Notwithstanding the hardship necessarily entailed upon the
accused in being tried in a district other than that in which he
resides, there is no principle of constitutional law that entitles
him to be tried in the place of his residence.
Art. III, § 2 of, and the Sixth Amendment to, the Constitution
secure to the accused the right to a trial in the district where
the crime is committed, and one committing a crime in a district
where he does not reside cannot object to his removal thereto for
trial.
Where one has been indicted for the same offense in two or more
districts, in one of which he resides, it is the duty of the
prosecuting officer to bring the case to trial in the district to
which the facts most strongly point, and if the court first
obtaining jurisdiction of the person of the accused does not
object, the accused cannot object
Page 216 U. S. 463
to his being removed under § 1014, Rev.Stat., from the district
of his residence to the district in which the government elects to
first bring the case to trial.
Where the statute is plain, and Congress has made no exception
in its application, the Court cannot make one.
Under § 1014, Rev.Stat., the duty of the commissioner is to
determine whether a
prima facie case is made out that a
crime has been committed, indictable and triable in the district to
which removal is sought, and if so determined, there is no
discretion; nor is the fact that the accused is under bail in the
district where he resides a bar to the removal.
A conspiracy to defraud the United States under § 5440,
Rev.Stat., does not necessarily involve a direct pecuniary loss to
the United States. The statute includes any conspiracy to impair,
obstruct or defeat the lawful function of any department of the
government --
e.g., the promulgation of officially
acquired information in regard to the cotton crop.
Regulations of a department of the government promulgated under
§ 161, Rev.Stat., have the force of law, and bribery of an officer
of the United States to violate such regulations is included under
§ 5451, Rev.Stat., making it a crime to bribe such officer to
violate his lawful duty.
Matters exclusively relating to defense either substantive or in
abatement are properly determinative by the court into which the
indictments are returned, and where the case will be tried; they
cannot be considered on an appeal from the order of removal made
under § 1014, Rev.Stat.
Introduction before the commissioner of an indictment found in
the district to which removal is sought makes a
prima
facie case for removal which is not overcome by an indictment
found in another district, although the locus is differently stated
in each indictment.
167 F. 211 affirmed.
The facts are stated in the opinion.
Page 216 U. S. 471
MR. JUSTICE LURTON delivered the opinion of the Court.
On May 29, 1908, four indictments were found in the Supreme
Court of the District of Columbia against Moses Haas and certain
others, charging them with having conspired in the District of
Columbia to defraud the United States, and with having conspired to
commit an offense against the United States, under § 5440,
Rev.Stat.. Bench warrants were issued and returned not found.
On the same day, four other indictments were found in the
Circuit Court of the United States for the Southern District of New
York against the same Moses Haas and the others named in the
District of Columbia indictments, charging them with having
conspired in the Southern District of New York to commit the same
offenses covered by the four District of Columbia indictments. Haas
appeared in the New York courts and gave bail. Later he was
arraigned and pleaded not guilty, then withdrew his plea and
entered a motion to quash, which was overruled.
On June 24, 1908, and while this motion to quash was
sub
judice, proceedings were duly begun by the United States
District Attorney for the Southern District of New York before the
United States commissioner for the arrest of Haas and his removal
to the District of Columbia for trial upon the indictments there
pending against him. Pending these removal proceedings, and before
any hearing, the United States district attorney moved the circuit
court in which the New York indictments were pending for consent to
the prosecution of these removal proceedings, and consent was
granted over the objection of Haas. This application was made by
direction of the then Attorney General of the United States, who in
an official communication, said "that should the trial here
[Washington] result in acquittal or conviction, the indictments in
New York will be dropped." Among other
Page 216 U. S. 472
reasons for desiring the trial in Washington, aside from mere
questions of convenience to government officials and witnesses, the
Attorney General said:
"1. The indictments charge a conspiracy on the part of the
several defendants to cause to be issued at Washington by the
Bureau of Statistics for the Department of Agriculture of false
cotton crop reports, and that Holmes, who was then Associate
Statistician of the Bureau of Statistics, was to furnish to his
co-conspirators, in advance of their official issue, the
information to be contained in the reports. While, owing to the
commission in your district of acts in pursuance of the conspiracy,
the court in your district has jurisdiction of the offense, yet the
conspiracy was, in all probability, actually formed in Washington.
The false reports were prepared and issued here, and the advance
information was given out here. The real situs of the crime, then,
is in the District of Columbia, and the trials should therefore be
had here."
"2. The defendant Holmes has been arrested and is now awaiting
trial on the indictments pending in the District of Columbia. There
are two series of these indictments, one against Price, Haas, and
Holmes, and the other against Haas, Peckham, and Holmes. It would
be a great convenience and a vast saving to the government to try
the defendants together. Even this would necessitate two trials,
one in each series. If the nonresident defendants are not removed
to Washington, four trials would be needed -- two in Washington and
two in New York."
Upon the hearing before the commissioner, the government put in
evidence certified copies of the four District of Columbia
indictments, and proof that bench warrants had issued in that
district and returned not found. The defendant admitted his
identity and put in evidence copies of the four New York
indictments and of the proceedings had thereunder. The commissioner
found probable cause and directed that Haas be held to await an
order of removal by a district judge. Thereupon a petition for
writs of habeas corpus and
Page 216 U. S. 473
certiorari was filed in the circuit court, averring that his
arrest and detention were illegal and in violation of the federal
Constitution. The circuit court, upon a full hearing, denied the
writs and remanded the petitioner. 166 F. 621. This appeal was
thereupon taken.
The facts stated present the question as to whether Haas could
be lawfully removed under § 1014, Rev.Stat., over his objection,
pending the proceedings against him in the Southern District of New
York for similar offenses.
Section 1014 provides for the arrest and detention of any
person, wherever found, "for trial" before such court of the United
States as by law has cognizance of the offense, and that,
"where any offender or witness is committed in any district
other than that where the offense is to be tried, it shall be the
duty of the judge of the district where such offender or witness is
imprisoned seasonably to issue, and of the marshal to execute, a
warrant for his removal to the district where the trial is to be
had."
Haas was arrested upon a warrant duly sworn out charging him
with offenses against the United States committed within the
District of Columbia. Copies of the indictments duly returned by a
grand jury were put in evidence. That made a
prima facie
case, requiring detention until an order of removal could be
applied for and issued. Haas insisted upon his right to be tried in
the district of his residence, and complained, with more or less
justice, of the expense and hardship incident to a trial in the
District of Columbia. But there is no principle of constitutional
law which entitles one to be tried in the place of his residence.
The right secured by Art. III, § 2, and the Sixth Amendment of the
Constitution is the right of trial in the district "where the crime
shall have been committed." If, therefore, Haas committed a crime
against the United States in the District of Columbia, he had
neither legal nor constitutional right to object to removal to the
district where the trial was to be had.
In re Palliser,
136 U. S. 257,
136 U. S.
265.
Page 216 U. S. 474
If the only constitutional right secured is the right to a trial
by jury in the district where the crime was committed, there is
obviously no invasion of either right by the election of the
government to prosecute the offense in any district and "court of
the United States as by law has cognizance of the offense." If the
same accusation has been made by grand juries of different
jurisdictions, it would be manifestly the duty of the prosecuting
officer of the United States to determine in which the offense was
most probably committed, and bring the offender to trial there.
Thus, if the place of the formation of the conspiracy be doubtful,
and there be some facts pointing to one district and some to
another, and indictments have been returned in each, it would be
the plain duty of the prosecution to take steps to bring the case
to trial in that district to which the facts most strongly pointed.
This seems to have been the very situation of this case, and the
principal motive moving the Attorney General to give the
instruction shown by his letter to the District Attorney for the
Southern District of New York. The removal statute is plain, and
leaves no room for the court to make an exception when Congress has
made none.
Has the United States court for the District of Columbia
jurisdiction over the accusation made in that district, and is the
case triable there? If so, the duty of the commissioner, assuming a
showing of probable cause, was to detain, and of the judge of the
district to issue his warrant for the removal of the accused "to
the district where the trial is to be had." The case, on principle,
must be the same if the offense be one which was committed in more
than one district. In such a case, § 731, Rev.Stat., makes it
cognizable in either. But, if indicted in two or more districts,
there must be an election as to where the defendant shall be tried.
Primarily, this is the right and duty of the Attorney General or
those acting by his authority. If the election require the arrest
of the accused in a district other than that in which the trial is
to be had, removal proceedings must, of course, be instituted.
Page 216 U. S. 475
The duty of the commissioner is then limited to the
determination of the single question of whether a
prima
facie case is made that the accused has committed an offense
against the United States, indictable and triable in the district
to which a removal is sought. There is no discretion reposed when
such a case is made out. That bail had been given would not prevent
removal, for in such a situation the sureties would be exonerated
by act of the law.
Beavers v. Haubert, 198 U. S.
77.
But in the case before us, the consent of the circuit court, to
which the New York indictments had been returned, was granted. To
say that the accused had a right to a speedy trial of the New York
cases may be conceded. If unreasonable delay should result from
continuances due to an election to try the same accusations in
another district, a very different question might arise, calling
for relief through habeas corpus. But such a possibility affords no
legal reason for denying the right of removal. The precise question
has not been before raised, but in principle the case is within
In re Palliser, 136 U. S. 257,
136 U. S. 267;
Hyde v. Shine, 199 U. S. 62, and
Benson v. Henkel, 198 U. S. 1,
198 U. S. 15.
In the
Palliser case, a removal from a New York
district, the residence of Palliser, to a Connecticut district was
objected to because the offense had been committed in New York, and
not Connecticut. The court said:
"But there can be no doubt at all that, if any offense was
committed in New York, the offense continued to be committed when
the letter reached the postmaster in Connecticut, and that, if no
offense was committed in New York, an offense was committed in
Connecticut, and that, it either aspect, the District Court of the
United States for the district of Connecticut had jurisdiction of
the charge against the petitioner. Whether he might have been
indicted in New York is a question not presented by this
appeal."
In
Hyde v. Shine, the fact that the conspiracy charged
was one triable in California, the residence of the appellant,
was
Page 216 U. S. 476
not considered as an answer to the demand for removal from
California to the District of Columbia, the question of distance
being the one pressed, and decided as presenting no obstacle to the
legal right of removal.
In
Beavers v. Haubert, supra, the appellant objected to
removal from the district of his residence to another, to be there
tried, because he was at the time under indictment in the district
of his residence and under bail for his appearance for a different
offense against the United States. But it was held that this fact
afforded no reason for denying a removal upon the election to try
the one case before the trial of the other.
In
Benson v. Henkel, 198 U. S. 15,
objection was made to a removal to the District of Columbia upon
the ground that the offense, if any, was committed in California,
and that, under the Constitution, the appellant was entitled to a
trial in that jurisdiction. In dealing with that question, Mr.
Justice Brown said:
"The objection does not appear upon the face of the indictment,
which charges the offense to have been committed within this
district, but from the testimony of one of those clerks it seems
that the money was received by him in certain letters mailed to him
from San Francisco and received in Washington. Without intimating
whether the question of jurisdiction can be raised in this way, the
case clearly falls within that of
In re Palliser,
136 U. S.
257, in which it was held that, where an offense is
begun by the mailing of a letter in one district and completed by
the receipt of a letter in another district, the offender may be
punished in the latter district, although it may be that he could
also be punished in the former."
The next objection is that the District of Columbia indictments
do not charge any offense against the United States.
The four District of Columbia indictments charge two sets of
conspiracies. One conspiracy, charged in indictment No. 26,088, is
averred to have been formed between Haas, one
Page 216 U. S. 477
Theodore Price, and one Edwin S. Holmes, Jr., who was an
associate statistician in the Department of Agriculture. The charge
in certain of these counts is that these three defendants conspired
to defraud the United States by secretly obtaining information from
Holmes which he should acquire in his official character as
associate statistician and should, in violation of his official
duty, give out secretly to his coconspirators as to the probable
contents of certain official cotton crop reports in advance of the
time when these reports were to be promulgated according to law. In
one of the counts it is charged that Holmes was to falsify one of
these official cotton crop reports, of which fact his associates
were to be advised in advance. All of which information in advance
of the publication of the official cotton crop reports was to be
used for speculative purposes in the open market.
Indictment No. 26,089 charges that Haas and Price conspired to
bribe Holmes to make this false report and to furnish them in
advance information as to its contents.
Indictment No. 26,086 charges that Haas and one Frederick A.
Peckham conspired with one Van Riper to bribe Holmes to give them
advance information of the June report of 1905, while No. 26,087,
charges Haas, Peckham, and Holmes with conspiracy to defraud the
United States by Holmes' giving his coconspirators advance
information as to that report.
The indictments are of such great length that it is not feasible
to set them out in full or to state the substance of their several
counts. It is, for the purposes of this case, enough to say that it
is averred that the Department of Agriculture includes a Bureau of
Statistics, established by law. That one of the governmental
functions exercised by that department, particularly through the
Statistical Bureau, is the acquirement of detailed information from
time to time in respect to the condition of the cotton crop of the
country. That this information comes through thousands of
correspondents, some official and others not, through the reports
of local agents scattered through the cotton region, and through
traveling
Page 216 U. S. 478
representatives of the Department. From these and other sources
a report is made estimating acreage, condition, and the probable
size of the crop. Comparisons with former reports are made, and
every explanation furnished which may throw light upon the present
condition and prospect of the growing crop. That the purpose is to
complete and promulgate at stated times fair, impartial, and
reliable reports, and that said reports are issued about the third
day of the months of June, July, August, September, October, and
December. That the information thus officially acquired and
compiled, and the estimates thereon, are of value and do greatly
affect the market price of the crop. That such reports are required
to be submitted to and approved by the Secretary of Agriculture
before publication, and that, under the custom, practices, and
regulations of the Secretary of Agriculture all officers and
employees are required to keep secret the information so gathered,
and from in any way divulging same or giving out any information
forecasting such report in advance of its official approval and
promulgation.
It is averred that the said Holmes was an employee or an
official in said department, and in the Bureau of Statistics. That,
by virtue of his duty as such official and assistant statistician,
he acquired much of the information upon which such reports are
based, and, as an official, came into knowledge of the probable
contents of the regular reports. That neither Haas nor Price had
any official connection, and were not authorized to obtain
information about such reports in advance of their promulgation.
That the conspiracy was to obtain such information from Holmes in
advance of general publicity, and to use such information in
speculating upon the cotton market, and thereby defraud the United
States by defeating, obstructing, and impairing it in the exercise
of its governmental function in the regular and official duty of
publicly promulgating fair, impartial, and accurate reports
concerning the cotton crop. One count charges in addition that the
conspiracy included the making of a false report, the
Page 216 U. S. 479
facts to be given by Holmes to his coconspirators in advance of
its publication.
The counts charging a conspiracy to commit an offense against
the United States in substance charge that this was to be
accomplished by bribing the said Holmes to induce him to do certain
acts in violation of his lawful duty not to give out advance
information in respect to the condition of the cotton crop acquired
in the performance of his official duty.
Do the counts which charge a conspiracy to defraud the United
States charge any offense?
The authority for the indictments charging a conspiracy to
defraud is § 5440, Rev.Stat. Its language is plain and broad:
"If two or more persons conspire . . . to defraud the United
States in any manner or for any purpose, and one or more of such
parties do any act to effect the object of the conspiracy, all the
parties to such conspiracy shall be liable,"
etc.
These counts do not expressly charge that the conspiracy
included any direct pecuniary loss to the United States, but, as it
is averred that the acquiring of the information and its
intelligent computation, with deductions, comparisons, and
explanations, involved great expense, it is clear that practices of
this kind would deprive these reports of most of their value to the
public and degrade the department in general estimation, and that
there would be a real financial loss. But it is not essential that
such a conspiracy shall contemplate a financial loss, or that one
shall result. The statute is broad enough in its terms to include
any conspiracy for the purpose of impairing, obstructing, or
defeating the lawful function of any department of government.
Assuming, as we have, for it has not been challenged, that this
statistical side of the Department of Agriculture is the exercise
of a function within the purview of the Constitution, it must
follow that any conspiracy which is calculated to obstruct or
impair its efficiency and destroy the value of its operations and
reports as fair, impartial, and reasonably accurate would be to
defraud
Page 216 U. S. 480
the United States by depriving it of its lawful right and duty
of promulgating or diffusing the information so officially acquired
in the way and at the time required by law or departmental
regulation. That it is not essential to charge or prove an actual
financial or property loss to make a case under the statute has
been more than once ruled.
Hyde v. Shine, 199 U. S.
62,
199 U. S. 81;
United States v. Keitel, 211 U. S. 370,
211 U. S. 394;
Curley v. United States, 130 F. 1;
McGregor v. United
States, 134 Fed.195.
The counts charging a conspiracy to commit an offense against
the United States -- namely, the offense of bribing Holmes to
violate his duty as a public official by giving out advance
information about the monthly cotton reports -- are said not to
charge an offense against the United States, because there is no
statute which prohibits the giving out of such official secrets in
advance of lawful promulgation.
Section 5451, Rev.Stat., makes it a crime to bribe or offer to
bribe "any officer of the United States," or
"any person acting for or on behalf of the United States, in any
official function, under or by authority of any department or
office of the government; . . . to induce him to do or omit to do
any act in violation of his lawful duty."
The head of each department is authorized by § 161,
Rev.Stat.,
"to prescribe regulations not inconsistent with law for the
government of his department, the conduct of its officers and
clerks, the distribution and performance of its business, and the .
. . preservation of the records, papers, and property appertaining
to it."
Such regulations need not be promulgated in any set form, nor in
writing.
In
United States v.
Macdaniel, 7 Pet. 1,
32 U. S. 14-15, it
was said of departmental regulations that,
"of necessity, usages have been established in every department
of the government, which have become a kind of common law, and
regulate the rights and duties of those who act within their
respective limits."
In
Benson v. Henkel, 198 U. S. 1,
198 U. S. 11, a
similar question
Page 216 U. S. 481
arose in an appeal from an order denying a writ of habeas corpus
in a removal case. The appellant was charged with a conspiracy to
commit an offense by bribing certain clerks of the land office to
divulge the contents of certain reports. It was said that these
clerks had not been forbidden by any statute to give out such
information. Mr. Justice Brown, for the Court, said:
"But it is clearly for the court to say whether every duty to be
performed by an official must be designated by statute, or whether
it may not be within the power of the head of a department to
prescribe regulations for the conduct of the business of his office
and the custody of its papers, a breach of which may be treated as
an act in violation of the lawful duty of an official or clerk.
United
States v. Macdaniel, 7 Pet. 1,
32 U. S.
14."
We have not dealt with certain minor objections which go to the
form of the indictments, rather than to the substance. These are
matters to be determined in the court where they were found, and
are not proper for consideration upon habeas corpus proceeding.
The exclusion of the evidence taken in
Price v. United
States and offered in this case upon the petition for writ of
habeas corpus in the circuit court, touching the history of the
finding of indictment No. 26,088, is not a matter which is proper
for review on such an appeal as this. So also the defense of the
statute of limitations. The one defense is matter in abatement, and
the other of substantive defense, and both are properly matters for
the determination of the court into which the indictments were
returned and where the case will be tried.
It is enough to hold, as we do, that the indictments
sufficiently charge an offense committed within the District of
Columbia to require that the appellant shall be removed to that
district for trial.
Benson v. Henkel, 198 U. S.
1.
The introduction of certified copies of the District of Columbia
indictments made a
prima facie case for removal. That
Page 216 U. S. 482
case was not overcome by the copies of the New York indictments.
That they laid the locus of the conspiracy in a different place
from that laid in the District of Columbia indictments is true. But
if such indictments are evidence for the purpose of showing that
the place of the conspiracy was not in the District of Columbia,
such evidence was not, as matter of law, sufficient to overcome the
probable cause shown by the District of Columbia indictments. They
certainly could not be regarded as admissions by the government.
They were, at most, evidence of the opinion of the New York grand
jury as to the locus of the conspiracy. But if the fact be that the
offense charged in both sets of indictments is identical, and that
the locus of the conspiracy is laid in one set as in one district
and in the other as in a different district, it is still for the
government to determine in which of the two districts it will bring
the accused to trial, and of the commissioner to determine whether
a
prima facie case has been shown that the accused had
probably committed an offense in the District of Columbia which was
indictable and triable there. This we have dealt with already, and
only refer to it now in connection with the use of the New York
indictments as evidence that the offense was not committed in the
District of Columbia.
Upon the whole case, we conclude that the commissioner had
jurisdiction, and that no sufficient reason is shown for
discharging the appellant.
Final order denying writ
Affirmed.
BREWER, J., concurring:
I concur in affirming the orders of removal in these cases, but
my concurrence must not be taken as holding that the indictments
will stand the final test of validity or sufficiency. Assuming that
there is a doubt in respect to these matters, as I think there is,
and as seems to be suggested by the opinion in No. 367, I am of the
opinion that such doubt should be
Page 216 U. S. 483
settled by direct action in the court in which the indictments
were returned, and not in removal proceedings.
MR. JUSTICE McKENNA concurs in the result, but reserves opinion
whether the facts alleged in the indictment constitute a conspiracy
to defraud the United States.