
trial and punishment, during his term of office, of a congressman
for crime, that any assertion to the contrary affords no basis for
jurisdiction. It is not asserted that it has ever been finally
settled by this Court that the constitutional privilege does not
prohibit the arrest and punishment of a member of Congress for the
commission of any criminal offense. The contention must rest,
therefore, upon the assumption that the text of the Constitution so
plainly excludes all criminal prosecutions from the privilege which
that instrument accords a congressman as to cause the contrary
assertion to be frivolous. But this conflicts with
Burton v.
United States, supra, where, although the scope of the
privilege was not passed upon, it was declared that a claim
interposed by a senator of the United States of immunity from
arrest in consequence of a prosecution and conviction for a
misdemeanor involved a constitutional question of such a character
as to give jurisdiction to this Court by direct writ
Page 207 U. S. 434
of error. It is said, however, that this case differs from the
Burton case because there, the trial and conviction was
had during a session of the Senate, while here, at the time of the
trial, conviction, and sentence, Congress was not in session, and
therefore to assert the protection of the constitutional provision
is to reduce the claim "to the point of frivolousness." This,
however, but assumes that, even if the constitutional privilege
embraces the arrest and sentence of a member of Congress for a
crime like the one here involved, it is frivolous to assert that
the privilege could possibly apply to an arrest and sentence at any
other time than during a session of Congress, even although the
inevitable result of such arrest and sentence might be an
imprisonment which would preclude the possibility of the member's
attending an approaching session. We cannot give our assent to the
proposition. Indeed, we think, if it be conceded that the privilege
which the Constitution creates extends to an arrest for any
criminal offense, such privilege would embrace exemption from any
exertion of power by way of arrest and prosecution for the
commission of crime the effect of which exertion of power would be
to prevent a congressman from attending a future as well as a
pending session of Congress. The contention that, although there
may have been merit in the claim of privilege when asserted, it is
now frivolous because of a change in the situation is based upon
the fact that, at this time, the Congress of which the accused was
a member has ceased to exist, and therefore, even if the sentence
was illegal when imposed, such illegality has been cured by the
cessation of the constitutional privilege. But, even if the
proposition be conceded, it affords no ground for dismissing the
writ of error, since our jurisdiction depends upon the existence of
a constitutional question at the time when the writ of error was
sued out, and such jurisdiction, as we have previously said,
carries with it the duty of reviewing any errors material to the
determination of the validity of the conviction. It hence follows
that, even if the constitutional question as asserted is now "a
mere abstraction," that
Page 207 U. S. 435
fact would not avail to relieve as of the duty of reviewing the
whole case and hence disposing of the assignments of error which
are addressed to other than the constitutional question. Besides,
we do not consider the proposition well founded, for if at the time
the sentence was imposed it was illegal because in conflict with
the constitutional privilege of the accused, we fail to perceive
how the mere expiration of the term of Congress for which the
member was elected has operated to render that valid which was void
because repugnant to the Constitution.
We come, then, to consider the clause of the Constitution relied
upon in order to determine whether the accused, because he was a
member of Congress, was privileged from arrest and trial for the
crime in question, or, upon conviction, was, in any event,
privileged from sentence which would prevent his attendance at an
existing or approaching session of Congress.
The full text of the first clause of section 6, Article I, of
the Constitution is this:
"SEC. 6. The Senators and Representatives shall receive a
Compensation for their Services, to be ascertained by Law, and paid
out of the Treasury of the United States. They shall, in all cases
except Treason, Felony, and Breach of the Peace, be privileged from
Arrest during their Attendance at the Session of their respective
Houses, and in going to and returning from the same, and for any
Speech or Debate in either House they shall not be questioned in
any other Place."
If the words extending the privilege to all cases were
unqualified, and therefore embraced the arrest of a member of
Congress for the commission of any crime, we think, as we have
previously said, they would not only include such an arrest as
operated to prevent the member from going to and returning from a
pending session, but would also extend to prohibiting a court
during an interim of a session of Congress from imposing a sentence
of imprisonment which would prevent him from attending a session of
Congress in the future. But the question is not what would be the
scope of the words
Page 207 U. S. 436
"all cases" if those words embraced all crimes?, but is what is
the scope of the qualifying clause? -- that is, the exception from
the privilege of "treason, felony, and breach of the peace." The
conflicting contentions are substantially these: it is insisted by
the plaintiff in error that the privilege applied because the
offense in question is confessedly not technically the crime of
treason or felony, and is not embraced within the words "breach of
the peace," as found in the exception, because "the phrase "breach
of the peace" means only actual breaches of the peace, offenses
involving violence or public disturbance." This restricted meaning,
it is said, is necessary in order to give effect to the whole of
the excepting clause, since, if the words "breach of the peace" be
broadly interpreted so as to cause them to embrace all crimes, then
the words "treason" and "felony" will become superfluous. On the
other hand, the government insists that the words "breach of the
peace" should not be narrowly construed, but should be held to
embrace substantially all crimes, and therefore as in effect
confining the parliamentary privilege exclusively to arrests in
civil cases. And this is based not merely upon the ordinary
acceptation of the meaning of the words, but upon the contention
that the words "treason, felony, and breach of the peace," as
applied to parliamentary privilege, were commonly used in England
prior to the Revolution, and were there well understood as
excluding from the parliamentary privilege all arrests and
prosecutions for criminal offenses -- in other words, as confining
the privilege alone to arrests in civil cases, the deduction being
that, when the framers of the Constitution adopted the phrase in
question, they necessarily must be held to have intended that it
should receive its well understood and accepted meaning. If the
premise upon which this argument proceeds be well founded, we think
there can be no doubt of the correctness of the conclusion based
upon it. Before, therefore, coming to elucidate the text by the
ordinary principles of interpretation, we proceed to trace the
origin of the phrase "treason, felony, and breach of the peace," as
applied to parliamentary privilege, and to fix the meaning
Page 207 U. S. 437
of those words as understood in this country and in England
prior to and at the time of the adoption of the Constitution. In
the Articles of Confederation (last clause of Article V), it was
provided:
"Freedom of speech and debate in Congress shall not be impeached
or questioned in any court or place out of Congress, and the
members of Congress shall be protected in their persons from
arrests and imprisonments, during the time of their going to and
from, and attendance on, Congress, except for treason, felony, or
breach of the peace."
In Article V of "Mr. Charles Pinckney's Draft of a Federal
Government," it was provided as follows (Elliott's Debates, p.
146):
"In each house, a majority shall constitute a quorum to do
business. Freedom of speech and debate in the legislature shall not
be impeached or questioned, in any place out of it, and the members
of both houses shall, in all cases except for treason, felony, or
breach of the peace, be free from arrest during their attendance on
Congress, and in going to and returning from it."
The propositions offered to the convention by Mr. Pinckney, with
certain resolutions of the convention, were submitted to a
committee of detail for the purpose of reporting a constitution.
Section 5 of Article VI of the draft of Constitution reported by
this committee was as follows:
"SEC. 5. Freedom of speech and debate in the legislature shall
not be impeached or questioned in any court or place out of the
legislature, and the members of each house shall, in all cases,
except treason, felony, and breach of the peace, be privileged from
arrest during their attendance at Congress, and in going to and
returning from it."
The clause would seem not to have been the subject of debate. 3
Doc.Hist. of Constitution (Dept. of State, 1900) 500. In Elliott's
Debates (p. 237), it is recited as follows:
"On the question to agree to the fifth section of the sixth
article, as reported, it passed in the affirmative. "
Page 207 U. S. 438
And, in the revised draft, the section was reported by the
committee of revision exactly as it now appears.
The presence of the exact words of the exception as now found in
the Constitution, in the Articles of Confederation, and the
employment of the same words "treason, felony, and breach of the
peace," without discussion, in all the proceedings of the
convention relating to the subject of the privileges of members of
Congress, demonstrate that those words were then well known as
applied to parliamentary privilege, and had a general and well
understood meaning which it was intended that they should continue
to have. This follows because it is impossible to suppose that
exactly like words, without any change whatever, would have been
applied by all those engaged in dealing with the subject of
legislative privilege unless all had a knowledge of those words as
applied to the question in hand and contemplated that they should
continue to receive the meaning which it was understood they then
had. A brief consideration of the subject of parliamentary
privilege in England will, we think, show the source whence the
expression "treason, felony, and breach of the peace" was drawn,
and leave no doubt that the words were used in England for the very
purpose of excluding all crimes from the operation of the
parliamentary privilege, and therefore to leave that privilege to
apply only to prosecutions of a civil nature. We say this although
the King's Bench, in 1763 (
Rex v. Willkes, 2 Wils. 151)
held that a member of Parliament was entitled to assert his
privilege from arrest upon a charge of publishing a seditious
libel, the court ruling that it was not a breach of the peace. But,
as will hereafter appear, Parliament promptly disavowed any right
to assert the privilege in such cases.
In Potter's Dwarris on Statutes, p. 601, reference is made to
expressions of Lord Mansfield, advocating in 1770 the passage of a
bill -- which ultimately became a law -- whose provisions greatly
facilitated the prosecution of civil actions against members of
Parliament, and restrained only arrests of their persons
Page 207 U. S. 439
in such actions. The remarks of Lord Mansfield having been made
so shortly before the Revolution, and referring, as they
undoubtedly did, to the decision in the
Wilkes case (2
Wils. 151), are of special significance. Among other things, he
said:
"It may not be popular to take away any of the privileges of
Parliament, for I very well remember, and many of your Lordships
may remember, that not long ago the popular cry was for an
extension of privileges, and so far did they carry it at that time
that it was said that privilege protected members from criminal
actions, and such was the power of popular prejudice over weak
minds that the very decisions of some of the courts were tinctured
with that doctrine. . . . The laws of this country allow no place
or employment as a sanctuary for crime, and where I have the honor
to sit as judge, neither royal favor nor popular applause shall
ever protect the guilty. . . . Members of both houses should be
free in their persons in cases of civil suits, for there may come a
time when the safety and welfare of this whole empire may depend
upon their attendance in Parliament. God forbid that I should
advise any measure that would in future endanger the state. But
this bill has no such tendency. It expressly secures the persons of
members from arrest in all civil suits."
Blackstone, in 1765, discussing the subject of the privileges of
Parliament, says (Lewis' ed., *165):
"Neither can any member of either house be arrested and taken
into custody, unless for some indictable offense, without a breach
of the privilege of Parliament."
And, speaking of the writ of privilege, which was employed to
deliver the party out of custody when arrested in a civil suit, he
said (p. 166):
"It is to be observed that there is no precedent of any such
writ of privilege, but only in civil suits, and that the statute of
1 Jac. I. c. 13, and that of King William (which remedy some
inconveniences arising from privilege of Parliament), speak only of
civil actions. And therefore the claim of privilege hath been
usually guarded with an exception as to the case of indictable
Page 207 U. S. 440
crimes, or, as it has been frequently expressed, of treason,
felony, and breach (or surety) of the peace. Whereby it seems to
have been understood that no privilege was allowable to the
members, their families or servants, in any crime whatsoever, for
all crimes are treated by the law as being
contra pacem domini
regis. And instances have not been wanting wherein privileged
persons have been convicted of misdemeanors, and committed, or
prosecuted to outlawry, even in the middle of a session, which
proceeding has afterwards received the sanction and approbation of
Parliament. To which may be added that a few years ago, the case of
writing and publishing seditious libels was resolved by both houses
not to be entitled to privilege, and that the reasons upon which
that case proceeded extended equally to every indictable
offense."
The first volume of Hatsell's Precedents, published in April,
1776, is entitled as "relating to privilege of Parliament; from the
earliest records to the year 1628: with observations upon the reign
of Car. I. from 1628 to 4 January 1641." The material there
collected has been frequently employed in support of the statement
that the terms "treason, felony, and breach of the peace" were
employed by the Commons in a broad, and not in a restricted, sense.
And in the concluding chapter (V), after stating (4th ed. 205) "the
principal view, which the House of Commons seems always to have had
in the several declarations of their privileges," the author says
(p. 206):
"Beyond this, they seem never to have attempted; there is not a
single instance of a member's claiming the privilege of Parliament
to withdraw himself from the criminal law of the land: for offenses
against the public peace they always thought themselves amenable to
the laws of their country: they were contented with being
substantially secured from any violence from the Crown, or its
ministers; but readily submitted themselves to the judicature of
the King's Bench, the legal court of criminal jurisdiction; well
knowing that 'Privilege which is allowed in case of public service
for the Commonwealth must not be used for the danger of the
Commonwealth;' or, as it is
Page 207 U. S. 441
expressed in Mr. Glynn's Report of the sixth of January,
1641,"
"They were far from any endeavor to protect any of their
members, who should be, in due manner, prosecuted according to the
Laws of the Realm, and the Rights and Privileges of Parliament, for
treason, or any other misdemeanor; being sensible that it equally
imported them as well to see justice done against them that are
criminous as to defend the just Rights and Liberties of the
Subjects and Parliament of England."
May, in his treatise on the Law, Privileges, Proceedings, and
Usage of Parliament, first published in 1844, says (10th ed., p.
112):
"The privilege of freedom from arrest has always been limited to
civil causes, and has not been allowed to interfere with the
administration of criminal justice. In
Larke's case, in
1429, the privilege was claimed, 'except for treason, felony, or
breach of the peace;' and in
Thorpe's case, the judges
made exceptions to such cases as be 'for treason, or felony, or
surety of the peace.' The privilege was thus explained by a
resolution of the Lords, 18th April, 1626:"
"That the privilege of this house is that no peer of Parliament,
sitting the Parliament, is to be imprisoned or restrained without
sentence or order of the house unless it be for treason or felony
or for refusing to give surety of the peace,"
"and again, by a resolution of the Commons, 20th May, 1675,"
"that, by the laws and usage of Parliament, privilege of
Parliament belongs to every member of the House of Commons, in all
cases except treason, felony, and breach of the peace."
"On the 14th April, 1697, it was resolved, 'That no member of
this house has any privilege in case of breach of the peace, or
forcible entries, or forcible detainers.' and in
Wilkes'
case, 29th November, 1763, although the court of common pleas had
decided otherwise, it was resolved by both houses,"
" That privilege of Parliament does not extend to the case of
writing and publishing seditious libels, nor ought to be allowed to
obstruct the ordinary course of laws in the speedy
Page 207 U. S. 442
and effectual prosecution of so heinous and dangerous an
offense."
"'Since that time,' said the committee of privileges in 1831,
'it has been considered as established generally that privilege is
not claimable for any indictable offense.'"
"These being the general declarations of the law of Parliament,
one case will be sufficient to show how little protection is
practically afforded by privilege in criminal offenses. In 1815,
Lord Cochrane, a member, having been indicted and convicted of a
conspiracy, was committed by the Court of King's Bench to the
King's Bench Prison. Lord Cochrane escaped, and was arrested by the
marshal, whilst he was sitting on the privy councilor's bench, in
the House of Commons, on the right hand of the chair at which time
there was no member present, prayers not having been read. The case
was referred to the committee of privileges, who reported that it
was"
"entirely of a novel nature, and that the privileges of
Parliament did not appear to have been violated so as to call for
the interposition of the house, by any proceedings against the
marshal of the King's Bench."
See also Bowyer's Com. on Const. Law of England (2d
ed.), p. 84.
In what is styled
Mr. Long Wellesley's Case, decided in
1831, 2 Russ. & Mylne 639, the party named had been taken into
custody for clandestinely removing his infant daughter, a ward of
the court, from the place where such ward was residing under
authority of the court. The question for decision arose upon a
motion to discharge the order for commitment "on the ground that,
as a member of the House of Commons, he was protected from
attachment by the privilege of Parliament." As stated in the report
of the case, the committee of privileges of the House of Commons,
which had the matter of the arrest of Mr. Wellesley under
consideration, decided, p. 644, "that Mr. Long Wellesley's claim to
be discharged from imprisonment by reason of privilege of
Parliament ought not to be admitted." On the subject of the extent
of the privilege, counsel,
Page 207 U. S. 443
who as
amicus curiae contended that the order of
commitment was invalid, made an elaborate reference to authorities
and pertinent statutes. Lord Chancellor Brougham, however, decided
that privilege of Parliament was no protection against an
attachment for what was in its nature a criminal contempt. Among
other things, he observed that, upon principle, members of
Parliament could not be placed by privilege of Parliament above the
law, and held (p. 665)
"that he who has privilege of Parliament, in all civil matters,
matters which, whatever may be the form, are in substance of a
civil nature, may plead it with success, but that he can in no
criminal matter be heard to urge such privilege."
And by text writers of authority in this country it has been
recognized from the beginning that the convention which framed the
Constitution, in adopting the words "treason, felony, and breach of
peace" as applicable to the privileges of a parliamentary body,
used those words in the sense which the identical words had been
settled to mean in England.
Story, in his treatise on the Constitution, speaking of the
subject, says:
"SEC. 859. The next part of the clause regards the privilege of
the members from arrest, except for crimes, during their attendance
at the sessions of Congress, and their going to and returning from
them. This privilege is conceded by law to the humblest suitor and
witness in a court of justice, and it would be strange indeed if it
were denied to the highest functionaries of the state in the
discharge of their public duties. It belongs to Congress in common
with all other legislative bodies which exist, or have existed in
America since its first settlement, under every variety of
government, and it has immemorially constituted a privilege of both
houses of the British Parliament. It seems absolutely indispensable
for the just exercise of the legislative power in every nation
purporting to posses a free constitution of government, and it
cannot be surrendered without endangering the public liberties as
well as the private independence of the members."
"
* * * *"
Page 207 U. S. 444
"SEC. 865. The exception to the privilege is that it shall not
extend to 'treason, felony, or breach of the peace.' These words
are the same as those in which the exception to the privilege of
Parliament is usually expressed at the common law, and were
doubtless borrowed from that source. Now, as all crimes are
offenses against the peace, the phrase 'breach of the peace' would
seem to extend to all indictable offenses, as well those which are
in fact attended with force and violence, as those which are only
constructive breaches of the peace of the government, inasmuch as
they violate its good order. And so, in truth, it was decided in
Parliament, in the case of a seditious libel published by a member
(Mr. Wilkes) against the opinion of Lord Camden and the other
judges of the court of common pleas, and, as it will probably now
be thought, since the party spirit of those times has subsided,
with entire good sense and in furtherance of public justice. It
would be monstrous that any member should protect himself from
arrest or punishment for a libel, often a crime of the deepest
malignity and mischief, while he would be liable to arrest for the
pettiest assault or the most insignificant breach of the
peace."
Cushing, in his treatise -- first published in 1856 -- on the
elements of the law and practice of legislative assemblies in the
United States, declared (9th ed., § 546) that the Commons never
went "the length of claiming any exemption from the operation of
the criminal laws," and the author closed a discussion of the cases
to which the privilege of Parliament was applicable (§§ 559-563) by
expressing an opinion "in favor of the board rule which withdraws
the protection of parliamentary privilege from offenses and
criminal proceedings of every description." And, considering the
privilege as affected by the Constitution of the United States and
of the several states, he said:
"567. In the greater number of the constitutions, it is
expressly provided that members shall be privileged from arrest
during their attendance at the session of their respective houses,
and in going to and returning from the same, in all cases
except
Page 207 U. S. 445
'treason, felony, and breach of the peace.' This, it will be
recollected, is the form in which the privilege is stated by Sir
Edward Coke, and in which it is usually expressed by the English
writers on parliamentary law, and it was undoubtedly adopted in the
constitutions as correctly expressing the parliamentary rule on the
subject. The inaccuracy of the language has already been pointed
out, and it has been shown that, in England, the exception embraces
all criminal matters whatsoever, and, of course, includes many
cases which do not fall within the denomination either of treason,
felony, or breach of the peace. The question therefore arises
whether the exception of treason, felony, or breach of the peace,
being stated in express terms in these constitutions, is to be
understood strictly, and confined to cases coming within the
technical definitions of those offenses, or whether it is used as a
compendious expression to denote all criminal cases of every
description. In favor of the latter opinion, it may be said first
there can be no doubt that the framers of these constitutions
intended to secure the privilege in question upon as reasonable and
intelligible a foundation as it existed by the parliamentary and
common law of England -- in short, that, as in a multitude of other
cases, they intended to adopt, with the words, the full meaning
which had been given to them by usage and authoritative
construction, and second, that the word
felony, which
alone gives rise to any doubt,"
"has derived so many meanings from so many parts of the common
law, and so many statutes in England, and has got to be used in
such a vast number of different senses, that it is now impossible
to know precisely in what sense we are to understand it,"
"and consequently that, unless it is allowed to have such a
signification as, with the other words of the exception, will cover
the whole extent of criminal matters, it must be rejected
altogether for uncertainty, or at least, restricted to a very few
cases. These reasons alone, though others might be added, are
sufficient to establish the point that the terms 'treason, felony,
and breach of the peace,' as used in our constitutions, embrace
Page 207 U. S. 446
all criminal cases and proceedings whatsoever. In the federal
government, therefore, and in the states above referred to, the
privilege of exemption from legal process may be considered the
same as it is in England."
Since from the foregoing it follows that the term "treason,
felony, and breach of the peace," as used in the constitutional
provision relied upon, excepts from the operation of the privilege
all criminal offenses, the conclusion results that the claim of
privilege of exemption from arrest and sentence was without merit,
and we are thus brought to consider the other assignments of error
relied upon. They are, all but one, based on exceptions challenging
the sufficiency of the indictment and alleging the commission of
material error in admitting and rejecting evidence, in refusing
requested instructions, and in the instructions given. The only
assignment not based upon an exception taken at the trial asserts
that it is so clearly shown by the record that there is no proof
tending to establish the commission of the offense charged that it
should be now so decided, even although no request to instruct the
jury on that subject was made at the trial.
1.
As to the sufficiency of the indictment.
With great elaboration, it is insisted in argument that the
indictment charges no crime, since there can be no such thing as a
conspiracy to commit the offense of subornation of perjury. While
the statutes of the United States cause every person who procures
another to commit perjury to be guilty of subornation of perjury,
it is said there is no punishment by statute, as at common law, for
a mere attempt by an individual to induce the commission of
perjury. This being so, the argument is that a charge of conspiracy
to suborn, etc., perjury is, in the nature of things, but a charge
of an attempt to suborn perjury, which amounts only to the charge
of a conspiracy to do an act which is not a criminal offense. But
the proposition wholly fails to give effect to the provisions of
the conspiracy statute (Rev.Stat. § 5440), which clearly renders it
criminal for two or more persons to conspire to commit any offense
against the United
Page 207 U. S. 447
States, provided only that one or more of the parties to the
conspiracy do an act towards effecting the object of the
conspiracy. In other words, although it be conceded, merely for the
sake of argument, that an attempt by one person to suborn another
to commit perjury may not be punishable under the criminal laws of
the United States, it does not follow that a conspiracy by two or
more persons to procure the commission of perjury, which embraces
an unsuccessful attempt, is not a crime punishable as above stated.
The conspiracy is the offense which the statute defines, without
reference to whether the crime which the conspirators have
conspired to commit is consummated. And this result of the
conspiracy statute also disposes of an elaborate argument
concerning the alleged impossibility of framing an indictment
charging a conspiracy to suborn perjury, since it rests upon the
assumption that, as the conspirators could not, in advance, know
when they entered into the conspiracy that the persons would
willfully swear falsely to what they and the conspirators knew to
be false, there could be no conspiracy to suborn.
But even on the supposition that a valid indictment may be
framed charging a conspiracy to commit subornation of perjury, the
indictment in question, it is urged, is fatally defective by reason
of an omission to directly particularize various elements claimed
to be essential to constitute the offense of perjury and other
elements necessary to be averred in respect of the alleged
suborners.
This is based upon the assumption that an indictment alleging a
conspiracy to suborn perjury must describe not only the conspiracy
relied upon, but also must, with technical precision, state all the
elements essential to the commission of the crimes of subornation
of perjury and perjury, which, it is alleged, is not done in the
indictment under consideration. But in a charge of conspiracy, the
conspiracy is the gist of the crime, and certainty, to a common
intent, sufficient to identify the offense which the defendants
conspired to commit, is all that is requisite in stating the object
of the conspiracy. Looking at the indictment,
Page 207 U. S. 448
it in terms charges an unlawful conspiracy and combination to
have been entered into on a date and at a place named within the
district where the indictment was found, and the object of the
conspiracy is stated to be the suborning of a large number of
persons to go before a named person, stated to be a United States
commissioner of the District of Oregon, and, in proceedings for the
entry and purchase of land in such district under the Timber and
Stone Acts, make oath before the official that the lands
"were not being purchased by them on speculation, but were being
purchased in good faith to be appropriated to the own exclusive use
and benefit of those persons, respectively, and that they had not
directly or indirectly made any agreement, or contract in any way
or manner, with any other person or persons whomsoever, by which
the titles which they might acquire from the said United States in
and to such lands should enure in whole or in part to the benefit
of any person except themselves, when, in truth and in fact as each
of the said persons would then well know, and as they, the said
John Newton Williamson, Van Gesner, and Marion R. Biggs, would then
well know, such persons would be applying to purchase such lands on
speculation, and not in good faith to appropriate such lands to
their own exclusive use and benefit respectively, and would have
made agreements and contracts with them, the said John Newton
Williamson, Van Gesner and Marion R. Biggs, by which the titles
which they might acquire from the said United States in such lands
would enure to the benefit of the said John Newton Williamson and
Van Gesner, as copartners in the firm of Williamson and Gesner,
then and before then engaged in the business of sheep raising in
said county, the matters so to be stated, subscribed, and sworn by
the said persons being material matters under the circumstances,
and matters which the said persons so to be suborned, instigated,
and procured, and the said John Newton Williamson, Van Gesner, and
Marion R. Biggs would not believe to the true, and the said Marion
R. Biggs, United States commissioner as aforesaid, when
administering such oaths to those persons, being an officer and
person authorized by law
Page 207 U. S. 449
of the said United States to administer the same oaths, and the
said oaths being oaths administered in cases where a law of the
said United States would then authorize an oath to be
administered."
These allegations plainly import, and they are susceptible of no
other construction than, that the unlawful agreement contemplated a
future solicitation of individuals to enter lands who, in so doing,
would necessarily knowingly state and subscribe under oath material
false statements as to their purpose in respect to entering the
land, etc., and known to be such by the conspirators. There is no
reason to infer that the details of the unlawful conspiracy and
agreement are not fully stated in the indictment, and it may
therefore be assumed that the persons who were to be suborned, and
the time and place of such subornation, had not been determined at
the time of the conspiracy, except as might be inferred from a
purpose to procure the persons to be suborned to come before the
United States commissioner for the District of Oregon named in the
indictment. It was not essential to the commission of the crime
that, in the minds of the conspirators, the precise persons to be
suborned, or the time and place of such suborning, should have been
agreed upon, and as the criminality of the conspiracy charged
consisted in the unlawful agreement to compass a criminal purpose,
the indictment, we think, sufficiently set forth such purpose. The
assignments of error which assailed the sufficiency of the
indictment are therefore without merit.
2. Numerous exceptions were taken (a) to the admission of
evidence as to the understanding of the applicants concerning their
arrangement with Gesner, one of the accused, and the purpose of the
applicants in applying for the land, (b) to the admission of the
final proofs, which embraced a sworn statement, made pursuant to
the requirements of a regulation adopted by the Commissioner of the
General Land Office, declaring the
bona fides of the
applicant and that at that period he had made no contract or
agreement to dispose of the land,
Page 207 U. S. 450
and (c) to evidence respecting the character of the land and
concerning an attempt to acquire and the acquisition by like
wrongful methods of state school lands located near the government
timber lands in question.
As we shall hereafter have occasion to consider the instructions
of the court concerning the scope of the indictment as to the final
proofs and the law applicable to that subject, we put out of view
for the moment the objections just mentioned, under subdivision
(b), relating to the final proofs and the intention of the
applicants in respect to the land at the time such final proof was
made, and therefore presently consider the objections insofar only
as they concern the other subjects.
The issue being the existence of a conspiracy to suborn various
persons to commit perjury in relation to declarations to be made,
under the Timber and Stone Act, as to the purpose for which they
desired to acquire land, etc., and as it is conceded that no formal
contracts were executed between the alleged conspirators and the
proposed entrymen, and the alleged understandings were of an
ambiguous nature, and proof of the conspiracy depended upon a
variety of circumstances going to show motive or intent, we think
it was proper to permit the interrogation of the entrymen
concerning their understanding of the arrangement with Gesner and
their intention at the time when they made their preliminary
declarations, as the testimony was relevant to the question of the
nature and character of the dealings of the entrymen with the
alleged conspirators, and bore on the question of the purpose or
motive which influenced the making of the sworn statement required
by law as a condition precedent to the purchase of the land. As it
was insisted that the motive which impelled the formation of the
conspiracy was the desire to acquire a large tract of land for
sheep grazing purposes, which acquisition had become necessary by
reason of the fact that a rival had obtained a leasehold interest
in a considerable portion of the land which Gesner and Williamson
had theretofore used in their sheep
Page 207 U. S. 451
raising business, we think the testimony as to the character of
the timber lands in respect to suitability for grazing purposes,
etc. [was competent], and an attempt to acquire and the acquisition
of state school lands was, we think, also competent as tending to
establish on the part of the conspirators guilty intent, purpose,
design, or knowledge.
The contention that the proof on the subjects just stated should
not have been admitted, because it tended to show the commission of
crimes other than those charged in the indictment, and consequently
must have operated to prejudice the accused, is, we think, without
merit, particularly as the trial judge, in his charge to the jury,
carefully limited the application of the testimony so as to prevent
any improper use thereof.
The conclusion above expressed as to the admissibility of the
evidence objected to is elucidated by
Holmes v. Goldsmith,
147 U. S. 164,
where it was said:
"As has been frequently said, great latitude is allowed in the
reception of circumstantial evidence the aid of which is constantly
required, and therefore, where direct evidence of the fact is
wanting, the more the jury can see of the surrounding facts and
circumstances, the more correct their judgment is likely to
be."
"The competency of a collateral fact to be used as the basis of
legitimate argument is not to be determined by the conclusiveness
of the inferences it may afford in reference to the litigated fact.
It is enough if these may tend, even in a slight degree, to
elucidate the inquiry, or to assist, though remotely, to a
determination probably founded in truth."
"The modern tendency both of legislation and of the decision of
courts is to give as wide a scope as possible to the investigation
of facts. Courts of error are specially unwilling to reverse cases
because unimportant and possibly irrelevant testimony may have
crept in, unless there is reason to think that practical injustice
has been thereby caused."
3. The remaining assignments relate to the refusal to give
Page 207 U. S. 452
requested instructions, and to portions of the charge of the
court. Many of the requested instructions, however, are so clearly
without merit, because in effect covered by the charge as given,
that we do not deem it necessary to particularly notice them. The
only subjects which we think are sufficiently important to require
express notice are:
(a) That even although no request was made to instruct the jury
on the whole evidence to render a verdict of not guilty,
nevertheless it should now be held that the record establishes such
an entire absence of proof tending to show guilt that it should be
so declared.
(b) That prejudicial error was committed by the trial court in
refusing requested instructions to the effect that the jury should
acquit if they found that the defendants acted in good faith, under
the advice of counsel and in the belief of the lawfulness of their
conduct.
(c) Exceptions in respect to the instruction given by the court
that the indictment covered perjury in the matter of the final
proofs, and in instructing the jury that they might convict if
satisfied by the evidence, beyond a reasonable doubt, that the
defendants intended that the persons who might be procured or
induced to make entries of lands should willfully and deliberately
commit perjury in particulars stated at the time of making their
deposition or sworn statements when they made their final proofs
before the United States commissioner, and in effect charging that
a sworn statement made at the time of final proof concerning the
purpose for which the land was sought to be purchased, etc., would
constitute perjury if the oath so taken, although not expressly
embraced in the statute, was required by a regulation of the
Commissioner of the General Land Office because such regulation had
the force and effect of law. We shall consider the propositions
seriatim.
(a) Whilst it has been settled that, in a criminal case where it
plainly appeared that there was no evidence whatever justifying
conviction, this Court would so hold, despite the
Page 207 U. S. 453
failure to request an instruction of acquittal (
Wiborg v.
United States, 163 U. S. 638;
Clyatt v. United States, 197 U. S. 207),
this case affords no occasion for applying the rule, because it is
not certified that the bill of exceptions contains the entire
evidence, and we are not otherwise satisfied that it does, and,
further, because it is recited in the bill of exceptions that "the
plaintiff offered evidence during said trial sufficient to go to
the jury, tending to prove each and every material allegation of
the indictment."
(b) Without attempting to review in detail the requested charges
concerning motive and intent and the effect of advice of counsel,
we think the trial judge, in instructing the jury on the subject,
went as far in favor of the accused as it was possible for him to
go consistently with right, and therefore there is no ground for
complaint as to the failure to give the requested charges. The
court, after having fully and carefully instructed the jury as to
the operative effect of good faith in relieving the defendants from
the charge made against them, in express terms noticed the question
of the advice of counsel, and said:
"Having now placed before you the timber and stone law, and what
it denounces and what it permits, if a man honestly and in good
faith seeks advice of a lawyer as to what he may lawfully do in the
matter of loaning money to applicants under it, and fully and
honestly lays all the facts before his counsel, and in good faith
and honestly follows such advice, relying upon it and believing it
to be correct, and only intends that his acts shall be lawful, he
could not be convicted of crime which involves willful and unlawful
intent; even if such advice were an inaccurate construction of the
law. But, on the other hand, no man can willfully and knowingly
violate the law, and excuse himself from the consequences thereof
by pleading that he followed the advice of counsel."
(c) As the contentions under this head concern the instructions
of the court in relation to the final proof and the effect of the
regulations of the Commissioner of the General Land
Page 207 U. S. 454
Office relative to the subject, the exceptions taken to the
charge in relation to the matter are in the margin. [
Footnote 1]
Further, as in order to dispose of these objections it
becomes
Page 207 U. S. 455
necessary to consider not only the scope of the indictment, but,
moreover, to construe the Timber and Stone Act, and, it may be, to
determine the validity of the regulation of the General Land Office
heretofore referred to, the material portions of the act are in the
margin, [
Footnote 2] as well as
the regulation in question.
Page 207 U. S. 456
Contenting ourselves with referring to the quotation already
made from the indictment, we are of opinion that the particular
false swearing to which the indictment related was alone the
Page 207 U. S. 457
verified written statement provided for in § 2 of the act, to be
made on applying to purchase the land, and therefore the indictment
did not embrace a charge concerning a statement
Page 207 U. S. 458
or deposition under oath required to be made by any regulation
of the Commissioner of the General Land Office, after the
publication of the notice, and when the period had arrived for
final action by the land office on the application to purchase. It
seems to us clear that the indictment was thus restricted, since
all the language in it speaks as of the time of the first
statement, no reference is made to any regulation of the
Commissioner supplementing the statute in any particular, and each
of the nineteen overt acts charged to have been committed
exclusively relates to the statement required by § 2, and to none
other. We are of opinion that the elaborate argument made by the
government concerning the use in the indictment of the words
"declarations and depositions" can serve only to suggest ambiguity
in the indictment, and possible doubt as to the meaning of the
pleader. But, as of course, in a criminal case, doubt must be
resolved in favor of the accused, we hold that the indictment does
not charge a conspiracy to suborn perjury in respect of the making
of the final proofs, and therefore that there was prejudicial error
committed in the instructions to the jury on that subject which
were excepted to.
As, however, the question which we have hitherto passed over,
concerning the admissibility of the final proof to show motive in
making the original application, may arise at a future trial, even
although it be that the indictment charges only a conspiracy to
suborn perjury as to the original application, we proceed to
consider that subject. To do so it becomes necessary to determine
whether the statute requires an applicant, after he has made his
preliminary sworn statement concerning the
bona fides of
his application and the absence of any contract or agreement in
respect to the title, to additionally swear to such facts after
notice of his application has been published and the time has
arrived for final action on the application. And this, of course,
involves deciding whether the regulation of the Commissioner
exacting such additional statement at the time of final hearing is
valid. The inquiry concerns only the
Page 207 U. S. 459
second and third sections of the act. Turning to the second
section, it will be seen that it requires the applicant to make a
sworn statement, giving many particulars concerning the land -- its
unfitness for cultivation, its being uninhabited, the absence of
mineral, etc., etc. -- followed by the requirement that the
applicant shall declare that he makes the application not for the
purpose of speculation, but in good faith, and that he intends to
appropriate the land to his own exclusive use and benefit, and that
no agreement has been made, directly or indirectly, with any person
or persons whatsoever by which the title to be acquired from the
government shall enure, in whole or in part, to any person except
the applicant. And the section concludes by causing any false
statement made in the sworn application to constitute the crime of
perjury. Examining the third section, it will be seen that it
provides that, upon the filing of said statement, as provided in
the second section, it shall be the duty of the local land officer
to post a notice of the application in his office for sixty days,
to furnish the applicant with a copy of such notice for publication
at the expense of the applicant, in the nearest newspaper for sixty
days, and, when such period has expired, on proof of the
publication and of certain facts which the statute expressly
enumerates, the applicant shall, upon payment of the requisite
charge, in the absence of a contest, be entitled to a patent for
the land. Examining the items which the statute requires the
applicant to make proof of after showing publication, it is
apparent that, while some of the things referred to in the prior
section, and which are required to be stated in the preliminary
proof, are reiterated, all requirement is omitted of any statement
regarding a speculative purpose on the part of the applicant, his
bona fides, and his intention to acquire for himself
alone. When the context of the statute is thus brought into view,
we are of the opinion that it cannot possibly be held, without
making by judicial legislation a new law, that the statute exacts
from the applicant a reiteration, at the final hearing, of the
declaration concerning his purpose in acquiring
Page 207 U. S. 460
title to the land, since to do so would be to construe the
statute as including in the final hearing that which the very terms
of the statute manifest was intended to be excluded therefrom. We
say this because, as the third section reexacts in the final
application a reiteration of some of the requirements concerning
the character of the land made necessary in the first application,
and omits the requirement as to the
bona fides, etc., of
the applicant, it follows, under the elementary rule that the
inclusion of one is the exclusion of the other, that the reexacting
of a portion only of the requirements was equivalent to an express
declaration by Congress that the remaining requirements should not
be exacted at the final proof. And this becomes particularly cogent
when the briefness of the act is considered, when the propinquity
of the two provisions is borne in mind -- a propinquity which
excludes the conception that the legislative mind could possibly
have overlooked in one section the provisions of a section
immediately preceding -- especially when, in the last section, some
of the requirements of the prior section are reexpressed and made
applicable to the final statement. Indeed, we cannot perceive how,
under the statute, if an applicant has in good faith complied with
the requirements of the second section of the act, and, pending the
publication of notice, has contracted to convey, after patent, his
rights in the land, his so doing could operate to forfeit his
right. These conclusions are directly sustained by a recent ruling
in
Adams v. Church, 193 U. S. 510,
construing the Timber Culture Act. Under that law, an applicant for
entry was obliged, among other things, in making his application to
swear to his good faith and to the absence of speculative purpose,
in the exact words of the statute now under consideration. But in
the Timber Culture Act, as in the Timber and Stone Act, the
requirement was not reimposed in respect to the final proof. In the
cited case, the entrymen, who had complied with the statute in
making his application, had, between the date of the application
and the making of final proof, disposed of his right, and the
question was whether, by so doing, he had forfeited
Page 207 U. S. 461
his claim. In deciding adversely to the contention that he had,
the Court said (p.
193 U. S.
516):
"But, as the law does not require affidavit before final
certificate that no interest in the land has been sold, we perceive
no reason why such contract as was found to exist by the Supreme
Court of Oregon would vitiate the agreement to convey after the
certificate is granted and the patent issued. If the entryman has
complied with the statute and made the entry in good faith, in
accordance with the terms of the law and the oath required of him
upon making such entry, and has done nothing inconsistent with the
terms of the law, we find nothing in the fact that, during his term
of occupancy, he has agreed to convey an interest to be conveyed
after patent issued, which will defeat his claim and forfeit the
right acquired by planting the trees and complying with the terms
of the law. Had Congress intended such result to follow from the
alienation of an interest after entry in good faith, it would have
so declared in the law.
Myers v. Croft, 13 Wall.
291."
It is elaborately insisted on behalf of the government that
there is a difference between the Timber Culture Act and the Timber
and Stone Act, resulting from the fact that, in the one case, in
the interim between the entry and the final proof, a long time must
elapse, and much is required to be done by the applicant, while in
the other, a short time intervenes and substantially nothing is
required to be done. But this reasoning in effect assails the
wisdom of Congress in omitting the requirement in the act under
consideration, and affords no ground for inserting in the act
requirements which Congress has, by express intendment, excluded
therefrom. Besides, the weakness of the argument becomes apparent
when it is borne in mind that the Timber and Stone Act and the
Timber Culture Act were enacted by the same Congress, and with only
a few days' interval between the two.
It remains only to consider whether it was within the power of
the Commissioner of the General Land Office to enact rules and
regulations by which an entryman would be compelled
Page 207 U. S. 462
to do that at the final hearing which the act of Congress must
be considered as having expressly excluded, in order thereby to
deprive the entryman of a right which the act, by necessary
implication, conferred upon him. To state the question is to answer
it. As observed in
Adams v. Church, supra, at p.
193 U. S. 517:
"To sustain the contentions . . . would be to incorporate . . .
a prohibition against the alienation of an interest in the lands,
not found in the statute or required by the policy of the law upon
the subject."
True it is that, in the concluding portion of § 3 of the Timber
and Stone Act, it is provided that "effect shall be given to the
foregoing provisions of this act by regulations to be prescribed by
the Commissioner of the General Land Office." But this power must,
in the nature of things, be construed as authorizing the
Commissioner of the General Land Office to adopt rules and
regulations for the enforcement of the statute, and cannot be held
to have authorized him, by such an exercise of power, to virtually
adopt rules and regulations destructive of rights which Congress
had conferred. As, then, there was no requirement concerning the
making in the final proof of an affidavit as to the particulars
referred to, and as the entryman who had complied with the
preliminary requirements was under no obligation to make such an
affidavit, and had full power to dispose and interim of his claim
upon the final issue of patent, we think the motive of the
applicant at the time of the final proof was irrelevant, even under
the broad rule which we have previously in this case applied, and
therefore that error was committed not alone in instructing the
jury that the indictment covered or could cover the procurement of
perjury in connection with the final proof, and that the jury might
base a conviction thereon, but in admitting the final proof as
evidence tending to show the alleged illegal purpose in the primary
application for the purchase of the lands.
Reversed and remanded.
MR. JUSTICE HARLAN is of opinion that no substantial error was
committed, and the judgment should be affirmed.
[
Footnote 1]
"The defendants, each of them, also excepted to the giving of
said instruction hereinbefore set forth, reading as follows:"
" Now, when the sworn statement is filed, the register posts a
notice of the application, embracing a description of the land, in
his office for a period of sixty days, and furnishes the applicant
a copy of the same for publication in a newspaper published nearest
the location of the premises, for a like period of time. And it is
provided by law, and by regulation duly made by proper authority
and having the force and effect of law, that, after the expiration
of said sixty days, the person or claimant desiring to purchase
shall furnish to the register of the land office satisfactory
evidence, among other things, that notice of the application
prepared by the register was duly published in a newspaper as
required by the law; that the land is of the character contemplated
in the act; that the applicant has not sold or transferred his
claim to the land since making his sworn statement, and has not,
directly or indirectly, made any agreement or contract, in any way
or manner, with any person whomsoever by which the title he may
acquire from the government may enure, in whole or in part, to the
benefit of any person except himself, and that he makes his entry
in good faith, for the appropriation of the land exclusively for
his own use, and not for the use and benefit of any other
person,"
"as not the law, and misleading, and directing the attention of
the jury to a matter not charged in the indictment."
"Defendants, each of them, also then and there expected to the
giving of said instruction as hereinbefore set forth, reading as
follows:"
" But, as heretofore said, if he is not in good faith, and has
directly or indirectly made any agreement or contract in any way or
manner with any persons by which the title he may acquire from the
United States shall enure, in whole or in part, to the benefit of
any persons except himself, then he commits perjury in making his
sworn statement, and in making a deposition that he has not done
those things, and any person who knowingly and willfully procures
and instigates the person to make such sworn statement or
deposition is guilty of subornation of perjury,"
"and especially to the words in said paragraph, 'and in making a
deposition that he has not done those things,' upon the ground that
the same is not the law, and misleading, and directs the attention
of the jury to a matter not charged in the indictment."
"Defendants also except to the giving of the instruction
hereinbefore set forth, which reads as follows:"
" The essential questions, then, for your determination, are,
does the evidence show beyond a reasonable doubt that Williamson,
Gesner, and Biggs, or two of them, knowingly and intentionally
entered into an agreement or combination to induce or procure
persons to apply to purchase and enter the lands as alleged, or
some part of the lands charged in the indictment, as lands subject
to entry under the Timber and Stone Act, after having first come to
an agreement or understanding with such persons that they would
convey the title which they might acquire to Williamson and Gesner,
or either of them? and, next, does the evidence satisfy you beyond
a reasonable doubt that these defendants, so combining and
agreeing, intended that the persons, or some of the persons, whom
they might procure or induce to make such entries, should willfully
and deliberately, in making their sworn statements or applications
to purchase such lands at the time of making the first paper called
a sworn statement, or at the time of making their depositions or
sworn statements when they made their final proofs before the
United States commissioner applying to purchase such lands, commit
perjury by swearing falsely that their applications were not made
on speculation, but in good faith, to appropriate the lands to the
exclusive use and benefit of the applicant or applicants, and that
the applicant or applicants had not, directly or indirectly, made
any agreement or contract in any way or manner by which the title
to be acquired from the United States should enure, in whole or in
part, to the benefit of any persons other than himself or
herself?,"
"and especially to the words therein, 'or some of the persons,'
and also to the words, 'or at the time of making their depositions
or sworn statements when they made their final proofs before the
United States commissioner,' as misleading, and not the law, and
applying to a matter not charged in the indictment, and variant
from said indictment."
[
Footnote 2]
"
TIMBER AND STONE ACT"
"
(Approved June 3, 1878, 20 Stat. 89)"
"CHAP. 151. -- An Act for the Sale of Timber Lands in the States
of California, Oregon, Nevada, and in Washington Territory."
"
Be it enacted by the Senate and House of Representatives of
the United States of America in Congress assembled, that
surveyed public lands of the United States within the States of
California, Oregon, and Nevada, and in Washington Territory, not
included within military, Indian, or other reservations of the
United States, valuable chiefly for timber, but unfit for
cultivation, and which have not been offered at public sale
according to law, may be sold to citizens of the United States, or
persons who have declared their intentions to become such, in
quantities not exceeding one hundred and sixty acres to any one
person or association of persons at the minimum price of two
dollars and fifty cents per acre, and lands valuable chiefly for
stone may be sold on the same terms as timber lands:
Provided, That nothing herein contained shall defeat or
impair any
bona fide claim under any law of the United
States, or authorize the sale of any mining claim, or the
improvements of any
bona fide settler, or lands containing
gold, silver, cinnabar, copper, or coal, or lands selected by the
said states under any law of the United States donating lands for
internal improvements, education, or other purposes:
And
provided further, That none of the rights conferred by the act
approved July twenty-sixth, eighteen hundred and sixty-six,
entitled 'An Act Granting the Right of Way to Ditch and Canal
Owners over the Public Lands, and for Other Purposes' shall be
abrogated by this act, and all patents granted shall be subject to
any vested and accrued water rights, or rights to ditches and
reservoirs used in connection with such water rights, as may have
been acquired under and by the provisions of said act, and such
rights shall be expressly reserved in any patent issued under this
act."
"SEC. 2. That any person desiring to avail himself of the
provisions of this act shall file with the register of the proper
district a written statement in duplicate, one of which is to be
transmitted to the General Land Office, designating by legal
subdivisions the particular tract of land he desires to purchase,
setting forth that the same is unfit for cultivation and valuable
chiefly for its timber or stone; that it is uninhabited; contains
no mining or other improvements, except for ditch or canal
purposes, where any such do exist, save such as were made by or
belonged to the applicant, nor, as deponent verily believes, any
deposit of gold, silver, cinnabar, copper, or coal; that deponent
has made no other application under this act; that he does not
apply to purchase the same on speculation, but in good faith, to
appropriate it to his own exclusive use and benefit, and that he
has not, directly or indirectly, made any agreement or contract in
any way or manner with any person or person whatsoever, by which
the title which he might acquire from the government of the United
States should enure, in whole or in part, to the benefit of any
person except himself, which statement must be verified by the oath
of the applicant before the register or the receiver of the land
office within the district where the land is situated, and if any
person taking such oath shall swear falsely in the premises, he
shall be subject to all the pains and penalties of perjury, and
shall forfeit the money which he may have paid for said lands, and
all right and title to the same, and any grant or conveyance which
he may have made, except in the hands of
bona fide
purchasers, shall be null and void."
"SEC. 3. That upon the filing of said statement, as provided in
the second section of this act, the register of the land office
shall post a notice of such application embracing a description of
the land by legal subdivisions, in his office, for a period of
sixty days, and shall furnish the applicant a copy of the same for
publication at the expense of such applicant in a newspaper
published nearest the location of the premises, for a like period
of time, and after the expiration of said sixty days, if no adverse
claim shall have been filed, the person desiring to purchase shall
furnish to the register of the land office satisfactory evidence,
first, that said notice of the application prepared by the register
as aforesaid was duly published in a newspaper as herein required;
secondly, that the land is of the character contemplated in this
act, unoccupied, and without improvements, other than those
excepted, either mining or agricultural, and that it apparently
contains no valuable deposits of gold, silver, cinnabar, copper, or
coal, and upon payment to the proper officer of the purchase money
of said land, together with the fees of the register and the
receiver, as provided for in case of mining claims in the twelfth
section of the act approved May tenth, eighteen hundred and
seventy-two, the applicant may be permitted to enter said tract,
and, on the transmission to the General Land Office of the papers
and testimony in the case, a patent shall issue thereon;
Provided, That any person having a valid claim to any
portion of the land may object, in writing, to the issuance of a
patent to lands so held by him, stating the nature of his claim
thereto, and evidence shall be taken, and the merits of said
objection shall be determined by the officers of the land office,
subject to appeal, as in other land cases. Effect shall be given to
the foregoing provisions of this act by regulations to be
prescribed by the Commissioner of the General Land Office."
"
* * * *"
Circular from the General Land Office Showing the Manner of
Proceeding to Obtain Title to Public Lands under the Homestead,
Desert Land, and Other Laws, issued July 11, 1899, p. 46:
"11. The evidence to be furnished to the satisfaction of the
register and receiver at time of entry, as required by the third
section of the act, must be taken before the register and receiver,
and will consist of the testimony of claimant, corroborated by the
testimony of two disinterested witnesses. The testimony will be
reduced to writing by the register and receiver upon the blanks
provided for the purpose, after verbally propounding the questions
set forth in the printed forms. The accuracy of affiant's
information and the
bona fides of the entry must be tested
by close and sufficient oral examination. The register and receiver
will especially direct such examination to ascertain whether the
entry is made in good faith, for the appropriation of the land to
the entryman's own use, and not for sale or speculation, and
whether he has conveyed the land or his right thereto, or agreed to
make any such conveyance, or whether he has directly or indirectly
entered into any contract or agreement in any manner with any
person or persons whomsoever by which the title that may be
acquired by the entry shall enure, in whole or in part, to the
benefit of any person or persons except himself. They will certify
to the fact of such oral examination, its sufficiency, and his
satisfaction therewith."