The District Court of the United States in the District of
Kansas had jurisdiction over a prosecution for the crime of
perjury, in violation of the
Page 152 U. S. 212
provisions of Rev.Stat. § 5392, committed in what is now the
Territory of Oklahoma before the passage of the act creating that
territory, although the indictment was not found until after the
passage of that act.
Within the scope of Rev.Stat. § 5392, local land officers, in
hearing and deciding upon a contest in respect of a homestead
entry, constitute a competent tribunal, and the contest so pending
before them is a case in which the laws of the United States
authorize an oath to be administered.
False swearing in a land contest before a local land office in
respect of a homestead entry is perjury within the scope of
Rev.Stat. § 5392.
The courts of the United States take judicial notice of rules
and regulations prescribed by the Department of the Interior in
respect of contests before the Land Office.
Wherever, by the express language of any act of Congress, power
is entrusted to either of the principal departments of government
to prescribe rules and regulations for the transaction of business
in which the public is interested and in respect to which they have
a right to participate and by which they are to be controlled, the
rules and regulations prescribed in pursuance of such authority
become a mass of that body of public records of which the courts
take judicial notice.
The case is stated in the opinion.
MR. JUSTICE BREWER delivered the opinion of the Court.
This case comes on error from the District Court of the United
States for the District of Kansas. On March 31, 1893, plaintiff in
error, having been found guilty of the crime of perjury by the
verdict of a jury, was sentenced to confinement in the Kansas State
Penitentiary for a term of two years, and to pay a fine of ten
dollars.
The questions are these: the indictment was returned September
22, 1892. It in two counts charged the defendant with the crime of
perjury, committed on January 3, 1890, in the land office at
Kingfisher, Oklahoma, in falsely testifying
Page 152 U. S. 213
that he was on a sand bar in the South Canadian River at 12
o'clock noon on the 22d of April, 1889; that this false testimony
was given in a contest then pending in the land office, in which
one Thomas Burch contested defendant's homestead entry on the
ground that he had violated the Act of Congress of March 2, 1889,
and the President's proclamation, by entering upon and occupying
the lands opened to settlement under such proclamation prior to 12
o'clock noon of the day named therein, to-wit, April 22, 1889.
The two counts are similar, the only material difference being
that in the first count, the oath is charged to have been
administered by J. V. Admire, the receiver of the land office, and
in the second by J. C. Roberts, the register of the land office,
each being, as averred, authorized to administer the oath by the
laws of the United States and the regulations of the land office.
To this indictment a demurrer was presented which, after argument,
was overruled, and the first matter for consideration is this
ruling. The grounds of the demurrer still insisted upon are first
that the court had no jurisdiction over the alleged offense, and
secondly that the indictment stated no public offense.
As to the first of these grounds, it is not disputed that the
District Court of Kansas had, at the time of the commission of the
alleged offense, jurisdiction generally of offenses against the
criminal laws of the United States committed in the country known
as Oklahoma, the place where this offense is charged to have been
committed, but on the 2d of May, 1890, Congress passed an act
creating the Territory of Oklahoma, 26 Stat. 81, c. 182. In section
9 is found this provision:
"Each of the said district courts shall have and exercise,
exclusive of any courts heretofore established, the same
jurisdiction in all cases arising under the Constitution and laws
of the United States as is vested in the circuit and district
courts of the United States. . . . All acts and parts of acts
heretofore enacted, conferring jurisdiction upon United States
courts held beyond and outside of the limits of the Territory of
Oklahoma as herein defined, as to
Page 152 U. S. 214
all causes of action or offences in said territory, and in that
portion of the Cherokee Outlet hereinbefore referred to, are hereby
repealed, and such jurisdiction is hereby given to the supreme and
district courts in said territory; but all actions commenced in
such courts, and crimes committed in said territory and in the
Cherokee Outlet, prior to the passage of this act shall be tried
and prosecuted and proceeded with until finally disposed of in the
courts now having jurisdiction thereof as if this act had not been
passed."
The contention is that by this section, jurisdiction was given
to the district courts of Oklahoma, the indictment not having been
found until September, 1892, and the reservation of jurisdiction to
the Kansas court being limited to the cases in which prosecutions
had already been commenced. We do not so understand the provision.
The general grant of jurisdiction to the Oklahoma courts is
prospective in its operation. Such is the ordinary rule of
construction, and the repeal of the act vesting jurisdiction in the
Kansas court is limited by a proviso which includes not only
"actions commenced," but "crimes committed." Counsel lay stress
upon the words "having jurisdiction thereof," and argue that courts
have no jurisdiction of crimes, but only of actions for the
punishment of crimes. But this is placing too much stress upon a
subordinate part of the sentence. If the scope of the sentence be
as thus contended for, the words "crimes committed" are
superfluous, and it would have been sufficient to have said, "all
actions commenced in such courts prior to the passage of this act,"
etc. For the word "actions" may include both civil and criminal
proceedings. But Congress went further and provided not only that
all "actions commenced in such courts," but also that all "crimes
committed in said territory" prior to the passage of the act should
be "tried, prosecuted, and proceeded with until finally disposed
of." Grammatically, "crimes committed in said territory" is an
independent nominative, and refers to matters different from those
embraced within the term "actions commenced in such courts." It is
fair under such cases, in order to determine the meaning, to omit
the one nominative and read the sentence as though the other
only
Page 152 U. S. 215
were present, and so it will read
"all crimes committed in said territory prior to the passage of
this act shall be tried, prosecuted, and proceeded with until
finally disposed of in the courts now having jurisdiction thereof,
as if this act had not been passed.-"
So reading, the meaning cannot be doubtful. Whatever of
jurisdiction the District Court of Kansas had at the time of the
alleged offense remained unaffected by the Act of May 2, 1890.
Neither can it be doubted that the District Court of Kansas had
jurisdiction over a prosecution for the crime of perjury committed
at the place named in violation of the provisions of Rev.Stat. §
5392. That section -- and under it this indictment was found --
reads as follows:
"Every person who, having taken an oath before a competent
tribunal, officer, or person, in any case in which a law of the
United States authorizes an oath to be administered, that he will
testify, declare, depose, or certify truly, or that any written
testimony, declaration, deposition, or certificate by him
subscribed is true, willfully and contrary to such oath states or
subscribes any material matter which he does not believe to be true
is guilty of perjury."
This statute is one of universal application within the
territorial limits of the United States, and is not limited to
those portions which are within the exclusive jurisdiction of the
national government, such as the District of Columbia. Generally
speaking, within any state of this union, the preservation of the
peace and the protection of person and property are the functions
of the state government, and are no part of the primary duty, at
least, of the nation. The laws of Congress in respect to those
matters do not extend into the territorial limits of the states,
but have force only in the District of Columbia and other places
that are within the exclusive jurisdiction of the national
government. It was in reference to such body of laws that § 2145,
Rev.Stat., was enacted, and the argument which is sought to be
drawn by the counsel therefrom against the jurisdiction of the
District Court of Kansas has no foundation.
It is enough that § 5392 has uniform application throughout the
territorial limits of the
Page 152 U. S. 216
United States; that by § 563, the district courts are given
jurisdiction generally "of all crimes and offences cognizable under
the authority of the United States committed within their
respective districts," and that, by the Act of January 6, 1883, c.
13, § 2, 22 Stat. 400, the territory in question was annexed to and
made a part of the United States Judicial District of Kansas.
Neither is it necessary to consider whether § 5 of the Act of
March 3, 1857, c. 116, 11 Stat. 250, remained in force after the
Revision of 1873. The first three sections of that chapter were
reenacted in the Revised Statutes; the fifth was omitted, and there
is some discussion in the briefs as to whether, under §§ 5595 and
5596, Rev.Stat., said § 5 still remains in force. But, as we said,
it is unnecessary to enter into such a discussion. The indictment
was returned under § 5392, and its sufficiency is to be determined
by the provisions of that section.
Do the facts stated in this indictment constitute an offense
under that section? It will be remembered that the perjury is
charged to have been committed in a contest in the land office in
respect to the validity of a homestead entry, the oath having been
administered by one or other of the land officers before whom the
contest was carried on. And the contention is that the statute
makes no provision for such a contest before those officers --
that, as the statute does not authorize any such contest, it cannot
be said that the oath was taken in a "case in which a law of the
United States authorizes an oath to be administered." If such a
contest before the local land officers is not in terms provided
for, it is certainly recognized in the statutes. Section 2273,
Rev.Stat., is as follows:
"When two or more persons settle on the same tract of land, the
right of preemption shall be in him who made the first settlement
provided such person conforms to the other provision of the law,
and all questions as to the right of preemption arising between
different settlers shall be determined by the register and receiver
of the district within which the land is situated, and appears from
the decision of district
Page 152 U. S. 217
officers, in cases of contest for the right of preemption, shall
be made to the Commissioner of the General Land Office, whose
decision shall be final, unless appeal therefrom be taken to the
Secretary of the Interior."
Obviously here is expressly authorized a contest before the
local land officers in respect to preemption entries. And while the
same provision is not found in reference to homestead entries, the
rightfulness of such a contest before such a tribunal is recognized
in the Act of May 14, 1880, c. 89, § 2, 21 Stat. 141, as
follows:
"In all cases where any person has contested, paid the land
office fees, and procured the cancellation of any preemption,
homestead, or timber culture entry, he shall be notified by the
register of the land office of the district in which such land is
situated of such cancellation,"
etc.
Reenacted substantially in 1892. Act of July 26, 1892, c, 252,
27 Stat. 270.
See also Act of March 3, 1891, c. 561, § 7,
26 Stat. 1099, and the recent Act of January 11, 1894, § 1. It is
evident from these references that even if there be no statute in
terms authorizing a contest before the local land office in respect
to homestead entries, the validity of such contest has been again
and again expressly recognized by Congress.
Further, we find in the Revised Statutes these sections:
"SEC. 441. The Secretary of the Interior is charged with the
supervision of public business relating to the following subjects:
. . . Second. The public lands, including mines."
"SEC. 453. The Commissioner of the General Land Office shall
perform, under the direction of the Secretary of the Interior, all
executive duties appertaining to the surveying and sale of the
public lands of the United States, or in anywise respecting such
public lands and also such as relate to private claims of land, and
the issuing of patents for all [
agents] [grants] of land
under the authority of the government."
"SEC. 2478. The Commissioner of the General Land Office, under
the direction of the Secretary of the Interior, is authorized to
enforce and carry into execution, by appropriate regulations, every
part of the provisions of this title not otherwise specially
provided for. "
Page 152 U. S. 218
"SEC. 2246. The register or receiver is authorized, and it shall
be their duty, to administer any oath required by law or the
instructions of the General Land Office, in connection with the
entry or purchase of any tract of the public lands."
General rules of practice have been adopted and promulgated by
the Interior Department, which rules of longstanding were codified
by Commissioner Sparks and approved by Secretary Lamar, August 13,
1885, and, as so codified, are still the regulations in force. By
these rules of practice, express provision is made for a contest
before the local land officers in respect to homestead as well as
preemption entries, and for the taking of testimony before such
officers and a regular formal trial, with the right of appeal to
the Commissioner of the General Land Office, and therefrom to the
Secretary of the Interior.
We have therefore a general grant of authority to the Land
Department to prescribe appropriate regulations for the disposition
of the public land; a specific act of Congress authorizing contests
before the local land offices in cases of preemption; rules and
regulations prescribed by the Land Department for contests in all
cases of the disposition of public lands, including both preemption
and homestead entries, and the frequent recognition by acts of
Congress of such contests in respect to homestead entries. Clearly,
then, within the scope of § 5392, the local land officers, in
hearing and deciding upon a contest with respect to a homestead
entry, constituted a competent tribunal, and the contest so pending
before them was a case in which the laws of the United States
authorized an oath to be administered.
This is not a case in which the violation of a mere regulation
of a department is adjudged a crime.
United
States v. Bailey, 9 Pet. 238, is in point. There
was an act of Congress making false testimony in support of a claim
against the United States perjury, and the defendant in that case
was indicted for making a false affidavit before a justice of the
peace of the Commonwealth of Kentucky in support of a claim against
the United States. It was contended that the justice of the peace,
an officer of the state, had no authority under the acts of
Congress
Page 152 U. S. 219
to administer oaths, and that therefore perjury could not be
laid in respect to a false affidavit before such officer. It
appeared, however, that the Secretary of the Treasury had
established, as a regulation for the government of his department
and its officers in their action upon claims that affidavits taken
before any justice of the peace of any of the states should be
received and considered in support of such claims. And upon this,
the conviction of perjury was sustained, Mr. Justice McLean alone
dissenting. It was held that the secretary had power to establish
the regulation, and that the effect of it was to make the false
affidavit before the justice of the peace perjury within the scope
of the statute, and this notwithstanding the fact that such justice
of the peace was not an officer of the United States. Much stronger
is the case at bar, for the tribunal was composed of officers of
the government of the United States. It was created by the Land
Department in pursuance of express authority from the acts of
Congress. This perjury was not merely a wrong against that tribunal
or a violation of its rules or requirements. The tribunal and the
contest only furnished the opportunity and the occasion for the
crime, which was a crime defined in and denounced by the
statute.
Nor is there anything in the case of
United States v.
Eaton, 144 U. S. 677,
conflicting with the views herein expressed. In that case, the
wrong was in the violation of a duty imposed only by a regulation
of the Treasury Department. There was an act entitled "An act
defining butter; also imposing a tax upon and regulating the
manufacture, sale, importation, and exportation of oleomargarine,"
which contained several sections forbidding particular acts and
imposing penalties for violation thereof. And in addition, there
was a general provision in section 18 that
"if a party shall knowingly, or willfully omit, neglect, or
refuse to do or cause to be done any of the things required by law
in the carrying on or conducting of his business, or shall do
anything by this act prohibited, . . . he shall pay a penalty,"
etc. There was authority given to the Commissioner of Internal
Revenue to make all needful regulations for carrying into effect
the act. In pursuance of that authority, the commissioner required
the keeping
Page 152 U. S. 220
of a book in a certain form and the making of a monthly return,
matters which were in no way referred to in the various sections of
the statute prescribing the duties resting upon the manufacturer or
dealer in oleomargarine, although, subsequently to this statute and
subsequently to the offense complained of, and on October 1, 1890,
Congress passed an act, by section 41 of which wholesale dealers in
oleomargarine were required to keep such books and render such
returns in relation thereto as the Commissioner of Internal Revenue
should require. It was held by this Court that the regulation
prescribed by the Commissioner of Internal Revenue, under that
general grant of authority, was not sufficient to subject one
violating it to punishment under section 18. It was said by Mr.
Justice Blatchford, speaking for the Court:
"It is necessary that a sufficient statutory authority should
exist for declaring any act or omission a criminal offense, and we
do not think that the statutory authority in the present case is
sufficient. If Congress intended to make it an offense for
wholesale dealers in oleomargarine to omit to keep books and render
returns as required by regulations to be made by the Commissioner
of Internal Revenue, it would have done so distinctly, in
connection with an enactment such as that above recited, made in
section 41 of the act October 1, 1890."
"Regulations prescribed by the President and by the heads of
departments, under authority granted by Congress, may be
regulations prescribed by law so as lawfully to support acts done
under them and in accordance with them, and may thus have, in a
proper sense, the force of law; but it does not follow that a thing
required by them is a thing so required by law as to make the
neglect to do the thing a criminal offense in a citizen where a
statute does not distinctly make the neglect in question criminal
offense."
This, it will be observed, is very different from the case at
bar, where no violation is charged of any regulation made by the
department. All that can be said is that a place and an occasion
and an opportunity were provided by the regulations of the
department at which the defendant committed the crime of perjury,
in violation of section 5392. We have no
Page 152 U. S. 221
doubt that false swearing in a land contest before the local
land office in respect to a homestead entry is perjury, within the
scope of said section.
Some objection in made by counsel to the form of the indictment,
in that in its caption there is nothing to show the organization of
the court, or who composed it, or who were present as constituent
parties thereof, when the indictment was returned, and nowhere any
express recital that it was found by the concurrence of at least
twelve jurors, and further that it was signed by the assistant
United States district attorney, instead of by the district
attorney himself. The record shows that at a term of the district
court, the grand jurors of the United States in and for said
district came into open court, and, through their foreman,
presented the bill of indictment, and that the bill was endorsed "A
true bill," with the signature of the foreman immediately
thereunder. With reference to all these objections, it is enough to
refer to section 1025 of the Revised Statutes as follows:
"No indictment found and presented by a grand jury in any
district or circuit or other court of the United States shall be
deemed insufficient, nor shall the trial, judgment, or other
proceeding thereon be affected by reason of any defect or
imperfection in matter of form only, which shall not tend to the
prejudice of the defendant."
Clearly there was nothing in any of these matters which tended
to the prejudice of the defendant or rendered it doubtful by what
body he was charged with the crime, in what court he was to be
tried, or the exact nature of the offense with which he was
charged.
Another matter is this: the rules and regulations prescribed by
the Interior Department in respect to contests before the land
office were not formally offered in evidence, and it is claimed
that this omission is fatal, and that a verdict should have been
instructed for the defendant. But we are of opinion that there was
no necessity for a formal introduction in evidence of such rules
and regulations. They are matters of which courts of the United
States take judicial notice. Questions of a kindred nature have
been frequently presented, and
Page 152 U. S. 222
it may be laid down as a general rule, deducible from the cases,
that wherever, by the express language of any act of Congress,
power is entrusted to either of the principal departments of
government to prescribe rules and regulations for the transaction
of business in which the public is interested and in respect to
which they have a right to participate, and by which they are to be
controlled, the rules and regulations prescribed in pursuance of
such authority become a mass of that body of public records of
which the courts take judicial notice. Without attempting to notice
all the cases bearing upon the general question of judicial notice,
we may refer to the following:
United States v.
Teschmaker, 22 How. 392,
63 U. S. 405;
Romera v. United
States, 1 Wall. 721;
Armstrong
v. United States, 13 Wall. 154;
Jones v. United
States, 137 U. S. 202;
Knight v. United States Land Association, 142 U.
S. 161,
142 U. S. 169;
Jenkins v. Collard, 145 U. S. 546.
These are all the matters which we deem of importance, and, in
them appearing no error, the judgment is
Affirmed.