The Acts of Congress of 27 February, 1801, and of 3 March, 1801,
relative to the District of Columbia have not changed the laws of
Maryland and Virginia, adopted by Congress as the laws of the
District in such parts of the same respectively as formerly
belonged severally to those states any further than was made
necessary by the change of jurisdiction. Suits for fines,
forfeitures, and penalties imposed by the laws of Maryland or
Virginia must be prosecuted and proceeded in according to the forms
and provisions of those laws, but in the name of the United States
where the prosecution was required to be conducted in the name of
the state.
Where, by a law of Virginia, a penalty was imposed for keeping a
gaming table, and the same was given to any person who should sue
for the same, an indictment in the name of the United States for
the offense cannot be sustained, but the penalty must be sued for
in the form authorized by the law.
Page 5 U. S. 253
The defendant was indicted for suffering a faro bank to be
played in his house, contrary to an Act of the Assembly of Virginia
of 19 January, 1798, ch. 2, sec. 3.
The act provides that
"Any person whatsoever who shall suffer the game of billiards,
or any of the games played at the tables called the A. B. C. -- E.
O. or faro bank, or any other gaming table or bank of the same or
the like kind, under any denomination whatever, to be played in his
or her house or in a house of which he or she hath at the time the
use or possession shall, for every such offense, forfeit and pay
the sum of $150, to be recovered in any court of record by any
person who will sue for the same."
Upon the trial of the indictment, the court charged the jury
that the proceeding by indictment to recover the penalty imposed by
law for the offense stated in the indictment was improper, illegal,
and could not be sustained.
To this opinion an exception was taken by the attorney of the
United States, and the question before the court was whether an
indictment was the proper process.
Page 5 U. S. 256
MR. CHIEF JUSTICE MARSHALL delivered the opinion of the
Court.
This is a writ of error to a judgment of the Circuit Court of
the District of Columbia, sitting in the County of Alexandria, in
the following case.
By an act of the Legislature of Virginia, a penalty of �150 is
imposed on any person who permits certain games, enumerated in the
act, to be played in a house of which he is the proprietor. The
penalty, by that act, is given to any person who will sue for the
same.
After the passage of this act, Congress assumed the government
of the District and declared the laws of Maryland to remain in
force in that part of the District which had been ceded by
Maryland, and the laws of Virginia to remain in force in that part
of the District which had been ceded by Virginia.
Subsequent to the act of assumption, an act passed supplementary
to the act entitled "an act concerning the District of Columbia,"
the second section of which is in these words:
"All indictments shall run in the name of the United States and
conclude against the peace and government thereof, and all fines,
penalties, and forfeitures accruing under the laws of the States of
Maryland and Virginia, which by adoption have become the laws of
this District, shall be recovered with costs by indictment or
information in the name of the United States, or by action of debt
in the name of the United States and of the informer, one-half of
which fine shall accrue to the United States and the other half to
the informer; and the said fines shall be collected by, or paid to
the marshal, and one-half thereof shall be by him paid over to the
board of commissioners hereinafter established, and the other half
to the informers."
It is admitted that under the laws of Virginia, an indictment
for this penalty could not be sustained, but it is contended that
the clause in the supplemental act which has been recited makes a
new appropriation of the penalty and gives a new remedy for its
recovery.
It is insisted that the words "all fines, penalties, and
forfeitures accruing under the laws of Maryland and Virginia"
necessarily include this penalty, and by giving a recovery in the
name of the United States by indictment, appropriate the penalty to
the public treasury. On the part of the defendant in error it is
contended that the words relied on do not change the law further
than to substitute in all actions heretofore carried on in the
names of the States of Maryland and Virginia respectively, the name
of the United States instead of those names, and that the
provisions of the act apply only to
Page 5 U. S. 257
fines, penalties, and forfeitures accruing to the
government.
This subject will perhaps receive some elucidation from a review
of the two acts of Congress relative to the District of
Columbia.
The first section of the first act, declaring that the laws of
the two states respectively should remain in force in the parts of
the territory ceded by each, was perhaps only declaratory of a
principle which would have been in full operation without such
declaration; yet it manifests very clearly an intention in Congress
not to take up the subject of a review of the laws of the District
at that time, but to leave things as they then were, only adapting
the existing laws to the new situation of the people.
Every remaining section of the act to the 16th is employed on
subjects where the mere change of government required the
intervention of the general legislature.
The sixteenth section continues still to manifest a solicitude
or the preservation of the existing state of things, so far as was
compatible with the change of government, by declaring that nothing
contained in the act should be construed to affect rights granted
by or derived from the acts of incorporation of Alexandria and
Georgetown, or of any body politic or corporate within the said
District, except so far as relates to their judicial powers.
This act had given to the circuit court, which it established,
cognizance of all crimes committed in the District and of all
penalties and forfeitures accruing under the laws of the United
States.
It was soon perceived that the criminal jurisdiction of the
court could not be exercised in one part of the District, because,
by the laws of Virginia, persons guilty of any offense less than
murder in the first degree were only punishable in the penitentiary
house, erected in the City of Richmond, which punishment the Court
of Columbia could not inflict.
Page 5 U. S. 258
It was also perceived that some embarrassment would arise
respecting the style in which suits theretofore directed to be
brought in the names of Maryland and Virginia should thenceforth be
prosecuted. The respective laws authorizing them, and which were
considered as having been reenacted by Congress,
totidem
verbis, directed such suits to be prosecuted in the names of
Maryland and Virginia, respectively. The continuance of this style
in the courts of the United States was glaringly improper, and it
was thought necessary to change it by express provision. These
objects rendered the supplemental act necessary, which provides
that the criminal law of Virginia as it existed before the
establishment of a penitentiary system should continue in force,
and that all indictments shall run in the name of the United
States, and all fines, penalties, and forfeitures accruing under
the laws of the States of Maryland and Virginia shall be recovered
with costs, &c.
The residue of this supplemental act changes nothing, and only
supplies provisions required by the revolution in government and
which had been omitted in the original act.
This view of the two acts would furnish strong reasons for
supposing the object of Congress to have been not to change in any
respect the existing laws further than the new situation of the
District rendered indispensably necessary, and that the fines,
penalties, and forfeitures alluded to in the act, are those only
which accrued by law in the whole or in part to government, and for
the recovery of which the remedy was by indictment or information
in the name of the state in which the court sat, or by a
qui
tam action in which the name of the state was to be used. It
cannot be presumed that Congress could have intended to use the
words in the unlimited sense contended for.
By the laws of Virginia, an officer is liable to a heavy fine
for not returning an execution which came to his hands to be
served, or for retaining in his hands money levied on such
execution. This goes to the party injured, and on his motion the
judgment for the fine is to be rendered. It would be going a great
way to construe this act
Page 5 U. S. 259
of Congress as making such a fine recoverable for the use of the
United States, and yet this would be the consequence of construing
it to extend to fines and penalties accruing by law, not to
government, but to individuals.
If a penalty recoverable by any individual by action of debt was
to be considered as designed to be embraced by the second section
of the supplemental act, still an action of debt in the name of the
United States and of the informer would seem to be the remedy given
by the act.
The principle
reddenda singula singulis would be
applicable, and it would seem to the Court more proper to suppose
the
qui tam action given in this case to be the remedy
than an indictment.
The Court therefore is of opinion that there is no error in the
judgment, and that it be
Affirmed.