1. Sect. 641 of the Revised Statutes, which provides for the
removal into the federal court of any civil suit or prosecution
"commenced in any state court for any cause whatsoever against
any person who is denied or cannot enforce in the judicial
tribunals of the State, or in the part of the State where such suit
or prosecution is pending, any right secured to him by any law
providing for the equal civil rights of citizens of the United
States,"
&c., examined in connection with sects. 1977 and 1978.
Held, that the object of these statutes, as of the
Constitution which authorized them, was to place, in respect to
civil rights, the colored race upon a level with the white. They
made the rights and responsibilities, civil and criminal, of the
two races exactly the same.
2. The prohibitions of the Fourteenth Amendment have exclusive
reference to State action. It is the State which is prohibited from
denying to any person within its jurisdiction the equal protection
of the laws, and, consequently, the statutes founded upon the
Amendment, and partially enumerating what civil rights the colored
man shall enjoy equally with the white are intended for protection
against State infringement of those rights. Sect. 641 was also
intended to protect them against State action, and against that
alone.
3. A State may exert her authority through different agencies,
and those prohibitions extend to her action denying equal
protection of the laws, whether it be action by one of these
agencies or by another. Congress, by virtue of the fifth section of
the Fourteenth Amendment, may enforce the prohibitions whenever
they are disregarded by either the Legislative, the Executive, or
the Judicial Department of the State. The mode of enforcement is
left to its discretion. It may secure the right, that is, enforce
its recognition, by removing the case from a State court, in which
it is denied, into a federal court, where it will be
acknowledged.
4. But the Fourteenth Amendment is broader than sect. 641, as
the latter does not apply to
all cases in which the equal
protection of the laws may be denied to a defendant. The removal
thereby authorized is before trial or final hearing. But the
violation of the constitutional prohibitions, when committed by the
judicial action of a State, may be, and generally will be, after
the trial or final hearing has commenced. It is during the trial or
final hearing the defendant is denied equality of legal protection,
and not until then. Nor can he know until then that the equal
protection of the laws will not be extended to him. Certainly not
until then can he affirm that it is denied. To such a case -- that
is, to judicial infractions of the constitutional amendment after
the trial has commenced -- sect. 641 has no applicability. It was
not intended to reach such cases. They were left to the revisory
power of this Court.
5. Therefore, the denial or inability to enforce in the judicial
tribunals of a State rights secured to a defendant by any law
providing for the equal civil rights of all persons citizens of the
United States, of which sect. 641 speaks, is primarily, if not
exclusively, a denial of such rights, or an inability to enforce
them, resulting from the Constitution or laws of the State,
rather
Page 100 U. S. 314
than a denial made manifest at the trial of the case. In other
words, the statute has reference to a legislative denial, or an
inability resulting from it. By express requirement of the statute,
the party must set forth under oath the facts upon which he bases
his claim to have his case removed, not merely his belief that he
cannot enforce his rights at a subsequent stage of the proceedings.
But, in the absence of constitutional or legislative impediment, he
cannot swear before his case comes to trial that his enjoyment of
his civil rights is denied to him.
6. The Constitution and laws of Virginia do not exclude colored
citizens from service on juries. The petition for removal did not
present a case under sect. 641.
7. The defendant moved in the State court that the venire be so
modified that one-third or some portion of the jury should be
composed of his own race. The denial of that motion was not a
denial of a right secured to him by any law providing for the equal
civil rights of citizens of the United States, or by any statute,
or by the Fourteenth Amendment. A mixed jury in a particular case
is not essential to the equal protection of the laws. It
is a right to which any colored man is entitled that, in
the selection of jurors to pass upon his life, liberty, or
property, there shall be no exclusion of his race and no
discrimination against them because of his color. But that is a
different thing from that which was claimed, as of right, and
denied in the State court --
viz., a right to have the
jury composed in part of colored men.
8. A mandamus does not lie to control judicial discretion except
when that discretion has been abused. But it may be used as a
remedy where the case is outside of that discretion and outside the
jurisdiction of the court or officer to which or to whom the writ
is directed. One of its peculiar and more common uses is to
restrain inferior courts and keep them within their lawful
bound.
MR. JUSTICE STRONG delivered the opinion of the court.
The questions presented in this case arise out of the following
facts:
Burwell Reynolds and Lee Reynolds, two colored men, were jointly
indicted for murder in the county court of Patrick County,
Virginia, at its January Term, 1878. The case having been removed
into the Circuit Court of the State, and brought on for trial, the
defendants moved the court that the venire, which was composed
entirely of the white race, be modified so as to allow one-third
thereof to be composed of colored
Page 100 U. S. 315
men. This motion was overruled on the ground that the court
"had no authority to change the venire, it appearing [as the
record stated] to the satisfaction of the court that the venire had
been regularly drawn from the jury box according to law."
Thereupon, the defendants, before the trial, filed their
petition, duly verified, praying for a removal of the case into the
Circuit Court of the United States for the Western District of
Virginia. This petition represented that the petitioners were
negroes, aged respectively seventeen and nineteen years, and that
the man whom they were charged with having murdered was a white
man. It further alleged that the right secured to the petitioners
by the law providing for the equal civil rights of all the citizens
of the United States was denied to them in the judicial tribunals
of the County of Patrick, of which county they are natives and
citizens; that, by the laws of Virginia, all male citizens,
twenty-one years of age and not over sixty, who are entitled to
vote and hold office under the Constitution and laws of the State
are made liable to serve as jurors; that this law allows the right,
as well as requires the duty, of the race to which the petitioners
belong to serve as jurors; yet that the grand jury who found the
indictment against them, as well as the jurors summoned to try
them, were composed entirely of the white race. The petitioners
further represented that they had applied to the judge of the
court, to the prosecuting attorney, and to his assistant counsel,
that a portion of the jury by which they were to be tried should be
composed in part of competent jurors of their own race and color,
but that this right had been refused them. The petition further
alleged that a strong prejudice existed in the community of the
county against them, independent of the merits of the case and
based solely upon the facts that they are negroes and that the man
they were accused of having murdered was a white man. From that
fact alone, they were satisfied they could not obtain an impartial
trial before a jury exclusively composed of the white race. The
petitioners further represented that their race had never been
allowed the right to serve as jurors, either in civil or criminal
cases, in the County of Patrick, in any case, civil or criminal, in
which their race had been in any way interested. They therefore
prayed that the prosecution might be removed
Page 100 U. S. 316
into the Circuit Court of the United States. The state court
denied this prayer, and proceeded with the trial, when each of the
defendants was convicted. The verdicts and judgments were, however,
set aside, and a motion for a removal of the case was renewed on
the same petition, and again denied. The defendants were then tried
again separately. One was convicted and sentenced, and a bill of
exceptions was duly signed and made part of the record. In the
other case, the jury disagreed.
In this stage of the proceedings, a copy of the record was
obtained, the cases were, upon petition, ordered to be docketed in
the Circuit Court of the United States, Nov. 18, 1878, which was at
its next succeeding term after the first application for removal,
and a writ of habeas corpus
cum causa was issued, by
virtue of which the defendants were taken from the jail of Patrick
County into the custody of the United States marshal, and they are
now held in jail subject to the control of that Court.
No motion has been made in the Circuit Court to remand the
prosecutions to the state court, but the Commonwealth of Virginia
has applied to this Court for a rule to show cause why a mandamus
should not issue commanding the judge of the District Court of the
Western District of Virginia, the Hon. Alexander Rives, to cause to
be redelivered by the marshal of said district to the jailer of
Patrick County the bodies of the said Lee and Burwell Reynolds, to
be dealt with according to the laws of the said Commonwealth. The
rule has been granted, and Judge Rives has returned an answer
setting forth substantially the facts hereinbefore stated, and
averring that the indictments were removed into the Circuit Court
of the United States by virtue of sect. 641 of the Revised
Statutes.
If the petition filed in the state court before trial, and duly
verified by the oath of the defendants, exhibited a sufficient
ground for a removal of the prosecutions into the Circuit Court of
the United States, they were in legal effect thus removed, and the
writ of habeas corpus was properly issued. All proceedings in the
state court subsequent to the removals were
coram non
judice, and absolutely void. This by virtue of the express
declaration of sect. 641 of the Revised Statutes, which enacts
that, "upon the filing of such petition, all further
Page 100 U. S. 317
proceedings in the state court shall cease, and shall not be
resumed except as thereinafter provided."
In Gordon
v. Longest, 16 Pet. 97, it was ruled by this Court
that when an application to remove a cause (removable) is made in
proper form, and no objection is made to the facts upon which it is
founded,
"it is the duty of the state court to 'proceed no further in the
cause,' and every step subsequently taken in the exercise of
jurisdiction in the case, whether in the same court or in the Court
of Appeals, is
coram non judice."
To the same effect is
Insurance Company v.
Dunn, 19 Wall. 214.
It is, therefore, a material inquiry whether the petition of the
defendants set forth such facts as made a case for removal, and
consequently arrested the jurisdiction of the state court and
transferred it to the Federal court. Sect. 641 of the Revised
Statutes provides for a removal
"when any civil suit or prosecution is commenced in any state
court, for any cause whatsoever, against any person who is denied
or cannot enforce in the judicial tribunals of the State, or in the
part of the State where such suit or prosecution is pending, any
right secured to him by any law providing for the equal civil
rights of citizens of the United States,"
&c. It declares that such a case may be removed before trial
or final hearing.
Was the case of Lee and Burwell Reynolds such a one? Before
examining their petition for removal, it is necessary to understand
clearly the scope and meaning of this act of Congress. It rests
upon the Fourteenth Amendment of the Constitution and the
legislation to enforce its provisions. That Amendment declares that
no State shall make or enforce any law which shall abridge the
privileges or immunities of citizens of the United States, nor
shall any State deprive any person of life, liberty, or property,
without due process of law, nor deny to any person within its
jurisdiction the equal protection of the laws. It was in pursuance
of these constitutional provisions that the civil rights statutes
were enacted. Sects. 1977, 1978, Rev. Stat. They enact that all
persons within the jurisdiction of the United States shall have the
same right in every State and Territory to make and enforce
contracts, to sue, be parties, give evidence, and to the full and
equal benefit of all laws and proceedings for the security of
persons and property
Page 100 U. S. 318
as is enjoyed by white citizens, and shall be subject to like
punishment, pains, penalties, taxes, licenses, and exactions of
every kind, and to no other. Sect. 1978 enacts that all citizens of
the United States shall have the same right in every State and
Territory as is enjoyed by white citizens thereof to inherit,
purchase, lease, sell, hold, and convey real and personal property.
The plain object of these statutes, as of the Constitution which
authorized them, was to place the colored race, in respect of civil
rights, upon a level with whites. They made the rights and
responsibilities, civil and criminal, of the two races exactly the
same.
The provisions of the Fourteenth Amendment of the Constitution
we have quoted all have reference to State action exclusively, and
not to any action of private individuals. It is the State which is
prohibited from denying to any person within its jurisdiction the
equal protection of the laws, and consequently the statutes
partially enumerating what civil rights colored men shall enjoy
equally with white persons, founded as they are upon the amendment,
are intended for protection against State infringement of those
rights. Sect. 641 was also intended for their protection against
State action, and against that alone.
It is doubtless true that a State may act through different
agencies -- either by its legislative, its executive, or its
judicial authorities, and the prohibitions of the Amendment extend
to all action of the State denying equal protection of the laws,
whether it be action by one of these agencies or by another.
Congress, by virtue of the fifth section of the Fourteenth
Amendment, may enforce the prohibitions whenever they are
disregarded by either the Legislative, the Executive, or the
Judicial Department of the State. The mode of enforcement is left
to its discretion. It may secure the right -- that is, enforce its
recognition -- by removing the case from a state court in which it
is denied, into a federal court where it will be acknowledged. Of
this there can be no reasonable doubt. Removal of cases from state
courts into courts of the United States has been an acknowledged
mode of protecting rights ever since the foundation of the
Government. Its constitutionality has never been seriously doubted.
But it is still a
Page 100 U. S. 319
question whether the remedy of removal of cases from state
courts into the courts of the United States, given by sect. 641,
applies to all cases in which equal protection of the laws may be
denied to a defendant. And clearly it does not. The constitutional
amendment is broader than the provisions of that section. The
statute authorizes a removal of the case only before trial, not
after a trial has commenced. It does not, therefore, embrace many
cases in which a colored man's right may be denied. It does not
embrace a case in which a right may be denied by judicial action
during the trial, or by discrimination against him in the sentence,
or in the mode of executing the sentence. But the violation of the
constitutional provisions, when made by the judicial tribunals of a
State, may be, and generally will be, after the trial has
commenced. It is then, during or after the trial, that denials of a
defendant's right by judicial tribunals occur. Not often until
then. Nor can the defendant know until then that the equal
protection of the laws will not be extended to him. Certainly,
until then, he cannot affirm that it is denied, or that he cannot
enforce it, in the judicial tribunals.
It is obvious, therefore, that to such a case -- that is, a
judicial infraction of the constitutional inhibitions, after trial
or final hearing has commenced -- sect. 641 has no applicability.
It was not intended to reach such cases. It left them to the
revisory power of the higher courts of the State, and ultimately to
the review of this Court. We do not say that Congress could not
have authorized the removal of such a case into the Federal courts
at any stage of its proceeding, whenever a ruling should be made in
it denying the equal protection of the laws to the defendant. Upon
that subject it is unnecessary to affirm anything. It is sufficient
to say now that sect. 641 does not.
It is evident, therefore, that the denial or inability to
enforce in the judicial tribunals of a State, rights secured to a
defendant by any law providing for the equal civil rights of all
persons citizens of the United States, of which sect. 641 speaks,
is primarily, if not exclusively, a denial of such rights, or an
inability to enforce them, resulting from the Constitution or laws
of the State, rather than a denial first made manifest at the trial
of the case. In other words, the statute has reference
Page 100 U. S. 320
to a legislative denial or an inability resulting from it. Many
such cases of denial might have been apprehended, and some existed.
Colored men might have been, as they had been, denied a trial by
jury. They might have been excluded by law from any jury summoned
to try persons of their race, or the law might have denied to them
the testimony of colored men in their favor, or process for
summoning witnesses. Numerous other illustrations might be given.
In all such cases, a defendant can affirm, on oath, before trial,
that he is denied the equal protection of the laws or equality of
civil rights. But, in the absence of constitutional or legislative
impediments, he cannot swear before his case comes to trial that
his enjoyment of all his civil rights is denied to him. When he has
only an apprehension that such rights will be withheld from him
when his case shall come to trial, he cannot affirm that they are
actually denied, or that he cannot enforce them. Yet such an
affirmation is essential to his right to remove his case. By the
express requirement of the statute, his petition must set forth the
facts upon which he bases his claim to have his case removed, and
not merely his belief that he cannot enforce his rights at a
subsequent stage of the proceedings. The statute was not,
therefore, intended as a corrective of errors or wrongs committed
by judicial tribunals in the administration of the law at the
trial.
The petition of the two colored men for the removal of their
case into the Federal court does not appear to have made any case
for removal, if we are correct in our reading of the act of
Congress. It did not assert, nor is it claimed now, that the
Constitution or laws of Virginia denied to them any civil right, or
stood in the way of their enforcing the equal protection of the
laws. The law made no discrimination against them because of their
color, nor any discrimination at all. The complaint is that there
were no colored men in the jury that indicted them, nor in the
petit jury summoned to try them. The petition expressly admitted
that, by the laws of the State, all male citizens twenty-one years
of age and not over sixty, who are entitled to vote and hold office
under the Constitution and laws thereof, are made liable to serve
as jurors. And it affirms (what is undoubtedly true) that this law
allows the right, as
Page 100 U. S. 321
well as requires the duty, of the race to which the petitioners
belong to serve as jurors. It does not exclude colored
citizens.
Now, conceding as we do, and as we endeavored to maintain in the
case of
Strauder v. West Virginia (
supra, p.
100 U. S. 303),
that discrimination by law against the colored race, because of
their color, in the selection of jurors, is a denial of the equal
protection of the laws to a negro when he is put upon trial for an
alleged criminal offence against a State, the laws of Virginia make
no such discrimination. If, as was alleged in the argument, though
it does not appear in the petition or record, the officer to whom
was entrusted the selection of the persons from whom the juries for
the indictment and trial of the petitioners were drawn,
disregarding the statute of the State, confined his selection to
white persons, and refused to select any persons of the colored
race solely because of their color, his action was a gross
violation of the spirit of the State's laws, as well as of the Act
of Congress of March 1, 1875, which prohibits and punishes such
discrimination. He made himself liable to punishment at the
instance of the State and under the laws of the United States. In
one sense, indeed, his act was the act of the State, and was
prohibited by the constitutional amendment. But inasmuch as it was
a criminal misuse of the state law, it cannot be said to have been
such a "denial or disability to enforce
in the judicial
tribunals of the State" the rights of colored men, as is
contemplated by the removal act. Sect. 641. It is to be observed
that act gives the right of removal only to a person "who is
denied, or cannot enforce, in the judicial tribunals of the State
his equal civil rights." And this is to appear before trial. When a
statute of the State denies his right, or interposes a bar to his
enforcing it, in the judicial tribunals, the presumption is fair
that they will be controlled by it in their decisions; and, in such
a case, a defendant may affirm on oath what is necessary for a
removal. Such a case is clearly within the provisions of sect. 641.
But when a subordinate officer of the State, in violation of state
law, undertakes to deprive an accused party of a right which the
statute law accords to him, as in the case at bar, it can hardly be
said that he is denied, or cannot enforce, "in
the judicial
tribunals of the State" the rights which belong to him. In
such a case, it ought to be presumed
Page 100 U. S. 322
the court will redress the wrong. If the accused is deprived of
the right, the final and practical denial will be in the judicial
tribunal which tries the case, after the trial has commenced. If,
as in this case, the subordinate officer whose duty it is to select
jurors fails to discharge that duty in the true spirit of the law;
if he excludes all colored men solely because they are colored; or
if the sheriff to whom a venire is given, composed of both white
and colored citizens, neglects to summon the colored jurors only
because they are colored; or if a clerk whose duty it is to take
the twelve names from the box rejects all the colored jurors for
the same reason -- it can with no propriety be said the defendant's
right is denied by the State and cannot be enforced in the judicial
tribunals. The court will correct the wrong, will quash the
indictment or the panel, or, if not, the error will be corrected in
a superior court. We cannot think such cases are within the
provisions of sect. 641. Denials of equal rights in the action of
the judicial tribunals of the State are left to the revisory powers
of this Court.
The assertions in the petition for removal, that the grand jury
by which the petitioners were indicted, as well as the jury
summoned to try them, were composed wholly of the white race, and
that their race had never been allowed to serve as jurors in the
County of Patrick in any case in which a colored man was
interested, fall short of showing that any civil right was denied
or that there had been any discrimination against the defendants
because of their color or race. The facts may have been as stated,
and yet the jury which indicted them, and the panel summoned to try
them, may have been impartially selected.
Nor did the refusal of the court and of the counsel for the
prosecution to allow a modification of the venire, by which
one-third of the jury, or a portion of it, should be composed of
persons of the petitioners own race, amount to any denial of a
right secured to them by any law providing for the equal civil
rights of citizens of the United States. The privilege for which
they moved, and which they also asked from the prosecution, was not
a right given or secured to them, or to any person, by the law of
the State, or by any act of Congress, or by the Fourteenth
Amendment of the Constitution. It is a right to which
Page 100 U. S. 323
every colored man is entitled that, in the selection of jurors
to pass upon his life, liberty, or property, there shall be no
exclusion of his race, and no discrimination against them because
of their color. But this is a different thing from the right which
it is asserted was denied to the petitioners by the state court,
viz., a right to have the jury composed in part of colored
men. A mixed jury in a particular case is not essential to the
equal protection of the laws, and the right to it is not given by
any law of Virginia or by any Federal statute. It is not,
therefore, guaranteed by the Fourteenth Amendment, or within the
purview of sect. 641.
It follows that the petition for a removal stated no facts that
brought the case within the provisions of this section, and,
consequently, no jurisdiction of the case was acquired by the
Circuit Court of the United States. In the absence of such
jurisdiction, the writ of habeas corpus, by which the petitioners
were taken from the custody of the State authorities, should not
have been issued. The Circuit Court has now no authority to hold
them, and they should be remanded.
Upon the question whether a writ of mandamus is a proper
proceeding to enforce the return of the men indicted to the custody
of the State authorities, little need be said in view of former
decisions of this Court. Sect. 688 of the Revised Statutes enacts
that the Supreme Court shall have
"power to issue . . . writs of mandamus in cases warranted by
the principles and usages of law, to any courts appointed under the
authority of the United States, or to persons holding office under
the authority of the United States, where a State or an ambassador,
or other public minister, or a consul or vice-consul, is a
party."
In what case such a writ is warranted by the principles and
usages of law it is not always easy to determine. Its use has been
very much extended in modern times, and now it may be said to be an
established remedy to oblige inferior courts and magistrates to do
that justice which they are in duty, and by virtue of their office,
bound to do. It does not lie to control judicial discretion, except
when that discretion has been abused, but it is a remedy when the
case is outside of the exercise of this discretion, and outside the
jurisdiction of the court or officer to which or to whom the writ
is
Page 100 U. S. 324
addressed. One of its peculiar and more common uses is to
restrain inferior courts and to keep them within their lawful
bounds. Bacon's Abridgment, Mandamus, Letter D; Tapping on
Mandamus, 105; 3 Bl.Com. 110. This subject was discussed at length
in
Ex parte
Bradley, 7 Wall. 364, and what was there said
renders unnecessary any discussion of it now. To that discussion we
refer. In our judgment, it vindicates the use of a writ of mandamus
in such a case as the present.
The writ will, therefore, be awarded; and it is
So ordered.
Separate opinion of MR. JUSTICE FIELD, in which MR. JUSTICE
CLIFFORD concurred.
I concur in the judgment of the court that the prisoners, Lee
and Burwell Reynolds, must be returned to the officers of Virginia,
from whose custody they were taken; that the prosecution against
them must be remanded to the state court from which it was removed;
and that a mandamus to the district judge of the Western District
of Virginia is the appropriate remedy to effect these ends. But as
I do not agree with all the views expressed in the opinion of the
Court, and there are other reasons equally cogent with those given
for the decision rendered, I deem it proper to state at length the
grounds of my concurrence.
The prisoners were jointly indicted in a county court for the
crime of murder. They are colored men, and the person alleged to
have been murdered was a white man. On being arraigned, they
pleaded not guilty, and, on their demand, were remanded to the
Circuit Court of the county for trial. When brought before that
court, at the April Term of 1878, they moved that the venire of
jurors, then composed entirely of persons of the white race, should
be modified so as to allow one-third of the venire to be composed
of persons of their own race. This motion was denied on the ground
that the court had no authority to change the venire, and that it
satisfactorily appeared that the jurors had been regularly drawn
from the jury box according to law. The accused then presented a
petition for the removal of the prosecution to the Circuit
Court
Page 100 U. S. 325
of the United States for the Western District of Virginia,
setting forth the pendency of the criminal prosecution against them
and alleging, in substance, that rights, secured by the law
providing for the equal civil rights of all citizens of the United
States were denied to them by the judicial tribunals of the county,
inasmuch as their application for a mixed jury had been refused. It
further alleged that a strong prejudice existed in the community of
the county against them, independent of the merits of their case,
on the ground that they were colored persons and the one whom they
were charged to have murdered was a white man; and that, from this
fact alone, they were satisfied they could not obtain an impartial
trial before a jury composed exclusively of persons of the white
race.
The prayer of this petition was denied, and the prisoners were
tried separately and convicted of murder, one in the first and the
other in the second degree. Both obtained new trials, one by the
action of the court of original jurisdiction and the other by that
of the Court of Appeals on a writ of error.
At the October Term of 1878, they were a second time brought up
for trial, and before the jury were impanelled again moved the
court to remove the prosecution to the Circuit Court of the United
States upon the petition presented at the April Term, but the
motion, as before, was denied. They were then tried separately. In
one case, the jury disagreed, and the prisoner was remanded to jail
to await another trial. In the other case, the prisoner was
convicted of murder in the second degree, and his punishment was
fixed by the jury at eighteen years' confinement in the
penitentiary.
While the prisoners were held in jail, one of them to be again
tried, and the other until he could be removed to the penitentiary
under his sentence, they procured from the clerk of the court a
copy of the record of the proceedings against them, which they
presented to the Circuit Court of the United States for the Western
District of Virginia, then held by Alexander Rives, the district
judge, with the petition for removal presented to the state court,
and prayed that the prosecutions should be there docketed and
proceeded with. That court granted the petition, directed the cases
to be placed
Page 100 U. S. 326
on its docket, and authorized the clerk to issue a writ of
habeas corpus
cum causa to the marshal of the district,
requiring him to take the petitioners into his custody, and summon
for their trial twenty-five jurors to attend at the next term of
the court. A writ of habeas corpus
cum causa was
accordingly issued. Pursuant to its command, the prisoners were
removed from the custody of the jailer and taken into the custody
of the marshal. Thereupon, the Commonwealth of Virginia presented a
petition to this Court praying for a writ of mandamus to be
directed to the district judge commanding him to order the marshal
to redeliver the prisoners to her authorities upon the ground that
the judge, in his proceedings, had transcended the jurisdiction of
his court, and undertaken the exercise of powers not vested by any
law of the United States in him or the court held by him. Upon its
presentation at the last term, an order was issued to the judge to
show cause why the writ should not issue as prayed. His return
admits the facts as stated, and justifies his action on the ground
that the refusal of the state court to set aside the venire
summoned for the trial of the prisoners, and to give them a jury
composed in part of their own race and color, was a denial to them
of "the equal protection of the laws," and brought their cases
within the provisions of the Revised Statutes for the removal of
criminal prosecutions from the State to the Federal courts. The
Attorney-General of the Commonwealth contending that the return is
insufficient to justify his action, now moves that the writ be
issued a prayed.
The application of Virginia is resisted by a denial of the
jurisdiction of this Court to issue a writ to the district judge in
the case -- a denial made not only by the counsel for the
prisoners, who has been permitted to appear in their behalf, though
the proceeding is one directly between the Commonwealth and the
district judge, but by the Attorney General, who has appeared,
though not officially, for that officer. The ground of the denial
is that the writ can be issued by this Court only in the exercise
or in aid of its appellate jurisdiction, and that the writ is here
prayed in a proceeding which is not appellate but original, because
it has its commencement in the presentation of the petition of the
Commonwealth.
Page 100 U. S. 327
It is undoubtedly true that, except in cases where, under the
Constitution, this Court has original jurisdiction, the writ can be
issued only in the exercise or in aid of its appellate authority.
This was held as long ago as the case of
Marbury v.
Madison, decided in 1803, and the doctrine has been adhered to
ever since for the obvious reason that, the jurisdiction of the
court being original in only a few enumerated cases, all exercise
of power in other cases must be in virtue of its appellate
jurisdiction. That jurisdiction may, however, be called into
exercise in various ways. The term "appellate" in the Constitution
is not used in a restricted sense, but in the broadest sense, as
embracing the power to review and correct the proceedings of
subordinate tribunals brought before it for examination in the
modes provided by law. Congress has prescribed the mode or process
by which such proceedings shall be brought before the court. In
equity cases, it is by a simple notice that an appeal is taken from
the decree or proceeding sought to be reviewed; in common law
cases, it is generally by writ of error; in some cases, it is by a
writ of prohibition, and in some by that of certiorari or of
mandamus. The mode is one resting entirely in the discretion of
Congress. The Judiciary Act of 1789, passed at the first session of
Congress after the adoption of the Constitution, declared that the
Supreme Court should have appellate jurisdiction from the circuit
courts and from courts of the several States in certain cases, and
should
"have power to issue writs of prohibition to the district
courts, when proceeding as courts of admiralty and maritime
jurisdiction, and writs of mandamus in cases warranted by the
principles and usages of law, to any courts appointed or persons
holding office under the authority of the United States."
In
Marbury v. Madison, it was held that the authority
given by the act to issue the writ of mandamus to public officers
was not warranted by the Constitution, the Court observing that it
was an essential criterion of appellate jurisdiction that it
revises and corrects proceedings in a cause already instituted, and
does not create the cause, and that, although the writ might be
directed to courts, yet to issue it to an officer for the delivery
of a paper was, in effect, the same as to sustain
Page 100 U. S. 328
an original action for that paper, and therefore seemed to
belong not to appellate, but to original, jurisdiction. The case in
which this language was used was an application to the Court to
compel Mr. Madison, then Secretary of State, to deliver to Mr.
Marbury, as justice of the peace, a commission which had been
signed by President Adams and transmitted to the predecessor in
office of the Secretary, to be delivered to the appointee. There
was, therefore, no action of an inferior tribunal brought up for
review, the proceeding being merely to compel an executive officer
to perform a ministerial act in which a citizen was interested. The
language must, therefore, be limited by the facts of the case. It
was not intended to deny the authority of this Court to issue the
writ to public officers when the case is one in which it can
exercise original jurisdiction, and, probably to avoid such an
inference, the addition was made to the clause we have cited which
now appears in the Revised Statutes, so as to allow the writ to
issue to public officers only "where a State or an ambassador or
other public minister or a consul or vice-consul is a party" --
that is, in cases where the court has original jurisdiction.
Indeed, it is only by such writ that the original jurisdiction of
this Court can in many cases be exercised.
Kentucky v.
Dennison, 24 How. 66. Nor was the language intended
to deny that this Court can issue the writ to judicial officers
where the object is to revise and correct their action in legal
proceedings pending in the courts held by them. Though the writ to
a subordinate or inferior court may be addressed to the court as
such, it is usually directed to the judge thereof, or, if the court
is composed of several judges, to such one or more of them as may
be authorized to hold its sessions or participate in holding them.
The reason assigned is that, in case of disobedience to the writ,
the authority to enforce it is exercised over the judges personally
who are vested with the power of exercising the functions of the
court. High, Extraordinary Legal Remedies, sect. 275. In the
present case, the writ is asked against the district judge who,
whilst holding the Circuit Court of the Western District of
Virginia, made the order which is the subject of complaint, and
who, if the writ be granted, will be able to hold that court and
carry out its command. There is no sound objection to its issue in
this form.
Page 100 U. S. 329
The writ being one of the modes provided by Congress for the
exercise of our appellate jurisdiction, the question whether it
should be issued in this case is not difficult of solution if, as
contended by the Commonwealth of Virginia, the Circuit Court, in
taking the prisoners from the custody of her authorities,
transcended its jurisdiction. To review that action and set aside
what was done under it, the writ is sought. The jurisdiction
invoked is, in its nature, appellate; and there is no other mode
provided for its exercise in the case at bar than by the writ
prayed. Though the petition is the first step taken by the
Commonwealth against the judge, the proceeding is not on that
account an original suit. The petition is merely the process by
which our appellate jurisdiction is invoked.
It is well settled that the writ of mandamus will issue to
correct the action of subordinate or inferior courts or judicial
officers where they have exceeded their jurisdiction and there is
no other adequate remedy. "It issues," says Blackstone,
"to the judges of any inferior court, commanding them to do
justice according to the powers of their office, whenever the same
is delayed. For it is the peculiar business of the Court of King's
Bench to superintend all inferior tribunals, and therein to enforce
the due exercise of those judicial or ministerial powers with which
the crown or the legislature have invested them; and this not only
by restraining their excesses, but also by quickening their
negligence and obviating the denial of justice."
3 Bl.Com. 110.
It is in accordance, therefore, with the principles and usages
of law that this Court should issue a mandamus in the cases here
enumerated, and thus supervise the proceedings of inferior courts
where there is a legal right and there is no other existing legal
remedy. "It is upon this ground," says Mr. Justice Nelson,
"that the remedy has been applied from an early day -- indeed,
since the organization of courts and the admission of attorneys to
practise therein down to the present time -- to correct the abuses
of the inferior courts in summary proceedings against their
officers, and especially against the attorneys and counselors of
the courts. The order disbarring them, or subjecting them to fine
or imprisonment, is not reviewable by writ
Page 100 U. S. 330
of error, it not being a judgment in the sense of the law for
which this writ will lie. Without, therefore, the use of the writ
of mandamus, however flagrant the wrong committed against these
officers, they would be destitute of any redress."
Ex parte
Bradley, 7 Wall. 364.
See also Ex parte
Robinson, 19
id. 505.
And so, in the case at bar, without the use of this writ, the
greatest possible injury would be inflicted upon the Commonwealth
of Virginia, without any redress, if the Circuit Court, as
contended, transcended its jurisdiction. In no case, therefore,
could the writ be more properly issued in the interests of justice,
order, and good government. Nor was there any necessity for a
previous demand upon that court, in the way of a motion to remand
the prisoners. While the authorities, says Mr. High in his valuable
treatise on the law of mandamus, are not altogether reconcilable as
to the necessity of a previous demand and refusal to perform the
act which it is sought to coerce, a distinction is made between the
cases where the duties to be enforced are of a public nature,
affecting the public at large, and those where the duties are of a
private nature, affecting only the rights of individuals. "And
while," continues the author,
"in the latter class of cases, where the person aggrieved claims
the immediate and personal benefit of the act or duty whose
performance is sought, demand and refusal are held to be necessary
as a condition precedent to relief by mandamus, in the former
class, the duty being strictly of a public nature, not affecting
individual interests, and there being no one specially empowered to
demand its performance, there is no necessity for a literal demand
and refusal. In such cases, the law itself stands in lieu of a
demand, and the omission to perform the required duty in place of a
refusal."
Extraordinary Legal Remedies, sect. 13.
In this case, not only was the duty required of the Circuit
Court one of a public nature in which the Commonwealth of Virginia
is interested, but it would have been a useless ceremony to move
for an order remanding the prisoners to her authorities in the face
of its direction to the marshal to take them into custody and its
order to docket and proceed with the prosecution against them in
the Circuit Court of the United
Page 100 U. S. 331
States, and the justification of this action contained in the
return of the judge.
The preliminary objections to the exercise of our jurisdiction
being disposed of, we are brought to the important inquiry whether
the action of the Circuit Court, in taking the prisoners from the
custody of the authorities of Virginia, was authorized under the
laws of the United States. The mandamus prayed is to compel the
return of the prisoners, as already stated, but the validity of the
order directing the marshal to take them into his custody depends
upon the legality of the removal of the prosecution from the state
to the federal court. The order to the marshal was the necessary
sequence of assuming jurisdiction of the prosecution. The legality
of the removal is, therefore, the question for determination. Its
legality is denied by Virginia on two grounds: 1st, that the act of
Congress (Rev.Stat., sect. 641), upon the provisions of which the
respondent relies, does not authorize the removal; and, 2d, that
the act, in authorizing a criminal prosecution for an offence
against a law of the State to be, before trial, removed from a
state court to a federal court, is unconstitutional and void. In my
opinion, both of these grounds are well taken.
Sect. 641 of the Revised Statutes, reenacting provisions of
previous statutes, in terms provides in certain cases for the
removal to the circuit courts of the United States of criminal
prosecutions commenced in a state court. It declares that,
"when any civil suit or criminal prosecution is commenced in any
state court, for any cause whatsoever, against any person who is
denied or cannot enforce in the judicial tribunals of the State, or
in any part of the State where such suit or prosecution is pending,
any right secured to him by any law providing for the equal rights
of citizens of the United States, or of all persons within the
jurisdiction of the United States, or against any officer, civil or
military, or other person, for any arrest or imprisonment or other
trespass, or wrongs, made or committed by virtue of or under color
of authority derived from any law providing for equal rights as
aforesaid, or for refusing to do any act on the ground that it
would be inconsistent with such law, such suit or prosecution may,
upon the petition of such defendant filed in said state court, at
any time before the trial
Page 100 U. S. 332
or final hearing of the cause, stating the facts and verified by
oath, be removed for trial into the next circuit court to be held
in the district where it is pending. Upon the filing of such
petition, all further proceedings in the state courts shall
cease."
The section also provides for furnishing the Circuit Court with
copies of the process, pleadings, and proceeding of the state
court. A subsequent section provides for the issue in such cases of
a writ of habeas corpus
cum causa to remove the accused,
when in actual custody upon process of the state court, to the
custody of the marshal of the United States.
By this enactment it appears that, in order to obtain a removal
of a prosecution from a State to a Federal court -- except where it
is against a public officer or other person for certain trespasses
or conduct not material to consider in this connection -- the
petition of the accused must show a denial of, or an inability to
enforce in the tribunals of the State, or of that part of the State
where the prosecution is pending, some right secured to him by the
law providing for the equal rights of citizens or persons within
the jurisdiction of the United States. But how must the denial of a
right under such a law, or the accused's inability to enforce it in
the judicial tribunals of the State be made to appear? So far as
the accused is concerned, the law requires him to state and verify
the facts, and from them the court will determine whether such
denial or inability exists. His naked averment of such denial or
inability can hardly be deemed sufficient; if it were so, few
prosecutions would be retained in a state court for insufficient
allegations when the accused imagined he would gain by the removal.
Texas v. Gaines, 2 Woods 344. There must be such a
presentation of facts as to lead the court to the conclusion that
the averments of the accused are well founded. There are many ways
in which a person may be denied his rights, or be unable to enforce
them in the tribunals of a State. The denial or inability may arise
from direct legislation, depriving him of their enjoyment or the
means of their enforcement, or discriminating against him or the
class, sect, or race to which he belongs. And it may arise from
popular prejudices, passions, or excitement, biassing the minds of
jurors and judges. Religious
Page 100 U. S. 333
animosities, political controversies, antagonisms of race, and a
multitude of other causes will always operate, in a greater or less
degree, as impediments to the full enjoyment and enforcement of
civil rights. We cannot think that the act of Congress contemplated
a denial of, or an inability to enforce, one's rights from these
latter and similar causes, and intended to authorize a removal of a
prosecution by reason of them from a State to a Federal court. Some
of these causes have always existed in some localities in every
State, and the remedy for them has been found in a change of the
place of trial to other localities where like impediments to
impartial action of the tribunals did not exist. The Civil Rights
Act, to which reference is made in the section in question, was
only intended to secure to the colored race the same rights and
privileges as are enjoyed by white persons; it was not designed to
relieve them from those obstacles in the enjoyment of their rights
to which all other persons are subject, and which grow out of
popular prejudices and passions.
The denial of rights or the inability to enforce them, to which
the section refers is, in my opinion, such as arises from
legislative action of the State, as, for example, an act excluding
colored persons from being witnesses, making contracts, acquiring
property, and the like. With respect to obstacles to the enjoyment
of rights arising from other causes, persons of the colored race
must take their chances of removing or providing against them with
the rest of the community.
This conclusion is strengthened by the provisions of the
Fourteenth Amendment to the Constitution. The original Civil Rights
Act was passed, it is true, before the adoption of that amendment,
but great doubt was expressed as to its validity, and to obtain
authority for similar legislation, and thus obviate the objections
which had been raised to its first section, was one of the objects
of the amendment. After its adoption the Civil Rights Act was
reenacted, and upon the first section of that amendment it rests.
That section is directed against the State. Its language is
that
"
no State shall make or enforce any law which shall
abridge the privileges or immunities of citizens of the United
States; nor shall
any State deprive any person of life,
liberty, or property without due
Page 100 U. S. 334
process of law, nor deny to any person within its jurisdiction
the equal protection of the laws."
As the State, in the administration of its government, acts
through its executive, legislative, and judicial departments, the
inhibition applies to them. But the executive and judicial
departments only construe and enforce the laws of the State; the
inhibition, therefore, is in effect against passing and enforcing
any laws which are designed to accomplish the ends forbidden. If an
executive or judicial officer exercises power with which he is not
invested by law, and does unauthorized acts, the State is not
responsible for them. The action of the judicial officer in such a
case, where the rights of a citizen under the laws of the United
States are disregarded, may be reviewed and corrected or reversed
by this Court; it cannot be imputed to the State, so as to make it
evidence that she in her sovereign or legislative capacity denies
the rights invaded, or refuses to allow their enforcement. It is
merely the ordinary case of an erroneous ruling of an inferior
tribunal. Nor can the unauthorized action of an executive officer,
impinging upon the rights of the citizen, be taken as evidence of
her intention or policy so as to charge upon her a denial of such
rights.
If these views are correct, no cause is shown in the petition of
the prisoners that justified a removal of the prosecutions against
them to the Federal court. No law of Virginia makes any
discrimination against persons of the colored race, or excludes
them from the jury. The law respecting jurors provides that "all
male citizens, twenty-one years of age and not over sixty, who are
entitled to vote and hold office under the Constitution and laws of
the State," with certain exemptions not material to the question
presented, may be jurors, and it authorizes an annual selection in
each county, by the county judge, from the citizens at large, of
from one to three hundred persons, whose names are to be placed in
a box, and from them the jurors, grand and petit, of the county are
to be drawn. There is no restriction placed upon the county judge
in selecting them, except that they shall be such as he shall think
"well qualified to serve as jurors, being persons of sound judgment
and free from legal exception." The mode thus provided, properly
carried out, cannot fail to secure competent jurors.
Page 100 U. S. 335
Certain it is that no rights of the prisoners are denied by this
legislation. The application to the state court, upon the refusal
of which the petition was presented, was for a venire composed of
one-third of their race -- a proceeding wholly inadmissible in any
jury system which obtains in the several States.
From the return of the district judge, it would seem that, in
his judgment, the presence of persons of the colored race on the
jury is essential to secure to them the "equal protection of the
laws;" but how this conclusion is reached is not apparent, except
upon the general theory that such protection can only be afforded
to parties when persons of the class to which they belong are
allowed to sit on their juries. The correctness of this theory is
contradicted by every day's experience. Women are not allowed to
sit on juries; are they thereby denied the equal protection of the
laws? Foreigners resident in the country are not permitted to act
as jurors, yet they are protected in their rights equally with
citizens. Persons over sixty years of age in Virginia are
disqualified as jurors, yet no one will pretend that they do not
enjoy the equal protection of the laws. If, when a colored person
is indicted for a criminal offence, it is essential, to secure to
him the equal protection of the laws, that persons of his race
should be on the jury by which he is tried, it would seem that the
presence of such persons on the bench should be equally essential
where the court consists of more than one judge; and that, if it
should consist of only a single judge, such protection would be
impossible. To such an absurd result does the doctrine lead which
the Circuit Court announced as controlling its action.
The equality of protection assured by the Fourteenth Amendment
to all persons in the State does not imply that they shall be
allowed to participate in the administration of its laws, or to
hold any of its offices, or to discharge any duties of a public
trust. The universality of the protection intended excludes any
such inference. Were this not so, aliens resident in the country,
or temporarily here, of whom there are many thousands in each
State, would be without that equal protection which the amendment
declares that no State shall deny to any person within its
jurisdiction.
Page 100 U. S. 336
It follows from these views as to the meaning and purpose of the
act of Congress that the removal of the prosecution in this case
from the State to the Federal court is unauthorized by it, and that
the order of the Circuit Court to the marshal to take the prisoners
from the custody of the State authorities is illegal and void.
The second objection of the Commonwealth to the legality of the
removal is equally conclusive. The prosecution is for the crime of
murder, committed within her limits, by persons and at a place
subject to her jurisdiction. The offence charged is against her
authority and laws, and she alone has the right to inquire into its
commission and to punish the offender. Murder is not an offence
against the United States, except when committed on an American
vessel on the high seas, or in some port or haven without the
jurisdiction of the State, or in the District of Columbia, or in
the Territories, or at other places where the national government
has exclusive jurisdiction. The offence within the limits of a
State, except where jurisdiction has been ceded to the United
States, is as much beyond the jurisdiction of these courts as
though it had been committed on another continent. The prosecution
of the offence in such a case does not, therefore, arise under the
Constitution and laws of the United States, and the act of Congress
which attempts to give the Federal courts jurisdiction of it is, to
my mind, a clear infraction of the Constitution. That instrument
defines and limits the judicial power of the United States.
It declares, among other things, that the judicial power shall
extend to cases in law and equity arising under the Constitution,
laws, and treaties of the United States, and to various
controversies to which a State is a party; but it does not include
in its enumeration controversies between a State and its own
citizens. There can be no ground, therefore, for the assumption by
a Federal court of jurisdiction of offences against the laws of a
State. The judicial power granted by the Constitution does not
cover any such case or controversy. And whilst it is well settled
that the exercise of the power granted may be extended to new cases
as they arise under the Constitution and laws, the power itself
cannot be enlarged by
Page 100 U. S. 337
Congress. The Constitution creating a government of limited
powers puts a bound upon those which are judicial as well as those
which are legislative, which cannot be lawfully passed.
This view would seem to be conclusive against the validity of
the attempted removal of the prosecution in this case from the
state court. The Federal court could not in the first instance have
taken jurisdiction of the offence charged, and summoned a grand
jury to present an indictment against the accused; and if it could
not have taken jurisdiction at first, it cannot do so upon a
removal of the prosecution to it. The jurisdiction exercised upon
the removal is original, and not appellate, as is sometimes
erroneously asserted; for, as stated by Chief Justice Marshall in
Marbury v. Madison, already cited, it is of the essence of
appellate jurisdiction that it revises and corrects proceedings
already had. The removal is only an indirect mode by which the
federal court acquires original jurisdiction.
Railway
Company v. Whitton, 13 Wall. 270.
The Constitution, it is to be observed, in the distribution of
the judicial power, declares that, in the cases enumerated in which
a State is a party, the Supreme Court shall have original
jurisdiction. Its framers seemed to have entertained great respect
for the dignity of a State which was to remain sovereign, at least
in its reserved powers, notwithstanding the new Government, and
therefore provided that when a State should have occasion to seek
the aid of the judicial power of the new government, or should be
brought under its subjection, that power should be invoked only in
its highest tribunal. It is difficult to believe that the wise men
who sat in the convention which framed the Constitution and
advocated its adoption ever contemplated the possibility of a
State's being required to assert its authority over offenders
against its laws in other tribunals than those of its own creation,
and least of all in an inferior tribunal of the new government. I
do not think I am going too far in asserting that, had it been
supposed a power so dangerous to the independence of the States and
so calculated to humiliate and degrade them lurked in any of the
provisions of the Constitution, that instrument would never have
been adopted.
There are many other difficulties in maintaining the
position
Page 100 U. S. 338
of the Circuit Court, which the counsel of the accused and the
Attorney General have earnestly defended. If a criminal prosecution
of an offender against the laws of a State can be transferred to a
federal court, what officer is to prosecute the case? Is the
attorney of the Commonwealth to follow the case from his county, or
will the United States district attorney take charge of it? Who is
to summon the witnesses and provide for their fees? In whose name
is judgment to be pronounced? If the accused is convicted and
ordered to be imprisoned, who is to enforce the sentence? If he is
deemed worthy of executive clemency, who is to exercise it -- the
Governor of the State, or the President of the United States? Can
the President pardon for an offence against the State? Can the
Governor release from the judgment of a federal court? These and
other questions which might be asked show, as justly observed by
the counsel of Virginia, the incongruity and absurdity of the
attempted proceeding.
Undoubtedly, if in the progress of a criminal prosecution, as
well as in the progress of a civil action, a question arise as to
any matter under the Constitution and laws of the United States
upon which the defendant may claim protection, or any benefit in
the case, the decision thereon may be reviewed by the federal
judiciary, which can examine the case so far, and so far only, as
to determine the correctness of the ruling. If the decision be
erroneous in that respect, it may be reversed and a new trial had.
Provision for such revision was made in the twenty-fifth section of
the Judiciary Act of 1789, and is retained in the Revised Statutes.
That great act was penned by Oliver Ellsworth, a member of the
convention which framed the Constitution, and one of the early
chief justices of this Court. It may be said to reflect the views
of the founders of the Republic as to the proper relations between
the federal and state courts. It gives to the federal courts the
ultimate decision of federal questions, without infringing upon the
dignity and independence of the state courts. By it harmony between
them is secured, the rights of both federal and state governments
maintained, and every privilege and immunity which the accused
could assert under either can be enforced.