The appellate jurisdiction of this Court from a state court
extends to a final judgment or decree in any suit, civil or
criminal, in the highest court of a state where a decision in the
suit could be had, against a title, right, privilege or immunity
specially set up and claimed under the Constitution or a treaty or
statute of the United States.
If the order of the Court of Criminal Appeals of the State of
Texas, being the highest court of the state having jurisdiction of
the case, dismissing the writ of habeas corpus issued by one of its
judges and remanding the prisoner to custody denied to him any
right specially set up and claimed by him under the Constitution,
laws or treaties of the United States, it is reviewable by this
Court on writ of error.
The right to equal protection of the laws is not denied by a
state court when it is apparent that the same law or course of
procedure would be applied to any other person in the state under
similar circumstances and conditions.
When the committing court has jurisdiction of the subject matter
and of the person, and power to make the order for disobedience to
which a judgment in contempt is rendered, and to render that
judgment, then the appellate court cannot do otherwise than
discharge a writ of habeas corpus brought to review that judgment
and secure the prisoner's discharge, as that writ cannot be availed
of as a writ of error or appeal.
It was competent for the district court to compel the surrender
of the minute book and notes in Tinsley's possession, and he could
not be discharged on habeas corpus until he had performed or
offered to perform so much of the order as it was within the power
of the district court to impose, even though it may have been in
some part invalid.
The case is stated in the opinion.
Page 171 U. S. 102
MR. CHIEF JUSTICE FULLER delivered the opinion of the Court.
The object of both these proceedings is to obtain the discharge
of Thomas Tinsley from imprisonment under an order committing him
for contempt under the following circumstances:
On April 23, 1896, upon a petition for the appointment of a
receiver of the Houston Cemetery Company, a corporation of Texas,
filed against the corporation and against Tinsley, who was its
president, and the other officers of the corporation, both as such
officers and individually, by some, in behalf of all, of the owners
of lots in the cemetery, the District Court of the County of
Harris, in the State of Texas, made an order appointing a receiver
of all the property of the corporation and requiring each of its
officers, upon demand of the receiver, to deliver to him any books,
papers, money, or property, or vouchers for property within their
control to which the corporation was entitled. Upon appeal by
Tinsley and the other defendants from that order, it was affirmed
on May 21, 1896, by the court of civil appeals of the state. 36
S.W. 802.
On February 2, 1897, the receiver made a motion to the district
court to commit Tinsley for contempt in refusing to deliver to the
receiver a minute book, promissory notes of the amount of
$1,440.50, and a trust fund amounting to $492.52 belonging to the
corporation. A rule to show cause was issued, in answer to which
Tinsley averred that the notes and the minute book had been
delivered by the corporation to him as collateral security for
money advanced by him to the corporation, and that he had made at
the expense to himself of $7.70, an investment of the trust fund in
securities which he had offered, and was still ready, to deliver to
the receiver upon payment of this sum.
On February 6, 1897, the district court, after taking evidence
and hearing the parties, adjudged that Tinsley was guilty of a
contempt in disobeying its former order by not delivering to the
receiver the minute book, notes, and trust
Page 171 U. S. 103
fund, being the property of the corporation and in his control,
and ordered him to pay to the sheriff a fine of $100, and to
deliver to the receiver the property aforesaid, and to be committed
until he should pay the find, and should (being allowed by the
sheriff reasonable opportunity to do so if he should so desire)
deliver the property to the receiver, or until he should be
discharged by further order of the court. And upon the same day he
was accordingly committed to the county jail.
On March 17, 1897, he presented to the judge of the district
court a petition for a writ of habeas corpus setting forth the
above proceedings and alleging that the judgment and commitment for
contempt were void, and his detention under them illegal, for these
reasons: that his claim to the notes, minute book and trust fund
was made in good faith, and that he had the right thereto until
deprived thereof by due course of law, and that the proceedings on
said motion and said judgment are not due process of law, and that
he ought not and cannot be by such proceedings imprisoned, or
compelled to turn over said property and things, for that thereby
he is deprived of a trial by due course of law; that the judgment
and commitment were uncertain and indefinite, and did not limit the
time of his confinement under them; that the statute of the state
provided that the district court should not have the power to
imprison any person for a longer period than three days for a
contempt, and that the matters set up in said motion and judgment
did not and could not constitute a contempt. This petition for a
writ of habeas corpus was denied by the judge of the district
court, but on April 2, 1897, was granted by the presiding judge of
the court of criminal appeals of the State of Texas, and a writ of
habeas corpus issued, addressed to the sheriff, who, on April 8th,
returned that he held the prisoner under the commitment for
contempt.
After full arguments by both parties, the court of criminal
appeals entered judgment dismissing the writ of habeas corpus and
remanding him to the custody of the sheriff on the ground that the
order of commitment for contempt was within the power of the
district court, at least, so far as concerned the notes and minute
book, because Tinsley was a
Page 171 U. S. 104
party to the suit in which the receiver was appointed, and
claimed no title, other than by way of lien, in the notes and
minute book, and such lien, if genuine, would be preserved to him
against the property in the hands of the receiver. 40 S.W. 306.
On April 26, 1897, Tinsley filed a motion to set aside that
judgment and for a rehearing, which, after further written
arguments in his behalf, was overruled on May 12, 1897.
On May 15, 1897, upon a petition alleging that, by the order of
commitment, he
"is deprived of his liberty, and will be, if he submits to the
order, of his property, without due process of law in violation of
the Constitution of the United States,"
he obtained from the Circuit Court of the United States for the
Eastern District of Texas a writ of habeas corpus to the sheriff
which, after a hearing, was by the judgment of that court dismissed
and the prisoner remanded to custody, and on January 21, 1898, he
appealed from that judgment to this Court.
On January 31, 1898, he sued out a writ of error from this Court
to review the judgment of the court of criminal appeals of the
State of Texas, and filed in that court an assignment of errors,
one of which was that, by the proceedings in that court,
"he was deprived of his liberty, and, if he submitted to the
order of the trial court, would be deprived of his property without
due process of law in violation of the Constitution of the United
States and the Fifth and Fourteenth Amendments thereto."
The two cases now before us are the appeal from the judgment of
the circuit court of the United States and the writ of error to the
court of criminal appeals of the State of Texas.
The dismissal by the circuit court of the United States of its
own writ of habeas corpus was in accordance with the rule
repeatedly laid down by this Court that the circuit courts of the
United States, while they have power to grant writs of habeas
corpus for the purpose of inquiring into the cause of restraint of
liberty of any person in custody under the authority of a state in
violation of the Constitution, a law or a
Page 171 U. S. 105
treaty of the United States, yet, except in cases of peculiar
urgency, ought not to exercise that jurisdiction by a discharge of
the person in advance of a final determination of his case in the
courts of the state, and, even after such final determination, will
leave him to his remedy to review it by writ of error from this
Court.
Ex Parte Royall, 117 U. S. 241;
Ex Parte Fonda, 117 U. S. 516;
In re Frederich, 149 U. S. 70;
Pepke v. Cronan, 155 U. S. 100;
Bergemann v. Backer, 157 U. S. 655;
Whitten v. Tomlinson, 160 U. S. 231;
Baker v. Grice, 169 U. S. 284.
This case shows no such circumstances as to require departure from
this rule.
It was argued in behalf of Tinsley that the judgment committing
him for contempt was not reviewable by this Court, citing the
statement in
Chetwood's Case, 165 U.
S. 443,
165 U. S. 462,
that
"judgments in proceedings in contempt are not reviewable here on
appeal or error,
Hayes v. Fischer, 102 U. S.
121;
In re Debs, 158 U. S.
564,
158 U. S. 573, and 159 U.S.
251."
But that statement was made in regard to such judgments in
independent proceedings for contempt in the circuit courts of the
United States, and the reason is, as stated in cases referred to in
Hayes v. Fischer, above cited, that such judgments were
considered as judgments in criminal cases, in which this Court had
no appellate jurisdiction from those courts.
Ex Parte
Kearney, 7 Wheat. 38,
20 U. S. 42;
New Orleans v. Steamship
Company, 20 Wall. 387,
87 U. S.
392.
But the appellate jurisdiction of this Court from the state
court extends to a final judgment or decree in any suit, civil or
criminal, in the highest court of a state where a decision in the
suit could be had, against a title, right, privilege, or immunity
specially set up and claimed under the Constitution or a treaty or
statute of the United States. Rev.Stat. § 709. Consequently, if the
order of the court of criminal appeals of the State of Texas, being
the highest court of the state having jurisdiction of the case,
dismissing the writ of habeas corpus issued by one of its judges
and remanding the prisoner to custody denied to him any right
specially set up and claimed by him under the Constitution, laws,
or treaties of the United States, it is doubtless reviewable by
this Court on writ
Page 171 U. S. 106
of error.
Newport Light Company v. Newport,
151 U. S. 527,
151 U. S. 542;
Pepke v. Cronan, 155 U. S. 100,
155 U. S.
101.
We perceive no reason for holding that any such rights were
denied by the judgment of the court of criminal appeals in view of
the facts appearing in the record and the grounds on which that
court proceeded as disclosed by its opinion.
Counsel asserts that the rights claimed under the Constitution
of the United States were the right to due process of law and the
right to the equal protection of the laws.
The right to the equal protection of the laws was certainly not
denied, for it is apparent that the same law or course of procedure
which was applied to Tinsley would have been applied to any other
person in the State of Texas under similar circumstances and
conditions, and there is nothing in the record on which to base an
inference to the contrary.
Was the right to due process of law denied? If the committing
court had jurisdiction of the subject matter and of the person and
power to make the order for disobedience to which the judgment in
contempt was rendered and to render that judgment, then the court
of criminal appeals could not do otherwise than discharge the writ
of habeas corpus and remand the petitioner. The writ cannot be
availed of as a writ of error or an appeal, and, if the commitment
was not void, petitioner was not deprived of his liberty without
due process of law.
The District Court of Harris county, Tex. was a court of general
jurisdiction, and had jurisdiction in the suit against the cemetery
company and its officers, including Tinsley, who was not a
stranger, but a party, to the litigation, after hearing had on due
notice and appearance by the defendants, to enter the order
appointing a receiver, and directing the company's officers to
deliver to him, on his demand therefor, the company's property in
their custody, including the books, notes, and moneys on hand, and
to determine on the facts that Tinsley was in contempt in refusing
to deliver such property, and assuredly to adjudge this as to so
much of the property as he conceded belonged to the company, but
the possession of
Page 171 U. S. 107
which he claimed the right to retain only in order to enforce an
alleged lien.
The court of criminal appeals held that as Tinsley did not claim
the legal title in the notes and in the minute book, but merely an
equity or lien thereon to secure his debt; as the order to turn
over the property to the receiver was by no means an adjudication
as to his lien, which, if it was a genuine lien, would be preserved
to him in the hands of the receiver, and as the effect of the order
was merely to place the articles in the hands of the receiver for
administration under the orders of the court, the district court
unquestionably had the power to make the order as to these
articles, and did not exceed its jurisdiction in so doing. So that,
even though the $492.52 was not a trust fund in his hands, as the
district court had decided, but a mere debt due from him because,
as he alleged, that sum had been taken by another and he had simply
agreed to make it good, the adjudication of the district court was
nevertheless sustainable apart from that item.
We concur in the view that it was undoubtedly competent for the
district court to compel the surrender of the minute book and notes
in Tinsley's possession, and that he could not be discharged on
habeas corpus until he had performed or offered to perform so much
of the order as it was within the power of the district court to
impose, even though it may have been in some part invalid.
In
re Swan, 150 U. S. 637.
The other objections suggested require no special consideration.
It is said that the imprisonment for contempt was limited by the
state statute to three days, Art. 1120, Tex.Rev.Stats., but the
state court held that that statute had reference to a
quasi-criminal contempt as a punishment, and not to a
civil contempt, where the authority of the court is exercised by
way of compelling obedience. Rapalje on Contempts § 21. This is not
a federal question, and we accept the ruling of the state court in
its construction of the statute. It is urged that the order of
commitment imposed an uncertain and indefinite term of
imprisonment, but the order was that Tinsley should be confined
until he complied, and the addition
Page 171 U. S. 108
"or until he shall be discharged by the further order of the
court" was merely intended to retain the power to discharge him if
the court should thereafter conclude to do so, it being within his
own power to obtain his discharge at any time by obeying the order.
Nor is there any force in the objection that no trial by jury was
awarded, for such trial was not demanded, and a jury trial is not
necessary to due process of law on an inquiry for contempt.
Walker v. Sauvinet, 92 U. S. 90;
Eilenbecker v. Plymouth County District Court,
134 U. S. 31;
Rapalje on Contempts § 112.
The judgments of the circuit court and of the court of criminal
appeals are severally
Affirmed.