But the appellate power of this court is broader than its
original, and generally -- that is, in most cases -- it may be said
that the issue of a writ of habeas corpus by us, when it is
directed to one of our inferior courts, is an exercise of our
appellate jurisdiction. Without going at large into a discussion of
its extent, it is sufficient for the present to notice the fact
that the exercise of the appellate power is not limited by the
Constitution to any particular form or mode. It is not alone by
appeal or by writ of error that it may be invoked. In the
Matter of
Metzer, 5 How. 176, it was indeed ruled that an
order of commitment made by a district judge at chambers cannot be
revised here by habeas corpus. But such an order was reviewable in
no form; and, besides, the authority of that case has been much
shaken.
In re Kaine,
14 How. 103;
Ex
Page 100 U. S. 342
parte Yerger, 8 Wall. 85. In the latter of these cases,
it was said by Chief Justice Chase, in delivering the opinion of
the court:
"We regard as established upon principle and authority that the
appellate jurisdiction by habeas corpus extends to all cases of
commitment by the judicial authority of the United States not
within any exception made by Congress."
In the present case, the petitioner Coles is in custody under a
bench warrant directed by the District Court, and the averment is
that the court had no jurisdiction of the indictment on which the
warrant is founded.
The District Court is an inferior court, and, in such a case as
that exhibited by the indictment, its judgments are reviewable
here. The indictment has been found for a violation of sect. 4 of
the Act of Congress of March 1, 1875, entitled "An Act to protect
all citizens in their civil and legal rights." 18 Stat., part 3,
336. The third section gives to the district courts as well as the
circuit judicial cognizance of all offences against the provisions
of the act, and the fifth section enacts that all cases arising
under the provisions of the act shall be reviewable by the Supreme
Court of the United States, without regard to the sum in
controversy, under the same provisions and regulations as are now
provided by law for the review of other cases in said court. If
this section applies to criminal cases as well as civil, our
appellate power extends directly to the District Court, and the act
of March 3, 1879, 20 Stat. 354, which allows writs of error to the
Circuit Court in such cases, has not deprived us of appellate
jurisdiction.
We have, then, an application to our appellate power over the
action of a district court in a case where it is alleged that court
has acted outside of its jurisdiction. It is said there is nothing
to appeal from -- that no decision or judgment has been given in
the inferior court -- and that the appeal, if any, is taken from
the finding of a grand jury. This is a mistake. The bench warrant
was an order of the court, and the validity of the bench warrant is
the matter in question. It is true there has been no final judgment
or decision of the whole case; but an appeal may lie, and in many
courts often does lie, from a merely interlocutory order. It is
said no habeas corpus was sued out either in the district or
circuit court, and that we are not called upon to review the
Page 100 U. S. 343
action of a lower court upon such a writ. This is true, and such
a writ from the lower court would have been a more regular
proceeding. We cannot say, however, it was indispensable,
especially in view of the fact that a State is seeking release of
one of her officers, and in view of former action in this court. In
Ex parte
Hamilton, 3 Dall. 17, this court awarded a writ of
habeas corpus, to review a commitment under a warrant of a district
judge. In
Ex parte
Burford, 3 Cranch 448, such a writ was awarded to
review a commitment by the Circuit Court of the District of
Columbia, not to review a decision of an inferior court upon a
habeas corpus issued by it. So, in
Ex parte
Jackson, 96 U. S. 727, in
which the question of our power to issue the writ was raised, and
the petition only averred that the Circuit Court had exceeded its
jurisdiction, this court considered the merits of the case, without
regard to the fact that there had been no habeas corpus in the
court below. And in
Ex parte
Lange, 18 Wall. 163, it was ruled, after an
examination of authorities, that when a prisoner shows that he is
held under a judgment of a Federal court given without authority of
law, this court, by writs of habeas corpus and certiorari, will
look into the record so far as to ascertain whether that is the
fact, and, if it is found to be so, will discharge him. Mr. Justice
Miller said, in delivering the opinion:
"The authority of the court in such a case, under the
Constitution of the United States and the fourteenth section of the
Judiciary Act of 1789, to issue this writ and to examine the
proceedings in the inferior court so far as may be necessary to
ascertain whether that court has exceeded its authority is no
longer an open question."
While, therefore, it is true that a writ of habeas corpus cannot
generally be made to subserve the purposes of a writ of error, yet,
when a prisoner is held without any lawful authority, and by an
order beyond the jurisdiction of an inferior Federal court to make,
this court will, in favor of liberty, grant the writ not to review
the whole case, but to examine the authority of the court below to
act at all.
Our conclusion, then, is that we are empowered to grant the writ
in such a case as is presented in these petitions. We come now to
the merits of the case.
Page 100 U. S. 344
The indictment and bench warrant in virtue of which the
petitioner Coles has been arrested and is held in custody have
their justification -- if any they have -- in the act of Congress
of March 1, 1875, sect. 4. 18 Stat., part 3, 336. That section
enacts that
"no citizen, possessing all other qualifications which are or
may be prescribed by law shall be disqualified for service as grand
or petit juror in any court of the United States, or of any State,
on account of race, color, or previous condition of servitude; and
any officer or other person charged with any duty in the selection
or summoning of jurors who shall exclude or fail to summon any
citizen for the cause aforesaid shall, on conviction thereof, be
deemed guilty of a misdemeanor, and be fined not more than
$5,000."
The defendant has been indicted for the misdemeanor described in
this act, and it is not denied that he is now properly held in
custody to answer the indictment if the act of Congress was
warranted by the Constitution. The whole merits of the case are
involved in the question whether the act was thus warranted.
The provisions of the Constitution that relate to this subject
are found in the Thirteenth and Fourteenth Amendments. The
Thirteenth ordains that
"[n]either slavery nor involuntary servitude, except as
punishment for crime, whereof the party shall have been duly
convicted, shall exist within the United States, or any place
subject to their jurisdiction,"
and it declares that Congress shall have power to enforce the
article by appropriate legislation. This has been followed by the
Fourteenth Amendment, which ordains that
"[a]ll persons born or naturalized in the United States, and
subject to the jurisdiction thereof, are citizens of the United
States, and of the State wherein they reside. 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 the equal protection of the laws."
This amendment also declares that "[t]he Congress shall have
power to enforce by appropriate legislation the provisions of this
article."
One great purpose of these amendments was to raise the
Page 100 U. S. 345
colored race from that condition of inferiority and servitude in
which most of them had previously stood into perfect equality of
civil rights with all other persons within the jurisdiction of the
States. They were intended to take away all possibility of
oppression by law because of race or color. They were intended to
be what they really are -- limitations of the power of the States
and enlargements of the power of Congress. They are to some extent
declaratory of rights, and though in form prohibitions, they imply
immunities such as may be protected by congressional legislation.
We had occasion in the
Slaughter-House
Cases, 16 Wall. 27, to express our opinion of their
spirit and purpose, and to some extent of their meaning. We have
again been called to consider them in
Tennessee v. Davis,
supra, p.
100 U. S. 257, and
Strauder v. West Virginia, supra, p.
342 U. S. 303.
In this latter case, we held that the Fourteenth Amendment secures,
among other civil rights, to colored men, when charged with
criminal offences against a State, an impartial jury trial, by
jurors indifferently selected or chosen without discrimination
against such jurors because of their color. We held that immunity
from any such discrimination is one of the equal rights of all
persons, and that any withholding it by a State is a denial of the
equal protection of the laws within the meaning of the amendment.
We held that such an equal right to an impartial jury trial, and
such an immunity from unfriendly discrimination, are placed by the
amendment under the protection of the general government and
guaranteed by it. We held further that this protection and this
guarantee, as the fifth section of the amendment expressly ordains,
may be enforced by Congress by means of appropriate
legislation.
All of the amendments derive much of their force from this
latter provision. It is not said the
judicial power of the
general government shall extend to enforcing the prohibitions and
to protecting the rights and immunities guaranteed. It is not said
that branch of the government shall be authorized to declare void
any action of a State in violation of the prohibitions. It is the
power of Congress which has been enlarged, Congress is authorized
to
enforce the prohibitions by appropriate legislation.
Some legislation is contemplated to make the amendments fully
effective. Whatever legislation is appropriate,
Page 100 U. S. 346
that is, adapted to carry out the objects the amendments have in
view, whatever tends to enforce submission to the prohibitions they
contain, and to secure to all persons the enjoyment of perfect
equality of civil rights and the equal protection of the laws
against State denial or invasion, if not prohibited, is brought
within the domain of congressional power.
Nor does it make any difference that such legislation is
restrictive of what the State might have done before the
constitutional amendment was adopted. The prohibitions of the
Fourteenth Amendment are directed to the States, and they are, to a
degree, restrictions of State power. It is these which Congress is
empowered to enforce, and to enforce against State action, however
put forth, whether that action be executive, legislative, or
judicial. Such enforcement is no invasion of State sovereignty. No
law can be, which the people of the States have, by the
Constitution of the United States, empowered Congress to enact.
This extent of the powers of the general government is overlooked
when it is said, as it has been in this case, that the act of March
1, 1875, interferes with State rights. It is said the selection of
jurors for her courts and the administration of her laws belong to
each State; that they are her rights. This is true in the general.
But, in exercising her rights, a State cannot disregard the
limitations which the Federal Constitution has applied to her
power. Her rights do not reach to that extent. Nor can she deny to
the general government the right to exercise all its granted
powers, though they may interfere with the full enjoyment of rights
she would have if those powers had not been thus granted. Indeed,
every addition of power to the general government involves a
corresponding diminution of the governmental powers of the States.
It is carved out of them.
We have said the prohibitions of the Fourteenth Amendment are
addressed to the States. They are:
"No State shall make or enforce a law which shall abridge the
privileges or immunities of citizens of the United States, . . .
nor deny to any person within its jurisdiction the equal protection
of the laws."
They have reference to actions of the political body denominated
a State, by whatever instruments or in whatever
Page 100 U. S. 347
modes that action may be taken. A State acts by its legislative,
its executive, or its judicial authorities. It can act in no other
way. The constitutional provision, therefore, must mean that no
agency of the State, or of the officers or agents by whom its
powers are exerted, shall deny to any person within its
jurisdiction the equal protection of the laws. Whoever, by virtue
of public position under a State government, deprives another of
property, life, or liberty, without due process of law, or denies
or takes away the equal protection of the laws, violates the
constitutional inhibition; and as he acts in the name and for the
State, and is clothed with the State's power, his act is that of
the State. This must be so, or the constitutional prohibition has
no meaning. Then the State has clothed one of its agents with power
to annul or to evade it.
But the constitutional amendment was ordained for a purpose. It
was to secure equal rights to all persons, and, to insure to all
persons the enjoyment of such rights, power was given to Congress
to enforce its provisions by appropriate legislation. Such
legislation must act upon persons, not upon the abstract thing
denominated a State, but upon the persons who are the agents of the
State in the denial of the rights which were intended to be
secured. Such is the act of March 1, 1875, and we think it was
fully authorized by the Constitution.
The argument in support of the petition for a habeas corpus
ignores entirely the power conferred upon Congress by the
Fourteenth Amendment. Were it not for the fifth section of that
amendment, there might be room for argument that the first section
is only declaratory of the moral duty of the State, as was said in
Commonwealth of Kentucky v.
Dennison, 24 How. 66. The act under consideration
in that case provided no means to compel the execution of the duty
required by it, and the Constitution gave none. It was of such an
act Mr. Chief Justice Taney said that a power vested in the United
States to inflict any punishment for neglect or refusal to perform
the duty required by the act of Congress
"would place every State under the control and dominion of the
general government, even in the administration of its internal
concerns and reserved rights."
But the Constitution now expressly
Page 100 U. S. 348
gives authority for congressional interference and compulsion in
the cases embraced within the Fourteenth Amendment. It is but a
limited authority, true, extending only to a single class of cases;
but, within its limits, it is complete. The remarks made in
Kentucky v. Dennison and in
Collector v. Day,
though entirely just as applied to the cases in which they were
made, are inapplicable to the case we have now in hand.
We do not perceive how holding an office under a State, and
claiming to act for the State, can relieve the holder from
obligation to obey the Constitution of the United States, or take
away the power of Congress to punish his disobedience.
It was insisted during the argument on behalf of the petitioner
that Congress cannot punish a State judge for his official acts,
and it was assumed that Judge Cole, in selecting the jury as he
did, was performing a judicial act. This assumption cannot be
admitted. Whether the act done by him was judicial or not is to be
determined by its character, and not by the character of the agent.
Whether he was a county judge or not is of no importance. The duty
of selecting jurors might as well have been committed to a private
person as to one holding the office of a judge. It often is given
to county commissioners, or supervisors, or assessors. In former
times, the selection was made by the sheriff. In such cases, it
surely is not a judicial act, in any such sense as is contended for
here. It is merely a ministerial act, as much so as the act of a
sheriff holding an execution, in determining upon what piece of
property he will make a levy, or the act of a roadmaster in
selecting laborers to work upon the roads. That the jurors are
selected for a court makes no difference. So are court criers,
tipstaves, sheriffs, &c. Is their election or their appointment
a judicial act?
But if the selection of jurors could be considered in any case a
judicial act, can the act charged against the petitioner be
considered such when he acted outside of his authority and in
direct violation of the spirit of the State statute? That statute
gave him no authority, when selecting jurors from whom a panel
might be drawn for a circuit court, to exclude all colored men
merely because they were colored. Such an exclusion was not left
within the limits of his discretion. It is idle, therefore, to say
that the act of Congress is unconstitutional because it
inflicts
Page 100 U. S. 349
penalties upon State judges for their judicial action. It does
no such thing.
Upon the whole, as we are of opinion that the act of Congress
upon which the indictment against the petitioner was founded is
constitutional, and that he is correctly held to answer it, and, as
therefore no object would be secured by issuing a writ of habeas
corpus, the petitions are
Denied.
MR. JUSTICE FIELD, with whom concurred MR. JUSTICE CLIFFORD,
dissenting.
I dissent from the judgment of the court in this case, and from
the reasons by which it is supported; and I will state the grounds
of my dissent.
In Virginia, all male citizens between the ages of twenty-one
and sixty, who are entitled to vote and hold office under the
Constitution and laws of the State, are liable, with certain
exceptions not material to be here mentioned, to serve as jurors.
The judge of each county or corporation court is required to
prepare annually a list of such inhabitants of the county or
corporation, not less than one hundred, nor exceeding three hundred
in number, "as he shall think well qualified to serve as jurors,
being persons of sound judgment and free from legal exception." The
name of each person on the list thus prepared is to be written on a
separate ballot, and placed in a box to be kept by the clerk of the
court. From this box the names of persons to be summoned as grand
and petit jurors of the county are to be drawn.
The law, in thus providing for the preparation of the list of
persons from whom the jurors are to be taken, makes no
discrimination against persons of the colored race. The judge of
the county or corporation court is restricted in his action only by
the condition that the persons selected shall, in his opinion, be
"well qualified to serve as jurors," be "of sound judgment," and
"free from legal exception." Whether they possess these
qualifications is left to his determination, and, as I shall
attempt hereafter to show, for the manner in which he discharges
this duty he is responsible only to the State whose officer he is
and whose law he is bound to enforce.
Page 100 U. S. 350
The petitioner, J. D. Coles, is the judge of the county court of
the county of Pittsylvania, in Virginia, and has held that office
for some years. It is not pretended that, in the discharge of his
judicial duties, he has ever selected as jurors persons who were
not qualified to serve in that character, or who were not of sound
judgment, or who were not free from legal exception. It is not even
suggested in argument that he has not at all times faithfully
obeyed the law of the State; yet he has been indicted in the
District Court of the United States for the Western District of
Virginia for having, on some undesignated day in the year 1878,
excluded and failed to select as grand and petit jurors citizens of
the county on account of race, color, and previous condition of
servitude. The indictment does not state who those citizens were,
or set forth any particulars of the offence, but charges it in the
general words of a definition. The District Court nevertheless
issued a bench warrant, upon which the judge was arrested, and,
refusing to give bail, he is held in custody to answer the
indictment. He therefore petitions for a certiorari to that court
to send up the record of its proceedings for our examination, and
for a writ of habeas corpus, alleging that its action was without
jurisdiction and that his imprisonment thereunder is unlawful; and
he prays to be released therefrom.
The Commonwealth of Virginia has also presented a similar
petition, declaring that she is injured by being deprived of the
services of her judicial officer by his unlawful arrest and
imprisonment.
If the District Court had no jurisdiction, as alleged, of the
matters charged against the county judge, if they constitute no
public offence for which he could be held, his arrest and
imprisonment upon process issued upon the indictment were unlawful,
and his petition should be granted.
It has been settled by this court upon full examination, and
after some conflict of opinion among it members, that the writ of
habeas corpus is a mode provided for the exercise of its appellate
jurisdiction, whenever by any unauthorized action of an inferior
tribunal, whether it be by its order, decree, or process, a citizen
is restrained of his personal liberty; and that a certiorari will
issue in connection with the writ, to bring up
Page 100 U. S. 351
the record of the inferior tribunal for examination. In such
cases, this court will look into the record to determine not
whether the inferior tribunal has erred in its action, but whether
it has exceeded its jurisdiction in the imprisonment of the
petitioner.
Ex parte
Yerger, 8 Wall. 85;
Ex
parte Lange, 18
id. 166.
The indictment is founded upon the fourth section of the act of
Congress of March 1, 1875, "to protect all citizens in their civil
and legal rights," which declares,
"That no citizen possessing all other qualifications, which are
or may be prescribed by law, shall be disqualified for service as
grand or petit juror in any court of the United States, or of any
State, on account of race, color, or previous condition of
servitude; and any officer or other person charged with any duty in
the selection or summoning of jurors, who shall exclude or fail to
summon any citizen for the cause aforesaid, shall, on conviction
thereof, be deemed guilty of a misdemeanor, and be fined not more
than $5,000."
In what I have to say, I shall endeavor to show that the
District Court, in issuing its process for the arrest of the
defendant and in imprisoning him, exceeded its jurisdiction: 1st,
because, assuming that the act of 1875 is constitutional and valid
legislation, the indictment describes no offence under it, but is
void on its face; and, 2d, because that act in the section cited,
so far as it relates to jurors in the State courts, is
unconstitutional and void.
The indictment merely repeats the general language of the
statute. It avers that the defendant, being judge of Pittsylvania
County, and an officer charged by law with the selection of jurors
to serve in the circuit and county courts of the county, excluded
and failed to select as jurors, on account of race, color, and
previous condition of servitude, certain citizens of the county
possessing all other qualifications prescribed by law; but it names
no citizens who were thus excluded, and, of course, designates no
specific traversable offence. It is essential to a valid indictment
that it should set forth the offence, with such particulars of
time, place, and person, that the accused may know the nature of
the charge, and be able to prepare to meet it. It is not enough to
repeat the definition of the offence in the general language of the
statute, and then
Page 100 U. S. 352
aver that the defendant has been guilty of the offence thus
defined, without other specification. It is not sufficient, for
example, to charge in an indictment that the defendant has been
guilty of murder without stating the time and place of the offence,
and the name of the person murdered, or, if his name be unknown,
giving such a description as to identify him. An indictment without
such specification would be merely a collection of pointless words.
This doctrine is only common learning; it is found in the hornbooks
of the law; it is on the pages thumbed by the student in his first
lessons in criminal procedure.
The Constitution, in its sixth amendment, strikes with nullity
all such vague accusations as are embraced in this indictment. It
declares, repeating in this respect the doctrine of the common law,
that, in all criminal prosecutions, the accused shall "be informed
of the nature and cause of the accusation" against him; and this
means that all the essential ingredients of the offence charged
must be stated, embracing, with reasonable certainty, the
particulars of time, place, and person or property. It is only by
such information that the accused will be enabled to prepare his
defence, and avail himself of his acquittal or conviction against
any further prosecution for the same cause. "This principle," says
Bishop in his treatise,
"that the indictment must contain an allegation of every fact
which is legally essential to the punishment to be inflicted
pervades the entire system of the adjudged law of criminal
procedure. It is not made apparent to our understandings by a
single case only, but by all the cases. Wherever we move in this
department of our jurisprudence, we come in contact with it. We can
no more escape from it than from the atmosphere which surrounds
us."
Sect. 81. To the same effect is the language of Archbold in his
treatise on Criminal Practice and Pleading. "The indictment," he
says,
"must state all the facts and circumstances comprised in the
definition of the offence, by the rule of the common law or statute
on which the indictment is founded. And these must be stated with
clearness and certainty; otherwise the indictment will be bad."
And he states that the principal rule as to the certainty
required in an indictment may be laid down thus:
"That where the definition of an offence, whether by a rule
Page 100 U. S. 353
of the common law or by statute, includes generic terms (as it
necessarily must), it is not sufficient that the indictment should
charge the offence in the same generic terms as in the definition,
but it must state the species, -- it must descend to
particulars."
P. 88. This doctrine is fully stated and illustrated in the
Cruikshank case, both in the prevailing and dissenting
opinion.
92 U. S. 558,
92 U. S. 568.
Tested by it, the indictment here is but a string of words,
presenting no specific offence, and therefore not justifying the
issue of any process for the arrest and imprisonment of the
petitioner.
It is difficult to understand how an indictment so defective
could have been drawn by the public prosecutor unless we accept, as
an explanation of it, the extraordinary statement of counsel that
the district judge instructed the grand jury to the effect that
whenever it appeared that a State judge, in discharging the duty
imposed on him by the law of the State to prepare annually a list
of such inhabitants of his county as he should "think well
qualified to serve as jurors, being persons of sound judgment and
free from legal exception," had never put colored persons on the
jury lists, it was to be presumed that his failure to do so was
because of their race, color, or previous condition of servitude,
and that it was the duty of the grand jury to indict him for that
offence. In the face of this ruling, no defence could be made by
the accused, although he may have exercised at all times his best
judgment in the selection of qualified persons, unless he could
prove what in most cases would be impossible -- that, in a county
of many thousand inhabitants, there was not a colored person
qualified to serve as a juror. With this ruling, there could be no
necessity of alleging in the indictment anything beyond the general
failure to put colored persons on the jury list -- a fact which
could not be disputed; and it would sufficiently inform the accused
that he must be prepared, in order to rebut the presumption of
guilt, to prove that there were no persons of the colored race in
the county qualified to act as jurors. It is difficult to speak of
this ruling in the language of moderation.
My second position is that the fourth section of the act of
1875, so far as it applies to the selection of jurors in the State
courts, is unconstitutional and void. Previous to the late
Page 100 U. S. 354
amendments, it would not have been contended by anyone familiar
with the Constitution that Congress was vested with any power to
exercise supervision over the conduct of State officers in the
discharge of their duties under the laws of the State, and
prescribe a punishment for disregarding its directions. It would
have been conceded that the selection of jurors was a subject
exclusively for regulation by the States,that it was for them to
determine who should act as jurors in their courts, from what class
they should be taken, and what qualifications they should possess;
and that their officers, in carrying out the laws in this respect,
were responsible only to them. The States could have abolished jury
trials altogether, and required all controversies to be submitted
to the courts without their intervention. The Sixth and Seventh
Amendments, in which jury trials are mentioned, apply only to the
Federal courts, as has been repeatedly adjudged.
The government created by the Constitution was not designed for
the regulation of matters of purely local concern. The States
required no aid from any external authority to manage their
domestic affairs. They were fully competent to provide for the due
administration of justice between their own citizens in their own
courts; and they needed no directions in that matter from any other
government, any more than they needed directions as to their
highways and schools, their hospitals and charitable institutions,
their public libraries, or the magistrates they should appoint for
their towns and counties. It was only for matters which concerned
all the States, and which could not be managed by them in their
independent capacity, or managed only with great difficulty and
embarrassment, that a general and common government was desired.
Whilst they retained control of local matters, it was felt
necessary that matters of general and common interest, which they
could not wisely and efficiently manage, should be intrusted to a
central authority. And so to the common government which grew out
of this prevailing necessity was granted exclusive jurisdiction
over external affairs, including the great powers of declaring war,
making peace, and concluding treaties; but only such powers of
internal regulation were conferred as were essential to the
successful and efficient working of the government
Page 100 U. S. 355
established -- to facilitate intercourse and commerce between
the people of the different States and secure to them equality of
protection in the several States.
That the central government was created chiefly for matters of a
general character, which concerned all the States and their people,
and not for matters of interior regulation, is shown as much by the
history of its formation as by the express language of the
Constitution. The Union preceded the Constitution. As happily
expressed by the late Chief Justice,
"It began among the colonies, and grew out of common origin,
mutual sympathies, kindred principles, similar interests, and
geographical relations. It was confirmed and strengthened by the
necessities of war, and received definite form and character and
sanction from the Articles of Confederation."
Texas v.
White, 7 Wall. 725. Those articles were prepared by
the Continental Congress, which was called to provide measures for
the common defence of the colonies against the encroachments of the
British crown, and which, failing to secure redress, declared their
independence. Its members foresaw that, when the independence of
the colonies was established and acknowledged, their condition as
separate and independent States would be beset with dangers
threatening their peace and safety; that disputes arising from
conflicting interests and rivalries, always incident to neighboring
nations, would lead to armed collisions, and expose them to
reconquest by the mother country. To provide against the
possibility of evils of this kind, the Articles of Confederation
were prepared and submitted to the legislatures of the several
States, and finally, in 1781, were adopted. They declared that the
States entered into a firm league of friendship with each other for
their common defence, the security of their liberties and their
mutual and general welfare; and they bound themselves to assist
each other against attacks on account of religion, sovereignty,
trade, or any other pretence. They clothed the new government
created by them with powers supposed to be ample to secure these
ends, and declared that there should be freedom of intercourse and
commerce between the inhabitants of the several States. They
provided for a general congress, and, among other things, invested
it with the exclusive power of determining on peace and
Page 100 U. S. 356
war, except in case of invasion of a State by enemies, or
imminent danger of such invasion by Indians; of sending and
receiving ambassadors, entering into treaties and alliances; of
regulating the alloy and value of coin struck by the authority of
the States or of the United States; of fixing the standard of
weights and measures; of regulating the trade and managing all
affairs with the Indians; and of establishing and regulating post
offices from one State to another; and they placed numerous
restraints upon the States. But by none of the articles was any
interference authorized with the purely internal affairs of the
States, or with any of the instrumentalities by which the States
administered their governments and dispensed justice among their
people; and they declared in terms that each State retained its
sovereignty, freedom, and independence, and every power,
jurisdiction, and right which was not by the articles expressly
delegated to the United States in Congress assembled.
When the government of the confederation failed, chiefly through
the want of all coercive authority, to carry into effect its
measures -- its power being only that of recommendation to the
States -- and the present Constitution was adopted, the same
general ends were sought to be attained; namely, the creation of a
central government, which would take exclusive charge of all our
foreign relations, representing the people of all the States in
that respect as one nation, and would at the same time secure at
home freedom of intercourse between the States, equality of
protection to citizens of each State in the several States,
uniformity of commercial regulations, a common currency, a standard
of weights and measures, one postal system, and such other matters
as concerned all the States and their people.
Accordingly, the new government was invested with powers
adequate to the accomplishment of these purposes, with which it
could act directly upon the people, and not by recommendation to
the States, and enforce its measures through tribunals and officers
of its own creation. There were also restraints placed upon the
action of the States to prevent interference with the authority of
the new government, and to secure to all persons protection against
punishment by legislative decree,
Page 100 U. S. 357
and insure the fulfillment of contract obligations. But the
control of matters of purely local concern, not coming within the
scope of the powers granted or the restraints mentioned, was left
where it had always existed -- with the States. The new government
being one of granted powers, its authority was limited by them and
such as were necessarily implied for their execution. But lest,
from a misconception of their extent, these powers might be abused,
the Tenth Amendment was at an early day adopted, declaring that
"the powers not delegated to the United States by the
Constitution nor prohibited by it to the States are reserved to the
States respectively, or to the people."
Now if we look into the Constitution, we shall not find a single
word, from its opening to its concluding line, nor in any of the
amendments in force before the close of the civil war, nor, as I
shall hereafter endeavor to show, in those subsequently adopted,
which authorizes any interference by Congress with the States in
the administration of their governments, and the enforcement of
their laws with respect to any matter over which jurisdiction was
not surrendered to the United States. The design of its framers was
not to destroy the States, but to form a more perfect union between
them, and, whilst creating a central government for certain great
purposes, to leave to the States in all matters the jurisdiction of
which was not surrendered the functions essential to separate and
independent existence. And so the late Chief Justice, speaking for
the court in 1869, said:
"Not only, therefore, can there be no loss of separate and
independent autonomy to the States through their union under the
Constitution, but it may be not unreasonably said that the
preservation of the States and the maintenance of their governments
are as much within the design and care of the Constitution as the
preservation of the Union and the maintenance of the national
government;"
and then he adds, in that striking language which gives to an
old truth new force and significance, that "the Constitution, in
all its provisions, looks to an indestructible Union composed of
indestructible States."
Texas v. White, supra.
And Mr. Justice Nelson, also speaking for the Court, in 1871,
used this language:
"The general government and the
Page 100 U. S. 358
States, although both exist within the same territorial limits,
are separate and distinct sovereignties, acting separately and
independently of each other, within their respective spheres. The
former in its appropriate sphere is supreme; but the States, within
the limits of their powers not granted, or, in the language of the
Tenth Amendment, 'reserved,' are as independent of the general
government as that government within its spheres is independent of
the States."
And again:
"We have said that one of the reserved powers was that to
establish a judicial department; it would have been more accurate,
and in accordance with the existing state of things at the time, to
have said the power to maintain a judicial department. All of the
thirteen States were in the possession of this power, and had
exercised it at the adoption of the Constitution; and it is not
pretended that any grant of it to the general government is found
in that instrument. It is therefore one of the sovereign powers
vested in the States by their constitutions, which remained
unaltered and unimpaired, and in respect to which the State is as
independent of the general government as that government is
independent of the States."
The Collector v. Day, 11 Wall.
78 U. S.
124-126.
The cases of
Texas v. White and
The Collector v.
Day were decided after the Thirteenth and Fourteenth
Amendments, upon which it is sought to maintain the legislation in
question, were adopted, and with their provisions the Chief Justice
and Mr. Justice Nelson, and the court for which they spoke, were
familiar. Yet neither they nor any other judge of the court
suggested that the doctrines announced in the opinions from which I
have quoted were in any respect modified or affected by the
amendments.
Nothing, in my judgment, could have a greater tendency to
destroy the independence and autonomy of the States, reduce them to
a humiliating and degrading dependence upon the central government,
engender constant irritation, and destroy that domestic
tranquillity which it was one of the objects of the Constitution to
insure than the doctrine asserted in this case -- that Congress can
exercise coercive authority over judicial officers of the States in
the discharge of their duties under State laws. It will be only
another step in the same direction
Page 100 U. S. 359
towards consolidation, when it assumes to exercise similar
coercive authority over governors and legislators of the
States.
The Constitution declares that a
"person charged in any State with treason, felony, or other
crime, who shall flee from justice and be found in another State
shall, on demand of the executive authority of the State from which
he fled, be delivered up, to be removed to the State having
jurisdiction of the crime."
And yet, in the case of
The Commonwealth of Kentucky v.
Dennison, where a fugitive from justice from Kentucky was
demanded from the Governor of Ohio, and, on his refusal,
application was made to this court for a mandamus to compel him to
perform his duty in this respect, it was held that there was no
clause or provision in the Constitution which armed the government
of the United States with authority to compel the executive of a
State to perform his duty, nor to inflict any punishment for his
neglect or refusal. "Indeed, such a power," said Mr. Chief Justice
Taney, speaking for the whole court,
"would place every State under the control and dominion of the
general government even in the administration of its internal
concerns and reserved rights."
65 U. S. 24 How.
107. And Mr. Justice Nelson, in the case of
Collector v.
Day, where it was held that it was not competent for Congress
to impose a tax upon the salary of a judicial officer of a State,
said that
"any government whose means employed in conducting its
operations are made subject to the control of another and distinct
government can exist only at the mercy of that government."
I could add to these authorities, if anything more were
required, that all the recorded utterances of the statesmen who
participated in framing the Constitution and urging its adoption,
and of the publicists and jurists who have since studied its
language and aided in the enforcement of its provisions, are
inconsistent with the pretension advanced in this case by the
counsel of the government.
The duties of the county judge in the selection of jurors were
judicial in their nature. They involved the exercise of discretion
and judgment. He was to determine who were qualified to serve in
that character, and, for that purpose, whether they possessed sound
judgment and were free from legal exceptions. The law under which
he acted had been in
Page 100 U. S. 360
force for many years, and had been always considered by the
judicial authorities of Virginia to be in conformity with its
Constitution, which inhibits the legislature from requiring of its
judges any other than judicial duties. A test as to the character
of an act is found in the power of a writ of mandamus to enforce
its performance in a particular way. If the act be a judicial one,
the writ can only require the judge to proceed in the discharge of
his duty with reference to it; the manner of performance cannot be
dictated. Here, the writ could not command the county judge to
select as jurors any particular persons, black or white, but only
to proceed and select such as are qualified, its command in that
respect being subject to the limitation incident to all commands of
such writs upon judicial officers touching judicial acts.
The Thirteenth and Fourteenth Amendments are relied upon, as
already stated, to support the legislation in question. The
Thirteenth Amendment declares
"[t]hat neither slavery nor involuntary servitude, except as a
punishment for crime whereof the party shall have been duly
convicted, shall exist within the United States, or any place
subject to their jurisdiction."
The Fourteenth Amendment, in its first section, which is the
only one having any bearing upon the questions involved in this
case, declares that
"[a]ll persons born or naturalized in the United States, and
subject to the jurisdiction thereof, are citizens of the United
States and of the State wherein they reside. 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."
The Fifteenth Amendment, which declares that
"[t]he right of citizens of the United States to vote shall not
be denied or abridged by the United States or by any State, on
account of race, color, or previous condition of servitude,"
is not material to the question before us, except as showing
that it was only with respect to the suffrage that an interdict was
in terms placed against legislation on account of race, color, or
previous condition of servitude. Equality in their civil rights was
in other ways secured to persons of the colored
Page 100 U. S. 360
race, and, the ballot being assured to them, an effectual means
against unjust legislation was placed in their hands. To each of
these amendments a clause is added authorizing Congress to enforce
its provisions by "appropriate legislation."
The history of the amendments is fresh in the recollection of
all of us. They grew out of the late civil war and the events which
followed it. They were primarily designed to give freedom to
persons of the African race, prevent their future enslavement, make
them citizens, prevent discriminating State legislation against
their rights as freemen, and secure to them the ballot. The
generality of the language used necessarily extends some of their
provisions to all persons of every race and color; but, in
construing the amendments and giving effect to them, the occasion
of their adoption and the purposes they were designed to attain
should be always borne in mind. Nor should it be forgotten that
they are additions to the previous amendments, and are to be
construed in connection with them and the original Constitution as
one instrument. They do not, in terms, contravene or repeal
anything which previously existed in the Constitution and those
amendments. Aside from the extinction of slavery and the
declaration of citizenship, their provisions are merely prohibitory
upon the States, and there is nothing in their language or purpose
which indicates that they are to be construed or enforced in any
way different from that adopted with reference to previous
restraints upon the States. The provision authorizing Congress to
enforce them by appropriate legislation does not enlarge their
scope, nor confer any authority which would not have existed
independently of it. No legislation would be appropriate which
should contravene the express prohibitions upon Congress previously
existing, as, for instance, that it should not pass a bill of
attainder or an
ex post facto law. Nor would legislation
be appropriate which should conflict with the implied prohibitions
upon Congress. They are as obligatory as the express prohibitions.
The Constitution, as already stated, contemplates the existence and
independence of the States in all their reserved powers. If the
States were destroyed, there could, of course, be no United States.
In the language of this court in
The Collector v. Day,
"without them the general
Page 100 U. S. 362
government itself would disappear from the family of nations."
Legislation could not, therefore, be appropriate which, under
pretence of prohibiting a State from doing certain things, should
tend to destroy it or any of its essential attributes. To every
State, as understood in the American sense, there must be, with
reference to the subjects over which it has jurisdiction, absolute
freedom from all external interference in the exercise of its
legislative, judicial, and executive authority. Congress could not
undertake to prescribe the duties of a State legislature and the
rules it should follow, and the motives by which it should be
governed, and authorize criminal prosecutions against the members
if its directions were disregarded; for the independence of the
legislature is essential to the independence and autonomy of the
State. Congress could not lay down rules for the guidance of the
State judiciary, and prescribe to it the law and the motives by
which it should be controlled, and if these were disregarded,
direct criminal proceedings against its members, because a
judiciary independent of external authority is essential to the
independence of the State, and also, I may add, to a just and
efficient administration of justice in her courts. Congress could
not dictate to the executive of a State the bills he might approve,
the pardons and reprieves he might grant, or the manner in which he
might discharge the functions of his office, and assume to punish
him if its dictates were disregarded, because his independence,
within the reserved powers, is essential to that of the State.
Indeed, the independence of a State consists in the independence of
its legislative, executive, and judicial officers, through whom
alone it acts. If this were not so, a State would cease to be a
self-existing and an indestructible member of the Union, and would
be brought to the level of a dependent municipal corporation,
existing only with such powers as Congress might prescribe.
I cannot think I am mistaken in saying that a change so radical
in the relation between the Federal and State authorities as would
justify legislation interfering with the independent action of the
different departments of the State governments in all matters over
which the States retain jurisdiction was never contemplated by the
recent amendments.
Page 100 U. S. 363
The people, in adopting them, did not suppose they were altering
the fundamental theory of their dual system of governments. The
discussions attending their consideration in Congress, and before
the people, when presented to the legislatures of the States for
adoption, can be successfully appealed to in support of this
assertion. The Union was preserved at a fearful cost of life and
property. The institution of slavery in a portion of the country
was the cause of constant irritation and crimination between the
people of the States where it existed and those of the free States,
which finally led to a rupture between them and to the civil war.
As the war progressed, its sacrifices and burdens filled the people
of the loyal States with a determination that not only should the
Union be preserved, but that the institution which, in their
judgment, had threatened its dissolution should be abolished. The
emancipation proclamation of President Lincoln expressed this
determination, though placed on the ground of military necessity.
The Thirteenth Amendment carried it into the organic law. That
amendment prohibits slavery and involuntary servitude, except for
crime, within the United States or any place subject to their
jurisdiction. Its language is not restricted to the slavery of any
particular class. It applies to all men, and embraces in its
comprehensive language not merely that form of slavery which
consists in the denial of personal rights to the slave, and
subjects him to the condition of a chattel, but also serfage,
vassalage, peonage, villeinage, and every other form of compulsory
service for the benefit, pleasure, or caprice of others. It was
intended to render everyone within the domain of the republic a
freeman, with the right to follow the ordinary pursuits of life
without other restraints than such as are applied to all others,
and to enjoy equally with them the earnings of his labor. But it
confers no political rights; it leaves the States free as before
its adoption to determine who shall hold their offices and
participate in the administration of their laws. A similar
prohibition of slavery and involuntary servitude was in the
Constitution of several States previous to its adoption by the
United States, and it was never held to confer any political
rights.
On the 18th of December, 1865, this amendment was ratified,
Page 100 U. S. 364
that is, the official proclamation of its ratification was then
made, and, in April of the following year, the Civil Rights Act was
passed. Its first section declares that all persons born in the
United States, and not subject to any foreign power, excluding
Indians not taxed, are "citizens of the United States," and
that
"such citizens, of every race and color, without regard to any
previous condition of slavery or involuntary servitude, except as a
punishment for crime, of which the party shall have been duly
convicted, shall have the same right in every State and Territory
in the United States, to make and enforce contracts, to sue, be
parties and give evidence, to inherit, purchase, lease, sell, hold
and convey real and personal property, and to full and equal
benefit of all laws and proceedings for the security of person and
property as is enjoyed by white persons."
This legislation was intended to secure to all persons in the
United States practical freedom. But its validity was questioned in
many quarters entitled to consideration, and some of its provisions
not long afterwards were declared by State courts to be beyond the
constitutional authority of Congress.
Bowlin v.
Commonwealth, 2 Bush (Ky.), 15. There were also complaints
made that, notwithstanding the amendment abolishing slavery and
involuntary servitude except for crime, the freedmen were, by
legislation in some of the Southern States, subjected to such
burdensome disabilities in the acquisition and enjoyment of
property and the pursuit of happiness as to render their freedom of
little value.
Slaughter-House
Cases, 16 Wall. 36. There were, besides, complaints
of the existence, in those sections, of a feeling of dislike
towards citizens of the North seeking residence there, and towards
such of their own citizens as had adhered to the national
government during the war, which could not fail to find expression
in hostile and discriminating legislation. It is immaterial whether
these complaints were justified or not; they were believed by many
persons to be well founded. To remove the cause of them; to obviate
objections to the validity of legislation similar to that contained
in the first section of the Civil Rights Act; to prevent the
possibility of hostile and discriminating legislation in future by
a State against any citizen of the United States, and the
enforcement of any such legislation already had; and to
Page 100 U. S. 365
secure to all persons within the jurisdiction of the States the
equal protection of the laws, the first section of the Fourteenth
Amendment was adopted. Its first clause declared who are citizens
of the United States and of the States. It thus removed from
discussion the question, which had previously been debated, and,
though decided, not settled, by the judgment in the
Dred Scott
Case, whether descendants of persons brought to this country
and sold as slaves were citizens within the meaning of the
Constitution. It also recognized, if it did not create, a national
citizenship, as contradistinguished from that of the States. But
the privilege or the duty, whichever it may be called, of acting as
a juror in the courts of the country is not an incident of
citizenship. Women are citizens; so are the aged above sixty, and
children in their minority, yet they are not allowed in Virginia to
act as jurors. Though some of these are in all respects qualified
for such service, no one will pretend that their exclusion by law
from the jury list impairs their rights as citizens.
The second clause of the first section of the amendment declares
that "no State shall make or enforce any law which shall abridge
the privileges or immunities of citizens of the United States." In
Slaughter-House Cases, it was held by a majority of the
court that this clause had reference only to privileges and
immunities of citizens of the United States, as distinguished from
those of citizens of the States, and therefore did not apply to
those fundamental civil rights which belong to citizens of all free
governments, such as the right to acquire and enjoy property and
pursue happiness, subject only to such just restraints as might be
prescribed for the general good. If this construction be correct,
there can be no pretence that the privilege or duty of acting as a
juror in a State court is within the inhibition of the clause. Nor
could it be within that inhibition if a broader construction were
given to the clause, and it should be held, as contended by the
minority of the court in
Slaughter-House Cases, that it
prohibits the denial or abridgment by any State of those
fundamental privileges and immunities which of right belong to
citizens of all free governments, and with which the Declaration of
Independence proclaimed that all men were endowed by their
Creator,
Page 100 U. S. 366
and to secure which governments were instituted among men. These
fundamental rights were secured, previous to the amendment, to
citizens of each State in the other States by the second section of
the fourth article of the Constitution, which declares that "the
citizens of each State shall be entitled to all privileges and
immunities of citizens in the several States." Among those
privileges and immunities it was never contended that jury duty or
jury service was included.
The third clause in the first section of the amendment declares
that no State "shall deprive any person of life, liberty, or
property without due process of law." It will not be contended that
this clause confers upon the citizen any right to serve as a juror
in the State courts. It exists in the Constitution of nearly all
the States, and is only an additional security against arbitrary
deprivation of life and liberty, and arbitrary spoliation of
property. It means that neither can be taken, or the enjoyment
thereof impaired, except in the course of the regular
administration of the law in the established tribunals. The
existence of this clause in the amendment is, to me, a persuasive
argument that those who framed it, and the legislatures of the
States which adopted it, never contemplated that the prohibition
was to be enforced in any other way than through the judicial
tribunals, as previous prohibitions upon the States had always been
enforced. If Congress could, as an appropriate means to enforce the
prohibition, prescribe criminal prosecutions for its infraction
against legislators, judges, and other officers of the States, it
would be authorized to frame a vast portion of their laws, for
there are few subjects upon which legislation can be had besides
life, liberty, and property. In determining what constitutes a
deprivation of property, it might prescribe the conditions upon
which property shall be acquired and held, and declare as to what
subjects property rights shall exist. In determining what
constitutes deprivation of liberty, it might prescribe in what way
and by what means the liberty of the citizen shall be deemed
protected. In prescribing punishment for deprivation of life, it
might prescribe a code of criminal procedure. All this and much
more might be done if it once be admitted, as the court asserts in
this case, that Congress can authorize a criminal prosecution for
the infraction
Page 100 U. S. 367
of the prohibitions. It cannot prescribe punishment without
defining crime, and therefore must give expression to its own views
as to what constitutes protection to life, liberty, and
property.
The fourth clause in the first section of the amendment declares
that no State shall "deny to any person within its jurisdiction the
equal protection of the laws." Upon this clause the counsel of the
district judge chiefly rely to sustain the validity of the
legislation in question. But the universality of the protection
secured necessarily renders their position untenable. All persons
within the jurisdiction of the State, whether permanent residents
or temporary sojourners, whether old or young, male or female, are
to be equally protected. Yet no one will contend that equal
protection to women, to children, to the aged, to aliens, can only
be secured by allowing persons of the class to which they belong to
act as jurors in cases affecting their interests. The equality of
protection intended does not require that all persons shall be
permitted to participate in the government of the State and the
administration of its laws, to hold its offices, or be clothed with
any public trusts. As already said, the universality of the
protection assured repels any such conclusion.
The equality of the protection secured extends only to civil
rights, as distinguished from those which are political or arise
from the form of the government and its mode of administration. And
yet the reach and influence of the amendment are immense. It opens
the courts of the country to everyone, on the same terms, for the
security of his person and property, the prevention and redress of
wrongs, and the enforcement of contracts; it assures to everyone
the same rules of evidence and modes of procedure; it allows no
impediments to the acquisition of property and the pursuit of
happiness to which all are not subjected; it suffers no other or
greater burdens or charges to be laid upon one than such as are
equally borne by others; and, in the administration of criminal
justice, it permits no different or greater punishment to be
imposed upon one than such as is prescribed to all for like
offences. It secures to all persons their civil rights upon the
same terms; but it leaves political rights, or such as arise from
the form of government
Page 100 U. S. 368
and its administration, as they stood previous to its adoption.
It has no more reference to them than it has to social rights and
duties, which do not rest upon any positive law, though they are
more potential in controlling the intercourse of individuals. In
the consideration of questions growing out of these amendments,
much confusion has arisen from a failure to distinguish between the
civil and the political rights of citizens. Civil rights are
absolute and personal. Political rights, on the other hand, are
conditioned and dependent upon the discretion of the elective or
appointing power, whether that be the people acting through the
ballot or one of the departments of their government. The civil
rights of the individual are never to be withheld, and may be
always judicially enforced. The political rights which he may
enjoy, such as holding office and discharging a public trust, are
qualified because their possession depends on his fitness, to be
adjudged by those whom society has clothed with the elective
authority. The Thirteenth and Fourteenth Amendments were designed
to secure the civil rights of all persons, of every race, color,
and condition; but they left to the States to determine to whom the
possession of political powers should be intrusted. This is
manifest from the fact that when it was desired to confer political
power upon the newly made citizens of the States, as was done by
inhibiting the denial to them of the suffrage on account of race,
color, or previous condition of servitude, a new amendment was
required.
The doctrine of the district judge, for which the counsel
contend, would lead to some singular results. If, when a colored
person is accused of a criminal offence, the presence of persons of
his race on the jury by which he is to be tried is essential to
secure to him the equal protection of the laws, it would seem that
the presence of such persons on the bench would be equally
essential, if the court should consist of more than one judge, as
in many cases it may; and if it should consist of a single judge,
that such protection would be impossible. A similar objection might
be raised to the composition of any appellate court to which the
case, after verdict, might be carried.
The position that in cases where the rights of colored
persons
Page 100 U. S. 369
are concerned, justice will not be done to them unless they have
a mixed jury, is founded upon the notion that in such cases white
persons will not be fair and honest jurors. If this position be
correct, there ought not to be any white persons on the jury where
the interests of colored persons only are involved. That jury would
not be an honest or fair one of which any of its members should be
governed in his judgment by other considerations than the law and
the evidence; and that decision would hardly be considered just
which should be reached by a sort of compromise in which the
prejudices of one race were set off against the prejudices of the
other. To be consistent, those who hold this notion should contend
that, in cases affecting members of the colored race only, the
juries should be composed entirely of colored persons, and that the
presiding judge should be of the same race. To this result the
doctrine asserted by the District Court logically leads. The jury
de medietate linguae, anciently allowed in England for the
trial of an alien, was expressly authorized by statute, probably as
much because of the difference of language and customs between him
and Englishmen, and the greater probability of his defence's being
more fully understood, as because it would be heard in a more
friendly spirit by jurors of his own country and language.
If these views as to the purport and meaning of the Thirteenth
and Fourteenth Amendments to the Constitution be correct, there is
no warrant for the act of Congress under which the indictment in
this case was found, and the arrest and imprisonment of the
petitioner were unlawful, and his release should be ordered.
The case is one which should not be delayed for the slow process
of a trial in the court below, and a subsequent appeal, in case of
conviction, to this court to be heard years hence. The Commonwealth
of Virginia has represented to us that the services of her judicial
officer are needed in her courts for the administration of justice
between her citizens, and she asks that the highest tribunal of the
Union will release him from his unlawful arrest in order that he
may perform the duties of his office. Those who regard the
independence of the States in all their reserved powers -- and this
includes the independence
Page 100 U. S. 370
of their legislative, judicial, and executive departments -- as
essential to the successful maintenance of our form of government
cannot fail to view with the gravest apprehension for the future,
the indictment, in a court of the United States, of a judicial
officer of a State for the manner in which he has discharged his
duties under her laws, and of which she makes no complaint. The
proceeding is a gross offence to the State; it is an attack upon
her sovereignty in matters over which she has never surrendered her
jurisdiction. The doctrine which sustains it, carried to its
logical results, would degrade and sink her to the level of a mere
local municipal corporation, for, if Congress can render an officer
of a State criminally liable for the manner in which he discharges
his duties under her laws, it can prescribe the nature and extent
of the penalty to which he shall be subjected on conviction; it may
imprison him for life, or punish him by removal from office. And if
it can make the exclusion of persons from jury service on account
of race or color a criminal offence, it can make their exclusion
from office on that account also criminal, and, adopting the
doctrine of the district judge in this case, the failure to appoint
them to office will be presumptive evidence of their exclusion on
that ground. To such a result are we logically led. The legislation
of Congress is founded, and is sustained by this court, as it seems
to me, upon a theory as to what constitutes the equal protection of
the laws which is purely speculative, not warranted by any
experience of the country, and not in accordance with the
understanding of the people as to the meaning of those terms since
the organization of the government.