The courts of a state have no jurisdiction of a complaint for
perjury in testifying before a notary public of the state upon a
contested election of a member of the House of Representatives of
the United States, and a person arrested by order of a magistrate
of the state on such a complaint will be discharged by writ of
habeas corpus.
This was a writ of habeas corpus granted upon the petition of
Wilson Loney, by the circuit court of the United States, to the
police sergeant of the City of Richmond, in the State of Virginia,
who justified his detention of the prisoner under a warrant of
arrest from a justice of the peace for that city upon a complaint
charging him with willful perjury committed on February 2, 1889, in
giving his deposition as a witness before a notary public of the
city in the case of a contested election of a member of the House
of Representatives of the United States.
Page 134 U. S. 373
The circuit court discharged the prisoner upon the ground that
the offense charged against him was punishable only under § 5392 of
the Revised Statutes, and was within the exclusive cognizance of
the courts of the United States. 38 F. 101. The respondent appealed
to this Court.
MR. JUSTICE GRAY, after stating the facts as above, delivered
the opinion of the Court.
By the Constitution, the judicial power of the United States is
vested in the courts of the United States. Article III, Section 1.
By the statutes of the United States, those courts have
jurisdiction, exclusive of the courts of the several states, of
"all crimes and offenses cognizable under the authority of the
United States," Rev.Stat. § 711, cl. 1, and the circuit courts of
the United States have exclusive cognizance of all such crimes and
offenses except where otherwise provided by law, the principal
exception being where concurrent jurisdiction is given to the
district courts of the United States, Rev.Stat. § 629, cl. 20; Act
Aug. 13, 1888, 25 Stat. 434, c. 866, § 1, and it is declared by way
of greater caution that nothing contained in the Crimes Act of the
United States "shall be held to take away or impair the
jurisdiction of the courts of the several states under the laws
thereof." Rev.Stat. § 5328. The House of Representatives of the
United States is made by the Constitution the judge of the
elections, returns, and qualifications of its own members. Article
I, Section 5. Congress has regulated by law the form in which
notice of a contested election may be given and answered and the
time and manner in which depositions on oath of witnesses in such
cases may be taken and returned to the House of Representatives by
a judge of any court of the United States, or of a court of record
of any state, or by any mayor or recorder of a city, or by any
register in bankruptcy or notary public, or, if
Page 134 U. S. 374
the parties so agree, by any officer authorized to take
deposition by the laws of the state or of the United States, and
has provided for the punishment of such witnesses failing to attend
and testify after being duly summoned. Rev.Stat. §§ 105-130; Act
March 2, 1887, 24 Stat. 445, c. 318.
Congress has also enacted that every person having taken an oath
to testify truly "before a competent tribunal, officer, or person,
in any case in which a law of the United States authorizes an oath
to be administered," who willfully and contrary to such oath states
any material matter which he does not believe to be true is guilty
of perjury, and shall be punished by fine and imprisonment.
Rev.Stat. § 5392.
The laws of Virginia indeed, provide that notaries public shall
be appointed by the governor of the state, and may take "any oath
or affidavit required by law, which is not of such a nature that it
must be made in court." Virginia Code of 1887, §§ 923, 173. But the
oath of a witness, in the case of a contested election of a member
of the House of Representatives of the United States, is not
required by any law of Virginia, but is an oath authorized to be
administered by the laws of the United States, and by those laws
only, and the witness gives his testimony in obedience to those
laws, and not in the performance of any duty which he owes to the
state in which his testimony is taken. Any one of the officers
designated by Congress to take the depositions of such witnesses
(whether he is appointed by the United States, such as a judge of a
federal court or a register in bankruptcy, or by the state, such as
a judge of one of its courts of record, a mayor or recorder of a
city, or a notary public) performs this function not under any
authority derived from the state, but solely under the authority
conferred upon him by Congress, and in a matter concerning the
government of the United States. Testimony taken with the single
object of being returned to and considered by the House of
Representatives of the United States exercising the judicial power
vested in it by the Constitution of judging of the elections of its
members, and taken before an officer designated by Congress as
competent
Page 134 U. S. 375
for this purpose and deriving his authority to do this from no
other source, stands upon the same ground as testimony taken before
any judge or officer of the United States, and perjury in giving
such testimony is punishable in the courts of the United States.
United States v.
Bailey, 9 Pet. 238.
There are cases (the most familiar of which are those of making
and uttering counterfeit money) in which the same act may be a
violation of the laws of the state as well as of the laws of the
United States, and be punishable by the judiciary of either.
Fox v. Ohio, 5
How 410;
United States v.
Marigold, 9 How. 560;
Moore v.
Illinois, 14 How. 13;
Ex Parte Siebold,
100 U. S. 371,
100 U. S. 390;
Cross v. North Carolina, 132 U. S. 131.
But the power of punishing a witness for testifying falsely in a
judicial proceeding belongs peculiarly to the government in whose
tribunals that proceeding is had. It is essential to the impartial
and efficient administration of justice in the tribunals of the
nation that witnesses should be able to testify freely before them,
unrestrained by legislation of the state or by fear of punishment
in the state courts. The administration of justice in the national
tribunals would be greatly embarrassed and impeded if a witness
testifying before a court of the United States or upon a contested
election of a member of Congress were liable to prosecution and
punishment in the courts of the state upon a charge of perjury
preferred by a disappointed suitor or contestant or instigated by
local passion or prejudice.
A witness who gives his testimony, pursuant to the Constitution
and laws of the United States in a case pending in a court or other
judicial tribunal of the United States, whether he testifies in the
presence of that tribunal or before any magistrate or officer
(either of the nation or of the state) designated by act of
Congress for the purpose, is accountable for the truth of his
testimony to the United States only, and perjury committed in so
testifying is an offense against the public justice of the United
States, and within the exclusive jurisdiction of the courts of the
United States, and cannot therefore be punished in the courts of
Virginia under the general provision of her statutes that
"if any person to whom
Page 134 U. S. 376
an oath is lawfully administered on any occasion willfully swear
falsely on such occasion touching any material matter or
thing,"
he shall be guilty of perjury. Virginia Code of 1887, § 3741. It
has accordingly been held by the Supreme Court of New Hampshire, in
an able opinion of Chief Justice Parker, that the courts of a state
have no jurisdiction of the crime of perjury committed in an
examination before a commissioner under the United States Bankrupt
Act,
State v. Pike, 15 N.H. 83; by MR. JUSTICE BRADLEY,
affirming a decision of Judge Erskine, as well as by the Supreme
Courts of Tennessee and of Georgia, that the state courts have no
jurisdiction of perjury in testifying before a commissioner of the
circuit court of the United States,
Ex Parte Bridges, 2
Woods 428, same case
nom. Brown v. United States, 14
Amer.Law.Reg. (N.S.) 566;
State v. Shelley, 11 Lea 594;
Ross v. State, 55 Ga. 192, and by the courts of other
states, that they have no jurisdiction of perjury in making an
affidavit under the acts of Congress relating to the sale of public
lands,
State v. Adams, 4 Blackford 146;
People v.
Kelly, 38 Cal. 145;
State v. Kirkpatrick, 32 Ark.
117. The decisions in the Supreme Courts of Pennsylvania and of New
Hampshire, cited for the appellant, holding that the judiciary of a
state has jurisdiction of perjury committed in a proceeding for
naturalization before a court of the state, under authority of
Congress, tend rather to support than to oppose our conclusion, for
they were put upon the ground that the proceeding for
naturalization was a judicial proceeding in a court of the state,
as it doubtless was.
Rump v. Commonwealth, 30 Penn.St.
475;
State v. Whittemore, 50 N.H. 245;
Spratt v.
Spratt, 4 Pet. 393,
29 U. S.
408.
The courts of Virginia having no jurisdiction of the matter of
the charge on which the prisoner was arrested, and he being in
custody, in violation of the Constitution and laws of the United
States, for an act done in pursuance of those laws, by testifying
in the case of a contested election of a member of Congress, law
and justice required that he should be discharged from such
custody, and he was rightly so discharged by the
Page 134 U. S. 377
circuit court on writ of habeas corpus. Rev.Stat. §§ 751, 761;
Ex Parte Royall, 117 U. S. 241.
Judgment affirmed.