By Rev.Stat. § 5339,
"Every person who commits murder -- first, within any fort,
arsenal, dockyard, magazine, or in any other place or district of
country under the exclusive jurisdiction of the United States; . .
. shall suffer death. . . ."
and by the Act of January 15, 1897, c. 29, § 1, 29 Stat. 487, in
such cases "the jury may qualify their verdict by adding thereto
without capital punishment,'" whereupon the sentence is
imprisonment at hard labor for life. The jurisdiction of the United
States courts under these sections is exclusive. Rev.Stat. § 711.
If the language of the Constitution is wide enough to
Page 209 U. S.
38
authorize the purchase of land for a post office and
courthouse, and the acceptance of a grant of jurisdiction, there is
no reason for taking the language of the statute in any narrower
sense. The argument, although ostensibly directed against the
statute, must embrace the Constitution, and, as we have implied,
such an argument comes many years too late.
There was an exception to a refusal of the court to instruct the
jury on the law of justifiable homicide. Sufficient instructions
were given. The evidence, however, would not have warranted such a
verdict. According to the defendant's own testimony, the death was
due to an accident. According to all the other evidence, even the
most favorable, the defendant was upon a platform above Berry, and
Berry either was below, standing on a beam in a very insecure
place, or else was climbing up to or upon the platform, when the
defendant struck him over the head, according to several witnesses,
with an iron bolt, until he dropped fifty or sixty feet. So as to
involuntary homicide. There was no evidence of such a case, and the
jury, under the charge, must have found that the defendant made an
intentional and unjustified assault of such a kind that the
probable consequences were obvious, an assault with a deadly weapon
that either directly caused Berry's death or brought it about by
his inevitable fall.
It also is urged that the court erred in declining to give a
somewhat confused instruction concerning sanity that was asked. The
judge instructed the jury that the burden of proof was on the
government to prove that fact beyond a reasonable doubt, and he was
not called upon to go further. Until evidence is given on the other
side, the burden of proof is satisfied by a presumption arising
from the fact that most men are sane. In this case, there was the
merest shadow of evidence that the defendant was not of sound mind.
The jury were told to consider all the evidence, including the
bearing of the prisoner and the manner of his own testimony, and
the evidence relied upon on by him was stated. In the
circumstances, he could ask no more.
Page 209 U. S. 39
Finally, an exception was taken to an interruption of the judge,
asking the defendant's counsel to make an argument that did not
tend to degrade the administration of justice. The reference was to
an appeal to race prejudice and to such language as this:
"You will believe a white man not on his oath before you will a
negro who is sworn. You can swallow those niggers if you want to,
but John Randolph Cooper will never swallow them."
The interruption was fully justified. The foregoing are the
exceptions argued. In our opinion. there is nothing in them or in
any that were taken. The judgment of the Circuit Court must
stand.
Judgment affirmed.