The words "out of the jurisdiction of any particular state," as
used in § 5339, Rev.Stat., refer to the states of the Union, and
not to any separate particular community, and one committing the
crimes referred to in that section in the harbor of Honolulu in the
Territory of Hawaii is within the jurisdiction of the District
Court of the
Page 217 U. S. 235
United States for that Territory.
United
States v. Bevans, 3 Wheat. 337, and
Talbot v.
Silver Bow County, 139 U. S. 438,
distinguished. While, by § 5 of the Organic Act of the Territory of
Hawaii of April 30, 1890, c. 339, 31 Stat. 141, the Constitution of
the United States and laws not locally inapplicable were extended
to Hawaii, and by § 6 of that act laws of Hawaii not repealed and
not inconsistent with such Constitution and laws were left in
force, nothing in the act operated to leave intact the jurisdiction
of the territorial courts over crimes committed in the harbors of
Hawaiian ports exclusively cognizable by the courts of the United
States under § 5339, Rev.Stat.
A copy of the original certificate of enrollment of a vessel
certified under seal by the deputy collector of customs of the port
where issued which is in form as required by § 4155, Rev.Stat.,
held to be sufficient under the conditions of
identification of the signature and seal and § 882, Rev.Stat., to
prove the national character of the vessel upon which the crime was
committed by one indicted and tried under § 5339, Rev.Stat.
The facts are stated in the opinion.
Page 217 U. S. 240
MR. JUSTICE LURTON delivered the opinion of the Court.
The plaintiff in error, John Wynne, has sued out this writ of
error from a judgment and sentence of death for a murder committed
on board the steamer
Rosecrans, an American vessel, while
lying in the harbor of Honolulu, in the Territory of Hawaii. The
indictment upon which he was tried included four counts. In each,
it was charged that the murder had been done on board the said
American vessel, lying in the harbor of Honolulu, in the District
and Territory of Hawaii, and within the admiralty and maritime
jurisdiction of the United States, "and out of the jurisdiction of
any particular state of the said United States of America." In two
of the counts, the locality is described as a certain "haven" of
the Pacific Ocean, and in the others as a certain "arm" of the
Pacific Ocean.
The question to which the counsel for the plaintiff in error has
chiefly invited the attention of the Court is whether the
indictment charges an offense within the jurisdiction of the
District Court of the United States for the Territory of Hawaii. It
was founded upon § 5339, Rev.Stat., and particularly the second
paragraph. The section is set out below:
"SEC. 5339. Every person who commits murder --"
"First. Within any fort, arsenal, dockyard, magazine, or in any
other place or district of country under the exclusive jurisdiction
of the United States."
"Second. Or upon the high seas, or in any arm of the sea, or in
any river, haven, creek, basin, or bay within the admiralty and
maritime jurisdiction of the United States, and out of the
jurisdiction of any particular state."
"Third. Or who, upon any such waters, maliciously strikes,
stabs, wounds, poisons, or shoots at any other person, of which
striking, stabbing, wounding, poisoning, or shooting such other
person dies, either on land or at sea, within or without the United
States, shall suffer death. "
Page 217 U. S. 241
Shortly stated, the contention is that the haven or arm of the
Pacific ocean which constitutes the harbor of Honolulu, although
"within the admiralty and maritime jurisdiction of the United
States," is a locality not "out of the jurisdiction of any
particular state," because within the jurisdiction of the Territory
of Hawaii. The basis for the contention is that the words "out of
the jurisdiction of any particular state" do not refer to the
jurisdiction of a state of the United States, but are to be given
the wider meaning of out of the jurisdiction of any separate
political community, and that the Territory of Hawaii constitutes
such a political organism. The postulate cannot be considered. The
Crimes Act of April 30, 1790, c. 9, 1 Stat. 112, contained the same
limiting words. Thus, in the eighth section of that act,
jurisdiction was asserted over the crime of murder, as well as
certain other crimes, when committed "upon the high seas, or in any
river, haven, basin, or bay, out of the jurisdiction of any
particular state." The act was remolded by the Act of March 3,
1825, c. 65, § 4, page 115, 4 Stat. The further limitation of
"within the admiralty and maritime jurisdiction of the United
States" was added, but otherwise the jurisdiction remained the
same. Without substantial change, the provision of the last act was
carried into the Revised Statutes as part of § 5339.
To support the contention urged, counsel have cited
United States v.
Bevans, 3 Wheat. 337,
16 U. S. 388,
and
Talbott v. Silver Bow County, 139 U.
S. 438,
139 U. S. 444.
The indictment in the
Bevans case was for a murder done on
board a war vessel of the United States while she lay at anchor a
mile or more from the shores of the bay constituting the harbor of
Boston, in the State of Massachusetts. The bay was wholly within
the territorial jurisdiction of the State of Massachusetts, and the
Court said that it was not material whether the courts of that
state had cognizance of the offense or not. "To bring the offense,"
said the Court,
"within the jurisdiction of the courts of the Union, it must
have been committed in a river, etc., out of the jurisdiction of
any state. It is not the offense committed, but the
Page 217 U. S. 242
bay in which it is committed which must be out of the
jurisdiction of the state. If, then, it should be true that
Massachusetts can take no cognizance of the offense, yet, unless
the place itself be out of her jurisdiction, Congress has not given
cognizance of that offense to its courts. If there be a common
jurisdiction, the crime cannot be punished in the courts of the
Union."
The case has no bearing upon the question here involved except
so far as that the jurisdiction of the courts of the United States
was there held to be excluded because the place where the offense
was committed was within the territorial jurisdiction of one of the
states of the Union. The question in the
Talbott case was
whether a territory was within the meaning of § 5219, Rev.Stat.,
which permitted a "state within which" a national bank is located
to tax its shares. The Court held that the permission extended to
states in that regard including territories. The decision was based
upon the obvious intent of Congress, looking to the scope and
purpose of the act, the Court saying, among other things:
"While the word 'state' is often used in contradistinction to
'territory,' yet, in its general public sense, and as sometimes
used in the statutes and the proceedings of the government, it has
the larger meaning of any separate political community, including
therein the District of Columbia and the territories, as well as
those political communities known as states of the Union."
But the word "state," as used in the eighth section of the Act
of 1790, and the subsequent Act of 1825, as well as used in § 5339,
Rev.Stat., must be determined from its own context. The word
"state," as there used, has been uniformly held as referring only
to the territorial jurisdiction of one of the United States, and
not to any other government or political community. Thus, in
United States v. Ross, 1 Gall. 626, Mr. Justice Story
said, in reference to the words in § 4 of the Act of 1825, above
referred to, that
"the additional words of the act 'in any river, haven, basin, or
bay out of the jurisdiction of any particular state' refer to such
places without any of the United States, and not without foreign
states, as will be very clear on examining the provision
Page 217 U. S. 243
as to the place of trial, in the close of the same section."
In
United States v.
Brailsford, 5 Wheat. 184,
18 U. S. 189,
18 U. S. 200,
one of the questions certified was
"whether the words, 'out of the jurisdiction of any particular
state' in the eighth section of the Act of Congress of the 30th of
April, 1790, c. 9 , vol. 1, Statutes at Large, must be construed to
mean out of the jurisdiction of any particular state of the United
States?"
To this the Court said:
"We think it obvious that 'out of any particular state' must be
construed to mean 'out of any one of the United States.' By
examining the context it will be seen that 'particular state' is
uniformly used in contradistinction to United States."
In
United States v. Rodgers, 150 U.
S. 249,
150 U. S. 265,
the same meaning was attached to the words in question, and an
offense committed on the Detroit River, on a vessel belonging to a
citizen of the United States, was held cognizable by the District
Court of the United States for the Eastern District of Michigan
although it appeared that the offense had been committed
within
the territorial limits of the Dominion of Canada, and
therefore not within the jurisdiction of any particular state of
the United States.
See also St. Clair v. United States,
154 U. S. 134,
154 U. S. 144,
and
Andersen v. United States, 170
U. S. 489.
That there existed an organized political community in the
Hawaiian Islands, exercising political, civil, and penal
jurisdiction throughout what now constitutes the Territory of
Hawaii, including jurisdiction over the bay or haven in question,
when that territory was acquired under the joint resolution of
Congress of July 7, 1898, did not prevent the operation of § 5339,
Rev.Stat. That "political community" did not constitute one of the
states of the United States, and if the other jurisdictional facts
existed, § 5339 came at once into operation.
Unless, therefore, there was something in the legislation of
Congress found in the Act of April 30, 1900, c. 339, 31 Stat. p.
141, providing a government for the Territory of Hawaii, which
excluded the operation of the statute, the jurisdiction of the
courts of the United States over the bay here in question
Page 217 U. S. 244
in respect of the murder there charged to have been committed
was beyond question.
Counsel have cited and relied upon the fifth, sixth and seventh
sections of the organic act referred to, in connection with §§ 83,
84, 89, and 91, as operating to leave intact the jurisdiction of
the territorial courts of the territory under existing penal laws
over this "haven" or "arm" of the sea, in respect to homicides
there committed. The fifth section of the organic act referred to
provided
"that the Constitution, and except as herein otherwise provided,
all the laws of the United States which are not locally
inapplicable shall have the same force and effect within the said
territory as elsewhere in the United States."
The sixth section continued in force the laws of Hawaii
"not inconsistent with the Constitution or laws of the United
States, or the provisions of this act; . . . subject to repeal or
amendment by the Legislature of Hawaii or the Congress of the
United States."
The seventh section expressly repeals a long list of local laws,
civil and criminal, and does not expressly include the chapter of
the penal laws of Hawaii of 1897, relating to homicides. The
eighty-first section vests the judicial power of the territory in
one supreme court and such inferior courts as the legislature may
establish, and continues in force the laws of Hawaii concerning the
jurisdiction and procedure of such courts "except as herein
provided." Section 83 continues in force the laws of Hawaii
relating to the judicial department, including civil and criminal
procedure, subject to modification by Congress or the legislature.
Section 89 provides that the control of wharves and landings
constructed by the Republic of Hawaii, on any seacoast, bay, or
harbor, shall remain under the control of the government of the
Territory of Hawaii. Section 91 leaves public property which had
been ceded to the United States under the control of the government
of the territory.
We cannot see that any of the things referred to have the effect
claimed for them. The plain purpose of the fifth section was to
extend the Constitution and laws of the United States,
Page 217 U. S. 245
not locally inapplicable, to the territory, and of the sixth
section, to leave in force the laws of Hawaii, except as repealed
by the act, or inconsistent with the Constitution or laws of the
United States.
If, when that act was passed, one who committed murder in the
harbor of Honolulu was subject to trial in the courts of the United
States, though within the territorial waters of Hawaii, the organic
act neither expressly nor impliedly deprives the courts of the
Union of the jurisdiction which they had before. It was within the
power of Congress to confer upon its courts exclusive jurisdiction
over all offenses committed within the territory, whether on land
or water. This it did not elect to exercise. It provided for the
establishment of a district court of the United States, with all of
the powers and jurisdiction of a district court and of a circuit
court of the United States. It provided also for the organization
of local courts with the jurisdiction conferred by the existing
laws of Hawaii upon its local courts except as such laws were in
conflict with the act itself or the Constitution and laws of the
United States. If it be true, as claimed, that the territorial
courts exercise jurisdiction over homicides in the harbor of
Honolulu under and by virtue of the laws of Hawaii thus continued
in force, it only establishes that there may be concurrent
jurisdiction in respect of certain crimes when committed in certain
places, and is far from establishing that the courts of the Union
have been deprived of a jurisdiction which they have at all times
claimed and exercised over certain offenses when committed upon the
high seas, or in any arm of the sea, or in any river, basin, haven,
creek, or bay within the admiralty and maritime jurisdiction of the
United States, and out of the jurisdiction of any particular
state.
We find nothing in the special legislation applicable to that
territory which prevented the operation of § 5339.
There are assignments touching the competency of certain
evidence relied upon to establish the national character of the
Rosecrans, and others which challenge the sufficiency of
the
Page 217 U. S. 246
evidence to carry the case to the jury against a motion to
direct a verdict for insufficiency of evidence upon that point. A
certificate of enrollment, purporting to have been issued at San
Francisco by one Coey, "acting deputy collector of customs,"
initialed "W.," and signed by E. W. Marlin, deputy naval officer,
as required by § 4332, Rev.Stat., which recited that the vessel was
solely owned by the National Oil & Transportation Company, a
corporation organized under the laws of California, was introduced
for the purpose of establishing that the vessel was of American
nationality. There was also evidence that she carried the flag of
the United States -- evidence admissible upon a mere question of
nationality.
St. Clair v. United States, 154 U.
S. 134,
154 U. S. 151.
The principal objection is that this certificate was not the
original, but a copy, not sufficiently authenticated. The
authentication was in these words:
"
District and Port of San Francisco"
"I hereby certify the within to be a true copy of the original
issued by this office."
"Given under my hand and seal this 5 day of October 1907."
"(Sgd.) N.S. FARLEY [Seal]"
"
Deputy Collector of Customs"
"W."
The requirements for registration are set out in § 4142. The
certificate in question was in form as required by § 4155.
There was evidence of a witness that he had himself received
custom papers from the customhouse at San Francisco, signed by
Farley, and was familiar with the signature from its appearance
upon ship licenses on board ships. He had never seen Farley write,
and only identified the signature from familiarity with it obtained
from this and other like official papers. He also said he was
familiar with the seal of the customs officials at San
Francisco.
The appointment of deputy collectors is provided for by §§ 2630,
2633, Rev.Stat.. By § 882, Rev.Stat., copies of any
Page 217 U. S. 247
papers or documents, in any of the executive departments, under
the seal of the proper department, are made admissible in evidence
equally with the original.
There was no evidence whatever casting suspicion upon the
genuineness of the copy or of the seal or the signature of Farley,
and none which challenged in any way the American character of the
ship. Under such circumstances and for the purposes of this case,
it was not error to assume that the document was genuinely executed
by Farley, that he was what he claimed to be, a deputy collector of
customs, and that his signature had been signed by himself or one
authorized to sign for him. 3 Wigmore on Evidence § 2161.
There was no error, and the judgment is
Affirmed.