This proceeding arose from the efforts of a Negro to gain
admission as a student to the University of Mississippi. The Court
of Appeals,
sua sponte, appointed the Attorney General or
his assistants to prosecute this criminal contempt proceeding under
Rule 42(b) of the Federal Rules of Criminal Procedure against the
Governor and Lieutenant Governor of Mississippi for disobeying
injunctive orders issued by the Court of Appeals and the District
Court. The alleged contemners demanded trial by jury and the Court
of Appeals, being evenly divided, certified to this Court the
question whether they were so entitled.
Held: The alleged contemners are not entitled to a jury
trial.
1. On the facts certified, there is no statutory right to trial
by jury. Pp.
376 U. S.
690-692.
(a) 18 U.S.C. §§ 402 and 3691, which provide for jury trial in
certain instances of criminal contempt, do not apply, since this
case involves a contempt committed in disobedience of an order of
the Court of Appeals. Pp.
376 U. S.
690-692.
(b) It would be anomalous for a court of appeals to have the
power to punish contempt of its own orders without a jury, but to
be rendered impotent to do so when the offensive behavior happens
to be in contempt of a district court order as well. P.
376 U. S.
692.
2. On the facts certified, there is no constitutional right to
trial by jury. Pp.
376 U. S.
692-700.
Reported below: 330 F.2d 369.
Page 376 U. S. 682
MR. JUSTICE CLARK delivered the opinion of the Court.
This proceeding in criminal contempt was commenced by the United
States upon the specific order,
sua sponte, of the Court
of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit. Ross R. Barnett, Governor of the
State of Mississippi at the time this action arose, [
Footnote 1] and Paul B. Johnson, Jr.,
Lieutenant Governor, stand charged with willfully disobeying
certain restraining orders issued, or directed to be entered, by
that court. Governor Barnett and Lieutenant Governor Johnson moved
to dismiss, demanded a trial by jury and filed motions to sever and
to strike various charges. The Court of Appeals, being evenly
divided on the question of right to jury trial, has certified the
question [
Footnote 2] to this
Court under the authority of 28 U.S.C. § 1254(3), 330 F.2d 369. We
pass only on the jury issue and decide that the
Page 376 U. S. 683
alleged contemners are not entitled to a jury as a matter of
right.
The proceeding is the aftermath of the efforts of James
Meredith, a Negro, to attend the University of Mississippi.
Meredith sought admission in 1961, and, upon refusal, filed suit in
the United States District Court for the Southern District of
Mississippi.
202 F.
Supp. 224. That court denied relief, but the Court of Appeals
reversed and directed the District Court to grant the relief prayed
for.
Meredith v. Fair, 305 F.2d 343. The mandate was
stayed by direction of a single judge of the Court of Appeals,
whereupon, on July 27, 306 F.2d 374, the Court of Appeals set aside
the stay, recalled the mandate, amended and reissued it, including
its own injunctive order "enjoining and compelling" the Board of
Trustees, officials of the University, and all persons having
knowledge of the decree to admit Meredith to the school. On the
following day, the Court of Appeals entered a separate and
supplemental "injunctive order" directing the same parties to admit
Meredith and to refrain from any act of discrimination relating to
his admission or continued attendance. By its terms, this order was
to remain in effect
"until such time as there has been full and actual compliance in
good faith with each and all of said orders by the actual admission
of [Meredith]. . . ."
After a series of further delays, the District Court entered its
injunction on September 13, 1962, directing the members of the
Board of Trustees and the officials of the University to register
Meredith.
When it became apparent that the decrees might not be honored,
the United States applied to the Court of Appeals on September 18
for permission to appear in the Court of Appeals in the case. This
application was granted in the following terms:
"IT IS ORDERED that the United States be designated and
authorized to appear and participate as
amicus curiae in
all proceedings in this action before
Page 376 U. S. 684
this Court and by reason of the mandates and orders of this
Court of July 27, 28, 1962, and subsequently thereto, also before
the District Court for the Southern District of Mississippi to
accord each court the benefit of its views and recommendations,
with the right to submit pleadings, evidence, arguments and briefs
and to initiate such further proceedings, including proceedings for
injunctive relief and proceedings for contempt of court, as may be
appropriate in order to maintain and preserve the due
administration of justice and the integrity of the judicial
processes of the United States."
Meanwhile, the Mississippi Legislature had adopted an emergency
measure in an attempt to prevent Meredith from attending the
University, but, on September 20, upon the Government's
application, the enforcement of this Act was enjoined, along with
two state court decrees barring Meredith's registration. On the
same day, Meredith was rebuffed in his efforts to gain admission.
Both he and the United States filed motions in contempt in the
District Court citing the Chancellor, the Registrar and the Dean of
the College of Liberal Arts. After a hearing, they were acquitted
on the ground that the Board of Trustees had stripped them of all
powers to act on Meredith's application, and that such powers were
in Governor Barnett, as agent of the Board.
The United States then moved in the Court of Appeals for a show
cause order in contempt against the Board of Trustees, based on the
order of that court dated July 28. An en banc hearing was held at
which the Board indicated that it was ready to admit Meredith, and,
on September 24, the court entered an order requiring the Board to
revoke its action appointing Governor Barnett to act as its agent.
The order also required the Registrar, Robert B. Ellis, to be
available on September 25 to admit Meredith.
Page 376 U. S. 685
On the evening of September 24, the United States filed an
ancillary action to the
Meredith v. Fair litigation
seeking a temporary restraining order against the State of
Mississippi, Governor Barnett, the Attorney General of Mississippi,
the Commissioner of Public Safety, and various lesser officials.
This application specifically alleged that the Governor had
implemented the State's policy of massive resistance to the court's
orders, by personal action, as well as by use of the State's
various agencies, to frustrate and destroy the same; that the
Governor's action would result in immediate and irreparable injury
to the United States, consisting of impairment of the integrity of
its judicial processes, obstruction of the administration of
justice, and deprivation of Meredith's declared rights under the
Constitution and laws of the United States. On the basis of such
allegations and at the specific instance of the United States as
the sole moving party and on its own behalf, the Court of Appeals
issued a temporary restraining order at 8:30 a.m. on the 25th
against each of these parties restraining them from performing
specific acts set out therein and from interfering with or
obstructing by any means its order of July 28 and that of the
District Court of September 13. Thereafter, the United States filed
a verified application showing that, on the afternoon of the 25th,
Governor Barnett,
"having actual knowledge of . . . [the temporary restraining
order], deliberately prevented James H. Meredith from entering the
office of the Board of Trustees . . . at a time when James H.
Meredith was seeking to appear before Robert B. Ellis in order to
register . . . , and that, by such conduct, Ross R. Barnett did
wilfully interfere with and obstruct James H. Meredith in the
enjoyment of his rights under this Court's order of July 28, 1962 .
. . , all in violation of the terms of the temporary restraining
order entered by the Court this day."
The court then entered a show cause order in contempt against
Governor Barnett requiring him to appear on September
Page 376 U. S. 686
28. On September 26, a similar order was issued against
Lieutenant Governor Johnson requiring him to appear on September
29. On September 28, the Court of Appeals, en banc and after a
hearing, found the Governor in civil contempt and directed that he
be placed in the custody of the Attorney General and pay a fine of
$10,000 for each day of his recalcitrance, unless he purged himself
by October 2. On the next day, Lieutenant Governor Johnson was
found in contempt by a panel of the court, and a similar order was
entered with a fine of $5,000 a day.
On September 30, President Kennedy issued a proclamation
commanding all persons engaged in the obstruction of the laws and
the orders of the courts to "cease and desist therefrom and to
disperse an retire peaceably forthwith." No. 3497, 76 Stat. 1506.
The President also issued an Executive Order, No. 11053,
dispatching a force of United States Marshals and a detachment of
the armed forces to enforce the court's orders. On September 30,
Meredith, accompanied by the Marshals, was moved into a dormitory
on the University campus and was registered the next day. Although
rioting broke out, order was soon restored, with some casualties,
and Meredith carried on his studies under continuous guard until
his graduation.
On November 15, 1962, the Court of Appeals,
sua sponte,
appointed the Attorney General or his designated assistants to
prosecute this criminal contempt proceeding against the Governor
and Lieutenant Governor pursuant to Rule 42(b) of the Federal Rules
of Criminal Procedure. On application of the Attorney General, the
Court of Appeals issued a show cause order in criminal contempt
based on the Court of Appeals' temporary restraining order of
September 25, its injunctive order of July 28, and the District
Court's order of September 13. It is out of this proceeding that
the certified question arises.
As we have said, the sole issue before us is whether the alleged
contemners are entitled as a matter of right to a
Page 376 U. S. 687
jury trial on the charges. We consider this issue without
prejudice to any other contentions that have been interposed in the
case, and without any indication as to their merits.
I
The First Congress, in the Judiciary Act of 1789, conferred on
federal courts the power "to punish by fine or imprisonment at the
discretion of said courts, all contempts of authority in any cause
or hearing before the same. . . ." 1 Stat. 83. It is undisputed
that this Act gave federal courts the discretionary power to punish
for contempt as that power was known to the common law.
In re
Savin, 131 U. S. 267,
131 U. S.
275-276 (1889). In 1831, after the unsuccessful
impeachment proceedings against Judge Peck, [
Footnote 3] the Congress restricted the power of
federal courts to inflict summary punishment for contempt to
misbehavior "in the presence of the said court, or misbehavior so
near thereto as to obstruct the administration of justice,"
misbehavior of court officers in official matters, and disobedience
or resistance by any person to any lawful writ, process, order,
rule, decree, or command of the courts. Act of March 2, 1831, c.
99, 4 Stat. 487, 488. These provisions are now codified in 18
U.S.C. § 401 without material difference. [
Footnote 4] The Court of Appeals proceeded in this case
under the authority of this section.
Page 376 U. S. 688
The alleged contemners claim, however, that the powers granted
federal courts under § 401 were limited by the Congress in 1914 by
the provisions of §§ 21, 22 and 24 of the Clayton Act, 38 Stat.
738-740, now codified as 18 U.S.C. §§ 402 and 3691. These sections
guarantee the right to a jury trial in contempt proceedings arising
out of disobedience to orders "of any district court of the United
States or any court of the District of Columbia," provided that the
conduct complained of also constitutes a criminal offense under the
laws of the United States or of any State. But the Clayton Act
further provides that the requirement of a jury does not apply
to
"contempts committed in disobedience of any lawful writ,
process, order, rule, decree, or command entered in any suit or
action brought or prosecuted in the name of, or on behalf of, the
United States, but the same, and all other cases of contempt not
specifically embraced in this section may be punished in conformity
to the prevailing usages at law."
18 U.S.C. § 402. Rule 42(b) of the Federal Rules of Criminal
Procedure thereafter set down the procedural requirements for all
contempt actions, providing that "[t]he defendant is entitled to a
trial by jury in any case in which an act of Congress so
provides."
We now proceed to a consideration of the claim of a right to
trial by jury under these statutes and under the Constitution of
the United States.
II
Governor Barnett and Lieutenant Governor Johnson first contend
that the record clearly shows that the United States invoked the
proceedings taken by the Court of Appeals and sought that court out
as a source of orders, duplicating the orders obtained by the real
party in interest in the District Court, solely for the purpose of
bypassing the District Court and depriving them of their right to a
jury. We find no evidence of this. Indeed,
Page 376 U. S. 689
the Court of Appeals granted injunctive relief only after it had
jurisdiction over Meredith's appeal, after it had acted upon that
appeal, and after its order was being frustrated.
Next, it is contended that the Court of Appeals had no
jurisdiction in the matter, since its mandate had been issued and
the case had been remanded to the District Court. [
Footnote 5] On a certificate, we do not pass
on alleged irregularities in the proceedings in the court below, as
such contentions are clearly premature. [
Footnote 6]
Page 376 U. S. 690
The alleged contemners next assert that § 402 is applicable.
They urge that, since § 402 gives a jury trial to those charged
with contempt in "any court of the District of Columbia," this
would include the Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia.
They argue from this that the section must be construed to apply to
all other Courts of Appeals to avoid manifest discrimination which
the Due Process Clause of the Fifth Amendment prohibits, and to
comply with the Privileges and Immunities Clause of Art. IV, § 2 of
the Constitution. We are not persuaded. At the time that the
Clayton Act was adopted, the trial court of general jurisdiction in
the District of Columbia was known as the "Supreme Court of the
District of Columbia," rather than the United States District
Court. Moreover, there were also inferior courts there known as the
municipal and police courts and now called the "District of
Columbia Court of General Sessions." Since none of these trial
courts of the District would have been included in the designation
"any district court of the United States," the insertion of "any
court of the District of Columbia" was necessary to adapt the bill
to the judicial nomenclature of the District of Columbia. It is
hardly possible to suppose that the House, where this phrase was
inserted without explanation, was somehow by this language
reversing the decision to exclude appellate courts from the jury
requirements. [
Footnote 7]
Page 376 U. S. 691
This is shown by the legislative history of the bill when
discussed in the Senate, 51 Cong.Rec. 14414, where it was made
explicit that the bill "applies . . . only to orders of the
district courts; contempts of orders of all other courts must be
had as now."
Nor can we conclude from the record here that the show cause
order directed by the Court of Appeals to the alleged contemners
must be construed as being founded upon violations of the District
Court's injunction of September 13, entered upon the specific order
of the Court of Appeals. The show cause order specifies that three
injunctions were violated,
i.e., the original one of the
Court of Appeals of July 28 directing Meredith's admission; the
District Court's aforesaid order of September 13, which generally
embodied the same terms; and the injunction of September 25
directed at the alleged contemners. The claim is, first, that the
District Court's order of September 13 superseded the earlier Court
of Appeals order of July 28, and that the September 25 order of the
Court of Appeals was without significance, since it added nothing
to the earlier orders except to specifically name the alleged
contemners. But it can hardly be said that there was a
supersession, since the July 28 order specifically retained
jurisdiction. Nor is the September 25 order of no significance, as
it is the principal order upon which the alleged contemners'
contemptuous conduct is predicated. Moreover, it may be that, on
trial,
Page 376 U. S. 692
the Court of Appeals will limit the charge to its own orders.
Secondly, it is said that, since the contempt motion includes an
order of the District Court, the requirements of § 402 and 3691
make a jury necessary. It would be anomalous for a Court of Appeals
to have the power to punish contempt of its own orders without a
jury, but to be rendered impotent to do so when the offensive
behavior happens to be in contempt of a District Court order as
well. We are unable to attribute to Congress an intent to award
favored treatment to a person who is contemptuous of two or three
orders, instead of only one. [
Footnote 8]
III
Finally, it is urged that those charged with criminal contempt
have a constitutional right to a jury trial. [
Footnote 9] This claim has been made and rejected
here again and again. Only six years ago. we held a full review of
the issue in
Green v. United States, 356 U.
S. 165 (1958). We held there that
"[t]he statements of this Court in a long and unbroken line of
decisions involving contempts ranging from misbehavior in court to
disobedience of court orders establish beyond peradventure that
criminal contempts are not subject to jury trial as a matter of
constitutional right."
At
356 U. S. 183.
Nor can it be said with accuracy that these cases were based upon
historical error. It has always been the law of the land, both
state and federal, that the courts -- except where specifically
precluded by statute -- have the power to proceed summarily in
contempt matters. There were, of course, statutes enacted
Page 376 U. S. 693
by some of the Colonies which provided trivial punishment in
specific, but limited, instances. Some statutes concerned the
contempt powers of only certain courts or minor judicial officers.
Others concerned specific offenses such as swearing in the presence
of officials or the failure of a witness or juror to answer a
summons.
But it cannot be said that these statutes set a standard
permitting exercise of the summary contempt power only for offenses
classified as trivial. Indeed, the short answer to this contention
is the Judiciary Act of 1789, which provided that the courts of the
United States shall have power to "punish by fine or imprisonment,
at the discretion of said courts, all contempts of authority in any
cause or hearing before the same." [
Footnote 10] It will be remembered that this legislation
was enacted by men familiar with the new Constitution. Madison
urged passage of the act in the House, and five of the eight
members of the Senate Committee which recommended adoption were
also delegates to the Constitutional Convention of 1787. 1 Annals
of Congress 18, 812-813. It is also asserted that a limitation upon
the summary contempt power is to be inferred from the fact that
subsequent statutes of some of the States had limitation provisions
on punishment for contempts. But our inquiry concerns the standard
prevailing at the time of the adoption of the Constitution, not a
score or more years later. Finally, early cases have been ferreted
out, but not one federal case has been found to support the theory
that courts, in the exercise of their summary contempt powers, were
limited to trivial offenses. [
Footnote 11] On the contrary, an
Page 376 U. S. 694
1801 opinion in the case of
United States v. Duane, 25
Fed.Cas. page 920, No. 14,997, had this significant language:
"But though the court have power to punish at discretion, it is
far from their inclination to crush you
by an oppressive fine
or lasting imprisonment. (Emphasis supplied.) They hope and
believe offences of this kind will be prevented in future by a
general conviction of their destructive tendency, and by an
assurance that the court possess both the power and the resolution
to punish them."
At 922.
Following this holding, we have at least 50 cases of this Court
that support summary disposition of contempts without reference to
any distinction based on the seriousness of the offense. We list
these in the margin. [
Footnote
12] It
Page 376 U. S. 695
does appear true that, since 1957, the penalties imposed in
cases reaching this Court have increased appreciably. But those
cases did not settle any constitutional questions as to the
punishment imposed.
And with reference to state cases, it is interesting to note
that the State of Mississippi has recognized and enforced summary
punishment for contempt for over 100 years under the authority of
Watson v. Williams, 36 Miss. 331 (1858), a celebrated case
that has been cited with approval in many state jurisdictions as
well as in cases of this Court.
See Ex parte Terry,
128 U. S. 289,
128 U. S.
303
Page 376 U. S. 696
(1888), and
In re Debs, 158 U.
S. 564,
158 U. S. 595
(1895). And just one year before we decided
Green, supra,
Mississippi specifically approved, in
Young v. State, 230
Miss. 525, 528, 93 So. 2d 452 (1957), its previous holding that the
"overwhelming weight of authority is that in such cases [contempt]
they [the defendants] were not entitled to a jury trial."
O'Flynn v. State, 89 Miss. 850, 862. [
Footnote 13]
We will make specific reference to only a few of the federal
cases. As early as 1812, this Court held that
"[c]ertain implied powers must necessarily result to our Courts
of justice from the nature of their institution. . . . To fine for
contempt -- imprison for contumacy -- enforce the observance of
order. . . ."
Mr. Justice Johnson, in
United States v. Hudson &
Goodwin, 7 Cranch 32,
11
U. S. 34. In the case of
In re Savin, supra, at
131 U. S. 276,
the first Mr. Justice Harlan writing for the Court said:
"[W]e do not doubt that the power to proceed summarily for
contempt in those cases [in presence of court, in official
transactions and in resistance to lawful process], remains, as
under the act of 1831. . . . It was, in effect, so adjudged in
Ex parte Terry [
supra, at
128 U. S.
304]."
And in
Eilenbecker v. District Court, 134 U. S.
31 (1890), a contempt was based on the violation of a
court order. Mr. Justice Miller said:
"If it has ever been understood that proceedings according to
the common law for contempt of court have been subject to the right
of trial by jury, we have been unable to find any instance of it.
It has always been one of the attributes -- one of the powers
necessarily incident to a court of justice -- that it
Page 376 U. S. 697
should have this power of vindicating its dignity, of enforcing
its orders, of protecting itself from insult, without the necessity
of calling upon a jury to assist it in the exercise of this
power."
At
134 U. S. 36.
And, in 1895, Mr. Justice Brewer in
In re Debs,
158 U. S. 564, a
leading authority in this Court, wrote:
"Nor is there . . . any invasion of the constitutional right of
trial by jury. . . . [T]he power of a court to make an order
carries with it the equal power to punish for a disobedience of
that order, and the inquiry as to the question of disobedience has
been, from time immemorial, the special function of the court. And
this is no technical rule. In order that a court may compel
obedience to its orders, it must have the right to inquire whether
there has been any disobedience thereof. To submit the question of
disobedience to another tribunal, be it a jury or another court,
would operate to deprive the proceeding of half its
efficiency."
At
158 U. S.
594-595.
Mr. Justice Holmes, in an equally well known and authoritative
decision for this Court,
United States v. Shipp,
203 U. S. 563
(1906), upheld the power of this Court, without a jury, to punish
disobedience to its orders. "The first question," he said,
"naturally, is that of the jurisdiction of this Court. The
jurisdiction to punish for a contempt is not denied as a general
abstract proposition, as, of course, it could not be with success.
Ex parte
Robinson, 19 Wall. 505,
86 U. S.
510;
Ex parte Terry, 128 U. S.
289,
128 U. S. 302-303."
He also emphasized that
"[t]he court is not a party. There is nothing that affects the
judges in their own persons. Their concern is only that the law
should be obeyed and enforced, and their interest is no other than
that they represent in every case."
At
203 U. S. 574.
Since
Shipp was a case of original jurisdiction in this
Court, testimony was then taken before a commissioner, not a jury,
214 U. S. 214 U.S.
386, 471. After argument, this
Page 376 U. S. 698
Court adjudged the defendants guilty,
214 U. S. 214 U.S.
386, and sentenced some of them to prison,
215 U. S. 215 U.S.
580.
Mr Justice Holmes also wrote another leading case in the
contempt field in 1914,
Gompers v. United States,
233 U. S. 604, in
which he made explicit what he left implicit in
Shipp,
supra:
"The inquiry was directed solely with a view to punishment for
past acts, not to secure obedience for the future, and, to avoid
repetition, it will be understood that all that we have to say
concerns proceedings of this sort only, and further, only
proceedings for such contempt not committed in the presence of the
court."
At
233 U. S.
606.
"
* * * *"
"It is urged in the first place that contempts cannot be crimes,
because, although punishable by imprisonment and therefore, if
crimes, infamous, they are not within the protection of the
Constitution and the Amendments giving a right to trial by jury. .
. . It does not follow that contempts of the class under
consideration are not crimes, or rather . . . offenses, because
trial by jury, as it has been gradually worked out and fought out,
has been thought not to extend to them as a matter of
constitutional right."
At
233 U. S. 610.
In 1919 Chief Justice White, in
Ex parte Hudgings,
249 U. S. 378,
restated the same principle in these words:
"Existing within the limits of and sanctioned by the
Constitution, the power to punish for contempt committed in the
presence of the court is not controlled by the limitations of the
Constitution as to modes of accusation and methods of trial
generally safeguarding the rights of the citizen. . . . [The] only
purpose is to secure judicial authority from obstruction in the
performance of its duties to the end that means appropriate for the
preservation and enforcement of the Constitution may be
secured."
At
249 U. S.
383.
Page 376 U. S. 699
Finally, Mr. Justice Sutherland, in
Michaelson v. United
States, 226 U. S. 42
(1924), in upholding the constitutionality of the sections of the
Clayton Act contained in 18 U.S.C. §§ 402 and 3691, said that these
provisions were of
". . . narrow scope, dealing with the single class where the act
or thing constituting the contempt is also a crime in the ordinary
sense. It does not interfere with the power to deal summarily with
contempts committed in the presence of the court or so near thereto
as to obstruct the administration of justice, and is in express
terms carefully limited to the cases of contempt specifically
defined.
Neither do we think it purports to reach cases of
failure or refusal to comply affirmatively with a decree --
that is, to do something which a decree commands . . . If the reach
of the statute had extended to the cases which are excluded, a
different and more serious question would arise."
At
266 U. S. 66.
(Emphasis supplied.)
It is true that adherence to prior decisions in constitutional
adjudication is not a blind or inflexible rule. This Court has
shown a readiness to correct its errors even though of long
standing. Still, where so many cases in both federal and state
jurisdictions, by such a constellation of eminent jurists over a
century and a half's span, teach us a principle which is without
contradiction in our case law, we cannot overrule it. The statement
of the High Court of Errors and Appeals of Mississippi 105 years
ago in
Watson v. Williams, supra, is as true, and perhaps
even more urgent, today: [
Footnote 14]
"The power to fine and imprison for contempt, from the earliest
history of jurisprudence, has been regarded
Page 376 U. S. 700
as a necessary incident and attribute of a court, without which
it could no more exist than without a judge. It is a power inherent
in all courts of record, and coexisting with them by the wise
provisions of the common law. A court without the power effectually
to protect itself against the assaults of the lawless, or to
enforce its orders, judgments, or decrees against the recusant
parties before it, would be a disgrace to the legislation and a
stigma upon the age which invented it. In this country, all courts
derive their authority from the people, and hold it in trust for
their security and benefit. In this State, all judges are elected
by the people, and hold their authority, in a double sense,
directly from them; the power they exercise is but the authority of
the people themselves, exercised through courts as their agents. It
is the authority and laws emanating from the people, which the
judges sit to exercise and enforce. Contempts against these courts,
in the administration of their laws, are insults offered to the
authority of the people themselves, and not to the humble agents of
the law, whom they employ in the conduct of their government. The
power to compel the lawless offender, against decency and
propriety, to respect the laws of his country, and submit to their
authority (a duty to which the good citizen yields hearty
obedience, without compulsion) must exist, or courts and laws
operate at last as a restraint upon the upright, who need no
restraint, and a license to the offenders, whom they are made to
subdue."
At 341-342.
The question certified to the Court is therefore answered in the
negative.
Page 376 U. S. 701
[
Footnote 1]
On January 21, 1964, Governor Barnett's term of office expired
and Lieutenant Governor Johnson became Governor.
[
Footnote 2]
"Where charges of criminal contempt have been initiated in this
Court of Appeals against two individuals, asserting that such
individuals willfully disobeyed a temporary restraining order of
the Court, which order was entered at the request of the United
States, acting as
amicus curiae pursuant to its
appointment by an order of the Court which granted to it, among
other rights, the right to initiate proceedings for injunctive
relief, and the acts charged as constituting the alleged
disobedience were of a character as to constitute also a criminal
offense under an Act of Congress, are such persons entitled, upon
their demand, to trial by jury for the criminal contempt with which
they are changed?"
[
Footnote 3]
See Nelles and King, Contempt by Publication in the
United States, 28 Col.L.Rev. 401, 423-430.
[
Footnote 4]
18 U.S.C. § 401:
"Power of court"
"A court of the United States shall have power to punish by fine
or imprisonment at its discretion, such contempt of its authority,
and none other, as --"
"(1) Misbehavior of any person in its presence or so near
thereto as to obstruct the administration of justice;"
"(2) Misbehavior of any of its officers in their official
transactions;"
"(3) Disobedience or resistance to its lawful writ, process,
order, rule, decree, or command."
[
Footnote 5]
In
Busby v. Electric Utilities Employees Union,
323 U. S. 72,
323 U. S. 75
(1944), we held that:
"This Court will not answer a question which will not arise in
the pending controversy unless another issue,
not yet
resolved by the certifying court, is decided in a particular
way."
(Emphasis supplied.) In the instant case, the issue of right to
jury trial is not simply a hypothetical, and was squarely presented
to the Court of Appeals after the court rejected, in the order of
October 19, 1962, the contention that it lacked jurisdiction. While
this Court denied the petition for writ of certiorari to review
that order,
Mississippi v. Meredith, 372 U.S. 916 (1963),
and while the issue is not before us now, the Court would not be
foreclosed from passing on the jurisdictional question if and when
it is properly presented here after the trial on the merits.
[
Footnote 6]
Interpreting the precursor of 28 U.S.C. § 1254(3), this Court
said in
Ward v.
Chamberlain, 2 Black 430,
67 U. S.
434-435 (December Term, 1862):
"Such certificate, as has repeatedly been held by this Court,
brings nothing before this Court for its consideration but the
points or questions certified, as required by the 6th section of
the act. . . . [N]othing can come before this Court, under that
provision, except such single definite questions as shall actually
arise and become the subject of disagreement in the Court below,
and be duly certified here for decision.
Ogle v.
Lee, 2 Cranch 33;
Perkins v. Hart's
Executor, 11 Wheat. 237;
Kennedy v. Georgia State
Bank, 8 How. 586,
49 U. S.
611. All suggestions, therefore, respecting any supposed
informality in the decree, or irregularities in the proceedings of
the suit, are obviously premature and out of place, and may well be
dismissed without further remark, because no such inquiries are
involved in the points certified, and, by all the decisions of this
Court, matters not so certified are not before the Court for its
consideration, but remain in the Court below to be determined by
the Circuit Judges.
Wayman v. Southard, 10 Wheat.
1,
23 U. S. 21;
Saunders v.
Gould, 4 Pet. 392."
[
Footnote 7]
This is buttressed by an earlier statement of the sponsor of the
bill at 48 Cong.Rec. 8778:
"The next criticism (of the former, rejected bill) was that it
provided for contempt in courts where there were no jurors. We
answered that, by confining the operation in this bill to the
circuit courts, to the courts where there are juries, and we exempt
its operation in the courts of appellate jurisdiction. We met that
criticism in that way. There has been none that I know of, or
little, if any, complaint made against abuse of the process of
contempt by appellate courts. It has been in the district courts,
in the circuit courts, in the courts of first instance, where this
abuse has occurred, and this bill limits it in effect to the
operation of those courts of the first instance where the abuses
have occurred and do now occur."
See also statements by two members of the House
Judiciary Committee, Representative Floyd at 48 Cong.Rec. 8780 and
Representative Davis at 48 Cong.Rec.App. 314.
See also
S.Rep. No. 698, 63d Cong., 2d Sess., p. 18.
[
Footnote 8]
Our disposition of the certified question makes it unnecessary
for us to reach the issue whether the orders allegedly violated
were "entered in any suit or action brought or prosecuted in the
name of, or on behalf of, the United States," §§ 402, 3691.
[
Footnote 9]
U.S.Const., Art. III, § 2, cl. 3; Amend. VI. Contemners also
claim under Amendments IX and X.
[
Footnote 10]
1 Stat. 83.
[
Footnote 11]
Statutes and cases dealing with limitations on summary power to
punish for contempt in the original 13 States have been compiled in
an
376
U.S. 681app|>Appendix, which follows this opinion.
[
Footnote 12]
United States v. Hudson &
Goodwin, 7 Cranch 32 (1812);
Anderson
v. Dunn, 6 Wheat. 204 (1821);
Ex parte
Kearney, 7 Wheat. 38 (1822);
Ex parte
Robinson, 19 Wall. 505 (October Term, 1873);
New Orleans v. Steamship
Co., 20 Wall. 387 (October Term, 1874);
In re Chiles,
22 Wall. 157 (October Term, 1874);
Ex parte Terry,
128 U. S. 289
(1888);
In re Savin, 131 U. S. 267
(1889);
In re Cuddy, 131 U. S. 280
(1889);
Eilenbecker v. District Court, 134 U. S.
31 (1890);
In re Swan, 150 U.
S. 637 (1893);
Interstate Commerce Comm'n v.
Brimson, 154 U. S. 447
(1894);
In re Debs, 158 U. S. 564
(1895);
Brown v. Walker, 161 U. S. 591
(1896);
In re Lennon, 166 U. S. 548
(1897);
Wilson v. North Carolina, 169 U.
S. 586 (1898);
In re Watts and Sachs,
190 U. S. 1 (1903);
Bessette v. W. B. Conkey Co., 194 U.
S. 324 (1904);
Nelson v. United States,
201 U. S. 92
(1906);
United States v. Shipp, 203 U.
S. 563 (1906);
Ex parte Young, 209 U.
S. 123 (1908);
Gompers v. Buck's Stove & Range
Co., 221 U. S. 418
(1911);
Baglin v. Cusenier Co., 221 U.
S. 580 (1911);
Gompers v. United States,
233 U. S. 604
(1914);
Toledo Newspaper Co. v. United States,
247 U. S. 402
(1918);
Ex parte Hudgings, 249 U.
S. 378 (1919);
Blair v. United States,
250 U. S. 273
(1919);
Craig v. Hecht, 263 U. S. 255
(1923);
Michaelson v. United States, 266 U. S.
42 (1924);
Cooke v. United States, 267 U.
S. 517 (1925);
McGrain v. Daugherty,
273 U. S. 135,
273 U. S. 157
(1927);
Brown v. United States, 276 U.
S. 134 (1928);
Sinclair v. United States,
279 U. S. 749
(1929);
Blackmer v. United States, 284 U.
S. 421 (1932);
Clark v. United States,
289 U. S. 1 (1933);
Nye v. United States, 313 U. S. 33
(1941);
Pendergast v. United States, 317 U.
S. 412 (1943);
United States v. White,
322 U. S. 694
(1944);
In re Michael, 326 U. S. 224
(1945);
United States v. United Mine Workers, 330 U.
S. 258 (1947);
In re Oliver, 333 U.
S. 257,
333 U. S. 274
(1948);
Fisher v. Pace, 336 U. S. 155
(1949);
Rogers v. United States, 340 U.
S. 367 (1951);
Hoffman v. United States,
341 U. S. 479
(1951);
Sacher v. United States, 343 U. S.
1 (1952);
Offutt v. United States, 348 U. S.
11 (1954);
Cammer v. United States,
350 U. S. 399
(1956);
Nilva v. United States, 352 U.
S. 385 (1957);
Yates v. United States,
355 U. S. 66
(1957);
Green v. United States, 356 U.
S. 165 (1958);
Brown v. United States,
359 U. S. 41
(1959);
Levine v. United States, 362 U.
S. 610 (1960);
Piemonte v. United States,
367 U. S. 556
(1961);
Ungar v. Sarafite, ante, at
376 U. S. 575
(1964).
However, our cases have indicated that, irrespective of the
severity of the offense, the severity of the penalty imposed, a
matter not raised in this certification, might entitle a defendant
to the benefit of a jury trial.
See District of Columbia v.
Clawans, 300 U. S. 617
(1937). There, Mr. Justice Stone, later Chief Justice, citing many
cases, said that
"commonly accepted views of the severity of punishment by
imprisonment may become so modified that a penalty once thought to
be mild may come to be regarded as so harsh as to call for the jury
trial, which the Constitution prescribes, in some cases which were
triable without a jury when the Constitution was adopted."
At
300 U. S. 627.
In view of the impending contempt hearing, effective administration
of justice requires that this dictum be added: some members of the
Court are of the view that, without regard to the seriousness of
the offense, punishment by summary trial without a jury would be
constitutionally limited to that penalty provided for petty
offenses.
[
Footnote 13]
The constitution of Mississippi, like that of the United States,
also assures the right of trial by jury in criminal cases. "In all
criminal prosecutions, the accused shall have a right to . . .
trial by an impartial jury of the county where the offense was
committed. . . ." Miss.Const., Art. III, § 26. "The right of trial
by jury shall remain inviolate. . . ." Miss.Const., Art. III, §
31.
[
Footnote 14]
The fact that
Watson was a case of civil contempt is
not relevant, since its rationale and language are broadly
applicable to contempt cases in general. Further,
Watson
has recently been cited with approval in a Mississippi criminal
contempt case,
Young v. State, supra, where the
Mississippi Supreme Court reaffirmed that there is no right to jury
trial in cases of criminal contempt.
Watson has also been
cited by this Court as authority on criminal contempt.
In re
Debs, 158 U. S. 564,
158 U. S. 595
(1895).
|
376
U.S. 681app|
APPENDIX TO OPINION OF THE COURT
This Appendix contains statutes and cases relevant to the
punishments for contempt imposed by colonial courts. Although the
authority cited here is extensive, it does not purport to be
exhaustive. Research in this period of history is hampered by the
fact that complete reports of appellate decisions in most
jurisdictions were not available until the nineteenth century.
Reports of the colonial trial courts are even more sparse, and this
has particular importance in our study, since contempt citations
were usually either not appealable or not appealed.
Numerous observations could be made concerning what is set forth
here. [
Footnote 2/1] For our
present purposes, however, we need only note that we find no basis
for a determination that, at the time the Constitution was adopted,
contempt was generally regarded as not extending to cases of
serious misconduct. Rather, it appears that the limitations which
did exist were quite narrow in scope, being applicable only to a
specific contempt [
Footnote 2/2] or
to a particular type of court.
Page 376 U. S. 702
CONNECTICUT.
The Code of 1650, a compilation of the earliest laws and orders
of the General Court of Connecticut, provided "that whosoever doth
dissorderly speake privately, during the sitting of the courte,
with his neighbour" should pay 12 pence fine, "if the courte so
thinke meett," and that whosoever revealed secrets of the General
Court should forfeit 10 pounds "and bee otherwise dealt withall at
the discretion of the courte. . . ." Code of 1650 (1822 ed.) at 40.
The same Code also decreed
"[t]hat whosoever shall . . . defame any courte of justice, or
the sentences and proceedings of the same, or any of the
magistrates or judges of any such courte, in respect of any act or
sentence therein passed, and being thereof lawfully convicted in
any generall courte, or courte of magistrates, shall bee punnished
for the same, by fyne, imprisonment, disfranchisement, or
bannishment, as the quality and measure of the offence shall
deserve."
Id. at 69. This provision was carried forward through
the time of the adoption of the Constitution.
See
Conn.Laws of 1673 (1865 ed.) at 41, and Conn.Acts and Laws (1796
ed.) at 142.
An "Act concerning Delinquents" provided that,
"if any Person or Persons upon his or their Examination or Trial
for Delinquency, or any other Person not under Examination or Trial
as aforesaid, in the Presence of any Court, shall either in Words
or Actions behave contemptuously or disorderly, it shall be in the
power of the Court, Assistant, or Justice to inflict such
Punishment upon him
Page 376 U. S. 703
or them as they shall judge most suitable to the Nature of the
Offence.
Provided, That no single Minister of Justice
[justice of the peace, whose criminal jurisdiction was limited to
cases in which 'the Penalty does not exceed the Sum of Seven
Dollars'] shall inflict any other Punishment upon such Offenders
than Imprisonment, binding to the Peace or good Behaviour to the
next County Court, putting them in the Stocks, there to sit not
exceeding two Hours, or imposing a Fine, not exceeding
Five
Dollars."
Conn. Acts and Laws (1796 ed.) at 143.
The first Connecticut statute we have been able to find which
limited the power of all courts to inflict punishment summarily is
cited in an 1824 edition of Connecticut statutes:
"If any person, in the presence of any court, shall, either by
words or actions, behave contemptuously or disorderly, it shall be
in the power of the court to inflict such punishment upon him, by
fine or imprisonment, as shall be judged reasonable: Provided,
however, that no single minister of justice shall inflict a greater
fine than seven dollars, nor a longer term of imprisonment than one
month; and no other court shall inflict a greater fine than one
hundred dollars, nor a longer term of imprisonment than six
months."
Conn.Pub.Stat.Laws, 1821 (1824 ed.) at 118-119. This statute
applied only to acts of contempt committed in the presence of the
court, and left "all other cases of contempt to be ascertained and
punished according to the course of the common law."
Huntington
v. McMahon, 48 Conn. 174, 196 (May Term, 1880).
Accord,
William Rogers Mfg. Co. v. Rogers, 38 Conn. 121, 123 (February
Term, 1871).
The same laws also made it a contempt, punishable summarily by
commitment and fine of $200, to refuse to perform or accept service
of a writ of habeas corpus. Conn.Pub.Stat.Laws, 1821 (1824 ed.) at
219-220.
Records of cases in the Particular Court between 1639 and 1663
reveal several summary contempt proceedings:
Page 376 U. S. 704
In 1639, Thomas Gridley was "Censured to be whipt at Hartford
and bound to his good behavior" for,
inter alia, using
"contempteous words against the orders of Court. . . ." Records of
the Particular Court of the Colony of Connecticut, 1639-1663 at 5.
Enoch Buck was fined 10 shillings "for irregular speeches in Court"
in 1648.
Id. at 60. In 1654, Will Taylor was committed to
prison for an unspecified length of time for his "Contemtuous
Carriage in the Courte. . . ."
Id. at 128. John Sadler was
ordered imprisoned for a day and fined 40 shillings in 1655 for
"Contemptuous Carriage against the Courte and Magistrates. . . ."
Id. at 152. In 1657, both parties in a case were fined 10
shillings for disorderly carriage in court.
Id. at 187. In
1663, for,
inter alia, "defameing the sentence of the
Court and one of the members thereof," Edward Bartlet was ordered
to prison for about 10 days and made to give 10 pounds security for
his good behavior.
Id. at 269. Connecticut Colony
Particular Court records also indicate various fines and
forfeitures, from two shillings, six pence, to four pounds, imposed
on nonappearing parties and jurors between 1647 and 1654.
(
E.g., Thomas Sherwood fined 40 shillings "for his
contempte in not appeareing att Court uppon summons,"
id.
at 47.)
In 1796, Zephaniah Swift, Chief Justice of the Connecticut
Superior Court, wrote of contempt:
"But tho all courts but assistants and justices of the peace,
have an
unlimitted discretionary power [emphasis
supplied], yet this cannot be deemed to authorize them to inflict
capital punishment. It can be supposed to extend only to fine,
imprisonment, or such corporal punishment as may be suited to the
nature of the offence, and according to the principles of the
common law."
II Swift, A System of the Laws of Connecticut (1796), at
374.
In 1823, Swift added:
"When courts punish for contempts, committed in their presence,
they must inflict a
Page 376 U. S. 705
definite fine, or imprison for a certain time in the manner
prescribed by the statute; but where they punish for contempts at
common law, or not committed in their presence
they may
imprison till the further order of the court. . . ."
(Emphasis supplied.) II Swift, A Digest of the Laws of
Connecticut (1823), at 359.
DELAWARE.
We were unable to find any Delaware colonial statutes dealing
generally with contempt. Two statutes, apparently passed during the
early part of the eighteenth century, provided maximum penalties
for certain types of offenses: jurors who refused to attend could
be summarily fined up to 20 shillings, and one who spoke in
derogation of a court's judgment or committed any rudeness or
misdemeanor in a court while the court was in session could be
fined up to five pounds. 1 Del.Laws (1797 ed.) at 117, 120. A 1739
or 1740 "Act against drunkenness [and] blasphemy" authorized a
maximum fine of five pounds for one convicted [
Footnote 2/3] of using, upon arrest by court order,
"abusive, reviling or threatening speeches against . . . [any]
court. . . ."
Id. at 174. An 1852 Act provided that judges
of the Superior Court could punish for contempt as fully "as the
justices of the king's bench, common pleas, and exchequer in
England, . . . may or can do." Del.Rev.Stat. (1852 ed.) at 317.
In 1818, the Kent Supreme Court said that,
"[f]or a contempt committed in the presence of a justice of the
peace, he may either imprison the offender for a definite period or
require sureties for his good behavior."
Patterson v. Blackiston, 1 Del.Cases, 1792-1830
(Boorstin), at 571, 573.
Page 376 U. S. 706
GEORGIA
Our research has uncovered no Georgia colonial statutes dealing
with contempt. An enactment in 1799 provided for the fine of
witnesses and jurors who neglected or refused to appear. Section XX
provided for attachment of witnesses and a fine not exceeding $300.
Section XLIV provided for a fine of $40 for grand jurors and $20
for petit jurors. Ga.Digest of Laws (1822 ed.) at 205, 210,
215.
An 1801 statute set a fine of $10 as the amount of punishment
that could be imposed upon a defaulting witness by a justice of the
peace. Ga.Laws, 1801-1810 (1812 ed.) at 17. An 1811 statute made
more specific mention of the contempt power of the justices of the
peace, providing that these officers could fine or imprison for
contempt, but not exceeding $2 or two days. Ga.Laws, 1811-1819
(1821 ed.) at 378.
The earliest reported Georgia contempt case is
State v.
Noel, Charlton's Reports (1805-1810) 43 (1806). There, the
mayor and marshal of the City of Savannah were fined $50 and $10,
respectively, for failing to comply with an order of the Superior
Court directing them to suspend certain City Council proceedings.
In 1807, the Superior Court said, in
State v. White,
Charlton's Reports (1805-1810) 123, 136 (1807), that the inferior
courts of record had the power to "inflict punishments at the
discretion of the court, for all contempts of their authority." No
specific punishment was indicated in that case. In
State v.
Helvenston, Charlton's Reports (1811-1837) 48 (1820), several
jurors were fined $5 each for having talked with persons not
officers of the court.
MARYLAND
It appears that, in colonial Maryland, there was but one
statutory enactment directly concerning contempts, and
Page 376 U. S. 707
this Act was applicable only to the court of chancery. This was
a 1785 Act providing that
"in order to enforce obedience to the process, rules and orders
of the chancery court in all cases where any party or person shall
be in contempt for disobedience, nonperformance or nonobservance,
of any process, rule or order, of the chancellor or chancery court,
or for any other matter . . . wherein a contempt . . . may be
incurred, such party or person shall . . . pay . . . a sum not
exceeding ten pounds current money . . . and may stand committed .
. . until the said process, rule or order, shall be fully performed
. . . and until the said fine . . . shall be fully paid. . . ."
II Kilty's Md.Laws, 1800, c. LXXII, § XXII.
Three other colonial Maryland Acts concerned only the
punishments of jurors and witnesses who failed to appear as
summoned and the enforcement of the rules of court. It is not clear
whether these were treated as contempts. A law enacted in 1715
provided that any person duly served with process to appear as a
witness who shall default and fail to appear, "shall be fined by
the justices of the provincial court one thousand pounds of tobacco
. . . ," or, by the county court, five hundred pounds of tobacco. I
Dorsey's Md.Laws, 1692-1839 (1840 ed.) at 20. Another 1715 statute
provided that the judges of the provincial and county courts in
Maryland could
"make such rules and orders from time to time, for the well
governing and regulating their said courts . . . as to them in
their discretion shall seem meet . . . [and shall enforce these
rules with] such fines and forfeitures as they shall think fit, not
exceeding one thousand pounds of tobacco in the provincial court,
and five hundred pounds of tobacco in the county court. . . ."
I Dorsey's Md.Laws, 1692-1839 (1840 ed.) at 24.
In 1782, the fines to be imposed on witnesses and jurors who
failed to appear were altered. The Act provided that.
"in all cases in which jurors or witnesses shall be summoned
Page 376 U. S. 708
to appear at the general court, and shall, without sufficient
excuse, neglect to appear, the general court may fine . . . not
exceeding thirty-five pounds current money."
The same provision applied to the county courts, but there the
fine was limited to 20 pounds. I Kilty's Md.Laws, 1799, c. XL.
The only reported Maryland case around the time of the adoption
of the Constitution is
State v. Stone, 3 Harris and
McHenry 115 (1792). There, the chief justice and associate justices
of the Charles County Court were each fined 20 shillings and costs
by the General Court for refusing to recognize a writ of certiorari
which had been directed to them.
The Archives of Maryland report several contempt citations by
the Provincial and County Courts from 1658 to 1675. The Provincial
Court fined Attorney John Rousby 100 pounds of tobacco for
violation of a court order that attorneys must speak in their
proper turns. Arch.Md. LXV, 585 (1675). Rousby and two other
attorneys were also fined 400 pounds of tobacco each for failing to
appear at the Provincial Court, and thus causing their clients to
suffer nonsuits. Arch.Md. LXV, 383 (1674). And another attorney,
who admitted that he had falsified a writ of the Provincial Court,
was summarily disbarred from practice. Arch.Md. LXV, 50 (1672).
The county courts imposed punishments for misbehavior in the
presence of the court: 500 pounds of tobacco for the use of abusive
language in court, Arch.Md. LIV, 566 (1673); 300 pounds of tobacco
for wearing a hat in the court's presence. Arch.Md. LIV, 146
(1658); 10 pounds of tobacco for taking the name of God in vain
before the court, Arch.Md. LIII, 84 (1660); and 300 pounds of
tobacco for using insolent language before the court, Arch.Md. LIV,
9 (1652). Between 1671 and 1674, the Provincial Court cited 23
persons for failure
Page 376 U. S. 709
to appear as jurors or witnesses in response to proper
summonses. Each was fined 500 pounds of tobacco. Arch.Md. LXV, 18,
21, 23, 25, 29, 31, 32, 40, 45, 141, 203, 246, 314.
MASSACHUSETTS
The Massachusetts Bay Colony and Plymouth Colony enacted many
early statutes relating to contempt. In 1641, the General Court
[
Footnote 2/4] decreed that no one
in Massachusetts should be imprisoned before sentence if he could
put up bail, except "in crimes Capital, and contempt in open Court,
and in such cases where some expresse Act of Court doth allow it."
Mass.Laws and Liberties (1648 ed.) at 28. Prior to 1648, another
General Court order provided "Fine, Imprisonment, Disfranchisement
or Bannishment" for one "lawfully convict" [
Footnote 2/5] in any General Court or Court of
Assistants of defaming any court of justice, any court order, or
any magistrate or judge with respect to a sentence imposed.
Id. at 36. In 1665, the General Court made a law
permitting corporal punishment for the contempt of refusing to pay
the fine imposed for "Prophanation of the Sabbath, Contempt or
Neglect of Gods Publick Worship, Reproaching of the Laws, and
Authority here Established. . . ." Mass.Colonial Laws, 1660 (1889
ed.) at 232.
Plymouth Colony laws provided that the Court of Magistrates
could punish "by fine, imprisonment, binding to the Peace or good
Behaviour" for disturbing the peace or defaming any court of
justice or judge thereof with
Page 376 U. S. 710
respect to any act or sentence. Compact with the Charter and
Laws of New Plymouth (1836 ed.) at 249. Fines were provided for
grand jurors who refused to serve (40 shillings), grand jurors who
failed to appear (10 shillings), and nonappearing witnesses (20
shillings).
Id. at 263, 192 (Acts of 1671, 1681).
A 1692 Massachusetts Act provided fines for cursing in the
hearing of a justice of the peace-five shillings for the first
curse (or two hours in the stocks if unable to pay) and 12 pence
for each curse thereafter (or three hours in the stocks). Mass.Bay
Charter (1726 ed.) at 9. Various fines were established for
nonappearing jurors (20 shillings before 1698, 40 shillings until
1711, four to six pounds until 1784, 40 shillings or five pounds as
of 1784), [
Footnote 2/6]
nonappearing witnesses (40 shillings), [
Footnote 2/7] and defendants who failed to appear before
a justice of the peace (10 shillings). [
Footnote 2/8]
Many early contempt cases are contained in the Records of the
Court of Assistants [
Footnote 2/9]
of Massachusetts Bay Colony, 1630-1692, and in several of these,
severe summary
Page 376 U. S. 711
punishments were inflicted. For example, in 1675 Maurice Brett
"for his Contemptuous Carriage Confronting the sentence of this
Court" was sentenced to stand for an hour with his ear nailed to a
pillory. At the end of the hour, the ear was to be cut off, and he
was to pay 20 shillings or be given 10 lashes. I Records of the
Court of Assistants at 57. Also: in 1643, Elizabeth Vane was
ordered committed at the pleasure of the court for abusing one of
the magistrates (she was released upon humble petition and
acknowledgment), II Records of the Court of Assistants at 132; in
1637, John Greene was fined 20 pounds, committed until the fine was
paid, and told not to come into this jurisdiction again "upon paine
of fine, or imprisonment at the pleasure of the Courte for speaking
contemptuously of the magistrates,"
id. at 71; in 1633,
Captain John Stone was fined 100 pounds and prohibited from
returning to the Colony without leave from the government "under
the penalty of death" for abusing an officer of the court,
assaulting him and calling him "A just asse,"
id. at 35;
in 1630 or 1631, Thomas Foxe was ordered whipped for saying that
the court acted in a case "as if they hadd taken some bribe,"
id. at 12; in 1634 ,John Lee was ordered whipped and fined
"for calling . . . [a court officer] false-hearted knave &
hard-hearted knave heavy friend,"
id. at 43; in 1637 or
1638, Thomas Starr was ordered fined 20 pounds, committed, and
enjoined to acknowledge his fault the next week for speaking
against an order of the court,
id. at 73; in 1638,
Katherine Finch was ordered whipped and committed until the General
Court for speaking against the magistrates and the Churches,
id. at 76; and in 1659, William Robbinson was ordered
whipped 20 lashes for contemptuous speeches against the whole court
and the governor, III Records of the Court of Assistants at 68.
In addition, Court of Assistants records show: in 1632, Thomas
Dexter was ordered set in the bilboes (device
Page 376 U. S. 712
used for punishment at sea, similar to stocks on land),
disfranchised, and fined 40 pounds for speaking reproachfully
against the government and for finding fault with various acts of
the Court, II Records of the Court of Assistants at 30; in 1634,
John Lee was ordered whipped and fined 40 pounds for speaking
reproachfully of the government (including a statement that the
Court of Assistants made laws to pick men's purses),
id.
at 49; in 1636, Thomas Miller was ordered committed for an
unspecified length of time for "certeine seditious &
opprobrious speaches, saying wee are all rebells, & traytors"
("wee" probably referring to the court),
id. at 63; in
1638 or 1639, Robert Shorthose was ordered set in the bilboes for
slighting the magistrate in his speeches,
id. at 81; and
in 1640, George Hurne was ordered committed (in irons) and whipped
for insolent and contemptuous carriage,
id. at 93. Various
fines for contempts are also reflected in the records. The only
instance we can find in which the Court of Assistants did not
proceed summarily to punish what was probably considered a contempt
is a 1686 case in which Samuell Shrimpton was indicted by grand
jury for denying the power of the government, defaming the General
Court and the County Court, and causing such a tumult in the court
to result in "breach of his Majesty's Government." I Records of the
Court of Assistants at 299.
In 1635, the General Court ordered John Endecott committed to
prison for an unspecified period "for his contempt in protesting
against the proceeding of the Court. . . ." He was released upon
submission and acknowledgment.
See Haskins, Law and
Authority in Early Massachusetts, at 207. The Records of the
Suffolk County Court from 1680 to 1698 reveal two other cases in
which men were ordered imprisoned for unspecified periods for
"contemptuous carriage in open court." John
Page 376 U. S. 713
Farnum (1681), Records of the Inferiour Court of Pleas (Suffolk
County Court), 1680-1698 at 111; John Jones (1685),
id. at
128. The Pynchon Court Record, 1639-1702, reveals three instances
in which a magistrate fined men for contempts of court.
See Colonial Justice in Western Massachusetts, 1639-1702
at 243, 271, 288.
In 1772, the Superior Court of Judicature ordered a party
committed for an unspecified period for savagely snatching papers
from his opponent's hand.
Thwing v. Dennie, Quincy's
Reports, 338.
See also the 1767 charge to the grand jury
of the chief justice of that court, in which he said that "[t]o
strike a Man in the King's Court will subject the Offender to the
Loss of his Hand and Imprisonment for Life," and implying that such
sentence could be given by the court summarily.
Id. at
245.
NEW HAMPSHIRE
The only relevant statutes existing in eighteenth century New
Hampshire that our research has uncovered were those directed
toward witnesses and jurors. An Act passed in 1791 provided that
courts could attach any witnesses who failed to appear and, if no
reasonable excuse was offered, fine them as much as 10 pounds. A
justice of the peace was allowed to fine up to 40 shillings for the
same offense. N.H.Laws (1792 ed.) at 96. Another Act of the same
year provided that grand jurors who failed to appear could be fined
up to three pounds. N.H.Laws (1792 ed.) at 105.
The 1792 New Hampshire Constitution specifically gave the power
to punish for contempt to the house of representatives, senate,
governor and council. The punishment which they could administer
was limited to 10 days' imprisonment. N.H.Laws (1815 ed.) at 10.
There was no mention of the contempt power of the New Hampshire
courts.
Page 376 U. S. 714
NEW JERSEY
Apparently no legislation concerning the punishment of contempts
existed in New Jersey until after the adoption of the Constitution.
The first statutory provision was enacted in 1798, and concerned
only witnesses and jurors in courts for the trial of small causes,
which courts had jurisdiction only where the amount in controversy
did not exceed $60. The law provided that defaulting jurors or
witnesses could be fined not more than $5 nor less than $1.
N.J.Rev.Laws (1800 ed.) at 317. In the following year, the
legislature provided that any circuit court juror who either failed
to appear or left a trial should be punished by a reasonable fine.
N.J.Rev.Laws (1800 ed.) at 395. And, also in that year, an Act was
passed dealing with the power of the Court of Chancery in matters
of contempt. It provided that
"to enforce obedience to the process, rules, and orders of the
court of chancery, where any person shall be in contempt . . . , he
shall . . . pay . . . a sum not exceeding fifty dollars,"
and shall be confined until the order of the court is complied
with and the fine and costs fully paid. N.J.Rev.Laws (1800 ed.) at
434.
In 1698, the Court of Common Right of East New Jersey fined a
contemner 50 pounds and placed him in prison until it should be
paid. Contemner had come before the court, demanded to know by what
authority it sat, denied that it sat by the authority of the King,
and resisted when the constable took him into custody.
Case of
Lewis Morrice, I Journal of the Courts of Common Right and
Chancery of East New Jersey, 1683-1702 at 311.
NEW YORK
Perhaps the earliest enactment concerning contempt in colonial
New York was the Charter of Liberties and Privileges,
Page 376 U. S. 715
passed by the General Assembly on October 30, 1683. Hamlin and
Baker, I Supreme Court of Judicature of the Province of New York,
1691-1704 at 147. The Charter contained a broad provision assuring
jury trials in numerous cases and stating that no freeman could be
imprisoned, deprived of his freehold or liberty or exiled except by
the judgment of 12 peers. However, there was a specific exception
from this jury requirement when the fault charged was a
contempt.
Our research has uncovered no other statutory provisions dealing
with contempt in New York prior to the Constitution. An 1801 law
provided that any person swearing in the presence or hearing of a
justice of the peace, mayor, recorder or alderman could be placed,
in a summary manner, in the stocks for one hour. N.Y.Laws, 1801
(1887 ed.) at 54. Then, in 1829, a fairly comprehensive statute was
enacted designating what actions constituted criminal contempts and
limiting punishments to $250 fine and 30 days in jail. 2
N.Y.Rev.Stat., 1828-1835 (1836 ed.) at 207.
There are few reported cases of contempt in colonial New York.
One notable instance occurred at the trial of John Peter Zenger in
1735. During the preliminary stages of the trial, Zenger's
attorneys filed exceptions to the court, taking the position that
the judges' commissions were defective because they had been
appointed by Governor Cosby to serve "at pleasure," rather than
"during good behavior," as required by law. The judges refused to
allow Zenger's attorneys to argue in support of these exceptions,
and, instead, cited the lawyers for contempt and disbarred them
from further legal practice. The order stated:
"It is therefore ordered that, for the said contempt, the said
James Alexander and William Smith be excluded from any farther
practice in this Court, and that their names be struck out of the
roll of attorneys of this Court."
Buranelli, The Trial of Peter Zenger, 89;
Page 376 U. S. 716
see also Alexander, A Brief Narrative of the Case and
Trial of John Peter Zenger, 53-55.
A few colonial cases are mentioned in Goebel and Naughton, Law
Enforcement in Colonial New York. Fines of 200 pounds were imposed
by the New York Supreme Court in 1763 and 1764 for contempt in
refusing to answer questions. At 243. In 1717, the Suffolk Court of
Oyer and Terminer ordered a week of imprisonment for one who had
affronted the King's Justices.
Id. at 606. And in 1729,
the Supreme Court imposed a fine of 10 pounds upon one who had
"privately given victuals to the jury."
Ibid.
One post-colonial case is worthy of mention, the case of
In
re Yates, 4 Johns. 317 (1809). Yates, an officer of the Court
of Chancery, was found in contempt for having forged a name upon a
bill filed in that court. He was sent to jail "there to remain
until the further order of the court." On writ of habeas corpus,
the New York Supreme Court held that this was a valid form of
commitment, and that the Supreme Court had no power to discharge
anyone committed for contempt by the Chancery Court. The commitment
in this case was not for the purpose of forcing Yates to comply
with the will of the Chancery Court, but rather for punishment.
Thus, Yates was imprisoned during the pleasure of the court for a
criminal contempt.
NORTH CAROLINA
Prior to 1868, North Carolina had few statutes dealing with
offenses which might have been considered contempts: a 1741 Act
carrying a fine of two shillings and six pence for profanely
swearing or cursing in a hearing of a justice of the peace, and a
fine of 10 shillings or punishment of up to three hours in the
stocks for swearing or cursing in the presence of any court of
record, I N.C.Pub.Acts 1715-1790 (Iredell, 1804 ed.) at 52; a 1777
Act
Page 376 U. S. 717
providing a fine of 50 pounds for nonappearance of witnesses, I
N.C. Laws (Potter, 1821 ed.) at 298; a 1779 Act fining jurors who
failed to appear at superior courts 200 pounds and fining
nonappearing "bystanders" 50 pounds, I N.C.Pub.Acts, 1715-1790
(Iredell, 1804 ed.) at 279; and a 1783 Act changing the fine
against jurors to 10 pounds and establishing fines of five pounds
for failing to appear as county court jurors and 20 shillings for
nonappearing "talismen,"
id. at 332.
The first general statute in North Carolina limiting the power
to punish summarily for contempt was enacted in 1868 or 1869. It
provided a maximum penalty of $250 and 30 days' imprisonment.
Statutes of 1868-1869, c. 177, § 2, cited in Battle's Revisal of
the N.C.Pub.Stat. (1873 ed.) at 257.
PENNSYLVANIA
Prior to the adoption of the Constitution, there were three
Pennsylvania statutes relevant to the punishment of contempts. The
Act of 1713, which established the orphans' courts of Pennsylvania,
provided that,
"if any person . . . summoned to appear . . . shall make
default, the Justices may send their attachments for contempts, and
may force obedience to their warrants, sentences and orders,
concerning any matter or thing cognizable in the same courts by
imprisonment of body, or sequestration of lands or goods, as fully
as any court of equity may or can do."
I Pa.Laws, 1700-1781 (1810 ed.) at 84.
A 1715 Act creating the "Supreme or Provincial Court of Law and
Equity" provided in § I that this court would
"exercise the jurisdictions and powers hereby granted concerning
all and singular the premises, according to law, as fully and amply
to all intents and purposes whatsoever as the justices of the
courts of King's Bench, common pleas and exchequer at Westminster,
or any of them, may
Page 376 U. S. 718
or can do, [
Footnote
2/10]"
and to
"correct and punish the contempts, omissions and neglects,
favors, corruptions and defaults of all or any of the justices of
the pleas, sheriffs, coroners, clerks and other officers within the
said respective counties."
III Pa.Stat. at Large, 1712-1724 (1896 ed.) at 66-67. Section
III of the same Act provided that, when sitting as a court of
equity, this court could enforce obedience to its orders and
decrees by
"like process, orders and proceedings thereupon, as are and hath
been used in like cases in or by the said courts of chancery or
exchequer in Great Britain. . . ."
III Pa.Stat. at Large, 1712-1724 (1896 ed.), at 68.
In 1722, Pennsylvania passed "An Act for Establishing Courts of
Judicature in this Province." Section VI said that these courts
"shall minister justice to all persons, and exercise the
jurisdictions and powers hereby granted concerning all and singular
the premises according to law, as fully and amply, to all intents
and purposes whatsoever, as the justices of the court of King's
Bench, common pleas and exchequer at Westminster, or any of them,
may or can do."
III Pa.Stat. at Large 1712-1724 (1896 ed.) at 303.
No Pennsylvania enactment was specifically directed to the
matter of criminal contempt until 1809. By the terms of this Act,
the summary contempt power of the several courts of the
commonwealth was limited to official misconduct of court officers,
disobedience of court process by officers, parties, jurors or
witnesses, and misbehavior of any person in the presence of the
court. The punishment of imprisonment for contempts was applicable
"only to such contempts as are committed in open court, and all
other contempts shall be punished by fine only." Pa.Laws 1808-1812
at 55-56.
Page 376 U. S. 719
In
Feree v. Strome, 1 Yeates 303 (1793), a witness
failed to appear as summoned to the Nisi Prius Court of Lancaster
County.
"He was reprimanded for his conduct, but, as he asserted, that
he did not conceive himself to be subpoenaed, he was dismissed
without any fine."
In
Respublica v. Oswald,
1 Dall. 343 (319), the Pennsylvania Supreme Court levied a fine of
10 pounds and an imprisonment of one month upon one who published a
contemptuous article. In passing sentence, the court said:
"some difficulty has arisen with respect to our sentence; for,
on the one hand, we have been informed of your circumstances, and,
on the other, we have seen your conduct: your circumstances are
small, but your offense is great and persisted in. Since, however,
the question seems to resolve itself into this, whether you shall
bend to the law, or the law shall bend to you, it is our duty to
determine that the former shall be the case."
At
1 U.S. 353.
The Supreme Court issued attachment for a contempt against
another publisher in
Bayard v. Passmore, 3 Yeates 438, 441
(1802). Contemner was required to secure his appearance by posting
$300, and was admonished to "consider well what atonement he will
make to the court . . . for the gross injury." It is later reported
that contemner was fined $50 and imprisoned for 30 days, to remain
in prison until the fine and costs were paid. 3 Yeates 442.
The Records of the Courts of Quarter Sessions and Common Pleas
of Bucks County, Pennsylvania, 1684-1700, report several contempt
attachments. Thomas Coverdale was fined five shillings for coming
into court drunk. (At 111.) Nine jurors were fined five shillings
apiece for their failure to appear as summoned. (At 391.) Two
others were fined three shillings apiece for the same offense. (At
211.) And there are three reports of one Richard Thatcher's being
committed for abusing the justices on the bench. (At 100, 198,
208.) In each instance, he was held in custody until the next day,
when he was
Page 376 U. S. 720
fined 50 shillings and committed until he could produce sureties
for his good behavior and his appearance at the next term of court.
(At 101, 199, 208.)
RHODE ISLAND
The only laws existing in colonial Rhode Island which in any way
concerned contempt of court were confined to the punishment of
witnesses and jurors for failure to appear in court. An Act which
was in force in 1798, but which probably dated back to 1729,
provided that, if a witness failed to appear, the court could bring
him before it by writ of attachment and impose a fine not exceeding
$20 and place the witness in prison until the fine was paid.
R.I.Laws (1798 ed.) at 206. Another Act, of like dates, provided
that jurors who failed to appear should forfeit and pay a sum not
exceeding $5. R.I.Laws (1798 ed.) at 185.
Research has disclosed very few contempt cases from colonial
Rhode Island. However, several cases are reported from the Court of
Trials of the Colony of Providence Plantations between 1647 and
1670. In two instances where persons used contemptuous words before
this court, they were required to post bond of 10 pounds sterling
to secure their future good behavior. I R.I.Court Records,
1647-1662 at 29, 51. A fine of five shillings was imposed upon
another who used contemptuous words to the court while drunk. II
R.I.Court Records, 1662-1670 at 58. And, between 1647 and 1662, a
total of 20 persons were fined 10 shillings each for failure to
appear as jurors when summoned. I R.I.Court Records, 1647-1662 at
16, 19, 29, 30, 35, 73, 77.
SOUTH CAROLINA
It appears that colonial South Carolina imposed broader
restraints upon its courts in the punishment of contempts than any
other Colony. A 1702 Act provided
Page 376 U. S. 721
that a witness who failed to appear at the Court of General
Sessions should pay 10 pounds plus damages, or up to 100 pounds if
he appeared but refused to give evidence. The witness could be
imprisoned until the fine was paid. II S.C.Pub.Stat.Law (Brevard,
1814 ed.) at 338. A 1731 statute reenacted these provisions and
provided that nonappearing jurors could be summarily fined 40
shillings. S.C.Pub.Laws (Grimke, 1790 ed.) at 129, 126. Under the
same Act, judges were permitted to fine up to 10 pounds for "any
misbehaviour or contempt" in court, and to imprison until payment
was made; and if any person used violence in the courts, the judge
could fine at his discretion and imprison until payment was made.
Id. at 129. An 1811 Act provided that, when an affray
occurred "to the disturbance of the court" when the court was
sitting, the judge could order the offenders brought before him and
"make such order or orders . . . as is or may be consistent with
law, justice and good order." Acts and Resolutions of the S.C.
General Assembly, December, 1811, at 33.
In
Lining v. Bentham, 2 Bay 1 (1796), a justice of the
peace had ordered a man imprisoned for accusing the justice with
gross partiality and abuse of power. The South Carolina
Constitutional Court of Appeals affirmed the "power of a magistrate
to commit for insults or contempts" offered in the presence of the
court. The court, however, added the dictum that contempts
committed out of the presence of the court "ought to" be prosecuted
by indictment.
In
State v. Johnson, 1 Brev. 155 (1802), a justice of
the peace had ordered a woman imprisoned for an unspecified length
of time for coming to his office, treating him contemptuously, and
threatening him. The Charleston Constitutional Court held that the
1731 Act providing punishment by fine for contempt in court did
Page 376 U. S. 722
not apply to justices of the peace, who have "indispensably
requisite" power to commit for contempt.
In
State v. Applegate, 2 McCord 110 (1822), a justice
of the peace had ordered a constable imprisoned for failing to
carry out his duties. The Charleston Constitutional Court ruled
that the constable had to be discharged, as all courts have the
power "[t]o commit for a contempt done in the face of a court," but
the power to imprison for a contempt done out of court is reserved
to "courts of the highest jurisdiction."
VI
RGINIA
The only colonial Virginia contempt statutes which we were able
to find were Acts specifying fines, usually in terms of pounds of
tobacco, for nonappearance of jurors and witnesses. [
Footnote 2/11] A 1788 Act established a
maximum fine of 10 pounds sterling for jurors "guilty of a contempt
to the court. . . ." 12 Hening's Va.Stat. at Large at 746. In 1792,
the limit was changed to $30. Va.Acts (1803 ed.) at 101. Another
1792 Act set forth procedures to be followed in issuing and
pursuing process of contempt. Va.Acts (1803 ed.) at 66, 90-91.
The first general contempt statute was passed in 1831. It
specified four different categories of contempts in which judges
had power to inflict punishments summarily. The power to punish the
first class of contempts -- misbehavior
Page 376 U. S. 723
in the presence of courts -- was limited to $50 or 10 days'
imprisonment. The other categories -- violence or threats of
violence to judges, witnesses or jurors, misbehavior of court
officers in official transactions, and disobedience to a court
order -- were not specifically limited. [
Footnote 2/12] Supp. to the Va.Rev.Code (1833 ed.) at
143-144.
In Criminal Law in Colonial Virginia, Arthur P. Scott discusses
early Virginia contempt cases. He states that
"[c]ontempt of court was sharply reproved. The least that was
required was an open apology, and the court often added a fine, or
commitment to prison, usually to last until bond for good behavior
was furnished. Sometimes an hour or two in the stocks was
prescribed."
At 171-172. [
Footnote 2/13]
Scott concludes:
"On the whole, a review of the attitude of the Virginia
magistrates would indicate that they acted reasonably and
moderately. The power
Page 376 U. S. 724
to punish for contempt is always open to abuse. The persons
injured are judges in their own case. The only safeguard, outside
of public opinion, lies in the character of the persons intrusted
with this power."
At 174.
[
Footnote 2/1]
For example, punishments of a former age must be judged by the
standards of that time, and not by the norms of the present. As
Professor Zechariah Chafee observed:
"The most significant fact is that the colonists seem to have
made very little use of the favorite modern method of punishment by
long terms of imprisonment. They got rid of the worst offenders by
executions . . . ; the others they usually subjected to some short
and sharp penalty, and then turned them loose or else sold them
into service. To imprison thieves and other rascals for years, as
we do, would have cost the taxpayers dear, left the prisoners'
relatives without support, and kept men idle when the community
wanted manpower. Consequently, most offenders were let out after
they had paid their fines and damages to the victim, or had been
whipped or otherwise disgraced."
1 Records of the Suffolk County (Mass.) Court, 1671-1680 at
lxxix.
[
Footnote 2/2]
The type of statute most frequently found in the Colonies is
that which provided for the punishment of witnesses or jurors who
failed to appear in court as summoned. While in most Colonies this
offense was regarded, and punished, as a contempt, it is not clear
whether it was so regarded and punished in all jurisdictions.
Some Colonies had statutes making it a contempt for jailers,
sheriffs, etc., to refuse to carry out an order of the court. In
general, we have not included such statutes.
[
Footnote 2/3]
It is not clear whether the use of the word "convicted" was
intended to preclude summary punishment.
[
Footnote 2/4]
From 1634 at least until 1672, the General Court was "the chief
Civil Power" of Massachusetts, its principal business being
legislation.
See 1 Records of the Suffolk County Court,
1671-1680 at xxi-xxii.
[
Footnote 2/5]
It has been argued that the words "lawfully convict" indicate
that formal process of indictment was required.
See
Haskins, Law and Authority in Early Massachusetts at 278.
[
Footnote 2/6]
See I Province of Mass.Bay: Acts and Resolves (1869
ed.) at 335,
id. at 374; Mass.Bay Charter (1726 ed.) at
254; I Mass.Laws 1780-1800 (1801 ed.) at 185, 189.
See
also Act providing that nonappearing grand jurors "shall be
proceeded against for contempt." Mass.Colonial Laws (1887 ed.) at
88.
[
Footnote 2/7]
I Province of Mass.Bay: Acts and Resolves (1869 ed.) at 374.
[
Footnote 2/8]
Id. at 72.
Also id. at 282-283.
[
Footnote 2/9]
The Court of Assistants consisted of the governor,
deputy-governor, and the other annually elected assistants or
magistrates. It was the institutional ancestor of the Massachusetts
Supreme Judicial Court and
"also had the functions of an upper house of the legislature and
a governor's council. For judicial business it met regularly twice
a year . . . to hear and determine appeals from the County Courts,
and to exercise original jurisdiction in 'all Causes of divorce,
all Capital and Criminal Causes, extending to Life, Member or
Banishment.'"
I Records of the Suffolk County Court, 1671-1680 at xx-xxi.
[
Footnote 2/10]
It has not been contended that the courts of England were
limited to trivial punishments for contempt.
[
Footnote 2/11]
1660: witnesses fined 1,000 pounds of tobacco for quarter
courts, 350 pounds of tobacco for county courts, 2 Hening's
Va.Stat. at Large at 23-24, 69; 1734: petit jurors before justices
of Oyer and Terminer fined up to 400 pounds of tobacco, 4 Hening's
Va.Stat. at Large at 404; 1777: witnesses not attending the General
Court fined five pounds (sterling) or 1,000 pounds of tobacco, plus
costs, Va.Pub.Acts (1785 ed.) at 73; 1788: same fine for District
Court witnesses, 12 Hening's Va.Stat. at Large at 748; 1792: grand
jurors fined up to $8, Va.Acts (1803 ed.) at 100.
[
Footnote 2/12]
See Yoder v. Commonwealth, 107 Va. 823, 833, 57 S.E.
581, 584.
"The first class is: 'Misbehavior in the presence of the court,
or so near thereto as to obstruct or interrupt the administration
of justice.' But the limitation of [this] section . . . does not
apply to the second, third, fourth, and fifth classes into which
[the general] section . . . is divided."
[
Footnote 2/13]
The following are cases cited by Scott at 172-173: in 1662,
William Hatton was bound over to the General Court for saying
(outside court) that the justices were not fit to sit; in 1684,
Robert Smith had to petition humbly for saying that the court had
done more than it could answer or justify; in 1685, Humphrey
Chamberlain was put in jail for standing with a drawn sword in the
road between the courthouse and the ferry, and fined five pounds
sterling plus the cost of repairing the prison for breaking his way
out; in 1703, Mary Russell was ordered to jail until she could give
bond for good behavior for saying that she had gotten as little
justice in court as she would have in hell with the devil sitting
as judge; in 1720, Colonel Bolling was similarly punished for
calling on God to damn the justices; and in 1748, Richard Dunning
was ordered committed for saying that the judges never did any
good.
MR. JUSTICE BLACK, with whom MR. JUSTICE DOUGLAS joins,
dissenting.
For many reasons, I cannot agree with the Court's opinion. In
the first place, Congress has never expressly given the Federal
Courts of Appeals jurisdiction to try and punish people for
criminal contempt of court, and I am unwilling to hold that such a
power exists in these courts in the absence of a clear and
unequivocal congressional grant. The business of trial courts is to
try cases. That of appellate courts is to review the records of
cases coming from trial courts below. In my judgment, it is bad for
appellate courts to be compelled to interrupt and delay their
pressing appellate duties in order to hear and adjudicate cases
which trial courts have been specially created to handle as a part
of their daily work. [
Footnote 3/1]
And, in particular, I believe that it is highly disruptive and
downright injurious to appellate courts for them to attempt to take
over and try criminal contempt cases, surcharged as these cases
almost always are with highly emotional quarrels.
Compare,
e.g., cases cited in
Green v. United States,
356 U. S. 165,
356 U. S. 199,
n. 8 (dissenting opinion). Appellate courts are too useful a part
of our judicial system to be subjected to such unnecessary ordeals.
I say unnecessary because trial courts are as qualified and capable
to try criminal contempt cases as they are to try others.
Assuming, however, that a United States Court of Appeals does
have jurisdiction to try criminal contempt
Page 376 U. S. 725
cases, I agree, for the reasons set out in
376 U.
S. that Congress has commanded that defendants in those
cases be accorded a right to trial by jury. His powerful arguments
on this point stand unanswered by the Court. Even in construing
statutes and rules governing civil cases, we have taken pains, as
Congress commanded, to resolve all doubts in favor of trial by jury
as guaranteed by the Seventh Amendment. [
Footnote 3/2] We should certainly be equally alert to
construe statutes governing trials for criminal contempt so as to
protect the right of jury trial guaranteed for the "Trial of all
crimes" by section 2, cl. 3 of Article III of the original
Constitution, and for "all criminal prosecutions" by the Sixth
Amendment.
I think that, in denying a jury trial here, the Court flies in
the face of these two constitutional commands. My reasons for this
belief were stated in
Green v. United States, 356 U.
S. 165,
356 U. S. 193
(dissenting opinion), and in other opinions cited in the margin
which I have written or to which I have agreed. [
Footnote 3/3] No provisions of the Constitution
Page 376 U. S. 726
and the Bill of Rights were more widely approved throughout the
new nation than those guaranteeing a right to trial by jury in all
criminal prosecutions. Subsequent experience has confirmed the
wisdom of their approval. They were adopted in part, I think,
because many people knew about and disapproved of the type of
colonial happenings which the Court sets out in its
376
U.S. 681app|>appendix -- cases in which, as reported by the
Court, people had been sentenced to be fined, thrown in jail,
humiliated in stocks, whipped, and even nailed by the ear to a
pillory, and punishments imposed by judges without jury trials.
Unfortunately, as the Court's opinion points out, judges in the
past despite these constitutional safeguards, have claimed for
themselves "inherent" power, acting without a jury and without
other Bill of Rights safeguards, to punish for criminal contempt of
court people whose conduct they find offensive. This means that one
person has concentrated in himself the power to charge a man with a
crime, prosecute him for it, conduct his trial, and then find him
guilty. I do not agree that any such "inherent" power exists.
[
Footnote 3/4] Certainly no
language in the Constitution permits it; in fact, it is expressly
forbidden by the two constitutional commands for trial by jury.
And, of course, the idea that persons charged with criminal
offenses such as "crimes" contempt are not charged with "crimes" is
a judicial fiction. As I said in
Green, I think that this
doctrine that a judge has "inherent" power to make himself
prosecutor, judge and jury seriously encroaches upon the
constitutional right to trial by jury, and should be
repudiated.
In
Green, the Court affirmed a three-year sentence
imposed for criminal contempt. But now, in
note 12 of its opinion in the present case the
Court has inserted an
Page 376 U. S. 727
ambiguous statement which intimates that, if a sentence of
sufficient "severity" had already been imposed on these defendants,
a majority of the Court would now overrule
Green in part
by holding that, if a criminal contempt charge is tried without
allowing the defendant a jury trial, punishment is constitutionally
limited to that customarily meted out for "petty offenses."
[
Footnote 3/5] I welcome this as a
halting but hopeful step in the direction of ultimate judicial
obedience to the doubly proclaimed constitutional command that all
people charged with a crime, including those charged with criminal
contempt, must be given a trial with all the safeguards of the Bill
of Rights, including indictment by grand jury and trial by
jury.
Whatever is included within the scope of "petty offenses,"
certainly if the present defendants committed the acts with which
they are charged, their crimes cannot be classified as "petty," but
are grave indeed. These defendants nevertheless, like others
charged with crimes, should have their cases heard according to
constitutional due process, including indictment and trial by jury.
Nothing less can measure up to the kind of trials which III and our
Bill of Rights guarantee. It is high time, in my judgment, to wipe
out root and branch the judge-invented and judge-maintained notion
that judges can try criminal contempt cases without a jury.
[
Footnote 3/6] It will
Page 376 U. S. 728
be a fine day for the constitutional liberty of individuals in
this country when that at last is done.
[
Footnote 3/1]
What I have said above, of course, has no application whatever
to the useful practice, authorized by statute, by which circuit
judges sometimes sit on District Courts and district judges
sometimes sit on Courts of Appeals.
See 28 U.S.C. §§ 2284,
291, 292.
[
Footnote 3/2]
See Dairy Queen, Inc. v. Wood, 369 U.
S. 469;
Beacon Theatres, Inc. v. Westover,
359 U. S. 500.
See also Simler v. Conner, 372 U.
S. 221. The Seventh Amendment provides:
"In Suits at common law, there the value in controversy shall
exceed twenty dollars, the right of trial by jury shall be
preserved, and no fact tried by a jury, shall be otherwise
reexamined in any Court of the United States, than according to the
rules of the common law."
[
Footnote 3/3]
See also, e.g., In re McConnell, 370 U.
S. 230;
In re Murchison, 349 U.
S. 133;
Offutt v. United States, 348 U. S.
11;
In re Oliver, 333 U.
S. 257;
Ungar v. Sarafite, ante, p.
376 U. S. 592
(DOUGLAS, J., dissenting);
Piemonte v. United States,
367 U. S. 556,
367 U. S. 565
(DOUGLAS, J., dissenting);
Levine v. United States,
362 U. S. 610,
362 U. S. 620
(dissenting opinion);
Brown v. United States, 359 U. S.
41,
359 U. S. 53
(WARREN, C.J., dissenting);
Yates v. United States,
355 U. S. 66,
355 U. S. 76
(DOUGLAS, J., dissenting);
Nilva v. United States,
362 U. S. 385,
362 U. S. 396
(dissenting opinion);
United States v. United Mine
Workers, 330 U. S. 258,
330 U. S. 328
(opinion of BLACK and DOUGLAS, JJ.)
[
Footnote 3/4]
See Green v. United States, 356 U.
S. 165,
356 U. S. 193
(dissenting opinion), and opinions cited
supra, 376
U.S. 681fn3/3|>n. 3.
[
Footnote 3/5]
"Some members of the Court are of the view that, without regard
to the seriousness of the offense, punishment by summary trial
without a jury would be constitutionally limited to that penalty
provided for petty offenses."
Ante, p.
376 U. S.
695.
[
Footnote 3/6]
Of course,
"it should be emphasized that we are not at all concerned with
the power of courts to impose conditional imprisonment for the
purpose of compelling a person to obey a valid order. Such
coercion, where the defendant carries the keys to freedom in his
willingness to comply with the court's directive, is essentially a
civil remedy designed for the benefit of other parties, and has
quite properly been exercised for centuries to secure compliance
with judicial decrees. . . . In my judgment, the distinction
between conditional confinement to compel future performance and
unconditional imprisonment designed to punish past transgressions
is crucial, analytically as well as historically, in determining
the permissible mode of trial under the Constitution."
Green v. United States, 356 U.
S. 165,
356 U. S.
197-198 (dissenting opinion). It was this kind of
conditional imprisonment for the purpose of compelling obedience to
a valid court order that was involved in
Watson v.
Williams, 36 Miss. 331, which the Court stresses so heavily at
the concluding part of its opinion. In that Mississippi case,
Watson refused to deliver property to minor children whose guardian
he had been. The lower court had entered an order "committing the
plaintiff to the jail of Lowndes county for safekeeping
until
he comply with the order of the court."
Id., 36 Miss.
at 340. (Emphasis added.) The Supreme Court of Mississippi
dismissed the appeal for want of jurisdiction. As I said in
Sacher v. United States, 343 U. S. 1,
343 U. S. 22
(dissenting opinion), with respect to this kind of conditional
civil contempt order, I agree with this statement of Mr. Justice
Holmes:
"I would go as far as any man in favor of the sharpest and most
summary enforcement of order in court and obedience to decrees,
but, when there is no need for immediate action, contempts are like
any other breach of law, and should be dealt with as the law deals
with other illegal acts."
Toledo Newspaper Co. v. United States, 247 U.
S. 402,
247 U. S.
425-426 (dissenting opinion).
MR. JUSTICE GOLDBERG, with whom THE CHIEF JUSTICE and MR.
JUSTICE DOUGLAS join, dissenting.
In response to the certified question, I would answer that
defendants have both a statutory and a constitutional right to have
their case tried by a jury.
A. THE STATUTORY RIGHT TO A JURY TRIAL
Defendants claim that 62 Stat. 844, 18 U.S.C. § 3691, entitles
them to a jury trial in this case. That statute provides in
relevant part that "the accused, upon demand therefor, shall be
entitled to trial by a jury" whenever the alleged contempt
"shall consist in willful disobedience of
Page 376 U. S. 729
any lawful writ, process, order, rule, decree, or command of any
district court of the United States by doing or omitting any act or
thing in violation thereof, and the act or thing done or omitted
also constitutes a criminal offense under any Act of Congress . . .
,"
except if the alleged contempt is
"committed in disobedience of any lawful writ, process, order,
rule, decree, or command entered in any suit or action brought or
prosecuted in the name of, or on behalf of, the United States."
The statutory right to a jury trial thus turns on three
essential factors: (1) the source of the order; (2) the nature of
the alleged violation; and (3) the character of the party that
"brought or prosecuted" the "suit or action." I conclude for the
reasons stated below that the District Court was the source of the
basic order in this case; that the nature of the alleged violation
would make it a criminal offense under 74 Stat. 86, 18 U.S.C.
(Supp. IV) § 1509; and that the "suit or action" in the case was
brought and prosecuted not by the United States, but by James
Meredith, a private party. It follows that defendants have a
statutory right to be tried for their alleged contempt by a jury of
their peers.
1. The Source of the Order
The show cause order entered by the Court of Appeals on January
4, 1963, specified three earlier orders which defendants allegedly
violated. [
Footnote 4/1] The acts
committed were alleged to be
"for the purpose of preventing compliance with this Court's [the
Court of Appeals'] order of July 28, 1962, and of the similar order
of the United States District Court for the Southern District of
Mississippi, entered on September 13, 1962, and were in willful
disobedience and defiance of the temporary restraining order
Page 376 U. S. 730
of this Court [the Court of Appeals] entered on September 25,
1962."
A brief analysis of the background and content of each of these
three orders is necessary to an understanding of the problem.
After James Meredith was denied admission to the University of
Mississippi, he filed suit in the United States District Court for
the Southern District of Mississippi, which denied the requested
relief. On appeal, the United States Court of Appeals reversed the
judgment and directed the District Court to order Meredith's
admission. The mandate of the Court of Appeals was then stayed by a
single judge of that court. The Court of Appeals immediately
recalled its mandate, issued a new one explicitly directing the
District Court forthwith to issue a permanent injunction compelling
Meredith's admission to the University, and vacated the stay
granted by the single judge. On July 28, 1962, the Court of
Appeals, in aid of its appellate jurisdiction, issued its own
preliminary injunction [
Footnote
4/2]
"[p]ending such time as the District Court has issued and
enforced the orders herein required and until such time as there
has been full and actual compliance in good faith with each and all
of said orders. . . ."
The Court of Appeals' preliminary injunction, which ran against
"the . . . [defendants,] all persons acting in concert with them,
as well as any and all persons having knowledge of the decree . . .
," was substantially the same as the permanent injunction which the
Court of Appeals directed the District Court to enter. A single
judge again stayed the mandates of the Court of Appeals, but, on
September 10, 1962, MR. JUSTICE BLACK, after consultation with the
members of this Court,
Page 376 U. S. 731
vacated all the stays issued by the single judge of the Court of
Appeals. [
Footnote 4/3]
Three days later, on September 13, 1962, the District Court,
declaring that the
"matter is now before [it] by virtue of the Mandate of the
United States Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit and the
Mandate of MR. JUSTICE BLACK . . . ,"
issued a permanent injunction as directed by the Court of
Appeals. [
Footnote 4/4] This
injunction was substantially identical with the preliminary
injunction issued by the Court of Appeals on July 28, 1962.
At this juncture, therefore, two substantially identical
injunctions appear to have been in effect: the "preliminary" one
issued by the Court of Appeals on July 28, 1962, and the
"permanent" one issued by the District Court on September 13
pursuant to the mandate of the Court of Appeals. The show cause
order subsequently entered against defendants by the Court of
Appeals alleges separate violations of both injunctions. It seems
clear, however, that any act allegedly committed by contemners in
violation of the preliminary injunction would necessarily have
violated the permanent injunction as well. This Court has held that
a single act or course of conduct alleged to be in violation of two
identical orders cannot be punished as two separate contempts.
See Yates v. United States, 355 U. S.
66.
Also see United States v. Costello, 198
F.2d 200. This is no less true if the two orders were issued by
different federal courts, especially if the earlier order was
designated "preliminary" and the later one "permanent." I would
conclude, therefore, that, at least for purposes of a contempt
conviction, the preliminary injunction entered by the Court of
Appeals on July 28, 1962, to protect its appellate jurisdiction,
was superseded by the substantially identical permanent
Page 376 U. S. 732
injunction entered by the District Court on September 13,
pursuant to the mandates of the Court of Appeals and MR. JUSTICE
BLACK.
It is argued, however, that the preliminary injunction entered
by the Court of Appeals on July 28, 1962, explicitly applied until
James Meredith's "actual admission" to the University. This part of
the Court of Appeals' order must be construed in the context of the
other orders entered on July 28, 1962, and the immediately
preceding days. During this time, the Court of Appeals was
attempting finally and definitively to secure James Meredith's
admission to the University. To accomplish this, it concluded,
correctly, I think, that there should be no lapse in the operation
of the substantive terms of the injunction until the desired end
had been achieved. Therefore, the Court of Appeals announced the
terms of the injunction which would be in effect from that time
until Meredith's admission was secured. It also issued a mandate
requiring the District Court to incorporate these terms into a
permanent injunction. The operative effect of these orders was
that, in the event that the District Court's permanent injunction
failed fully to incorporate the substantive terms of the Court of
Appeals' preliminary injunction, then the unincorporated provision
would remain in effect as an order of the Court of Appeals. But, in
the event that the District Court's permanent injunction fully
incorporated the substantive terms of the Court of Appeals'
preliminary injunction, then the injunction would become an order
of the District Court. In this way, the Court of Appeals was
assured that each of the substantive terms of its injunction would
remain in effect from the time of the order until Meredith's
admission, and that none of the terms of the injunction would
simultaneously be incorporated in orders of two courts. The
District Court's permanent
Page 376 U. S. 733
injunction did, in fact, incorporate all the substantive terms
of the Court of Appeals' preliminary injunction. Thus, so long as
it remained in effect, as it did until Meredith's admission, it
necessarily superseded the Court of Appeals' preliminary
injunction. It follows from this that defendants' acts, which
allegedly violated both the Court of Appeals' order of July 28,
1962, and the District Court's order of September 13, 1962, must be
deemed only alleged violations of the District Court's permanent
injunction of September 13, 1962. Any allegation of contempt of the
Court of Appeals' preliminary injunction of July 28, 1962, must be
deemed without legal significance for purposes of this
proceeding.
The third and last order which defendants were accused of
violating was "the temporary restraining order of this Court (the
Court of Appeals) entered on September 25, 1962." [
Footnote 4/5] That order specifically named
defendant Barnett and others, and temporarily restrained them "and
all persons in active concert or participation with them" from
"interfering with or obstructing" compliance with the Court of
Appeals' order of July 28, 1962, and with the District Court's
order of September 13, 1962. It also restrained them from
committing other designated acts which were not specifically
covered by the earlier orders (
e.g., instituting civil or
criminal actions against Meredith). Defendants, however, were not
accused in the show cause order of violating the entire temporary
restraining order of September 25, 1962, but only that part of the
order restraining them
"from interfering with or obstructing the enjoyment of rights or
the performance of duties under the order of this Court [the Court
of Appeals] of July 28, 1962, in the case of
Meredith v.
Fair, and a similar order of the District Court for the
Southern
Page 376 U. S. 734
District of Mississippi in that case. . . ."
Each specified violation in the show cause order related to the
permanent injunction of September 13, 1962, and the preliminary
injunction of July 28, 1962. Defendants, in their notice of "the
essential facts constituting the criminal contempt charged," Rule
42(b), Fed.Rules Crim.Proc., received no notice that they were
being charged with violating any provisions of the Court of
Appeals' temporary restraining order of September 25, 1962, other
than those derived directly from the earlier orders.
With respect to the alleged contempt here charged, therefore,
the Court of Appeals' temporary restraining order added nothing to
the earlier orders except to name specifically one of the
defendants. But this was obviously unnecessary, as the Government
must concede. Governor Barnett must be deemed included within the
coverage of the earlier orders enjoining "all persons acting in
concert with [the named defendants], as well as any and all persons
having knowledge of the decree. . . ." Were this not so, Governor
Barnett's alleged contempts of the earlier orders would have to
fall, as would Lieutenant Governor Johnson's alleged contempt of
all the orders he is accused of violating, since he was not
specifically named in any of them.
Thus, unless form is to prevail over substance, we must conclude
that there has been no independently alleged violation of the Court
of Appeals' temporary restraining order of September 25, 1962. That
order therefore has no bearing on whether defendants have a
statutory right to a jury trial.
In sum, therefore, I conclude that the District Court's
permanent injunction of September 13, 1962, superseded and replaced
the Court of Appeals' substantially identical preliminary
injunction of July 28, 1962, and that the Court of Appeals'
temporary restraining order
Page 376 U. S. 735
of September 25, 1962, as it is relevant here, added nothing to
the earlier orders. Thus, although the show cause order alleged
contempts of two orders of the Court of Appeals and one order of
the District Court, I would hold that, for purposes of deciding
whether 18 U.S.C. § 3691 is applicable, defendants have been
charged with violating only one order, which was issued by a
"district court of the United States."
Even if I were to agree with the Court, however, that defendants
were effectively charged with contempt of all three orders, my
conclusion would remain the same. The statute does not say in
negative terms that, whenever the alleged contempt "shall consist
in willful disobedience of any lawful . . . order" of any Court of
Appeals, the accused shall
not be entitled to a trial by a
jury. It says in affirmative terms that, whenever the alleged
contempt "shall consist in willful disobedience of any lawful . . .
order . . . of any district court . . . , the accused . . .
shall be entitled to trial by a jury." (Emphasis added.)
Defendants here are charged with disobedience of an order of a
District Court. The fact that they are charged also with
disobedience of orders of a Court of Appeals should not defeat
their statutory right to a jury trial.
2. The Nature of the Alleged Violation
The second relevant question in deciding whether defendants have
a statutory right to a jury trial is whether "the act or thing done
or omitted also constitutes a criminal offense under any Act of
Congress. . . ." 18 U.S.C. § 3691. This is not in dispute here. The
question certified by the Court of Appeals specified that "the acts
charged as constituting the alleged disobedience were of a
character as to constitute also a criminal offense under an Act of
Congress. . . ." While the Court is not bound by the facts assumed
in a certified question, it is clear here
Page 376 U. S. 736
that contemners' alleged acts would constitute violations of 18
U.S.C. (Supp. IV) § 1509. [
Footnote
4/6] The Government does not dispute this.
3. The Character of the Party Which Brought the Suit or
Action
The third and final question in deciding whether defendants have
a statutory right to a jury trial is whether the alleged contempt
was
"committed in disobedience of any lawful writ, process, order,
rule, decree, or command entered in any suit or action brought or
prosecuted in the name of, or on behalf of, the United States."
18 U.S.C. § 3691.
The Government contends that it entered the case on September
18, 1962, and that the Court of Appeals' temporary restraining
order of September 25, 1962, which was issued on its motion, was
thus an order entered in a suit or "action brought or prosecuted in
the name of, or on behalf of, the United States." My previous
conclusion -- that the Court of Appeals' order of September 25,
1962, was of no legal significance so far as the charged contempts
are concerned -- provides a complete answer to the Government's
contention. If I am correct in concluding that the only operative
order was the permanent injunction entered by the District Court on
September 13, 1962, at a time when no one claims the United States
had any formal interest in the case, then it necessarily follows
that defendants are charged with contempt of an order entered in a
suit brought in the name of, and on behalf of, a private party, and
not the United States.
Page 376 U. S. 737
Even assuming
arguendo that the Court of Appeals' order
of September 25, 1962, had some independent legal significance, I
could not conclude, as the Court does, that it was "entered in any
suit or action brought or prosecuted in the name of, or on behalf
of, the United States." The Court of Appeals' order authorizing the
United States to participate in the case, authorized it to
participate "as
amicus curiae," not as a party. It also
authorized the United States
"to submit pleadings, evidence, arguments and briefs and to
initiate such further proceedings, including proceedings for
injunctive relief and proceedings for contempt of court. . . ."
The Court of Appeals entered the temporary restraining order of
September 25, 1962, on motion made by the United States pursuant to
this authorization. But the applicable statute does not exempt from
the protection of a jury trial "contempts committed in disobedience
of any lawful . . . order . . . entered"
upon motion by the
United States. It only exempts contempts committed in
disobedience of "any lawful . . . order . . . entered
in any
suit or action brought or prosecuted in the name of, or on behalf
of, the United States." (Emphasis added.) The touchstone of
the exemption is thus the party who brought or prosecuted the basic
suit or action, not the party upon whose motion the violated order
was entered. This reading of the statute is buttressed by the
repeated references in the congressional debates to suits where the
United States is a "party."
See, e.g., 48 Cong.Rec. 8780,
8785; 51 Cong.Rec. 9672, 14413, 15946.
The Government contends, however, that it was, in effect, a
party to the suit, because of:
"[t]he critical fact . . . that, in instituting and prosecuting
those proceedings, the United States was asserting an interest of
its own separate and distinct from that of the plaintiff in the
original action.
Page 376 U. S. 738
The interest of the United States was the sovereign's
independent concern for preserving the integrity of its courts and
vindicating their authority."
But this alone does not convert the United States from an
amicus curiae into a party. A traditional function of an
amicus is to assert "an interest of its own separate and
distinct from that of the [parties]," whether that interest be
private or public. It is "customary for those whose rights [depend]
on the outcome of cases . . . to file briefs
amicus curiae
in order to protect their own interests." Wiener, Briefing and
Arguing Federal Appeals (1961), 269. This Court has recognized the
power of federal courts to appoint "
amici to represent the
public interest in the administration of justice."
Universal
Oil Products Co. v. Root Rfg. Co., 328 U.
S. 575,
328 U. S. 581.
In this case, the Government was serving essentially in that
capacity. Its ultimate interest -- securing compliance with the
courts' orders requiring Meredith's admission -- was identical with
the interest of the private plaintiff, and it was invited by the
court to render necessary aid in that direction.
The Government's argument thus goes too far. "After all, a
federal court can always call on law officers of the United States
to serve as
amici" "to represent the public interest in
the administration of justice."
Ibid. The Government has
"an interest of its own" in vindicating its authority in every
instance where the orders of its courts are violated, no matter how
private or insignificant the suit. (This is evidenced by the fact
that criminal contempt proceedings are typically prosecuted by the
sovereign, not the private litigant.) In this respect, every
criminal contempt proceeding is actually (or at least potentially)
a "suit or action brought or prosecuted in the name of, or on
behalf of, the United States." Such a reading would, of course,
make the statute a dead letter. It would bestow no "right" to a
jury trial at all.
Page 376 U. S. 739
We are dealing here with a remedial statute broadly designed to
afford the right to a jury trial in all but a narrowly limited
category of contempts constituting violations of criminal statutes.
Accordingly, the statute should be construed to effectuate its
basic purpose, and its exemptions should not be unduly expanded by
judicial construction. The Government concedes that the precise
problem involved here -- the United States entering a private
litigation as
amicus curiae and obtaining the order
allegedly violated -- "did not arise in the course of the
legislative history." In my view, therefore, since a reading of the
statute inclines against applying the exception here, and since
there are no countervailing policy considerations, the statutory
exemption should be read so as not to apply to the defendants.
The foregoing satisfies me that the alleged contempt was of an
order of a District Court; that the alleged acts also constitute a
criminal violation under an Act of Congress; that the relevant
order was not entered in a suit or action brought or prosecuted in
the name of, or on behalf of, the United States; and that,
accordingly, defendants are entitled to a jury trial pursuant to 18
U.S.C. § 3691. Insofar as there may be lingering doubts concerning
the application of that statute to the circumstances here, I would
resolve those doubts in favor of the statutory right to a jury
trial in order to avoid the grave constitutional questions inherent
in the practice of punishing contempts such as the one here charged
without trial by jury. Since the Court has not accepted this
statutory analysis, I must consider these constitutional
questions.
B. THE CONSTITUTIONAL RIGHT TO A JURY TRIAL
The Court, in denying defendants' constitutional claim to a jury
trial, rests on the history of criminal contempts relied on in its
past decisions. The most recent of these decisions is
Green v.
United States, 356 U. S. 165,
Page 376 U. S. 740
which was decided by a closely divided Court. [
Footnote 4/7] The Court said:
"The principle that criminal contempts of court are not required
to be tried by a jury under Article III or the Sixth Amendment is
firmly rooted in our traditions."
Id. at
356 U. S.
187.
"Against this historical background [of the power to punish
criminal contempts summarily at the time of the Constitution], this
Court has never deviated from the view that the constitutional
guarantee of trial by jury for 'crimes' and 'criminal prosecutions'
was not intended to reach to criminal contempts."
Id. at
356 U. S. 186.
A review of the original sources convinces me, however, that the
history relied on by the decisions of this Court does not justify
the relatively recent practice of imposing serious punishment for
criminal contempts without a trial by jury. My research, which is
confirmed by the authorities cited in the
376
U.S. 681app|>Appendix to the opinion of the Court, suggests
the following explanation as to why criminal contempts were
generally tried without a jury at the time of the Constitution: the
penalties then authorized and imposed for criminal contempts were
generally minor; and the courts were authorized to impose minor
criminal penalties without a trial by jury for a variety of trivial
offenses including, but not limited to, criminal contempts.
1. Criminal Contempts at About the Time of the
Constitution
In 1821, this Court recognized that there were "known and
acknowledged limits of fine and imprisonment" for
Page 376 U. S. 741
criminal contempt.
Anderson v.
Dunn, 6 Wheat. 204,
19 U. S. 228.
[
Footnote 4/8] What these limits
were at about the time of the Constitution can best be derived from
the contemporary statutory and case law.
When the Bill of Rights was ratified, at least five of the
original 13 States had specific statutory limitations on the
punishment which could be imposed summarily for criminal contempts.
The Connecticut statute permitting summary punishment for certain
types of contempts contained a proviso
"[t]hat no single minister of justice shall inflict any other
punishment [for criminal contempt than] . . . putting them in the
stocks, there to sit not exceeding two hours; or imposing a fine,
not exceeding
five dollars. [
Footnote 4/9]"
(Emphasis in original.) The Delaware statute permitted a
contemner to "be fined in any sum not exceeding Five Pounds"; it
did not permit imprisonment for criminal contempt. [
Footnote 4/10] The Maryland statute
permitted
Page 376 U. S. 742
the court to hold the contemner "in close custody until the said
process, rule or order, shall be fully performed . . ." (civil
contempt), but it permitted no punishment "exceeding ten pounds
current money." [
Footnote 4/11]
The New Hampshire provision permitted imprisonment for contempt not
exceeding 10 days and a fine "not to exceed ten pounds." [
Footnote 4/12] The South Carolina statute
permitted a fine not exceeding 10 pounds for any contempt "by word
or gesture," and a fine "at the discretion of the said court," for
anyone who shall "strike or use any violence in the said courts";
[
Footnote 4/13] it did not permit
imprisonment. [
Footnote 4/14]
Page 376 U. S. 743
Within a short time after the ratification of the Bill of
Rights, other States enacted statutes containing specific
limitations on the punishments which could be imposed summarily for
criminal contempts. These statutes, which appear to be
codifications of existing practices and court decisions, rather
than newly created legislative limitations, [
Footnote 4/15]
Page 376 U. S. 744
shed additional light on the practice at about the time of the
Constitution.
The New Jersey statute permitted a contemner to be punished by a
fine "not exceeding fifty dollars." [
Footnote 4/16] The
Page 376 U. S. 745
Kentucky statute specified that
"[n]o court or judge shall, for any contempt against such court
or judge, pass judgment for, decree, order or inflict, or cause to
be inflicted,
Page 376 U. S. 746
any fine exceeding the sum of ten pounds, nor any imprisonment
exceeding one day,
without the trial by jury to assess the
quantity of such fine, and determine the duration of such
imprisonment. [
Footnote
4/17]"
The Pennsylvania statute permitted an unspecified fine and if
the contemner "shall be unable to pay such fine, such person may be
committed to prison by the court for any time not exceeding three
months." [
Footnote 4/18] The New
York statute permitted a maximum fine of $250 and imprisonment for
30 days in summary proceedings for criminal contempts. [
Footnote 4/19]
The Alabama criminal contempt statute declared that:
"
whereas, the trial by jury in all penal as well as
criminal cases is both a safe and adequate mode of investigation
and decision, and should only be suspended in cases of absolute
necessity,
be it enacted that no court shall, for any
contempt against such court, . . . inflict . . . any fine exceeding
the sum of twenty dollars, nor any imprisonment exceeding
twenty-four hours, without the trial by jury to assess the amount
of such fine and determine the duration of such imprisonment.
[
Footnote 4/20]"
The Virginia statute was quite detailed. It contained the
following proviso:
"That no court shall, without the intervention of a jury, for
any such contempt of misbehaviour in the presence of the court, or
so near thereto as to obstruct or interrupt the administration of
justice
Page 376 U. S. 747
therein, impose any fine on any person or persons, exceeding
fifty dollars, or commit him, her or them for a longer period than
ten days,
and provided that in any case of aggravated
contempt . . . , the court may impannel a jury, without any
indictment, information or pleadings, in a summary manner, to
ascertain the amount of fine or term of imprisonment, proper to be
inflicted for such offence, and may impose the fine or imprisonment
ascertained by the jury in manner aforesaid. [
Footnote 4/21]"
The laws of other States similarly limited the maximum penalties
which could be imposed summarily for criminal contempts. [
Footnote 4/22]
Page 376 U. S. 748
The available evidence of the practice in criminal contempt
cases also suggests that punishments were trivial. [
Footnote 4/23] This practice was
described by Chief Justice Kent in 1809 as follows:
"There is no such thing as an abuse of this power in modern
times. The case probably is not to be found. An alarm cannot be
excited at its existence in the extent now laid down. . . . The
tendency of the times is rather to induce the courts to relax than
increase in the severity of their ancient discipline, to exercise
their power over contempts with extreme moderation. . . ."
In the case of John V. N. Yates, 4 Johnson's Rep.
(N.Y.1809) 317, 375-376. And, in 1916, the Supreme Court of Iowa
summarized a century
Page 376 U. S. 749
and a quarter of practice in criminal contempt cases in the
following terms:
"The authorities may be searched in vain for any precedent under
our constitutional form of government holding it to be in the power
of a state to clothe its courts with authority to visit infamous
punishment upon any person for contempt, or in any proceeding
whatever other than the orderly process of trial. . . ."
Flannagan v. Jepson, 177 Iowa 393, 400, 158 N.W.
641.
2. Petty Offenses at About the Time of the
Constitution
This Court has recognized that:
"At the time of the adoption of the Constitution, there were
numerous offenses, commonly described as 'petty,' which were tried
summarily without a jury, by justices of the peace in England, and
by police magistrates or corresponding judicial officers in the
Colonies, and punished by commitment to jail, a workhouse, or a
house of correction."
District of Columbia v. Clawans, 300 U.
S. 617,
300 U. S.
624.
New Jersey statutes, for example, permitted trial by a judge for
offenses such as "Profanely swearing" (punishable by a fine of "one
half of a dollar," four hours in the stocks, or four days in the
"common gaol"); "excessive use of spirituous, vinous, or other
strong liquor" (fine of one dollar, four hours in the stocks, or
four days in "gaol"); [
Footnote
4/24] and disorderly conduct (three months in the workhouse).
[
Footnote 4/25] In New York,
trial by jury was not
Page 376 U. S. 750
required for offenses such as unlicensed practice by a physician
(fine of five pounds); [
Footnote
4/26] offering copper coins of known inferior quality or weight
(fine of six pounds or five times the value of the coins, whichever
is less); [
Footnote 4/27]
"drunkenness or swearing" (fine of three shillings or four hours in
the stocks); [
Footnote 4/28] and
false pretenses (imprisonment for six months). [
Footnote 4/29] Maryland statutes permitted trial
by a judge for offenses such as refusal by the mother of a bastard
child to "discover" the father (fine of 30 shillings), [
Footnote 4/30] and disorderly conduct
(three months in the workhouse). [
Footnote 4/31] Virginia permitted summary punishment
for offenses ranging from improper issuing of notes (fine of 25
shillings) [
Footnote 4/32] to
disorderly conduct (20 lashes and three months' imprisonment).
[
Footnote 4/33]
This history has led the Court to conclude that "the intent [of
the Framers] was to exclude from the constitutional requirement of
a jury the trial of petty criminal offenses."
Schick v. United
States, 195 U. S. 65,
195 U. S. 70. It
has similarly led the Court to conclude that,
"[e]xcept in that class or grade of offences called petty
offences . . . the guarantee of an impartial jury to the accused in
a criminal prosecution . . . secures to him the right to enjoy that
mode of trial from the first moment, and in whatever court, he is
put on trial for the offence charged,"
Callan v. Wilson, 127 U. S. 540,
127 U. S. 557, and
that
"the severity of the penalty' must be considered in determining
whether a violation of law, 'in other respects trivial and not a
crime
Page 376 U. S. 751
at common law, must be deemed so serious as to be comparable
with common law crimes, and thus to entitle the accused to the
benefit of a jury trial prescribed by the Constitution."
District of Columbia v. Clawans, 300 U.
S. 617,
300 U. S.
625.
3. Criminal Contempt in Recent Years
There has been a dramatic increase in recent years in the
severity of the punishment imposed in the federal courts without
trial by jury for criminal contempt. For example, in
Green v.
United States, supra, and
Collins v. United States,
269 F.2d 745, sentences of imprisonment for three years were
imposed; in
Piemonte v. United States, 367 U.
S. 556, a sentence of imprisonment for 18 months was
imposed; in
Brown v. United States, 359 U. S.
41, a sentence of imprisonment for 15 months was
imposed; in
Nilva v. United States, 352 U.
S. 385, a sentence of imprisonment for one year and one
day was imposed; and in
Levine v. United States,
362 U. S. 610, a
sentence of imprisonment for one year was imposed.
4. Historical Conclusions
The available evidence seems to indicate that (a) at the time of
the Constitution, criminal contempts triable without a jury were
generally punishable by trivial penalties, and that, (b) at the
time of the Constitution, all types of "petty" offenses punishable
by trivial penalties were generally triable without a jury. This
history justifies the imposition without trial by jury of no more
than trivial penalties for criminal contempts. The Court, in light
of the history reviewed here and in the
376
U.S. 681app|>Appendix to the opinion of the Court, has
failed sufficiently to take into account the possibility that one
significant reason why criminal contempts were tried without a jury
at the time of the Constitution was because they were
Page 376 U. S. 752
deemed a species of petty offense punishable by trivial
penalties. [
Footnote 4/34] Since
criminal contempts, as they are now punished, can no longer be
deemed a species of petty offense punishable by trivial penalties,
defendants' constitutional claim to trial by jury should not be
denied on the authority of the history of criminal contempt at the
time of the Constitution, nor on the authority of the past
decisions of this Court which relied on that history. [
Footnote 4/35]
Page 376 U. S. 753
Their claim should be evaluated by analyzing the real nature of
criminal contempts and applying the policy of the constitutional
requirement of trial by jury in "all crimes" and "all criminal
prosecutions." [
Footnote
4/36]
5. The Nature of Criminal Contempts
and the Policy of Trial by Jury
I wish to make it clear that I am not here concerned with, nor
do I question, the power of the courts to compel
Page 376 U. S. 754
compliance with their lawful orders by the imposition of
conditional punishment -- commonly referred to as civil contempt.
In such cases, it may be said that "the defendant carries the keys
to freedom in his willingness to comply with the court's directive.
. . ." [
Footnote 4/37] Nor am I
here concerned with the imposition of the trivial punishments
traditionally deemed sufficient for maintaining order in the
courtroom.
Cf. Ungar v. Sarafite, 376 U.
S. 575. I am concerned solely with the imposition,
without trial by jury, of fixed nontrivial punishments after
compliance with the court's order has been secured.
Thus limited, criminal contempts are not essentially different
from other "crimes" or "criminal prosecutions." In each case
punishment is imposed for a past violation of a mandate of a
coordinate organ of government: [
Footnote 4/38]
Page 376 U. S. 755
criminal contempt involves punishment for violation of an order
of a court; "crime" involves punishment for violation of a statute
enacted by a legislature. [
Footnote
4/39] I can see no greater need for certain and prompt
punishment for the former than for the latter. [
Footnote 4/40]
It may be true that a judge can dispose of a charge of criminal
contempt, or any other criminal charge, more expeditiously and more
cheaply than a jury.
"But such trifling economies as may result have not generally
been thought sufficient reason for abandoning our great
constitutional safeguards aimed at protecting freedom and other
basic human rights of incalculable value. Cheap, easy convictions
were not the primary concern of those who adopted the Constitution
and the Bill of Rights. Every procedural safeguard they established
purposely made it more difficult for the Government to convict
those it accused of crimes. On their scale of values justice
occupied at least as high a position as economy."
Green v. United States, supra, at
356 U. S.
216.
Nor are criminal contempts substantially different from other
crimes when measured by the "tests traditionally applied to
determine whether [a given sanction] is penal or regulatory in
character. . . ."
Kennedy
v.
Page 376 U. S. 756
Mendoza-Martinez, 372 U. S. 144,
372 U. S. 168.
In the
Mendoza-Martinez case, the tests were enumerated in
the following terms:
"Whether the sanction involves an affirmative disability or
restraint, whether it has historically been regarded as a
punishment, whether it comes into play only on a finding of
scienter, whether its operation will promote the
traditional aims of punishment -- retribution and deterrence,
whether the behavior to which it applies is already a crime,
whether an alternative purpose to which it may rationally be
connected is assignable for it, and whether it appears excessive in
relation to the alternative purpose assigned. . . ."
Id. at
372 U. S.
168-169.
Criminal contempt, when punished by a nontrivial penalty,
certainly "involves an affirmative disability or restraint" under
any reasonable definition of these terms. The sanction imposed for
criminal contempt has always been "regarded as a punishment"
designed to deter future defiances of the court's authority and to
vindicate its dignity. [
Footnote
4/41] No "alternative purpose" has been suggested to justify
its existence.
Scienter is generally required to support a
charge of criminal contempt. [
Footnote 4/42] And the behavior to which a charge of
criminal contempt applies is generally "already a crime." [
Footnote 4/43]
In my view, therefore, there is no justification, either in the
history or policy of criminal contempt or in the history or policy
of the Constitution, for treating criminal contempt differently
from other "crimes" or "criminal prosecutions." If a criminal
contempt (or any other
Page 376 U. S. 757
violation of law), is punishable only by a trivial penalty, then
the Constitution does not require trial by jury. If a violation of
law is punishable by a nontrivial penalty, then the Constitution
does require trial by jury whether the violation is labeled
criminal contempt or anything else. [
Footnote 4/44]
C. APPLICATION OF THE CONSTITUTIONAL RULE
TO THE FACTS OF THIS CASE.
It remains only to apply this conclusion to the facts here.
Although the certified question does not specify
Page 376 U. S. 758
the severity of the punishment which could be imposed upon the
defendants if the allegations against them are proved, it would
defy reality to assume that the contempt with which they are
charged is a "trivial" one punishable by a minor penalty. The
Solicitor General of the United States described the nature of the
contempt to this Court in oral argument in the following words:
"[T]he Governor and Lieutenant Governor of a State sought to
array the whole panoply of the State against a final adjudication
by the federal courts. The contempt with which they are charged was
rioting, loss of life, and the need for federal troops to uphold
the law of the land. . . ."
One judge in the Court of Appeals said: "Never before has such a
charge been brought by or in a Court of Appeals . . . against
either a state officer or a private citizen." [
Footnote 4/45] The certified question indicates
that "the acts charged as constituting the alleged disobedience
were of a character as to constitute also a criminal offense . . .
," punishable by imprisonment for a year. 18 U.S.C. (Supp. IV) §
1509. Another judge in the Court of Appeals said that: "Respondents
are charged with what amounts to a crime." 330 F.2d at 432. These
indicia, taken together with the severity of the sanction imposed
in the civil contempt case which grew out of the same conduct,
[
Footnote 4/46] compel the
conclusion that the contempt here charged was not "trivial." It was
extraordinarily serious, among the most serious in this Nation's
history. If Green's contempt -- jumping bail -- was punishable by
imprisonment
Page 376 U. S. 759
for three years, and if Piemonte's contempt -- refusal to answer
a question before a grand jury -- was punishable for imprisonment
for a year and a half, [
Footnote
4/47] it would be wholly unrealistic for us to assume that,
under the standards of punishment sanctioned by this Court in the
past, the present contempt may be characterized as a petty offense
punishable by no more than a trivial penalty. [
Footnote 4/48] For these reasons, I would answer
the certified question in the affirmative, and remand the case to
the District Court so that the accused may be tried by a jury and
receive at a trial all the safeguards which our Constitution
affords a criminal defendant.
In sum, therefore, I conclude that defendants' trial should be
by a jury. This would accord with the basis policy of Congress,
that contempts which are also crimes should be tried by a jury. And
it would accord with the fundamental policy of the Constitution
that contempts which are punishable as crimes must be tried by a
jury. [
Footnote 4/49]
I reject the Government's "necessity" argument, that "[t]he
independence of the federal courts . . . would be seriously
undermined if their orders could be nullified by an unsympathetic
jury." That is but another way of putting the oft-rejected
assertion against trial by jury that some guilty men may be
acquitted. This possibility, however, is the price we have chosen
to pay for our cherished
Page 376 U. S. 760
liberties.
"The imperative necessity for safeguarding these rights . . .
under the gravest of emergencies has existed throughout our
constitutional history, for it is then, under the pressing
exigencies of crisis, that there is the greatest temptation to
dispense with fundamental constitutional guarantees which, it is
feared, will inhibit governmental action."
Kennedy v. Mendoza-Martinez, 372 U.S. at
372 U. S.
165
"The Constitution of the United States is a law for rulers and
people, equally in war and in peace, and covers with the shield of
its protection all classes of men at all times, and under all
circumstances."
Ex parte
Milligan, 4 Wall. 2,
71 U. S.
120-121.
[
Footnote 4/1]
The show cause ordered is printed
infra at
376 U. S. 760,
as Appendix A to this opinion. The relevant orders in this case are
also reported in 7 Race Rel.L.Rep. 739
et seq.
[
Footnote 4/2]
The "preliminary injunction" was actually "issued" on July 27,
1962, as part of an opinion signed by Judge Wisdom. The order,
which is printed
infra at
376 U. S. 763
as Appendix B to this opinion, is dated July 28, 1962.
[
Footnote 4/3]
83 S. Ct. 10.
[
Footnote 4/4]
The District Court's permanent injunction is printed
infra at
376 U. S. 766,
as Appendix C to this opinion.
[
Footnote 4/5]
The Court of Appeals' temporary restraining order is printed
infra at
376 U. S. 769,
as Appendix D to this opinion.
[
Footnote 4/6]
The statute provides in relevant part that:
"Whoever, by threats or force, willfully prevents, obstructs,
impedes, or interferes with, or willfully attempts to prevent,
obstruct, impede, or interfere with, the due exercise of rights or
the performance of duties under any order, judgment, or decree of a
court of the United States shall be fined not more than $1,000 or
imprisoned not more than one year, or both."
[
Footnote 4/7]
In
Green v. United States, 356 U.
S. 165, "petitioners [did] not [contend] that they were
entitled to a jury trial."
Id. at
356 U. S. 187.
The Court did, however, explicitly consider the issue.
[
Footnote 4/8]
See United States v. Duane, 25 Fed.Cas. 920, No. 14,997
(1801):
"We confine ourselves within the ancient limits of the law [of
criminal contempt] recently retraced by legislative provisions and
judicial decisions."
At 922.
[
Footnote 4/9]
An Act Concerning Delinquents, May 1667, 1 Conn.Pub.Stat.Laws
(1808), 231-232. The statute also permitted "imprisonment, binding
to the peace or good behaviour to the next county court."
Id. at 231. (County courts met twice annually,
see
id. at 208.) This was apparently a civil contempt sanction
permitting imprisonment only until the contemptuous conduct
terminated, limited in any event to about six months. The criminal
contempt section was part of a more general title which permitted a
judge to try "any matter of a criminal nature . . . where the
penalty does not exceed the sum of
seven dollars."
(Emphasis in original.)
Id. at 230.
[
Footnote 4/10]
An Act against drunkenness, etc., apparently enacted in 1737. 1
Laws of Del. (1797) 173. The criminal contempt section is part of a
general statute permitting trial without a jury for a number of
petty offenses,
e.g., "drunkenness" (five shillings);
"prophane cursing and swearing" (five shillings and three hours in
the stocks); blasphemy (two hours in the pillory "and be branded in
his or her forehead with the letter B, and be publicly whipt, on
his or her bare back, with thirty-nine lashes well laid on").
Id. at 173-174.
[
Footnote 4/11]
Act of Nov. 1785, Chapter LXXII, I Md. Laws (Maxcy 1811),
595-596.
[
Footnote 4/12]
Act of Feb. 9, 1791, N.H. Constitution and Laws (1805), 95.
See id. at 9.
See also N.H. Acts and Laws
(1696-1725), 15.
[
Footnote 4/13]
Act of 1731, No. 552, Grimke's Laws of South Carolina (1790),
129. It is unclear whether this discretion was limited by
decisional or statutory law.
[
Footnote 4/14]
Although finding no general statutory limitation on the
punishment which could be imposed for criminal contempt in
Massachusetts, I have found the following data which suggest that
the punishments there imposed were probably not out of line with
those imposed in the other Colonies.
See 1 Mass.Acts and
Resolves (1692-1714), 282-283, Act of June 18, 1697, limiting to 10
shillings the punishment which could be imposed by a justice of the
peace for criminal contempt in refusing to obey a summons;
id. at 335, Act of June 22, 1698, limiting to 40 shillings
the punishment which any court could impose upon jurors who refused
to obey a summons;
id. at 354-355, Act of Dec. 10, 1698,
limiting to 40 shillings (or imprisonment for 48 hours, or "by
setting in the stocks not exceeding four hours") the punishment for
disobeying the order of a justice of the peace to assist in
apprehending an offender.
See also Case of John Matthews,
cited in Colonial Justice in Western Massachusetts (1639-1702): The
Pynchon Court Record (1961) 243 (fine of five shillings for
"refusinge to obey a summons"; "contemptuous and high carriage";
"commanding [the server of the summons] off his ground and holding
up his sickle at him . . . ");
Case of Samuell Fellowes,
id. at 271 (1671) (fine of five pounds for "contemptuous
carriage in Corte");
Case of James Carver, id. at 288
(1678) (fine of 60 shillings for "horible abusive Cariage,"
including threats, striking the constable with his fist and "saying
he would kill him and beate out his Braines etc.").
But see
Thwing v. Dennie, Quincy's Reports (Mass.1761-1772) 338
(committed to prison for a period of time not specified in the
court's opinion for "in a most savage Manner attempt[ing] to
snatch" papers from the hands of his courtroom opponent, thereby
tearing some essential documents); Act of Oct. 20, 1663,
Mass.Colonial Laws (1672) 133, relating to the payment of fines for
"Prophanation of the Sabbath, Contempt or Neglect of Gods publick
Worship." The Act provides that:
"in case any person or persons so sentenced do neglect or refuse
to pay such Fine or Mulcts as shall be legally imposed on them, or
give Security in Court . . . , every such person or persons so
refusing or neglecting to submit to the Courts Sentence shall for
such his Contempt be Corporally punished, according as the Court
that hath cognizance of the case shall determine; and where any are
Corporally punished, their fines shall be remitted."
Compare the penalties sometimes imposed by the "Court" of
Assistants of Massachusetts Bay Colony, which was a legislative and
executive body as well as a judicial tribunal (cases cited in the
Appendix to the opinion of the Court,
ante at
376 U. S.
711-712).
Although finding no colonial statute designating the punishment
for criminal contempt in Maine, I have found a rule of court
promulgated in 1649 which states that contemners "shall be fined
according unto the discretion of the Court." 1 Maine Province and
Court Records 137. I have found no rule permitting imprisonment for
criminal contempt.
In 1647, the Rhode Island General Assembly enacted a statute
prohibiting the "use [of] words of contempt against a chief
officer, especially in the execution of his office. . . ." The
penalty for this offense was being "bound to his good behavior, so
to remain for three months space, or the next court following."
Trial was by a jury of "his peers," and not by summary proceeding .
R.I. Code of Laws (1647) 24.
Cf. id. at 52.
[
Footnote 4/15]
See, e.g., Case of Theunis Thew (N.Y.Supreme Court,
1763), in Goebel and Naughton, Law Enforcement in Colonial New York
(1944) 243 (fine of 200 pounds for contempt in refusing to answer
questions);
Case of William Dobbs and William Paulding
(N.Y.Supreme Court, 1764),
ibid. (fine of 200 pounds for
contempt in refusing to answer questions);
Case of John
Mosier (Suffolk Court of Oyer and Terminer, 1717),
id. at 606 ("John Mosier [was ordered to be] committed
into ye sheriffs Custody and to suffer a weeks Imprisonment for
affronting the Kings Justices in Going to Hold court." He was
released, however, the following day);
King v. Mary
Richardson (N.Y.Kings County Court, 1693),
id. at 605
(unspecified fine for unspecified contempt);
King v.
Tiebout (N.Y.Court of Quarter Sessions, 1695),
ibid.
(unspecified fine for unspecified contempt);
Case of John
Tenbroek (N.Y.Supreme Court, 1729),
id. at 606 (fine
of 10 pounds for contempt in "having privately given victuals to
the jury");
Feree v. Strome, 1 Yeates 303 (Pa.1793)
("reprimanded . . . [and] dismissed without any fine" for failing
to respond to subpoena);
Respublica v.
Oswald, 1 Dall. 343 (Pa.1788) (imprisonment for one
month and fine of 10 pounds for contempt by publication);
Territory v. Thierry, 1 Martin 55 (La.1810) (imprisonment
for 10 days and fine of $50 for "grossly and indecently abusive"
contempt by publication);
State v. Noel, T. U. P.
Charlton's Reports 43, 65 (Ga.1806) (fines of $50 and $10 for
"contempts in disobeying the order of" the Superior Court);
Case of Priest and Bonet (1702), cited in Scott, Criminal
Law in Colonial Virginia (1930), 173 (three hours in stocks for
fighting near the court);
Case of Thomas Smith (1697),
ibid. (one hour in stocks for threatening the foreman of a
jury);
Case of Matthew Kelley (1773),
id. at 174
(fined five pounds for refusal to obey a warrant);
Case of Mary
Russell (Oct. 6, 1703), cited in
id. at 172 (ordered
to jail until she gave bond for future good behavior for claiming
that she had "received as little justice as she would have in hell
with the devil sitting as judge");
State v. Stone, 3
Harris and McHenry's Reports (Md.1792), 115 (fine of 20 shillings
against a lower court judge for refusing to obey the mandate of a
higher court);
State v. Keene, 11 La. 596, 601 (fine of
$50 and imprisonment "during the space of ten days," for a contempt
described by the court in the following terms: "We do not remember
a case of grosser contempt, and we doubt whether any are to be
found in the books." The annotation of the official court reporter
states that "The maximum punishment for a contempt of court,
committed by a party to a suit, is ten days' imprisonment and a
fine of fifty dollars and the costs."
Id. at 596).
Monroe v. Harkness, 1 Cranch C.C. (1803) 157-158
(imprisonment for six days for violating an injunction);
United
States v. Caton, 25 Fed.Cas. 350, No. 14,758 (1803) (fine of
$5 and ordered to give security of $100 for his good behavior, for
refusing to answer questions, behaving in an "insolent manner," and
threatening "some of the grand jurors");
Case of John
Rousby, Proceedings of the Provincial Court of Md. (1675),
Arch. of Md. LXV 585 (fine of 100 pounds of tobacco for
contemptuous speech by an attorney in court);
Case of John
Cherman, Proceedings of the Charles County Court of Md.
(1660), Arch. of Md. LIII 84 (fine of 10 pounds of tobacco for
contempt in "Prophainly takinge the name of god in vaine in Open
Courte");
Case of Jon Seybrey, Proceedings of the Chancery
Court of Md. (1669), Arch. of Md. LI 8 (fine of 12 shillings,
sixpence for failure to respond to summons);
Case of Lewis
Morrice (New Jersey Court of Common Right, 1698), I Journal of
the Courts of Common Right and Chancery of East New Jersey,
1683-1702, 311 (fine of 50 pounds for resisting arrest and denying
the authority of the court);
United States v. Duane, 25
Fed.Cas. 920, No. 14,997 (1801) (imprisonment for 30 days for
aggravated contempt by publication);
United States v.
Emerson, 25 Fed.Cas. 1012, No. 15,050 (1831) (fine of $5 for
fighting and shouting in court);
United States v. Carter,
25 Fed.Cas. 313, No. 14,740 (1829) (fine of $1 for threatening a
witness);
Weiberg v. The St. Oloff, 29 Fed.Cas. 591, No.
17,357 (1790) (fine of $20 for "refusing to obey the process of the
court, and in confining in irons a suitor whilst under the
protection of the laws . . .").
See also additional
authority cited in the
376
U.S. 681app|>Appendix to the opinion of the Court.
[
Footnote 4/16]
Act of June 13, 1799, Elmer, Digest of N.J.Laws (1838) 59.
[
Footnote 4/17]
Act of Dec. 19, 1793, 1 Digest of the Stats. of Ky. (1822), 301.
(Emphasis added.)
[
Footnote 4/18]
Act of Apr. 3, 1809, Laws of Pa. (1808-1812), 55-56.
[
Footnote 4/19]
2 N.Y.Rev.Stats. (1829) 276, 278. More extensive punishment was
permitted upon indictment and trial by jury.
[
Footnote 4/20]
Territorial Act of 1807, Aikin's Digest of the Laws of Ala.
(1833-1835 Supp.) 87-88.
[
Footnote 4/21]
Act of Apr. 16, 1831, Supp. to the Rev.Code of Va. (1833) 144.
The
376
U.S. 681app|>Appendix to the opinion of the Court correctly
notes that the punishment sanctioned for other categories of
contempt within this statute -- violence or threats of violence to
judges, witnesses or jurors, misbehavior of court officers, and
disobedience of a court order -- was not specifically limited.
Ante at
376 U. S.
723.
At the time of the enactment of this and similar statutes, there
were generally no factual disputes for resolution by a jury in
criminal contempt cases, for if the alleged contemner denied under
oath the factual allegations against him, the contempt charge was
dismissed and he was subject to indictment for perjury.
See,
e.g., Curtis and Curtis, The Story of a Notion in the Law of
Criminal Contempt, 41 Harv.L.Rev. 51, 63-64; 4 Blackstone,
Commentaries, 288; Wells v. Commonwealth, 21 Grattan's Rep. (Va.
1871) 500.
"Contempt of court was sharply reproved [in Colonial Virginia].
The least that was required was an open apology, and the court
often added a fine or commitment to prison, usually to last until
bond for good behavior was furnished. Sometimes an hour or two in
the stocks was prescribed."
Scott, Criminal Law in Colonial Virginia (1930) 171-172.
[
Footnote 4/22]
E.g., Rev.Stats. of Mich. (1846), Tit. XXI, c. 96, pp.
428-430 (30 days' imprisonment, $250 fine); Chase, Stats. of Ohio
(1788-1833), c. 823, §§ 49, 53, pp. 1701-1702 (fine of $200); Iowa
Code (1850-1851), Tit. 18, c. 94 § 1600, p. 237 (one day's
imprisonment, $50 fine); Wis.Rev.Stats. (1849), c. 87, § 8, p. 439
(30 days' imprisonment, $250 fine); Mo.Rev.Stats. (1835), Act of
Mar. 7, 1835, § 58, p. 160 (10 days' imprisonment, $50 fine);
Minn.Terr.Rev.Stats. (1851), c. 92, § 12, p. 456 (six months'
imprisonment, $250 fine); Miss.Stats. (1840), c. 40, § 26, p. 486
(imprisonment during "the term of the court at which the contempt
shall have been committed"; courts held two terms annually; $100
fine); Thomson's Digest of the Laws of Fla. (1847), 3d Div., Tit.
I, c. 1, § 2, p. 321 (30 days' imprisonment, $100 fine); Ark.Stats.
(1837), c. 43, § 38, pp. 234-235 (10 days' imprisonment, $50 fine);
Battle's Revisal, Pub.Stats. of N.C. (1873), Act of 1868, c. 24, §
2, p. 257 (imprisonment for 30 days, fine of $250); Laws of Vt.
(1824), Act of Nov. 11, 1818, c. 31, § 27, p. 259 (fine of
$200).
Cf. Georgia Stats. (Feb. 1799), an Act to amend an Act,
entitled "An act to revise and amend the Judiciary System of this
State," § 26, p. 30, limiting the punishment which courts may
impose "in case of a jury committing a contempt" to "a sum not
exceeding one hundred dollars."
See also § 20, p. 26,
providing for "an attachment against . . . defaulting witness" and
limiting the punishment to $300.
See also Georgia Stats.
(1851) 647, Act of Dec. 14, 1811, § XXVII, limiting the punishment
which could be imposed by justices of the peace for criminal
contempts to "any sum not exceeding $2, or imprisonment for a term
not exceeding two days for each offence. . . ."
[
Footnote 4/23]
See, e.g., cases cited
supra, 376
U.S. 681fn4/14|>note 14.
[
Footnote 4/24]
Elmer's Digest of N.J.Law (1838), Act of Mar. 16, 1798, §§ 8-11,
pp. 588, 589.
[
Footnote 4/25]
Paterson's Laws of N.J. (1800) 410.
See also id. at
329, 333.
[
Footnote 4/26]
4 Colonial Laws of N.Y. (1760) 455.
[
Footnote 4/27]
1787 Laws (N.Y.), c. 97.
[
Footnote 4/28]
1 Colonial Laws of N.Y. (1708) 617.
[
Footnote 4/29]
1785 Laws (N.Y.), cc. 31, 40, 47.
[
Footnote 4/30]
1752 Md.Sess.Laws 5.
[
Footnote 4/31]
1785 Md.Sess.Laws, c. 15, § 15.
[
Footnote 4/32]
Act of Oct. 1777, c. 24, § 2.
[
Footnote 4/33]
1785 Va.Stats. (Oct. Sess.) c. 1, § 8; c. 4, § 3; c. 59; 1787
Va.Stats. (Oct. Sess.), c. 48, § 13.
[
Footnote 4/34]
See Green v. United States, 356 U.
S. 165,
356 U. S.
209-210 (dissenting opinion of MR. JUSTICE BLACK):
"I find it difficult to understand how it can be maintained that
the same people who manifested such great concern for trial by jury
as to explicitly embed it in the Constitution for every $20 civil
suit could have intended that this cherished method of trial should
not be available to those threatened with long imprisonment for the
crime of contempt. I am confident that if there had been any
inkling that the federal courts established under the Constitution
could impose heavy penalties, as they now do, for violation of
their sweeping and far-ranging mandates without giving the accused
a fair trial by his fellow citizens, it would have provoked a storm
of protest, to put it mildly. Would any friend of the Constitution
have been foolhardy enough to take the floor of the ratifying
convention in Virginia or any of a half dozen other States and even
suggest such a possibility?"
[
Footnote 4/35]
The "historical error" on which the imposition of serious
penalties for criminal contempts without a jury trial rests is not
of the same character or duration as the "historical error"
discussed in
Green v. United States, supra, at
356 U. S. 185,
356 U. S. 190,
356 U. S. 202.
There, the alleged "error" occurred before the adoption of the
Constitution, and has been a part of English and American law for
almost two centuries. The Court was not prepared to overturn "at
least two score cases in this Court."
Id. at
356 U. S. 190.
Here, the "error" has only recently become manifest, and has never
been explicitly legitimated by this Court.
The imposition of serious penalties for criminal contempts is a
relatively recent phenomenon. From the foundation of the Republic
until 1957, I am aware of only two isolated instances of
imprisonment for longer than six months for criminal contempt
brought to the attention of this Court.
In re Savin,
131 U. S. 267 (one
year);
Hill v. United States ex rel. Weiner, 300 U.
S. 105 (two years). Since 1957, however, our attention
has been called to at least six instances where imprisonment of a
year or more was imposed.
Nilva v. United States,
352 U. S. 385 (one
year and one day);
Yates v. United States, 355 U. S.
66 (one year);
Green v. United States,
356 U. S. 165
(three years);
Brown v. United States, 359 U. S.
41 (15 months);
Levine v. United States,
362 U. S. 610 (one
year);
Piemonte v. United States, 367 U.
S. 556 (18 months). By holding that no nontrivial
penalty may be imposed for criminal contempt without a trial by
jury, we would be correcting a fundamental, but only recently
manifested, historical error.
[
Footnote 4/36]
An analogous situation is presented by the criminal enforcement
of the laws relating to the sale and taxation of liquor. At the
time of the Constitution, violations of the liquor laws of the
various States generally carried with them trivial penalties, and
were deemed petty offenses, triable without a jury.
E.g.,
failure to pay tax,
see Pa.Laws of 1712-1713, c. 195, § 2
(five-pound fine); Pa.Laws of 1719, c. 239, § 4 (20-shilling fine);
1756 Md.Sess.Laws, 12 (20-pound fine); unlicensed sale of liquor,
see New York Laws of 1781, c. 27 (10-pound fine); 1757
Md.Sess.Laws, 6 (30-shilling fine); selling liquor above price
fixed,
see Pa.Laws of 1718, c. 235 (40-shilling fine);
selling liquor to minors or slaves,
see Pa.Laws of 1721,
c. 244, § 3 (five-pound fine for third offense); Md.Laws 1735,
Arch. of Md. XXXIX 292 (10-shilling fine); or at prohibited places,
see 4 Colonial Laws of New York (1768), c. 1380
(five-pound fine). Now, however, violations of at least some liquor
laws are punished so severely that they cannot be deemed trivial
offenses. Certainly no one would argue that it is constitutionally
permissible to impose without trial by jury severe punishments for
violation of these laws simply because trivial punishments were
imposed without trial by jury at the time of the Constitution for
violation of similar or even identical laws.
See District of
Columbia v. Clawans, 300 U. S. 617,
300 U. S.
625.
[
Footnote 4/37]
"Such coercion, where the defendant carries the keys to freedom
in his willingness to comply with the court's directive, is
essentially a civil remedy designed for the benefit of other
parties and has quite properly been exercised for centuries to
secure compliance with judicial decrees.
See United States v.
United Mine Workers, 330 U. S. 258,
330 U. S.
330-332 (dissenting and concurring opinion). Instead at
stake here is the validity of a criminal conviction for
disobedience of a court order punished by a long, fixed term of
imprisonment. In my judgment, the distinction between conditional
confinement to compel future performance and unconditional
imprisonment designed to punish past transgressions is crucial,
analytically as well as historically, in determining the
permissible mode of trial under the Constitution."
Green v. United States, supra, at
356 U. S.
197-198 (dissenting opinion of MR. JUSTICE BLACK).
But see Goldfarb, The Contempt Power (1963), 49-67.
[
Footnote 4/38]
"Under the Constitution courts are merely one of the coordinate
agencies which hold and exercise governmental power. Their decrees
are simply another form of sovereign directive aimed at guiding the
citizen's activity. I can perceive nothing which places these
decrees on any higher or different plane than the laws of Congress
or the regulations of the Executive insofar as punishment for their
violation is concerned. . . . Unfortunately judges and lawyers have
told each other the contrary so often that they have come to accept
it as the gospel truth."
Green v. United States, supra, at
356 U. S.
218-219 (dissenting opinion of MR. JUSTICE BLACK).
[
Footnote 4/39]
In this case, defendants' conduct is alleged to be a violation
of both a court order and a legislative enactment.
[
Footnote 4/40]
"I would go as far as any man in favor of the sharpest and most
summary
enforcement of order in court and obedience to
decrees, but, when there is no need for immediate action, contempts
are like any other breach of law, and should be dealt with as the
law deals with other illegal acts."
Toledo Newspaper Co. v. United States, 247 U.
S. 402,
247 U. S.
425-426 (dissenting opinion of Mr. Justice Holmes,
concurred in by Mr. Justice Brandeis). (Emphasis added.)
[
Footnote 4/41]
See, e.g., 4 Blackstone, Commentaries, pp. 283-285.
[
Footnote 4/42]
See, e.g., In re Rice, 181 F. 217.
Scienter
was charged in this case,
see Appendix A,
infra
at
376 U. S.
761.
[
Footnote 4/43]
The behavior with which defendants are here charged is already a
crime.
Ante at
376 U. S. 729,
376 U. S.
735-736.
[
Footnote 4/44]
I need not at this juncture consider what constitutes a trivial
penalty. The Court considered this problem in
District of
Columbia v. Clawans, 300 U. S. 617.
Respondent there was sentenced "to pay a fine of $300 or to be
confined in jail for sixty days" for engaging in the business of
selling secondhand property without a license, an offense
"punishable by a fine of not more than $300 or imprisonment for not
more than ninety days."
Id. at
300 U. S. 623.
The United States Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia in
a unanimous en banc decision, noted that
"[i]f, instead of three months in jail, the punishment provided
were six months or a year, the problem would be simpler. So, also,
if the punishment were, let us say, ten days in jail."
It held, however, that imprisonment for three months "cannot be
said to be petty or trivial." 66 App.D.C. 11, 14, 84 F.2d 265, 268.
That decision was reversed by a divided Supreme Court. The Court
said:
"[W]e may doubt whether summary trial with punishment of more
than six months' imprisonment, prescribed by some pre-Revolutionary
statutes, is admissible, without concluding that a penalty of
ninety days is too much."
300 U.S. at
300 U. S.
627-628. The Court also cautioned:
"We are aware that those standards of action and of policy which
find expression in the common and statute law may vary from
generation to generation. Such change has led to the abandonment of
the lash and the stocks, and we may assume, for present purposes,
that commonly accepted views of the severity of punishment by
imprisonment may become so modified that a penalty once thought to
be mild may come to be regarded as so harsh as to call for the jury
trial, which the Constitution prescribes, in some cases which were
triable without a jury when the Constitution was adopted."
Id. at
300 U. S.
627.
[
Footnote 4/45]
330 F.2d 369, 393.
[
Footnote 4/46]
The civil contempt judgment provided for a fine of $10,000 a day
against Governor Barnett and $5,000 a day against Lieutenant
Governor Johnson unless they complied with the court's order by a
certain fixed time.
[
Footnote 4/47]
See Green v. United States, supra, and
Piemonte v.
United States, supra.
[
Footnote 4/48]
The right to trial by jury depends not on the severity of the
punishment actually imposed, but rather on the severity of the
punishment which could legally have been imposed.
District of
Columbia v. Clawans, 300 U. S. 617,
300 U. S.
623.
[
Footnote 4/49]
An answer to the certified question does not prevent defendants,
if they are convicted, from raising other issues, not included in
the certificate, on appeal from their convictions.
|
376
U.S. 681appa|
APPENDIX A TO OPINION OF
MR. JUSTICE GOLDBERG, DISSENTING
COURT OF APPEALS' ORDER TO SHOW CAUSE.
This Court having entered an order on September 18, 1962, in the
case of
James H. Meredith, et al. v. Charles Dickson Fair, et
al., No. 19475, designating and authorizing the United States
to appear and participate in that case as
amicus curiae
with the right to submit pleadings, evidence, arguments and briefs,
and to initiate such further proceedings, including proceedings for
injunctive relief, as might be appropriate in order to maintain and
preserve the due administration of justice and the integrity of the
judicial processes of the United States, and
The Attorney General having instituted, pursuant to this Court's
order of September 18, 1962, an action in the name of and on behalf
of the United States, as
amicus curiae, which action was
entitled
United States v. State of Mississippi, et al.,
restraining the State of Mississippi and Ross R. Barnett, their
agents, employees, officers, successors, and all persons in active
concert or participation
Page 376 U. S. 761
with them, from interfering with or obstructing the enjoyment of
rights or the performance of duties under the order of this Court
of July 28, 1962, in the case of
Meredith v. Fair, and a
similar order of the District Court for the Southern District of
Mississippi in that case, requiring the enrollment of James H.
Meredith at the University of Mississippi, and
This Court having ordered on November 15, 1962, that the
Attorney General, and such attorneys in the Department of Justice
as he may designate, be appointed to institute and prosecute
criminal contempt proceedings against Ross R. Barnett and Paul B.
Johnson, Jr., and
Probable cause having been made to appear from the application
of the Attorney General filed December 21, 1962, in the name of and
on behalf of the United States that on September 25, 1962, Ross R.
Barnett, having been served with and having actual notice of this
Court's temporary restraining order of September 25, 1962, wilfully
prevented James H. Meredith from entering the offices of the Board
of Trustees of the University of Mississippi in Jackson,
Mississippi, and thereby deliberately prevented James H. Meredith
from enrolling as a student in the University pursuant to this
Court's order of July 28, 1962; that, on September 26, 1962, Paul
B. Johnson, Jr., acting under the authorization and direction of
Ross R. Barnett, and as his agent and as an agent and officer of
the State of Mississippi, and while having actual notice of the
temporary restraining order of September 25, 1962, willfully
prevented James H. Meredith from entering the campus of the
University of Mississippi in Oxford, Mississippi, and thereby
deliberately prevented James H. Meredith from enrolling as a
student in the University pursuant to the orders of this Court;
that, on September 27, 1962, Ross R. Barnett and Paul B. Johnson,
Jr. willfully failed to take such measures as were necessary to
maintain
Page 376 U. S. 762
law and order upon the campus of the University of Mississippi,
and did, instead, direct and encourage certain members of the
Mississippi Highway Safety Patrol, Sheriffs and deputy Sheriffs,
and other officials of the State of Mississippi to obstruct and
prevent the entry of James H. Meredith upon the campus of the
University that day; that, on September 30, 1962, Ross R. Barnett,
knowing of the planned entry of James H. Meredith upon the campus
of the University of Mississippi, knowing that disorders and
disturbances had attended and would attend such entry, and knowing
that any failure of the Mississippi Highway Safety Patrol to take
all possible measures for the maintenance of peace and order upon
the campus could and would result in interferences with and
obstructions to the carrying out of the Court's order of July 28,
1962, wilfully failed to exercise his responsibility, authority,
and influence as Governor to maintain law and order upon the campus
of the University of Mississippi; and that all of said acts,
omissions and conduct of Ross R. Barnett and Paul B. Johnson, Jr.,
were for the purpose of preventing compliance with this Court's
order of July 28, 1962, and of the similar order of the United
States District Court for the Southern District of Mississippi,
entered on September 13, 1962, and were in willful disobedience and
defiance of the temporary restraining order of this Court entered
on September 25, 1962,
IT IS ORDERED that Ross R. Barnett and Paul B. Johnson, Jr.,
appear before this Court in the courtroom of the United States
Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit in New Orleans, Louisiana,
on February 8, 1963 at 9:30 o'clock a.m., to show cause, if any
they have, why they should not be held in criminal contempt, and
should either of them at said time and place show such cause,
either by pleading not guilty to the charges contained in the
application of the United States, or by other means,
Page 376 U. S. 763
he shall thereafter appear before this Court for hearing upon
said charges at a time and place to be fixed by the Court.
This 4th day of January, 1963.
ELBERT P. TUTTLE
RICHARD T. RIVES
WARREN L. JONES
JOHN R. BROWN
JOHN MINOR WISDOM
GRIFFIN B. BELL
United States Circuit Judges
Fifth Circuit
I Dissent -- BEN F. CAMERON
United States Circuit Judge, Fifth Circuit
I Dissent -- WALTER P. GEWIN
United States Circuit Judge, Fifth Circuit
|
376
U.S. 681appb|
APPENDIX B TO OPINION OF
MR. JUSTICE GOLDBERG, DISSENTING
COURT OF APPEALS' INJUNCTION ORDER
This Court, on July 26, 1962 entered its opinion and judgment
forthwith (1) vacating a stay issued herein by Judge Ben F.
Cameron, July 18, 1962, (2) recalling its mandate issued herein
July 17, 1962, (3) amending and reissuing its mandate, for the
purpose of preventing an injustice, by ordering the District Court
to issue forthwith an injunction against the defendants appellees
ordering the immediate admission of the plaintiff appellant, James
H. Meredith, to the University of Mississippi, (4) which opinion
and judgment includes an order of injunction
Page 376 U. S. 764
by this Court against the defendants appellees herein.
Now therefore, the following injunctive order is issued:
ORDER
Pending such time as the District Court has issued and enforced
the orders herein required and until such time as there has been
full and actual compliance in good faith with each and all of said
orders by the actual admission of plaintiff appellant to, and the
continued attendance thereafter of the University of Mississippi on
the same basis as other students who attend the University, the
defendants, their servants, agents, employees, successors and
assigns, and all persons acting in concert with them, as well as
any and all persons having knowledge of the decree are
expressly:
(1) Ordered to admit the plaintiff, James H. Meredith, to the
University of Mississippi, on the same basis as other students at
the University, under his applications heretofore filed, which are
declared to be continuing applications, such admission to be
immediate or, because of the second summer session having started,
such admission to be in September at Meredith's option, and without
further registration.
(2) Prohibited from any act of discrimination relating to
Meredith's admission and continued attendance, and is
(3) Ordered promptly to evaluate and approve Meredith's credits
without discrimination and on a reasonable basis in keeping with
the standards applicable to transfers to the University of
Mississippi.
In aid of this Court's jurisdiction and in order to preserve the
effectiveness of its judgment, this Court entered a preliminary
injunction on June 12, 1962. The injunction
Page 376 U. S. 765
was against Paul G. Alexander, Attorney for Hinds County,
Mississippi, his agent, employees, successors, and all persons in
active concert and participation with him and all persons who
received notice of the issuance of the order, restraining and
enjoining each and all of them from proceeding with the criminal
action instituted against James H. Meredith in the Justice of the
Peace Court of Hinds County, Justice District No. 5, or any other
court of the State of Mississippi, charging that Meredith knowingly
secured his registration as a voter in Hinds County but was a
resident of Attala County, Mississippi. In further aid of this
Court's jurisdiction and in order to preserve the continued
effectiveness of its judgment and orders, the said preliminary
injunction is continued against the same parties and all other
parties having knowledge of this decree pending the final action of
the United States Supreme Court if and when the defendants
appellees should apply for a writ of certiorari or for any other
appropriate action in this cause by the United States Supreme
Court.
It is further ordered that a copy of this order be served upon
the defendants appellees, through their attorneys, and upon Paul G.
Alexander, County Attorney for Hinds County, Mississippi, and
Joseph T. Patterson, Attorney General for the State of
Mississippi.
Entered at New Orleans, Louisiana
this 28th day of July, 1962.
JOHN R. BROWN, JMW
United States Circuit Judge
JOHN MINOR WISDOM
United States Circuit Judge
DOZIER A. DEVANE, JMW
United States District Judge
Page 376 U. S. 766
|
376
U.S. 681appc|
APPENDIX C TO OPINION OF
MR. JUSTICE GOLDBERG, DISSENTING.
DISTRICT COURT'S ORDER GRANTING PERMANENT
INJUNCTION
This matter is now before his Court by virtue of the Mandate of
the United States Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit and the
Mandate of Mr. Justice Black of September 10, 1962 setting aside
all stays granted by Judge Ben F. Cameron and putting into effect
the mandates of the Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
enjoining the Trustees and officials of the University of
Mississippi from taking any steps to prevent enforcement of the
mandates of the Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit, and this
Court having now considered the mandates of the Court of Appeals
for the Fifth Circuit of July 17, 1962, July 27, 1962, and its
final order of August 4, 1962, and this Court having considered the
mandate of July 17, 1962, wherein the Court of Appeals reversed the
judgment of the District Court with directions to this Court to
issue an injunction as prayed for in the complaint and, by its
mandate of July 27, 1962, ordered that the judgment of that Court
issued as and for the mandate on July 17, 1962, be recalled and
amended by making explicit the meaning that was implicit as
expressed in its opinion dated June 25, 1962, and ordering that
this Court
"forthwith grant all relief prayed for by the plaintiff and to
issue forthwith a permanent injunction against each and all of the
defendants appellees, their servants, agents, employees, successors
and assigns, and all persons acting in concert with them, as well
as any and all persons having knowledge of the decree, enjoining
and compelling each and all of them to admit the plaintiff
appellant, James H. Meredith, to the University of Mississippi
under his applications heretofore filed, which are declared by us
to be
Page 376 U. S. 767
continuing applications. Such injunction shall in terms prevent
and prohibit said defendants appellees, or any of the classes of
persons referred to from excluding the plaintiff appellant from
admission to continued attendance at the University of
Mississippi."
And. by its mandate of August 4, 1962. the Court of Appeals
reaffirmed its orders of July 17, 1962. and July 27, 1962. in the
following language:
"All of our orders of July 17, July 27, and this date, therefore
continue in full force and effect, and require full and immediate
obedience and compliance."
Now, therefore, it is here ordered, adjudged and decreed that
the plaintiff, James Howard Meredith, be and he is hereby granted
all the relief that is prayed for by him in his complaint and that
the defendants, Charles Dickson Fair, President of the Board of
Trustees of State Institutions of Higher Learning of the State of
Mississippi, Louisville, Mississippi; Euclid Ray Jobe, Executive
Secretary of the Board of Trustees of State Institutions of Higher
Learning of the State of Mississippi, Jackson, Mississippi; Edgar
Ray Izard, Hazlehurst, Mississippi; Leon Lowrey, Olive Branch,
Mississippi; Ira Lamar Morgan, Oxford, Mississippi; Malcolm Mette
Roberts, Hattiesburg, Mississippi; William Orlando Stone, Jackson,
Mississippi; S. R. Evans, Greenwood, Mississippi; Verner Smith
Holmes, McComb, Mississippi; James Napoleon Lipscomb, Macon,
Mississippi; Tally D. Riddell, Quitman, Mississippi; Harry Gordon
Carpenter, Rolling Fork, Mississippi; Robert Bruce Smith, II,
Ripley, Mississippi and Thomas Jefferson Tubb, West Point,
Mississippi, Members of the Board of Trustees of State Institutions
of Higher Learning; James Davis Williams, Chancellor of the
University of Mississippi, Oxford, Mississippi; Arthur Beverly
Lewis, Dean of the College of Liberal Arts of the University of
Mississippi, Oxford, Mississippi, and
Page 376 U. S. 768
Robert Byron Ellis, Registrar of the University of Mississippi,
Oxford, Mississippi, and each of them, their agents, servants,
employees, successors, attorneys and all persons in active concert
and participation with them be and they hereby are permanently
restrained and enjoined from:
(1) Refusing to admit plaintiff, James Howard Meredith
immediately to the University of Mississippi and that they shall
each of them be, and they are hereby required to admit him to the
University of Mississippi upon the same terms and conditions as
applicable to white students;
(2) From interfering in any manner with the right of plaintiff,
James Howard Meredith to matriculate in, or attend the University
of Mississippi;
(3) From taking any action or doing any act or being guilty of
any conduct which will impair, frustrate or defeat his right to
enter the University of Mississippi;
(4) Refusing to admit the plaintiff, James Howard Meredith to
the University of Mississippi upon his applications heretofore
filed, all of which are continuing applications.
It is further ordered that said defendants, or any of the
classes of persons referred to, are prohibited and enjoined from
excluding the said James Howard Meredith from admission to
continued attendance at the University of Mississippi.
It is further ordered that the defendants, their servants,
agents, employees, successors and assigns, and all persons acting
in concert with them, are enjoined to admit the plaintiff, James
Howard Meredith to the University of Mississippi upon his
applications heretofore filed and they are enjoined from excluding
the said James Howard Meredith from admission to continued
attendance at the University of Mississippi or discriminating
against him in any way whatsoever because of his race.
Page 376 U. S. 769
It is further ordered that a copy of this order and injunction
be served by the United States Marshal on each of the defendants
herein.
ORDERED, this the 13th day of September, 1962.
S. C. MIZE
United States District Judge
|
376
U.S. 681appd|
APPENDIX D TO OPINION OF
MR. JUSTICE GOLDBERG. DISSENTING
COURT OF APPEALS' TEMPORARY RESTRAINING ORDER
This Court having entered its order in this action on July 28,
1962, and the District Court for the Southern District of
Mississippi having entered a similar order on September 13, 1962,
pursuant to the mandate of this Court, requiring the defendant
officials of the University of Mississippi and the defendant
members of the Board of Trustees of the Institutions of Higher
Learning of the State of Mississippi to enroll James Howard
Meredith as a student in the University of Mississippi, and
It appearing from the verified petition of the United States,
Amicus Curiae herein, that the State of Mississippi, Ross
R. Barnett, Governor of Mississippi, Joe T. Patterson, Attorney
General of Mississippi, T. B. Birdsong, Commissioner of Public
Safety of Mississippi, Paul G. Alexander, District Attorney of
Hinds County, William R. Lamb, District Attorney of Lafayette
County, J. Robert Gilfoy, Sheriff of Hinds County, J. W. Ford,
Sheriff of Lafayette County, William D. Rayfield, Chief of Police
of the City of Jackson, James D. Jones, Chief of Police of the City
of Oxford, Walton Smith, Constable of the City of Oxford, the
classes consisting of all district attorneys in Mississippi, the
classes consisting of the sheriffs of all counties in Mississippi,
the classes consisting of all chiefs of police in Mississippi, and
the classes consisting
Page 376 U. S. 770
of all constables and town officials in Mississippi, threaten to
implement and enforce unless restrained by order of this Court, the
provisions of a Resolution of Interposition adopted by the
Mississippi Legislature, the provisions of Section 4065.3 of the
Mississippi Code, and a Proclamation of Ross R. Barnett invoking
the doctrine of interposition with respect to the enforcement of
the orders of this Court in this case; that Paul G. Alexander has
instituted two criminal prosecutions against James Howard Meredith
on account of the efforts of James Howard Meredith to enroll in the
University of Mississippi pursuant to the orders of this Court;
that A. L. Meador, Sr., and the class of persons he represents, on
September 19, 1962, instituted in the Chancery Court of the Second
Judicial District of Jones County, Mississippi, a civil action
against James Howard Meredith to prevent him from attending the
University of Mississippi; that, on September 20, 1962, James
Howard Meredith, while seeking to enroll at the University of
Mississippi in Oxford, Mississippi, pursuant to the orders of this
Court, was served with a writ of injunction issued by the Chancery
Court of Lafayette County, Mississippi at the instance of Ross R.
Barnett, enjoining James Howard Meredith from applying to or
attending the University of Mississippi; that, on September 20,
1962 the State of Mississippi enacted Senate Bill 1501, the effect
of which is to punish James Howard Meredith should he seek
enrollment in the University of Mississippi; that the effect of the
conduct of the defendants herein named in implementing the policy
of the State of Mississippi as proclaimed by Ross R. Barnett will
necessarily be to prevent the carrying out of the orders of this
Court and of the District Court for the Southern District of
Mississippi; and that the acts and conduct of the defendants named
in the petition will cause immediate and irreparable injury to the
United States consisting of the impairment of the integrity
Page 376 U. S. 771
of its judicial processes, the obstruction of the due
administration of justice, and the deprivation of rights under the
Constitution and laws of the United States, all before notice can
be served and a hearing had,
IT IS ORDERED that the State of Mississippi, Ross R. Barnett,
Joe T. Patterson, T. B. Birdsong, Paul G. Alexander, William R.
Lamb, J. Robert Gilfoy, J. W. Ford, William D. Rayfield, James D.
Jones, Walton Smith, the class consisting of all district attorneys
in Mississippi, the class consisting of the sheriffs of all
counties in Mississippi, the class consisting of all chiefs of
police in Mississippi, and the class consisting of all constables
and town marshals in Mississippi, their agents, employees,
officers, successors, and all persons in active concert or
participation with them, be temporarily restrained from:
1. Arresting, attempting to arrest, prosecuting or instituting
any prosecution against James Howard Meredith under any statute,
ordinance, rule or regulation whatever, on account of his
attending, or seeking to attend, the University of Mississippi;
2. Instituting or proceeding further in any civil action against
James Howard Meredith or any other persons on account of James
Howard Meredith's enrolling or seeking to enroll, or attending the
University of Mississippi;
3. Injuring, harassing, threatening or intimidating James Howard
Meredith in any other way or by any other means on account of his
attending or seeking to attend the University of Mississippi;
4. Interfering with or obstructing by any means or in any manner
the performance of obligations or the enjoyment of rights under
this Court's order of July 28, 1962 and the order of the United
States District Court for the Southern District of Mississippi
entered September 13, 1962, in this action, and
Page 376 U. S. 772
5. Interfering with or obstructing, by force, threat, arrest or
otherwise, any officer or agent of the United States in the
performance of duties in connection with the enforcement of, and
the prevention of obstruction to, the orders entered by this Court
and the District Court for the Southern District of Mississippi
relating to the enrollment and attendance of James Howard Meredith
at the University of Mississippi; or arresting, prosecuting or
punishing such officer or agent on account of his performing or
seeking to perform such duty.
IT IS FURTHER ORDERED that Paul G. Alexander and J. Robert
Gilfoy be temporarily restrained from proceeding further, serving
or enforcing any process or judgment, or arresting James Howard
Meredith in connection with the criminal actions against him in the
Justice of the Peace Court of Hinds County, Mississippi.
IT IS FURTHER ORDERED that A. L. Meador, Sr., be temporarily
restrained from taking any further action or seeking to enforce any
judgment entered in the case of
A. L. Meador, Sr. v. James
Meredith, et al.
IT IS FURTHER ORDERED that Ross R. Barnett be temporarily
restrained from enforcing or seeking to enforce against James
Howard Meredith, any process or judgment in the case of
State
of Mississippi Ex Rel Ross Barnett, Governor vs. James H.
Meredith.
ELBERT P. TUTTLE
Circuit Judge
RICHARD T. RIVES
Circuit Judge
JOHN MINOR WISDOM
Circuit Judge
Signed this 25th day of
September, 1962 at 8:30 A.M.