While this Court cannot review by appeal or writ of error a
judgment of the Court of Appeals of the District of Columbia
punishing for contempt, it may grant a writ of certiorari to review
the same.
Where two parties petition for writs of certiorari to review the
same judgment, but the entire matter can be disposed of on one
petition, the other will be denied.
Where the statute of limitations was pleaded, and, after a
decision that it was inapplicable, one general exception was
presented on his behalf in that regard, the rights of the defendant
are sufficiently preserved.
Page 233 U. S. 605
The provision in Rev.Stat. § 1044 that no person shall be
prosecuted for an offense not capital unless the indictment is
found or information instituted within three years after commission
of the offense applies to acts of contempt not committed in the
presence of the court.
Provisions of the Constitution of the United States are not
mathematical formulas having their essence in their form, but are
organic living institutions transplanted from English soil. Their
significance is not to be gathered simply from the words and a
dictionary, but by considering their origin and the line of their
growth.
Contempts are none the less offenses because trial by jury does
not extend to them as a matter of constitutional right.
The substantive portion of § 1044 Rev.Stat. is that no person
shall be tried for any offense not capital except within the
specified time, and the reference to form of procedure by
indictment or information does not take contempts out of the
statute because the procedure is by other methods than indictment
or information.
Quaere whether an indictment will lie for a contempt of
a court of the United States.
In dealing with the punishment of crime, some rule as to
limitation should be laid down, if not by Congress, by this
Court.
As the power to punish for contempt has some limit, this Court
regards that limit to have been established as three years by the
policy of the law, if not by statute, by analogy.
Adams v.
Wood, 2 Cranch 336.
40 App.D.C. 293 reversed.
The facts, which involve the construction of § 1044 Rev.Stat.
and its application to past acts of contempt, are stated in the
opinion.
MR. JUSTICE HOLMES delivered the opinion of the court;
These are proceedings for alleged criminal contempts in the
matter that was before this Court in
Gompers
v. Buck's
Page 233 U. S. 606
Stove & Range Co., 221 U.
S. 418. In that case, the proceedings instituted by the
Buck's Stove & Range Company to punish the petitioners were
ordered to be dismissed, but without prejudice to the power of the
Supreme Court of the District to punish contempt, if any, committed
against it. The decision was rendered on May 15, 1911, and the next
day the Supreme Court of the District appointed a committee to
inquire whether there was reasonable cause to believe the
plaintiffs in error guilty, in willfully violating an injunction
issued by that court on December 18, 1907, and, if yea, to present
and prosecute charges to that effect. The inquiry was directed
solely with a view to punishment for past acts, not to secure
obedience for the future, and to avoid repetition, it will be
understood that all that we have to say concerns proceedings of
this sort only, and further, only proceedings for such contempt not
committed in the presence of the court.
The committee, on June 26, 1911, reported and charged that the
parties severally were guilty of specified acts in violation of the
injunction, being the same acts of which they had been found guilty
by the Supreme Court in the former case. Rules to show cause were
issued on the same day. The defendants pleaded the statute of
limitations, Rev.Stat. § 1044, as to most of the charges, and not
guilty. There was a trial, the statute of limitations was held
inapplicable, and the defendants were found guilty and sentenced to
imprisonment for terms of different lengths, subject to exceptions
which by agreement was embodied in a single bill. The Court of
Appeals reduced the sentences to imprisonment for thirty days in
the case of Gompers and fines of $500 for each of the other two. 40
App.D.C. 293. The defendants brought a writ of error and an appeal
to this Court, and also petitioned for a writ of certiorari. Of
course, an appeal does not lie, nor does a writ of error, but the
writ of certiorari is granted.
Page 233 U. S. 607
The judges of the Supreme Court also petitioned for a writ of
certiorari, but as the case will be disposed of on the
first-mentioned petition, the other will be denied.
The injunction, subsequently held too broad, not only forbade
the defendants to combine to obstruct the business of the Buck's
Stove & Range Company, or to declare or threaten any boycott
against it (such a boycott already having been declared), but also
to publish any statement calling attention of any body to any such
boycott, or any statement of like effect, tending to any injury of
the company's business. This decree, although made on December 18,
did not become operative until December 23, 1907. Before going to
the Court of Appeals, the injunction in substantially the same form
was made permanent on March 23, 1908. It may be assumed for the
purposes of our decision that the evidence not only warranted, but
required, a finding that the defendants were guilty of some, at
least, of the violations of this decree that were charged against
them, and so we come at once to consider the statute of
limitations, which is their only real defense. A preliminary
objection was urged, to be sure, that the question of the validity
of that defense was not reserved, but there is nothing in it. The
bar was pleaded, there was a motion to dismiss on that ground for
want of a replication, there was a decision that the statute did
not apply to contempts, and the counsel for the plaintiffs in error
stated at the trial that there was one general exception presented
on their behalf with regard to that. We cannot doubt that it was
perfectly understood, or that the record shows that the plaintiffs
in error preserved all their rights.
The statute provides that
"no person shall be prosecuted, tried, or punished for any
offense not capital, except . . . unless the indictment is found or
the information is instituted within three years next after such
offense shall have been committed."
Rev.Stat. § 1044, Act of April 13, 1876, c. 56, 19 Stat. 32. The
plaintiffs in
Page 233 U. S. 608
error treat these proceedings as having begun on May 16, 1911,
when the Supreme Court directed an inquiry. They certainly did not
begin before that date, so that, if the statute applies, contempts
prior to May 16, 1908, would be barred. It is argued with force
that the inquiry was directed only to breaches of the preliminary
injunction, which expired by its own terms upon the making of the
final decree on March 23, 1908, and that therefore everything
legitimately before the court happened more than three years
before. But, as the report mentioned the final decree, and charged
a few acts later than March 23, though mostly rather unimportant,
and as the order to show cause referred to a violation of the
injunctions, in the plural, it perhaps would savor of a
technicality that we should be loath to apply on either side if we
did not deal with all that is charged.
The charges against Gompers are: (1) hurrying the publication of
the January number of the American Federationist, and distributing
many copies after the injunction was known and before it went into
effect, in which number the Buck's Stove & Range Company was
included in the "We don't patronize" list; (2) circulating other
copies in January, 1908; (3) on and after December 23, 1907,
circulating another document to the like effect with comments, some
of which were lawful criticism, but others of which suggested that
the injunction left the members of labor organizations free to
continue their boycott; (4) publishing in February, 1908, a copy of
the decree with the suggestion that those who violated the
injunction outside of the District could not be punished unless
they came within it; (5) in January and February, 1908, publishing
in conjunction with the other defendants a paper appealing for
financial aid, commenting on the injunction as invading the liberty
of the press and free speech, and reprinting the before-mentioned
comments and suggestions; (6) in March, 1908, again suggesting that
no law compelled the purchase
Page 233 U. S. 609
of a Buck stove; (7) in April, 1908, after the final decree,
reiterating the same suggestion in the American Federationist; (8)
in April, 1908, repeating similar suggestions by transparent
innuendo in a public address; (9) again repeating them in another
address, on or about May 1; (10) and again in the July issue of the
American Federationist; (11) publishing in the September
Federationist an editorial characterizing the injunction as an
invasion of constitutional freedom (which hardly seems to exceed
lawful comment unless on the ground that the case was not finished,
although mistaken in its law); (12) in a report published after
September 9, 1908, saying that, if the Executive Council of the
Federation of Labor obeyed the injunction, they could not report
the state of the case to the Denver Convention, and that they did
not see how they could refuse to give an account of their doings;
(13) on September 29, 1908, saying in a public address that the
injunction forbade him to discuss the case, but that he must
(seemingly not going beyond that declaration); (14) on October 26,
1908, recurring in a single phrase in an address to his old
suggestion that no law compelled his hearers to buy a Buck stove;
(15) in November, 1908, in an address which he caused to be
published in the Federationist in January, 1909, again referring to
the injunction, mentioning his past advice and suggestions, and
that he had been called on to show cause why he should not be
adjudged guilty of contempt (in the former proceeding), and asking
how he could have done otherwise, and finally, (16) in a report
made in November, 1909, referring to the judge as so far having
transcended his authority that even judges of the Court of Appeals
have felt called upon to criticize his action, and saying that, in
such circumstances, it is the duty of the citizens to refuse
obedience and to take whatever consequences may ensue. The charges
against Mitchell and Morrison are mainly for having taken part in
some of the above-mentioned publications, but need not
Page 233 U. S. 610
be stated particularly, as all the acts of any substance in
Mitchell's case and all in that of Morrison were more than three
years old when these proceedings began.
The boycott against the company was not called off until July 19
to 29, 1910, and it is argued that, even if the statute applies,
the conspiracy was continuing until that date (
United States v.
Kissel, 218 U. S. 601,
218 U. S.
607), and therefore that the statute did not begin to
run until then. But this is not an indictment for conspiracy, it is
a charge of specific acts in disobedience of an injunction. The
acts are not charged as evidence, but as substantive offenses; each
of them, so far as it was a contempt, was punishable as such, and
was charged as such, and therefore each must be judged by itself,
and so we come to what, as we already have intimated, is the real
question in the case.
It is urged in the first place that contempts cannot be crimes,
because, although punishable by imprisonment, and therefore, if
crimes, infamous, they are not within the protection of the
Constitution and the Amendments giving a right to trial by jury,
etc., to persons charged with such crimes. But the provisions of
the Constitution are not mathematical formulas having their essence
in their form; they are organic, living institutions transplanted
from English soil. Their significance is vital, not formal; it is
to be gathered not simply by taking the words and a dictionary, but
by considering their origin and the line of their growth.
Robertson v. Baldwin, 165 U. S. 275,
165 U. S.
281-282. It does not follow that contempts of the class
under consideration are not crimes, or rather, in the language of
the statute, offenses, because trial by jury as it had been
gradually worked out and fought out has been thought not to extend
to them as a matter of constitutional right. These contempts are
infractions of the law, visited with punishment as such. If such
acts are not criminal, we are in error as to the most fundamental
characteristic of crimes as that word has been understood in
English speech. So truly are
Page 233 U. S. 611
they crimes that it seems to be proved that, in the early law,
they were punished only by the usual criminal procedure, 3
Transactions of the Royal Historical Society, N.S. p. 147 (1885),
and that, at least in England, it seems that they still may be and
preferably are tried in that way.
See 7 Laws of England
(Halsbury) 280,
sub v. Contempt of Court (604);
Re
Clements v. Erlanger, 46 L.J., N.S. 375, 383.
Matter of
Macleod, 6 Jur. 461.
Schreiber v. Lateward, 2 Dick.
592.
Wellesley's Case, 2 Russ. & M. 639, 667.
In
re Pollard, L.R. 2 P.C. 106, 120.
Ex Parte
Kearney, 7 Wheat. 38,
20 U. S. 43.
Bessette v. W. B. Conkey Co., 194 U.
S. 324,
194 U. S. 328,
194 U. S.
331-332.
Gompers v. Buck's Stove & Range
Co., 221 U. S. 418,
221 U. S.
441.
We come, then, to the construction of the statute. It has been
assumed that the concluding words, "unless the indictment is found
or the information is instituted within three years" limit the
offenses given the benefit of the act to those usually prosecuted
in that way, and the counsel for the petitioners were at some pains
to argue that the charges of the committee amounted to an
information -- a matter that opens vistas of antiquarian
speculation. But this question is not one to be answered by
refinements and curious inquiries. In our opinion, the proper
interpretation of the statute begins with the substantive, not with
the adjective, part. The substantive portion of the section is that
no person shall be tried for any offense not capital except within
a certain time. Those words are of universal scope. What follows is
a natural way of expressing that the proceedings must be begun
within three years, indictment and information being the usual
modes by which they are begun, and very likely no other having
occurred to those who drew the law. But it seems to us plain that
the dominant words of the act are, "no person shall be prosecuted,
tried, or punished for any offense not capital," unless. --
No reason has been suggested to us for not giving to the
Page 233 U. S. 612
statute its natural scope. The English courts seem to think it
wise, even when there is much seeming reason for the exercise of a
summary power, to leave the punishment of this class of contempts
to the regular and formal criminal process.
Matter of
Macleod, 6 Jur. 461. Maintenance of their authority does not
often make it really necessary for courts to exert their own power
to punish, as is shown by the English practice in more violent days
than these, and there is no more reason for prolonging the period
of liability when they see fit to do so than in the case where the
same offense is proceeded against in the common way. Indeed, the
punishment of these offenses peculiarly needs to be speedy if it is
to occur. The argument loses little of its force if it should be
determined hereafter, a matter on which we express no opinion,
that, in the present state of the law, an indictment would not lie
for a contempt of a court of the United States.
Even if the statute does not cover the case by its express
words, as we think it does, still, in dealing with the punishment
of crime, a rule should be laid down, if not by Congress, by this
Court. The power to punish for contempt must have some limit in
time, and in defining that limit we should have regard to what has
been the policy of the law from the foundation of the government.
By analogy, if not by enactment, the limit is three years. The case
cannot be concluded otherwise so well as in the language of Chief
Justice Marshall in a case where the statute was held applicable to
an action of debt for a penalty.
Adams v.
Woods, 2 Cranch 336,
6 U. S.
340-342:
"It is contended that the prosecutions limited by this law are
those only which are carried on in the form of an indictment or
information, and not those where the penalty is demanded by an
action of debt. But if the words of the act be examined, they will
be found to apply not to any particular mode of proceeding, but
generally to any prosecution, trial, or punishment for the offense.
It is not declared
Page 233 U. S. 613
that no indictment shall be found. . . . But it is declared that
'[n]o person shall be prosecuted, tried, or punished' . . . -- In
expounding this law, it deserves some consideration that, if it
does not limit actions of debt for penalties, those actions might
in many cases be brought at any distance of time. This would be
utterly repugnant to the genius of our laws. In a country where not
even treason can be prosecuted after a lapse of three years, it
could scarcely be supposed that an individual would remain forever
liable to a pecuniary forfeiture."
The result is that the judgments, based as they are mainly upon
offenses that could not be taken into consideration, must be
reversed.
Judgments reversed.
MR. JUSTICE VAN DEVANTER and MR. JUSTICE PITNEY dissent.