Appellee, a former United States Senator, was charged with the
solicitation and acceptance of bribes in violation of 18 U.S.C. §§
201(c)(1) and 201(g). The District Court, on appellee's pretrial
motion, dismissed the indictment on the ground that the Speech or
Debate Clause of the Constitution shielded him "from any
prosecution for alleged bribery to perform a legislative act." The
United States filed a direct appeal to this Court under 18 U.S.C. §
3731 (1964 ed., Supp. V), which appellee contends this Court does
not have jurisdiction to entertain because the District Court's
action was not "a decision or judgment setting aside, or
dismissing" the indictment, but was instead a summary judgment on
the merits based on the facts of the case.
Held:
1. This Court has jurisdiction under 18 U.S.C. § 3731 (1964 ed.,
Supp. V) to hear the appeal, since the District Court's order was
based upon its determination of the constitutional invalidity of 18
U.S.C. §§ 201(c)(1) and 201(g) on the facts as alleged in the
indictment. Pp. 50507.
2. The prosecution of appellee is not prohibited by the Speech
or Debate Clause. Although that provision protects Members of
Congress from inquiry into legislative acts or the motivation for
performance of such acts,
United States v. Johnson,
383 U. S. 169,
383 U. S. 185,
it does not protect all conduct relating to the legislative
process. Since, in this case, prosecution of the bribery charges
does not necessitate inquiry into legislative acts or motivation,
the District Court erred in holding that the Speech or Debate
Clause required dismissal of the indictment. Pp.
408 U. S.
507-529.
Reversed and remanded.
BURGER, C.J., delivered the opinion of the Court, in which
STEWART, MARSHALL, BLACKMUN, POWELL, and REHNQUIST, JJ., joined.
BRENNAN, J., filed a dissenting opinion in which DOUGLAS J.,
joined,
post, p.
408 U. S. 529.
WHITE, J., filed a dissenting opinion, in which DOUGLAS and
BRENNAN, JJ., joined,
post, p.
408 U. S.
551.
Page 408 U. S. 502
MR. CHIEF JUSTICE BURGER delivered the opinion of the Court.
This direct appeal from the District Court presents the question
whether a Member of Congress may be prosecuted under 18 U.S.C. §§
201(c)(1), 201(g), for accepting a bribe in exchange for a promise
relating to an official act. Appellee, a former United States
Senator, was charged in five counts of a 10-count indictment.
[
Footnote 1] Counts one, three,
five, and seven alleged that, on four separate occasions, appellee,
while he was a Senator and a member of the Senate Committee on Post
Office and Civil Service,
"directly and indirectly, corruptly asked, solicited, sought,
accepted, received and agreed to receive [sums] . . . in return for
being influenced in his performance of official acts in respect to
his action, vote, and decision on postage rate legislation which
might at any time be pending before him in his official capacity .
. . in violation of Sections 201(c)(1) and 2, Title 18, United
States Code. [
Footnote 2] "
Page 408 U. S. 503
Count nine charged that appellee
"directly and indirectly, asked, demanded, exacted, solicited,
sought, accepted, received and agreed to receive [a sum] . . . for
and because of official acts performed by him in respect to his
action, vote and decision on postage rate legislation which had
been pending before him in his official capacity . . . in violation
of Sections 201(g) and 2, Title 18, United States Code. [
Footnote 3]"
Before a trial date was set, the appellee moved to dismiss the
indictment on the ground of immunity under the Speech or Debate
Clause, Art. I, § 6, of the Constitution, which provides:
"[F]or any Speech or Debate in either House, they [Senators or
Representatives] shall not be questioned in any other Place."
After hearing argument, the District Court ruled from the
bench:
"Gentlemen, based on the facts of this case,
Page 408 U. S. 504
it is admitted by the Government that the five counts of the
indictment which charge Senator Brewster relate to the acceptance
of bribes in connection with the performance of a legislative
function by a Senator of the United States."
"It is the opinion of this Court that the immunity under the
Speech and [
sic] Debate Clause of the Constitution,
particularly in view of the interpretation given that Clause by the
Supreme Court in
Johnson, shields Senator Brewster,
constitutionally shields him from any prosecution for alleged
bribery to perform a legislative act."
"I will, therefore, dismiss the odd counts of the indictment, 1,
3, 5, 7 and 9, as they apply to Senator Brewster."
The United States filed a direct appeal to this Court, pursuant
to 18 U.S.C. § 3731 (1964 ed., Supp. V). [
Footnote 4] We postponed consideration of jurisdiction
until hearing the case on the merits. 401 U.S. 935 (1971).
I
The United States asserts that this Court has jurisdiction under
18 U.S.C. § 3731 (1964 ed., Supp. V) to
Page 408 U. S. 505
review the District Court's dismissal of the indictment against
appellee. Specifically, the United States urges that the District
Court decision was either
"a decision or judgment setting aside, or dismissing [an]
indictment . . . or any count thereof, where such decision or
judgment is based upon the invalidity or construction of the
statute upon which the indictment . . . is founded"
or a "decision or judgment sustaining a motion in bar, when the
defendant has not been put in jeopardy." If the District Court
decision is correctly characterized by either of those
descriptions, this Court has jurisdiction under the statute to hear
the United States' appeal.
In
United States v. Knox, 396 U. S.
77 (1969), we considered a direct appeal by the United
States from the dismissal of an indictment that charged the
appellee in that case with violating 18 U.S.C. § 1001, a general
criminal provision punishing fraudulent statements made to any
federal agency. The appellee, Knox, had been accused of willfully
understating the number of employees accepting wagers on his behalf
when he filed a form that persons engaged in the business of
accepting wagers were required by law to file. The District Court
dismissed the counts charging violations of § 1001 on the ground
that the appellee could not be prosecuted for failure to answer the
wagering form correctly, since his Fifth Amendment privilege
against self-incrimination prevented prosecution for failure to
file the form in any respect. We found jurisdiction under § 3731 to
hear the appeal in
Knox on the theory that the District
Court had passed on the validity of the statute on which the
indictment rested. 396 U.S. at
396 U. S. 79 n.
2. The District Court in that case held that "§ 1001, as applied to
this class of cases, is constitutionally invalid."
Ibid.
The counts of the indictment involved in the instant case were
based on 18 U.S.C. § 201, a bribery statute.
Page 408 U. S. 506
Section 201 applies to "public officials," and that term is
defined explicitly to include Members of Congress as well as other
employees and officers of the United States. Subsections (c)(1) and
(g) prohibit the accepting of a bribe in return for being
influenced in or performing an official act. The ruling of the
District Court here was that
"the Speech [or] Debate Clause of the Constitution, particularly
in view of the interpretation given . . . in
Johnson,
shields Senator Brewster . . . from any prosecution for alleged
bribery to perform a legislative act."
Since § 201 applies only to bribery for the performance of
official acts, the District Court's ruling is that, as applied to
Members of Congress, § 201 is constitutionally invalid. Appellee
argues that the action of the District Court was not "a decision or
judgment setting aside, or dismissing" the indictment, but was
instead a summary judgment on the merits. Appellee also argues that
the District Court did not rule that § 201 could never be
constitutionally applied to a Member of Congress, but that, "based
on the facts of this case," the statute could not be
constitutionally applied. Under
United States v. Sisson,
399 U. S. 267
(1970), an appeal does not lie from a decision that rests not upon
the sufficiency of the indictment alone, but upon extraneous facts.
If an indictment is dismissed as a result of a stipulated fact or
the showing of evidentiary facts outside the indictment, which
facts would constitute a defense on the merits at trial, no appeal
is available.
See United States v. Findley, 439 F.2d 970
(CA1 1971). Appellee claims that the District Court relied on
factual matter other than facts alleged in the indictment. An
examination of the record, however, discloses that, with the
exception of a letter in which the United States briefly outlined
the theory of its case against appellee, there were no "facts" on
which the District Court could
Page 408 U. S. 507
act other than those recited in the indictment. Appellee
contends that the statement "based on the facts of this case," used
by the District Judge in announcing his decision, shows reliance on
the Government's outline of its case. We read the District Judge's
reference to "facts," in context, as a reference to the facts
alleged in the indictment, and his ruling as holding that Members
of Congress are totally immune from prosecution for accepting
bribes for the performance of official,
i.e., legislative,
acts by virtue of the Speech or Debate Clause. Under that
interpretation of § 201, it cannot be applied to a Member of
Congress who accepts bribes that relate in any way to his office.
We conclude, therefore, that the District Court was relying only on
facts alleged in the indictment, and that the dismissal of the
indictment was based on a determination that the statute on which
the indictment was drawn was invalid under the Speech or Debate
Clause. As a consequence, this Court has jurisdiction to hear the
appeal.
II
The immunities of the Speech or Debate Clause were not written
into the Constitution simply for the personal or private benefit of
Members of Congress, but to protect the integrity of the
legislative process by insuring the independence of individual
legislators. The genesis of the Clause at common law is well known.
In his opinion for the Court in
United States v. Johnson,
383 U. S. 169
(1966), Mr. Justice Harlan canvassed the history of the Clause and
concluded that it
"was the culmination of a long struggle for parliamentary
supremacy. Behind these simple phrases lies a history of conflict
between the Commons and the Tudor and Stuart monarchs during which
successive monarchs utilized the criminal and civil law to suppress
and intimidate critical legislators.
Page 408 U. S. 508
Since the Glorious Revolution in Britain, and throughout United
States history, the privilege has been recognized as an important
protection of the independence and integrity of the
legislature."
Id. at
383 U. S. 178
(footnote omitted).
Although the Speech or Debate Clause's historic roots are in
English history, it must be interpreted in light of the American
experience, and in the context of the American constitutional
scheme of government, rather than the English parliamentary system.
We should bear in mind that the English system differs from ours in
that their Parliament is the supreme authority, not a coordinate
branch. Our speech or debate privilege was designed to preserve
legislative independence, not supremacy. [
Footnote 5] Our task, therefore, is to apply the Clause
in such a way as to insure the independence of the legislature
without altering the historic balance of the three coequal branches
of Government.
It does not undermine the validity of the Framers' concern for
the independence of the Legislative Branch to acknowledge that our
history does not reflect a catalogue of abuses at the hands of the
Executive that gave rise to the privilege in England. There is
nothing in our history, for example, comparable to the imprisonment
of a Member of Parliament in the Tower without a hearing and, owing
to the subservience of some royal judges to the 17th and 18th
century English kings, without meaningful recourse to a writ of
habeas corpus. [
Footnote 6] In
fact, on only one previous occasion has this Court ever
Page 408 U. S. 509
interpreted the Speech or Debate Clause in the context of a
criminal charge against a Member of Congress.
(a) In
United States v. Johnson, supra, the Court
reviewed the conviction of a former Representative on seven counts
of violating the federal conflict of interest statute, 18 U.S.C. §
281 (1964 ed.), and on one count of conspiracy to defraud the
United States, 18 U.S.C. § 371. The Court of Appeals had set aside
the conviction on the count for conspiracy to defraud as violating
the Speech or Debate Clause. Mr. Justice Harlan, speaking for the
Court, 383 U.S. at
383 U. S. 183,
cited the oft-quoted passage of Mr. Justice Lush in
Ex parte
Wason, L.R. 4 Q.B. 573 (1869):
"I am clearly of opinion that we ought not to allow it to be
doubted for a moment that the motives or intentions of members of
either House cannot be inquired into by criminal proceedings
with respect to anything they may do or say in the
House."
Id. at 577 (emphasis added). In
Kilbourn v.
Thompson, 103 U. S. 168
(1881), the first case in which this Court interpreted the Speech
or Debate Clause, the Court expressed a similar view of the ambit
of the American privilege. There, the Court said the Clause is to
be read broadly to include anything "generally done in a session of
the House by one of its members in relation to the business before
it."
Id. at
103 U. S. 204.
This statement, too, was cited with approval in
Johnson,
383 U.S. at
383 U. S. 179.
Our conclusion in
Johnson was that the privilege protected
Members from inquiry into legislative acts or the motivation for
actual performance of legislative acts.
Id. at
383 U. S.
185.
In applying the Speech or Debate Clause, the Court focused on
the specific facts of the
Johnson prosecution. The
"conspiracy to defraud" count alleged an agreement among
Representative Johnson and three codefendants
Page 408 U. S. 510
to obtain the dismissal of pending indictments against officials
of savings and loan institutions. For these services, which
included a speech made by Johnson on the House floor, the
Government claimed Johnson was paid a bribe. At trial, the
Government questioned Johnson extensively, relative to the
"conspiracy to defraud" count, concerning the authorship of the
speech, the factual basis for certain statements made in the
speech, and his motives for giving the speech. The Court held that
the use of evidence of a speech to support a count under a broad
conspiracy statute was prohibited by the Speech or Debate Clause.
The Government was, therefore, precluded from prosecuting the
conspiracy count on retrial, insofar as it depended on inquiries
into speeches made in the House.
It is important to note the very narrow scope of the Court's
holding in
Johnson:
"We hold that a prosecution under a general criminal statute
dependent on such inquiries [into the speech or its preparation]
necessarily contravenes the Speech or Debate Clause. We emphasize
that our holding is limited to prosecutions involving circumstances
such as those presented in the case before us."
383 U.S. at
383 U. S.
184-185. The opinion specifically left open the question
of a prosecution which, though possibly entailing some reference to
legislative acts, is founded upon a "narrowly drawn" statute passed
by Congress in the exercise of its power to regulate its Members'
conduct. Of more relevance to this case, the Court in
Johnson emphasized that its decision did not affect a
prosecution that, though founded on a criminal statute of general
application, "does not draw in question the legislative acts of the
defendant member of Congress or his motives for performing them."
Id. at
383 U. S. 185.
The Court did not
Page 408 U. S. 511
question the power of the United States to try Johnson on the
conflict of interest counts, and it authorized a new trial on the
conspiracy count, provided that all references to the making of the
speech were eliminated. [
Footnote
7]
Three members of the Court would have affirmed Johnson's
conviction. Mr. Chief Justice Warren, joined by MR. JUSTICE DOUGLAS
and MR. JUSTICE BRENNAN, concurring in part and dissenting in part,
stated:
"After reading the record, it is my conclusion that the Court of
Appeals erred in determining that the evidence concerning the
speech infected the jury's judgment on the [conflict of interest]
counts. The evidence amply supports the prosecution's theory and
the jury's verdict on these counts -- that the respondent received
over $20,000 for attempting to have the Justice Department dismiss
an indictment against his [present] coconspirators, without
disclosing his role in the enterprise. This is the classic example
of a violation of § 281 by a Member of the Congress. . . . The
arguments of government counsel and the court's instructions
separating the conspiracy from the substantive counts seem
unimpeachable. The speech was a minor part of the prosecution.
There was nothing in it to inflame the jury and the respondent
pointed with pride to it as evidence of his vigilance in protecting
the financial institutions of his State. The record further reveals
that the trial participants were well aware that a finding of
criminality on one count did not authorize similar
Page 408 U. S. 512
conclusions as to other counts, and I believe that this salutary
principle was conscientiously followed. Therefore, I would affirm
the convictions on the substantive counts."
Id. at
383 U. S.
188-189. (Footnote omitted.)
Johnson thus stand as a unanimous holding that a Member
of Congress may be prosecuted under a criminal statute provided
that the Government's case does not rely on legislative acts or the
motivation for legislative acts. A legislative act has consistently
been defined as an act generally done in Congress in relation to
the business before it. In sum, the Speech or Debate Clause
prohibits inquiry only into those things generally said or done in
the House or the Senate in the performance of official duties and
into the motivation for those acts.
It is well known, of course, that Members of the Congress engage
in many activities other than the purely legislative activities
protected by the Speech or Debate Clause. These include a wide
range of legitimate "errands" performed for constituents, the
making of appointments with Government agencies, assistance in
securing Government contracts, preparing so-called "news letters"
to constituents, news releases, and speeches delivered outside the
Congress. The range of these related activities has grown over the
years. They are performed in part because they have come to be
expected by constituents, and because they are a means of
developing continuing support for future elections. Although these
are entirely legitimate activities, they are political in nature,
rather than legislative, in the sense that term has been used by
the Court in prior cases. But it has never been seriously contended
that these political matters, however appropriate, have the
protection afforded by the Speech or Debate Clause. Careful
examination of the decided cases reveals that the Court has
regarded the protection as reaching only those things "generally
done in a
Page 408 U. S. 513
session of the House by one of its members in relation to the
business before it,"
Kilbourn v. Thompson, supra, at
103 U. S. 204,
or things "said or done by him, as a representative, in the
exercise of the functions of that office,"
Coffin v.
Coffin, 4 Mass. 1, 27 (1808).
(b) Appellee argues, however, that, in
Johnson, we
expressed a broader test for the coverage of the Speech or Debate
Clause. It is urged that we held that the Clause protected from
executive or judicial inquiry all conduct "related to the due
functioning of the legislative process." It is true that the quoted
words appear in the
Johnson opinion, but appellee takes
them out of context; in context they reflect a quite different
meaning from that now urged. Although the indictment against
Johnson contained eight counts, only one count was challenged
before this Court as in violation of the Speech or Debate Clause.
The other seven counts concerned Johnson's attempts to influence
staff members of the Justice Department to dismiss pending
prosecutions. In explaining why those counts were not before the
Court, Mr. Justice Harlan wrote:
"No argument is made, nor do we think that it could be
successfully contended, that the Speech or Debate Clause reaches
conduct, such as was involved in the attempt to influence the
Department of Justice, that is in no wise
related to the due
functioning of the legislative process. It is the application
of this broad conspiracy statute to an improperly motivated speech
that raises the constitutional problem with which we deal."
383 U.S. at
383 U. S. 172.
(Emphasis added; footnote omitted.) In stating that those things
"in no wise related to the due functioning of the legislative
process" were
not covered by the privilege, the Court did
not in any sense imply as a corollary that everything that
"related" to the
Page 408 U. S. 514
office of a Member was shielded by the Clause. Quite the
contrary, in
Johnson we held, citing
Kilbourn v.
Thompson, supra, that only acts generally done in the course
of the process of enacting legislation were protected.
Nor can we give
Kilbourn a more expansive
interpretation. In citing with approval, 103 U.S. at
103 U. S. 203,
the language of Chief Justice Parsons of the Supreme Judicial Court
of Massachusetts in
Coffin v. Coffin, 4 Mass. 1 (1808),
the
Kilbourn Court gave no thought to enlarging
"legislative acts" to include illicit conduct outside the House.
The
Coffin language is:
"[The Massachusetts legislative privilege] ought not to be
construed strictly, but liberally, that the full design of it may
be answered. I will not confine it to delivering an opinion,
uttering a speech, or haranguing in debate, but will extend it to
the giving of a vote, to the making of a written report, and to
every other act resulting from the nature, and in the execution, of
the office; and I would define the article as securing to every
member exemption from prosecution
for everything said or done
by him, as a representative, in the exercise of the functions of
that office without enquiring whether the exercise was regular
according to the rules of the house, or irregular and against their
rules. I do not confine the member to his place in the house, and I
am satisfied that there are cases in which he is entitled to this
privilege when not within the walls of the representatives'
chamber."
Id. at 27 (emphasis added).
It is suggested that in citing these words, which were also
quoted with approval in
Tenney v. Brandhove, 341 U.
S. 367,
341 U. S.
373-374 (1951), the Court was interpreting the sweep of
the Speech or Debate Clause to be broader than
Johnson
seemed to indicate or than we today hold. Emphasis is placed on the
statement that "there are
Page 408 U. S. 515
cases in which [a Member] is entitled to this privilege, when
not within the walls of the representatives' chamber." But the
context of
Coffin v. Coffin indicates that in this passage
Chief Justice Parsons was referring only to legislative acts, such
as committee meetings, which take place outside the physical
confines of the legislative chamber. In another passage, the
meaning is clarified:
"If a member . . . be out of the chamber, siting in committee,
executing the commission of the house, it appears to me that such
member is within the reason of the article, and ought to be
considered within the privilege. The body of which he is a member,
is in session, and he, as a member of that body, is in fact,
discharging the duties of his office. He ought therefore to be
protected from civil or criminal prosecutions for every thing said
or done by him in the exercise of his functions, as a
representative in committee, either in debating, in assenting to,
or in draughting a report. [
Footnote 8]"
4 Mass. at 28.
In no case has this Court ever treated the Clause as protecting
all conduct
relating to the legislative process. [
Footnote 9] In every case thus far
before this Court, the Speech or Debate Clause has been limited to
an act which was
Page 408 U. S. 516
clearly a part of the legislative process -- the due functioning
of the process. [
Footnote
10] Appellee's contention for a broader interpretation of the
privilege draws essentially on the flavor of the rhetoric and the
sweep of the language used by courts, not on the precise words used
in any prior case, and surely not on the sense of those cases,
fairly read.
(c) We would not think it sound or wise, simply out of an
abundance of caution to doubly insure legislative independence, to
extend the privilege beyond its intended scope, its literal
language, and its history, to include all thing in any way related
to the legislative process. Given such a sweeping reading, we have
no doubt that there are few activities in which a legislator
engages that he would be unable somehow to "relate" to the
legislative process. Admittedly, the Speech or Debate Clause must
be read broadly to effectuate its purpose of protecting the
independence of the Legislative Branch, but no more than the
statutes we apply, was its purpose to make Members of Congress
super-citizens, immune from criminal responsibility. In its
narrowest scope, the Clause is a very large, albeit essential,
grant of privilege. It has enabled reckless men to slander and even
destroy others with impunity, but that was the conscious choice of
the Framers. [
Footnote
11]
Page 408 U. S. 517
The history of the privilege is by no means free from grave
abuses by legislators. In one instance, abuses reached such a level
in England that Parliament was compelled to enact curative
legislation.
"The practice of granting the privilege of freedom from arrest
and molestation to members' servants in time became a serious
menace to individual liberty and to public order, and a form of
protection by which offenders often tried -- and they were often
successful -- to escape the penalties which their offences deserved
and which the ordinary courts would not have hesitated to inflict.
Indeed, the sale of 'protections' at one time proved a source of
income to unscrupulous members, and these parliamentary
'indulgences' were on several occasions obtainable at a fixed
market price."
C. Wittke, The History of English Parliamentary Privilege 39
(1921). The authors of our Constitution were well aware of the
history of both the need for the privilege and the abuses that
could flow from too sweeping safeguards. In order to preserve other
values, they wrote the privilege so that it tolerates and protects
behavior on the part of Members not tolerated and protected when
done by other citizens, but the shield does not extend beyond what
is necessary to preserve the integrity of the legislative process.
Moreover, unlike England, with no formal, written constitutional
limitations on the monarch, we defined limits on the coordinate
branches, providing
Page 408 U. S. 518
other checks to protect against abuses of the kind experienced
in that country.
It is also suggested that, even if we interpreted the Clause
broadly so as to exempt from inquiry all matters having any
relationship to the legislative process, misconduct of Members
would not necessarily go unpunished because each House is empowered
to discipline its Members. Article I, § 5, does indeed empower each
House to "determine the Rules of its Proceedings, punish its
Members for disorderly Behavior, and, with the Concurrence of
two-thirds, expel a Member," but Congress is ill-equipped to
investigate, try, and punish its Members for a wide range of
behavior that is loosely and incidentally related to the
legislative process. In this sense, the English analogy on which
the dissents place much emphasis, and the reliance on
Ex parte
Wason, L.R. 4 Q.B. 73 (1869), are inapt. Parliament is itself
"The High Court of Parliament" -- the highest court in the land --
and its judicial tradition better equips it for judicial tasks.
"It is by no means an exaggeration to say that [the judicial
characteristics of Parliament] colored and influenced some of the
great struggles over [legislative] privilege in and out of
Parliament to the very close of the nineteenth century. It is not
altogether certain whether they have been entirely forgotten even
now. Nowhere has the theory that Parliament is a court -- the
highest court of the realm, often acting in a judicial capacity and
in a judicial manner -- persisted longer than in the history of
privilege of Parliament."
Wittke,
supra, at 14. The very fact of the supremacy of
Parliament as England's highest tribunal explains the long
tradition precluding trial for official misconduct of a member in
any other and lesser tribunal.
In Australia and Canada,
"where provision for legislative
Page 408 U. S. 519
free speech or debate exists but where the legislature may not
claim a tradition as the highest court of the realm, courts have
held that the privilege does not bar the criminal prosecution of
legislators for bribery."
Note, The Bribed Congressman's Immunity from Prosecution, 75
Yale L.J. 335, 338 (1965) (footnote omitted). Congress has shown
little inclination to exert itself in this area. [
Footnote 12] Moreover, if Congress did lay
aside its normal activities and take on itself the responsibility
to police and prosecute the myriad activities of its Members
related to but not directly a part of the legislative function, the
independence of individual Members might actually be impaired.
The process of disciplining a Member in the Congress is not
without countervailing risks of abuse, since it is not surrounded
with the panoply of protective shields that are present in a
criminal case. An accused Member is judged by no specifically
articulated standards, [
Footnote
13] and is at the mercy of an almost unbridled discretion of
the charging body that functions at once as accuser, prosecutor,
judge, and jury from whose decision there is no established right
of review. In short, a Member would be compelled to defend in what
would be comparable to a criminal prosecution without the
safeguards provided by the Constitution. Moreover, it would be
somewhat naive to assume that the triers would be wholly objective
and free from considerations
Page 408 U. S. 520
of party and politics and the passions of the moment. [
Footnote 14] Strong arguments can be
mad that trials conducted in a Congress with an entrenched majority
from one political party could result in far greater harassment
than a conventional criminal trial with the wide range of
procedural protections for the accused, including indictment by
grand jury, trial by jury under strict standards of proof with
fixed rules of evidence, and extensive appellate review.
Finally, the jurisdiction of Congress to punish its Members is
not all-embracing. For instance, it is unclear to what extent
Congress would have jurisdiction over a case such as this, in which
the alleged illegal activity occurred outside the chamber, while
the appellee was a Member, but was undiscovered or not brought
before a grand jury until after he left office. [
Footnote 15]
The sweeping claims of appellee would render Members of Congress
virtually immune from a wide range of crimes simply because the
acts in question were peripherally related to their holding office.
Such claims are inconsistent with the reading this Court has given
not only to the Speech or Debate Clause, but also to the other
legislative privileges embodied in Art. I, § 6. The very sentence
in which the Speech or Debate Clause appears provides that
Members
"shall in all Cases, except
Page 408 U. S. 521
Treason, Felony and Breach of the Peace, be privileged from
Arrest during their Attendance at the Session of their Respective
Houses. . . ."
In
Williamson v. United States, 207 U.
S. 425 (1908), this Court rejected a claim, made by a
Member convicted of subornation of perjury in proceedings for the
purchase of public lands, that he could not be arrested, convicted,
or imprisoned for any crime that was not treason, felony, or breach
of the peace in the modern sense,
i.e., disturbing the
peace. Mr. Justice Edward Douglass White noted that, when the
Constitution was written, the term "breach of the peace" did not
mean, as it came to mean later, a misdemeanor such as disorderly
conduct, but had a different 18th century usage, since it derived
from breaching the King's peace, and thus embraced the whole range
of crimes at common law. Quoting Lord Mansfield, he noted, with
respect to the claim of parliamentary privilege, "[t]he laws of
this country allow no place or employment as a sanctuary for crime.
. . ."
Id. at
207 U. S.
439.
The subsequent case of
Long v. Ansell, 293 U. S.
76 (1934), held that a Member's immunity from arrest in
civil cases did not extend to civil process. Mr. Justice Brandeis
wrote for the Court:
"Clause 1 [of Art. I, § 6] defines the extent of the immunity.
Its language is exact, and leaves no room for a construction which
would extend the privilege beyond the terms of the grant."
Id. at
293 U. S. 82. We
recognize that the privilege against arrest is not identical with
the Speech or Debate privilege, but it is closely related in
purpose and origin. It can hardly be thought that the Speech or
Debate Clause totally protects what the sentence preceding it has
plainly left open to prosecution,
i.e., all criminal
acts.
(d) MR. JUSTICE WHITE suggests that permitting the Executive to
initiate the prosecution of a Member of Congress
Page 408 U. S. 522
for the specific crime of bribery is subject to serious
potential abuse that might endanger the independence of the
legislature -- for example, a campaign contribution might be
twisted by a ruthless prosecutor into a bribery indictment. But, as
we have just noted, the Executive is not alone in possessing power
potentially subject to abuse; such possibilities are inherent in a
system of government that delegates to each of the three branches
separate and independent powers. [
Footnote 16] In The Federalist
Page 408 U. S. 523
No. 73, Hamilton expressed concern over the possible hazards
that confronted an Executive dependent on Congress for financial
support.
"The Legislature, with a discretionary power over the salary and
emoluments of the Chief Magistrate, could render him as obsequious
to their will as they might think proper to make him. They might,
in most cases, either reduce him by famine, or tempt him by
largesses, to surrender at discretion his judgment to their
inclinations."
Yet Hamilton's "parade of horribles" finds little real support
in history. The "check and balance" mechanism, buttressed by
unfettered debate in an open society with a free press, has not
encouraged abuses of power or tolerated them long when they arose.
This may be explained in part because the third branch has
intervened with neutral authority.
See, e.g., United States v.
Lovett, 328 U. S. 303
(1946). The system of divided powers was expressly designed to
check the abuses England experienced in the 16th to the 18th
centuries.
Probably of more importance is the public reaction engendered by
any attempt of one branch to dominate or harass another. Even
traditional political attempts to establish dominance have met with
little success owing to contrary popular sentiment. Attempts to
"purge" uncooperative legislators, for example, have not been
notably successful. We are not cited to any cases in which the
bribery statutes, which have been applicable to Members of Congress
for over 100 years, [
Footnote
17]
Page 408 U. S. 524
have been abused by the Executive Branch. When a powerful
Executive sought to make the Judicial Branch more responsive to the
combined will of the Executive and Legislative Branches, it was the
Congress itself that checked the effort to enlarge the Court. 2 M.
Pusey, Charles Evans Hughes 749-765 (1951).
We would be closing our eyes to the realities of the American
political system if we failed to acknowledge that many
non-legislative activities are an established and accepted part of
the role of a Member, and are indeed "related" to the legislative
process. But if the Executive may prosecute a Member's attempt, as
in
Johnson, to influence another branch of the Government
in return for a bribe, its power to harass is not greatly enhanced
if it can prosecute for a promise relating to a legislative act in
return for a bribe. We therefore see no substantial increase in the
power of the Executive and Judicial Branches over the Legislative
Branch resulting from our holding today. If we underestimate the
potential for harassment, the Congress, of course, is free to
exempt its Members from the ambit of federal bribery laws, but it
has deliberately allowed the instant statute to remain on the books
for over a century.
We do not discount entirely the possibility that an abuse might
occur, but this possibility, which we consider remote, must be
balanced against the potential danger flowing from either the
absence of a bribery statute applicable to Members of Congress or a
holding that the statute violates the Constitution. As we noted at
the outset, the purpose of the Speech or Debate Clause is to
protect the individual legislator, not simply for his own sake, but
to preserve the independence and thereby the integrity of the
legislative process. But financial abuses by way of bribes, perhaps
even more than Executive power, would gravely undermine legislative
integrity and defeat the right of the
Page 408 U. S. 525
public to honest representation. Depriving the Executive of the
power to investigate and prosecute and the Judiciary of the power
to punish bribery of Members of Congress is unlikely to enhance
legislative independence. Given the disinclination and limitations
of each House to police these matters, it is understandable that
both Houses deliberately delegated this function to the courts, as
they did with the power to punish persons committing contempts of
Congress. 2 U.S.C. § 194.
It is beyond doubt that the Speech or Debate Clause protects
against inquiry into acts that occur in the regular course of the
legislative process, and into the motivation for those acts. So
expressed, the privilege is broad enough to insure the historic
independence of the Legislative Branch, essential to our separation
of powers, but narrow enough to guard against the excesses of those
who would corrupt the process by corrupting its Members. We turn
next to determine whether the subject of this criminal inquiry is
within the scope of the privilege.
III
An examination of the indictment brought against appellee and
the statutes on which it is founded reveals that no inquiry into
legislative acts or motivation for legislative acts is necessary
for the Government to make out a
prima facie case. Four of
the five counts charge that appellee "corruptly asked, solicited,
sought, accepted, received and agreed to receive" money
"in return for being influenced . . . in respect to his action,
vote, and decision on postage rate legislation which might at any
time be pending before him in his official capacity."
This is said to be a violation of 18 U.S.C. § 201(c), which
provides that a Member who
"corruptly asks, demands, exacts, solicits, seeks, accepts,
receives, or agrees to receive anything of value . . . in
Page 408 U. S. 526
return for . . . (1) being influenced in his performance of any
official act"
is guilty of an offense.
The question is whether it is necessary to inquire into how
appellee spoke, how he debated, how he voted, or anything he did in
the chamber or in committee in order to make out a violation of
this statute. The illegal conduct is taking or agreeing to take
money for a promise to act in a certain way. There is no need for
the Government to show that appellee fulfilled the alleged illegal
bargain; acceptance of the bribe is the violation of the statute,
not performance of the illegal promise.
Taking a bribe is, obviously, no part of the legislative process
or function; it is not a legislative act. It is not, by any
conceivable interpretation, an act performed as a part of or even
incidental to the role of a legislator. It is not an "act resulting
from the nature, and in the execution, of the office." Nor is it a
"thing said or done by him, as a representative, in the exercise of
the functions of that office," 4 Mass. at 27. Nor is inquiry into a
legislative act or the motivation for a legislative act necessary
to a prosecution under this statute or this indictment. When a
bribe is taken, it does not matter whether the promise for which
the bribe was given was for the performance of a legislative act,
as here, or, as in
Johnson, for use of a Congressman's
influence with the Executive Branch. And an inquiry into the
purpose of a bribe "does not draw in question the legislative acts
of the defendant member of Congress or his motives for performing
them." 383 U.S. at
383 U. S.
185.
Nor does it matter if the Member defaults on his illegal
bargain. To make a
prima facie case under this indictment,
the Government need not show any act of appellee subsequent to the
corrupt promise for payment, for it is taking the bribe, not
performance of the illicit compact, that is a criminal act. If, for
example, there were undisputed evidence that a Member took a bribe
in exchange
Page 408 U. S. 527
for an agreement to vote for a given bill, and if there were
also undisputed evidence that he, in fact, voted against the bill,
can it be thought that this alters the nature of the bribery or
removes it from the area of wrongdoing the Congress sought to make
a crime?
Another count of the indictment against appellee alleges that he
"asked, demanded, exacted, solicited, sought, accepted, received
and agreed to receive" money
"for and because of official acts performed by him in respect to
his action, vote and decision on postage rate legislation which had
been pending before him in his official capacity. . . ."
This count is founded on 18 U.S.C. § 201(g), which provides that
a Member of Congress who
"asks, demands, exacts, solicits, seeks, accepts, receives, or
agrees to receive anything of value for himself for or because of
any official act performed or to be performed by him"
is guilty of an offense. Although the indictment alleges that
the bribe was given for an act that was actually performed, it is,
once again, unnecessary to inquire into the act or its motivation.
To sustain a conviction, it is necessary to show that appellee
solicited, received, or agreed to receive, money with knowledge
that the donor was paying him compensation for an official act.
Inquiry into the legislative performance itself is not necessary;
evidence of the Member's knowledge of the alleged briber's illicit
reasons for paying the money is sufficient to carry the case to the
jury.
MR. JUSTICE WHITE rests heavily on the fact that the indictment
charges the offense as being in part linked to Brewster's "action,
vote and decision on postage rate legislation." This is true, of
course, but our holding in
Johnson precludes any showing
of how he acted, voted, or decided. The dissenting position stands
on the fragile proposition that it "would take the Government at
its word" with respect to wanting to prove what we all agree
Page 408 U. S. 528
are protected acts that cannot be shown in evidence. Perhaps the
Government would make a more appealing case if it could do so, but
here, as in that case, evidence of acts protected by the Clause is
inadmissible. The Government, as we have noted, need not prove any
specific act, speech, debate, or decision to establish a violation
of the statute under which appellee was indicted. To accept the
arguments of the dissent would be to retreat from the Court's
position in
Johnson that a Member may be convicted if no
showing of legislative act is required.
MR. JUSTICE BRENNAN suggests that inquiry into the alleged bribe
is inquiry into the motivation for a legislative act, and it is
urged that this very inquiry was condemned as impermissible in
Johnson. That argument misconstrues the concept of
motivation for legislative acts. The Speech or Debate Clause does
not prohibit inquiry into illegal conduct simply because it has
some nexus to legislative functions. In
Johnson, the Court
held that, on remand, Johnson could be retried on the "conspiracy
to defraud" count, so long as evidence concerning his speech on the
House floor was not admitted. The Court's opinion plainly implies
that, had the Government chosen to retry Johnson on that count, he
could not have obtained immunity from prosecution by asserting that
the matter being inquired into was related to the motivation for
his House speech.
See 408 U. S. 7,
supra.
The only reasonable reading of the Clause, consistent with its
history and purpose, is that it does not prohibit inquiry into
activities that are casually or incidentally related to legislative
affairs but not a part of the legislative process itself. Under
this indictment and these statutes, no such proof is needed.
We hold that, under these statutes and this indictment,
prosecution of appellee is not prohibited by the Speech
Page 408 U. S. 529
or Debate Clause. [
Footnote
18] Accordingly, the judgment of the District Court is
reversed, and the case is remanded for further proceedings
consistent with this opinion.
Reversed and remanded.
[
Footnote 1]
The remaining five counts charged the alleged bribers with
offering and giving bribes in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 201(b).
[
Footnote 2]
Title 18 U.S.C. § 201(c) provides:
"Whoever, being a public official or person selected to be a
public official, directly or indirectly, corruptly asks, demands,
exacts, solicits, seeks, accepts, receives, or agrees to receive
anything of value for himself or for any other person or entity, in
return for: "
"(1) being influenced in his performance of any official act . .
. [shall be guilty of an offense]."
Title 18 U.S.C. § 201(a) defines "public official" to include
"Member of Congress." The same subsection provides:
"'official act' means any decision or action on any question,
matter, cause, suit, proceeding or controversy, which may at any
time be pending, or which may by law be brought before any public
official, in his official capacity, or in his place of trust or
profit."
Title 18 U.S.C. § 2 is the aiding or abetting statute.
[
Footnote 3]
Title 18 U.S.C. § 201(g) provides:
"Whoever, being a public official, former public official, or
person selected to be a public official, otherwise than as provided
by law for the proper discharge of official duty, directly or
indirectly asks, demands, exacts, solicits, seeks, accepts,
receives, or agrees to receive anything of value for himself for or
because of any official act performed or to be performed by him . .
. [shall be guilty of an offense]."
[
Footnote 4]
Title 18 U.S.C. § 3731 provided in relevant part:
"An appeal may be taken by and on behalf of the United States
from the district courts direct to the Supreme Court of the United
States in all criminal cases in the following instances: "
"From a decision or judgment setting aside, or dismissing any
indictment or information, or any count thereof, where such
decision or judgment is based upon the invalidity or construction
of the statute upon which the indictment or information is
founded."
"
* * * *"
"From the decision or judgment sustaining a motion in bar, when
the defendant has not been put in jeopardy."
The statute has since been amended to eliminate the direct
appeal provision on which the United States relies. 18 U.S.C. §
3731. This appeal, however, was perfected under the old
statute.
[
Footnote 5]
Cella, The Doctrine of Legislative Privilege of Freedom of
Speech and Debate: Its Past, Present and Future as a Bar to
Criminal Prosecutions in the Courts, 2 Suffolk L.Rev. 1, 15 (1968);
Note, The Bribed Congressman's Immunity from Prosecution, 75 Yale
L.J. 335, 337-338 (1965).
[
Footnote 6]
See C. Wittke, The History of English Parliamentary
Privilege 23-32 (1921).
[
Footnote 7]
On remand, the District Court dismissed the conspiracy count
without objection from the Government. Johnson was then found
guilty on the remaining counts, and his conviction was affirmed.
United States v. Johnson, 419 F.2d 56 (CA4 1969),
cert. denied, 397 U.S. 1010 (1970).
[
Footnote 8]
It is especially important to note that in
Coffin v.
Coffin, the court concluded that the defendant was not
executing the duties of his office when he allegedly defamed the
plaintiff and was hence not entitled to the claim of privilege.
[
Footnote 9]
The "concession" MR. JUSTICE BRENNAN seeks to attribute to the
Government lawyer who argued the case in the District Court reveals
no more than the failure of the arguments in that court to focus on
the distinction between true legislative acts and the myriad
related political functions of a Member of Congress. The
"concession" came in response to a question clearly revealing that
the District Court treated as protected all acts "related" to the
office rather than limiting the protection to what is "said or done
by him, as a representative, in the exercise of the functions of
that office."
[
Footnote 10]
See Kilbourn v. Thompson, 103 U.
S. 168 (1881) (voting for a resolution);
Tenney v.
Brandhove, 341 U. S. 367
(1951) (harassment of witness by state legislator during a
legislative hearing; not a Speech or Debate Clause case);
United States v. Johnson, 383 U.
S. 169 (1966) (making a speech on House floor);
Dombrowski v. Eastland, 387 U. S. 82 (1967)
(subpoenaing records for committee hearing);
Powell v.
McCormack, 395 U. S. 486
(1969) (voting for a resolution).
In
Coffin v. Coffin, 4 Mass. 1 (1808), the state
equivalent of the Speech or Debate Clause was held to be
inapplicable to a legislator who was acting outside of his official
duties.
[
Footnote 11]
"To this construction of the article it is objected that a
private citizen may have his character basely defamed, without any
pecuniary recompense or satisfaction. The truth of the objection is
admitted. . . . The injury to the reputation of a private citizen
is of less importance to the commonwealth, than the free and
unreserved exercise of the duties of a representative, unawed by
the fear of legal prosecutions."
Coffin v. Coffin, 4 Mass. at 28.
See Cochran v. Couzens, 59 App.D.C. 374, 42 F.2d 783,
cert. denied, 282 U.S. 874 (1930) (defamatory words
uttered on Senate floor could not be basis of slander action).
[
Footnote 12]
See Thomas, Freedom of Debate: Protector of the People
or Haven for the Criminal?, 3 The Harvard Rev. 74, 80-81 (No. 3,
1965); Note, The Bribed Congressman's Immunity from Prosecution, 75
Yale L.J. 335, 349 n. 84 (1965); Oppenheim, Congressional Free
Speech, 8 Loyola L.Rev. 1, 27-28 (1955-1956).
[
Footnote 13]
See, e.g., In re Chapman, 166 U.
S. 661,
166 U. S.
669-670 (1897):
"The right to expel extends to all cases where the offence is
such as in the judgment of the Senate is inconsistent with the
trust and duty of a member."
[
Footnote 14]
See the account of the impeachment of President Andrew
Johnson in J. Kennedy, Profiles in Courage 126-151 (1955).
See
also the account of the impeachment of Mr. Justice Samuel
Chase in 3 A. Beveridge, The Life of John Marshall 169-220
(1919).
[
Footnote 15]
". . . English Parliaments have historically reserved to
themselves, and still retain, the sole and exclusive right to
punish their members for the acceptance of a bribe in the discharge
of their office. No member of Parliament may be tried for such an
offense in any court of the land."
Cella,
supra, n 5,
at 15-16. That this is obviously not the case in this country is
implicit in the remand of Representative Johnson to be retried on
bribery charges.
[
Footnote 16]
The potential for harassment by an unscrupulous member of the
Executive Branch may exist, but this country has no tradition of
absolute congressional immunity from criminal prosecution.
See
United States v. Quinn, 141 F.
Supp. 622 (SDNY 1956) (motion for acquittal granted because the
defendant Member of Congress was unaware of receipt of fees by his
law firm);
Burton v. United States, 202 U.
S. 344 (1906) (Senator convicted for accepting
compensation to intervene before Post Office Department);
United States v. Dietrich, 126 F. 671 (CC Neb.1904)
(Senator-elect's accepting payment to procure office for another
not covered by statute);
May v. United States, 84
U.S.App.D.C. 233, 175 F.2d 994,
cert. denied, 338 U.S. 830
(1949) (Congressman convicted of receiving compensation for
services before an agency);
United States v. Bramblett,
348 U. S. 503
(1955) (Congressman convicted of defrauding government agency).
Bramblett concerned a Congressman's misuse of office funds
via a "kick-back" scheme, which is surely "related" to the
legislative office.
A strategically timed indictment could indeed cause serious harm
to a Congressman. Representative Johnson, for example, was indicted
while campaigning for reelection, and arguably his indictment
contributed to his defeat. On the other hand, there is the classic
case of Mayor Curley, who was reelected while under indictment.
See N.Y. Times, Nov. 8, 1945, p. 12, col. 5; 4 New
Catholic Encyclopedia 541 (1967). Moreover, we should not overlook
the barriers a prosecutor, attempting to bring such a case, must
face. First, he must persuade a grand jury to indict, and we are
not prepared to assume that grand juries will act against a Member
without solid evidence. Thereafter, he must convince a petit jury
beyond a reasonable doubt, with the presumption of innocence
favoring the accused. A prosecutor who fails to clear one of these
hurdles faces serious practical consequences when the defendant is
a Congressman. The Legislative Branch is not without weapons of its
own, and would no doubt use them if it thought the Executive were
unjustly harassing one of its members. Perhaps more important is
the omnipresence of the news media, whose traditional function and
competitive inclination afford no immunities to reckless or
irresponsible official misconduct.
[
Footnote 17]
The first bribery statute applicable to Congressmen was enacted
in 1853. Act of Feb. 26, 1853, c. 81, § 6, 10 Stat. 171.
[
Footnote 18]
In reversing the District Court's ruling that a Member of
Congress may not be constitutionally tried for a violation of the
federal bribery statutes, we express no views on the question left
open in
Johnson as to the constitutionality of an inquiry
that probes into legislative acts or the motivation for legislative
acts if Congress specifically authorizes such in a narrowly drawn
statute. Should such an inquiry be made, and should a conviction be
sustained, then we would face the question whether inquiry into
legislative acts and motivation is permissible under such a
narrowly drawn statute.
MR. JUSTICE BRENNAN, with whom MR. JUSTICE DOUGLAS joins,
dissenting.
When this case first came before the Court, I had thought it
presented a single, well defined issue -- that is, whether the
Congress could authorize by a narrowly drawn statute the
prosecution of a Senator or Representative for conduct otherwise
immune from prosecution under the Speech or Debate Clause of the
Constitution. Counts 1, 3, 5, and 7 of the indictment charged
Senator Brewster with receiving $19,000
"in return for being influenced in his performance of official
acts in respect to his action, vote, and decision on postage rate
legislation which might at any time be pending before him in his
official capacity [as a member of the Senate Post Office
Committee]."
Count 9 charged the Senator with receipt of another $5,000 for
acts already performed by him with respect to his "action, vote and
decision" on that legislation. These charges, it seemed to me, fell
within the clear prohibition of the Speech or Debate Clause as
interpreted by decisions of this Court, particularly
United
States v. Johnson, 383 U. S. 169
(1966).
Page 408 U. S. 530
For if the indictment did not call into question the "speeches
or debates" of the Senator, it certainly laid open to scrutiny the
motives for his legislative acts; and those motives, I had
supposed, were no more subject to executive and judicial inquiry
than the acts themselves, unless, of course, the Congress could
delegate such inquiry to the other branches.
That, apparently, was the Government's view of the case as well.
At the hearing before the District Court, the prosecutor was asked
point blank whether "the indictment in any wise allege[d] that
Brewster did anything not related to his purely legislative
functions." The prosecutor responded:
"We are not contending that what is being charged here, that is,
the activity by Brewster, was anything other than a legislative
act. We are not ducking the question; it is squarely presented.
They are legislative acts. We are not going to quibble over
that."
App. 28. The Government, in other words, did not challenge the
applicability of the Clause to these charges, but argued only that
its prohibitions could be avoided, "waived," as it were, through
congressional authorization in the form of a narrowly drawn bribery
statute. The District Court accepted the Government's reading of
the indictment and held that the Senator could not be prosecuted
for this conduct even under the allegedly narrow provisions of 18
U.S.C. § 201:
"Gentlemen, based on the facts of this case, it is admitted by
the Government that the five counts of the indictment which charge
Senator Brewster relate to the acceptance of bribes in connection
with the performance of a legislative function by a Senator of the
United States. "
Page 408 U. S. 531
"It is the opinion of this Court that the immunity under the
Speech and Debate Clause of the Constitution, particularly in view
of the interpretation given that Clause by the Supreme Court in
Johnson, shields Senator Brewster, constitutionally
shields him, from any prosecution for alleged bribery to perform a
legislative act."
App. 33. Furthermore, the Government's initial brief in this
Court, doubtless reflecting its recognition that
Johnson
had rejected the analysis adopted by the Court today, did not argue
that a prosecution for acceptance of a bribe in return for a
promise to vote a certain way falls outside the prohibition of the
Speech or Debate Clause. Rather, the Government's brief conceded,
or at least assumed, that such conduct does constitute "Speech or
Debate," but urged that Congress may enact a statute, such as 18
U.S.C. § 201, providing for judicial trial of the alleged
crime.
Given these admissions by the Government and the District
Court's construction of the indictment, which settled doctrine
makes binding on this Court,
United States v. Jones,
345 U. S. 377,
345 U. S. 378
(1953), the only issue properly before us was whether Congress is
empowered to delegate to the Executive and Judicial Branches the
trial of a member for conduct otherwise protected by the Clause.
Today, however, the Court finds it unnecessary to reach that issue,
for it finds that the indictment, though charging receipt of a
bribe for legislative acts, entails "no inquiry into legislative
acts or motivation for legislative acts,"
ante at
408 U. S. 525,
and thus is not covered by the Clause. In doing so, the Court
permits the Government to recede from its firm admissions, it
ignores the District Court's binding construction of the
Page 408 U. S. 532
indictment, and -- most important -- it repudiates principles of
legislative freedom developed over the past century in a line of
cases culminating in
Johnson. Those principles, which are
vital to the right of the people to be represented by Congressmen
of independence and integrity, deserve more than the hasty burial
given them by the Court today. I must therefore dissent.
I
I would dispel at the outset any notion that Senator Brewster's
asserted immunity strains the outer limits of the Clause. The Court
writes at length in an effort to show that "Speech or Debate" does
not cover "all conduct relating to the legislative process."
Ante at
408 U. S. 515.
Even assuming the validity of that conclusion, I fail to see its
relevance to the instant case. Senator Brewster is not charged with
conduct merely "relating to the legislative process," but with a
crime whose proof calls into question the very motives behind his
legislative acts. The indictment, then, lies not at the periphery,
but at the very center, of the protection that this Court has said
is provided a Congressman under the Clause.
Decisions of this Court dating as far back as 1881 have
consistently refused to limit the concept of "legislative acts" to
the "Speech or Debate" specifically mentioned in Art. I, § 6. In
Kilbourn v. Thompson, 103 U. S. 168
(1881), the Court held that:
"It would be a narrow view of the constitutional provision to
limit it to words spoken in debate. The reason of the rule is as
forcible in its application to written reports presented in that
body by its committees, to resolutions offered, which, though in
writing, must be reproduced in speech, and to the act of voting,
whether it is done vocally or by passing between the tellers. In
short, to things generally
Page 408 U. S. 533
done in a session of the House by one of its members in relation
to the business before it."
Id. at
103 U. S. 204.
In reaching its conclusion, the Court adopted what was said by the
Supreme Judicial Court of Massachusetts in
Coffin v.
Coffin, 4 Mass. 1 (1808), which
Kilbourn held to be
perhaps "the most authoritative case in this country on the
construction of the provision in regard to freedom of debate in
legislative bodies. . . ." 103 U.S. at
103 U. S. 204.
Chief Justice Parsons, peaking for the Massachusetts court,
expressed what
Kilbourn and later decisions saw as a
properly generous view of the legislative privilege:
"Thee privileges are thus secured not with the intention of
protecting the members against prosecutions for their own benefit,
but to support the rights of the people, by enabling their
representatives to execute the functions of their office without
fear of prosecutions, civil or criminal. I therefore think that the
article ought not to be construed strictly, but liberally, that the
full design of it may be answered. I will not confine it to
delivering an opinion, uttering a speech, or haranguing in debate,
but will extend it to the giving of a vote, to the making of a
written report, and to every other act resulting from the nature,
and in the execution, of the office, and I would define the article
as securing to every member exemption from prosecution for
everything said or done by him as a representative in the exercise
of the functions of that office, without enquiring whether the
exercise was regular according to the rules of the house or
irregular and against their rules. I do not confine the member to
his place in the house, and I am satisfied that there are cases in
which he is entitled to this privilege when not within the walls of
the representatives' chamber."
4 Mass. at 27.
Page 408 U. S. 534
There can be no doubt, therefore, that Senator Brewster's vote
on new postal rates constituted legislative activity within the
meaning of the Clause. The Senator could not be prosecuted or
called to answer for his vote in any judicial or executive
proceeding. But the Senator's immunity, I submit, goes beyond the
vote itself and precludes all extra-congressional scrutiny as to
how and why he cast, or would have cast, his vote a certain way. In
Tenney v. Brandhove, 341 U. S. 367
(1951), the plaintiff charged that a state legislative hearing was
being conducted not for a proper legislative purpose, but solely as
a means of harassing him. Nevertheless the Court held that no
action would lie against the committee members under federal civil
rights statutes. Mr. Justice Frankfurter stated:
"The claim of an unworthy purpose does not destroy the
privilege. Legislators are immune from deterrents to the
uninhibited discharge of their legislative duty not for their
private indulgence, but for the public good. One must not expect
uncommon courage even in legislators. The privilege would be of
little value if they could be subjected to the cost and
inconvenience and distractions of a trial upon a conclusion of the
pleader, or to the hazard of a judgment against them based upon a
jury's speculation as to motives. The holding of this Court in
Fletcher
v. Peck, 6 Cranch 87, 130, that it was not
consonant with our scheme of government for a court to inquire into
the motives of legislators, has remained unquestioned. . . ."
". . . In times of political passion, dishonest or vindictive
motives are readily attributed to legislative conduct, and as
readily believed. Courts are not the place for such controversies.
Self-discipline and the voters must be the ultimate reliance for
discouraging
Page 408 U. S. 535
or correcting such abuses."
Id. at
341 U. S.
377-378.
Barring congressional power to authorize this prosecution, what
has been said thus far would seem sufficient to require affirmance
of the order of dismissal, for neither Senator Brewster's vote nor
his motives for voting, however dishonorable, may be the subject of
a civil or criminal proceeding outside the halls of the Senate.
There is nothing complicated about this conclusion. It follows
simply and inescapably from prior decisions of this Court,
supra, setting forth the most basic elements of
legislative immunity. Yet the Court declines to apply those
principles to this case, for it somehow finds that the Government
can prove its case without referring to the Senator's official acts
or motives. According to the Court, the Government can limit its
proof on Counts 1, 3, 5, and 7 to evidence concerning Senator
Brewster's "taking or agreeing to take money for a promise to act
in a certain way," and need not show "that appellee fulfilled the
alleged illegal bargain; acceptance of the bribe is the violation
of the statute, not performance of the illegal promise."
Ante at
408 U. S. 526.
Similarly, the Court finds that Count 9 can be proved merely by
showing that the Senator solicited or received money "with
knowledge that the donor was paying him compensation for an
official act," without any inquiry "into the legislative
performance itself."
Ante at
408 U. S. 527.
These evidentiary limitations are deemed sufficient to avoid the
prohibitions of the Speech or Debate Clause.
With all respect, I think that the Court has adopted a wholly
artificial view of the charges before us. The indictment alleges
not the mere receipt of money, but the receipt of money in exchange
for a Senator's vote and promise to vote in a certain way. Insofar
as these charges bear on votes already cast, the Government
cannot
Page 408 U. S. 536
avoid proving the performance of the bargained-for acts, for it
is the acts themselves, together with the motivating bribe, that
form the basis of Count 9 of the indictment. Proof of "knowledge
that the donor was paying . . . for an official act" may be enough
for conviction under § 201(g). But assuming it is, the Government
still must demonstrate that the "official act" referred to was
actually performed, for that is what the indictment charges. Count
9, in other words, calls into question both the performance of
official acts by the Senator and his reasons for voting as he did.
Either inquiry violates the Speech or Debate Clause.
The counts charging only a corrupt promise to vote are equally
repugnant to the Clause. The Court may be correct that only receipt
of the bribe, and not performance of the bargain, is needed to
prove these counts. But proof of an agreement to be "influenced" in
the performance of legislative acts is, by definition, an inquiry
into their motives, whether or not the acts themselves or the
circumstances surrounding them are questioned at trial.
Furthermore, judicial inquiry into an alleged agreement of this
kind carries with it the same dangers to legislative independence
that are held to bar accountability for official conduct itself. As
our Brother WHITE cogently states,
post at
408 U. S.
556:
"Bribery is most often carried out by prearrangement; if that
part of the transaction may be plucked from its context and made
the basis of criminal charges, the Speech or Debate Clause loses
its force. It will be small comfort for a Congressman to know that
he cannot be prosecuted for his vote, whatever it may be, but he
can be prosecuted for an alleged agreement even if he votes
contrary to the asserted bargain. "
Page 408 U. S. 537
Thus, even if this were an issue of first impression, I would
hold that this prosecution, being an extra-congressional inquiry
into legislative acts and motives, is barred by the Speech or
Debate Clause.
What is especially disturbing about the Court's result, however,
is that this is not an issue of first impression, but one that was
settled six years ago in
United States v. Johnson,
383 U. S. 169
(1966). There, a former Congressman was charged with violating the
federal conflict of interest statute, 18 U.S.C. § 281 (1964 ed.),
and with conspiring to defraud the United States, 18 U.S.C. § 371,
by accepting a bribe in exchange for his agreement to seek
dismissal of federal indictments pending against officers of
several savings and loan companies. Part of the alleged conspiracy
was a speech delivered by Johnson on the floor of the House,
favorable to loan companies generally. The Government relied on
that speech at trial and questioned Johnson extensively about its
contents, authorship, and his reasons for delivering it. The Court
of Appeals set aside the conspiracy conviction, holding that the
Speech or Debate Clause barred such a prosecution based on an
allegedly corrupt promise to deliver a congressional speech. In
appealing that decision, the Government made the very same argument
that appears to persuade the Court today:
"[The rationale of the Clause] is applicable in suits based upon
the
content of a legislator's speech or action, where
immunity is necessary to prevent impediments to the free discharge
of his public duties. But it does not justify granting him immunity
from prosecution for accepting or agreeing to accept money to make
a speech in Congress. The latter case poses no threat which could
reasonably cause a Congressman to restrain himself in his official
speech, because no speech, as such, is being
Page 408 U. S. 538
questioned. It is only the
antecedent conduct of
accepting or agreeing to accept the bribe which is attacked in such
a prosecution."
"Whether the party taking the bribe lives up to his corrupt
promise or not is immaterial. The agreement is the essence of the
offense; when that is consummated, the offense is complete."
"3 Wharton, Criminal Law and Procedure, § 1383 (Anderson ed.
1957). . . . Thus, if respondent, after accepting the bribe, had
failed to carry out his bargain, he could still be prosecuted for
the same offense charged here, but it could not be argued that any
speech was being 'questioned' in his prosecution. The fact that
respondent fulfilled his bargain and delivered the corrupt speech
should not render the entire course of conduct constitutionally
protected."
Brief for the United States in
United States v.
Johnson, No. 25, O.T. 1965, pp. 10-11. The
Johnson
opinion answered this argument in two places. After emphasizing
that the prosecution at issue was
"based upon an allegation that a member of Congress abused his
position by conspiring to give a particular speech in return for
remuneration from private interests,"
the Court stated, 383 U.S. at
383 U. S.
180:
"However reprehensible such conduct may be, we believe the
Speech or Debate Clause extends at least so far as to prevent it
from being made the basis of a criminal charge against a member of
Congress of conspiracy to defraud the United States by impeding the
due discharge of government functions.
The essence of such a
charge in this context is that the Congressman's conduct was
improperly motivated, and . . . that is precisely what the Speech
or Debate Clause Generally forecloses from executive and judicial
inquiry."
(Emphasis supplied.)
Page 408 U. S. 539
Again, the Court stated,
id. at
383 U. S.
182-183:
"The Government argues that the clause was meant to prevent only
prosecutions based upon. the 'content' of speech, such as libel
actions, but not those founded on 'the antecedent unlawful conduct
of accepting or agreeing to accept a bribe.' Brief of the United
States, at 11. Although historically seditious libel was the most
frequent instrument for intimidating legislators, this has never
been the sole form of legal proceedings so employed, and the
language of the Constitution is framed in the broadest terms."
Finally, any doubt that the
Johnson Court rejected the
argument put forward by the Government was dispelled by its
citation of
Ex parte Wason, L.R. 4 Q.B. 573 (1869). In
that case, a private citizen moved to require a magistrate to
prosecute several members of the House of Lords for conspiring to
prevent his petition from being heard on the floor. The court
denied the motion, holding that
"statements made by members of either House of Parliament in
their places in the House . . . could not be made the foundation of
civil or criminal proceedings, however injurious they might be to
the interest of a third person. And a conspiracy to make such
statements would not make the persons guilty of it amenable to the
criminal law."
Id. at 576 (Cockburn, C.J.). Mr. Justice Blackburn
added,
"I entirely concur in thinking that the information did only
charge an agreement to make statements in the House of Lords, and
therefore did not charge any indictable offence."
Ibid.
Johnson, then, can only be read as holding that a
corrupt agreement to perform legislative acts, even if provable
without reference to the acts themselves, may not be the subject of
a general conspiracy prosecution.
Page 408 U. S. 540
In the face of that holding and
Johnson's rejection of
reasoning identical to its own, the Court finds support in the fact
that
Johnson "authorized a new trial on the conspiracy
count, provided that all references to the making of the speech
were eliminated."
Ante at
408 U. S. 511.
But the Court ignores the fact that, with the speech and its
motives excluded from consideration, this new trial was for nothing
more than a conspiracy to intervene before an Executive Department,
i.e., the Justice Department. And such executive
intervention has never been considered legislative conduct entitled
to the protection of the Speech or Debate Clause.
See
infra at
408 U. S. 542.
The Court cannot camouflage its departure from the holding of
Johnson by referring to a collateral ruling having little
relevance to the fundamental issues of legislative privilege
involved in that case. I would follow
Johnson and hold
that Senator Brewster's alleged promise, like the Congressman's
there, is immune from executive or judicial inquiry.
II
The only issue for me, then, is the one left open in
Johnson -- that is, the validity of a
"prosecution which, though possibly entailing inquiry into
legislative acts or motivations, is founded [not upon a general
conspiracy statute, but] upon a narrowly drawn statute passed by
Congress in the exercise of its legislative power to regulate the
conduct of its members."
383 U.S. at
383 U. S. 185.
Assuming that 18 U.S.C. § 201 is such a "narrowly drawn statute," I
do not believe that it, any more than a general enactment, can
serve as the instrument for holding a Congressman accountable for
his legislative acts outside the confines of his own chamber. The
Government offers several reasons why such a "waiver" of
legislative immunity should be allowed. None of these, it seems to
me, is sufficient to override
Page 408 U. S. 541
the public's interest in legislative independence, secured to it
by the principles of the Speech or Debate Clause. [
Footnote 2/1]
As a preliminary matter, the Government does not contend, nor
can it, that no forum was provided in which Senator Brewster might
have been punished if guilty. Article I, § 5, of the Constitution
provides that
"[e]ach House may determine the Rules of its Proceedings, punish
its Members for disorderly Behavior, and, with the Concurrence of
two thirds, expel a Member."
This power has a broad reach, extending
"to all cases where the offence is such as in the judgment of
the [House or] Senate is inconsistent with the trust and duty of a
member."
In re Chapman, 166 U. S. 661,
166 U. S.
669-670 (1897).
Chapman, for example, concerned
a Senate investigation of charges that Senate members had
speculated in stocks of companies interested in a pending tariff
bill. Similarly, the House of Representatives in 1873 censured two
members for accepting stock to forestall a congressional inquiry
into the Credit Mobilier. There are also many instances of
imprisonment or expulsion by Parliament of members who accepted
bribes. [
Footnote 2/2]
Though conceding that the Houses of Congress are empowered to
punish their members under Art. I, § 5, the Government urges that
Congress may also enact a statute, such as 18 U.S.C. § 201,
providing for judicial enforcement of that power. In support of
this position, the Government relies primarily on the following
language from the opinion in
Burton v. United States,
202 U. S. 344,
202 U. S. 367
(1906):
"While the framers of the Constitution intended
Page 408 U. S. 542
each Department should keep within its appointed sphere of
public action, it was never contemplated that the authority of the
Senate to admit to a seat in its body one who had been duly elected
as a Senator, or its power to expel him after being admitted,
should, in any degree, limit or restrict the authority of Congress
to enact such statutes, not forbidden by the Constitution, as the
public interests required for carrying into effect the powers
granted to it."
However,
Burton was not a case that involved conduct
protected by the Speech or Debate Clause. Senator Burton was
prosecuted for accepting money to influence the Post Office
Department in a mail fraud case in violation of Rev.Stat. § 1782,
13 Stat. 123. That was nonlegislative conduct, and as we said in
Johnson, supra, at
383 U. S.
172,
"[n]o argument is made, nor do we think that it could be
successfully contended, that the Speech or Debate Clause reaches
conduct, such as was involved in the attempt to influence the
Department of Justice, that is in no wise related to the due
functioning of the legislative process."
Such a prosecution, as the quoted excerpt from
Burton
specifically said, is "not forbidden by the Constitution," but that
holding has little relevance to a case, such as this one, involving
legislative acts and motives.
The Government, however, cites additional considerations to
support the authority of Congress to provide for judicial trials of
corrupt Members; the press of congressional business, the
possibility of politically motivated judgments by fellow Members,
and the procedural safeguards of a judicial trial are all cited as
reasons why Congress should be allowed to transfer the trial of a
corrupt Member from the Houses of Congress to the courts. Once
again, these are arguments urged and found unpersuasive in
Johnson. I find them no more
Page 408 U. S. 543
persuasive now. I may assume as a general matter that the
"Legislative Branch is not so well suited as politically
independent judges and juries to the task of ruling upon the
blameworthiness of, and levying appropriate punishment upon,
specific persons."
United States v. Brown, 381 U.
S. 437,
381 U. S. 445
(1965). Yet it does not necessarily follow that prosecutors,
judges, and juries are better equipped than legislators to make the
kinds of political judgments required here. Senators and
Congressmen are never entirely free of political pressures, whether
from their own constituents or from special interest lobbies.
Submission to these pressures, in the hope of political and
financial support or the fear of its withdrawal, is not uncommon,
nor is it necessarily unethical. [
Footnote 2/3] The line between legitimate influence and
outright bribe may be more a matter of emphasis than objective
fact, and in the end may turn on the trier's view of what was
proper in the context of the everyday realities and necessities of
political office. Whatever the special competence of the judicial
process
Page 408 U. S. 544
in other areas, members of Congress themselves are likely to be
in the better position to judge the issue of bribery relating to
legislative acts. The observation of Mr. Justice Frankfurter bears
repeating here:
"Courts are not the place for such controversies.
Self-discipline and the voters must be the ultimate reliance for
discouraging or correcting such abuses."
Tenney v. Brandhove, 341 U.S. at
341 U. S.
378.
Nor is the Member at the mercy of his colleagues, free to adjust
as they wish his rights to due process and free expression. It is
doubtful, for example, that the Congress could punish a Member for
the mere expression of unpopular views otherwise protected by the
First Amendment.
See Bond v. Floyd, 385 U.
S. 116 (1966). And judicial review of the legislative
inquiry is not completely foreclosed; the power of the House and
Senate to discipline the conduct of Members is not exempt from the
"restraints imposed by or found in the implications of the
Constitution."
Barry v. United States ex rel. Cunningham,
279 U. S. 597,
279 U. S. 614
(1929), quoted in
Powell v. McCormack, 395 U.
S. 486,
395 U. S. 519
n. 40 (1969).
Finally, the Government relies on the history of the Clause to
support a congressional power of delegation. While agreeing that
the Speech or Debate Clause was a "culmination of a long struggle
for parliamentary supremacy" and a reaction against the Crown's use
of "criminal and civil law to suppress and intimidate critical
legislators,"
Johnson, supra, at
383 U. S. 178,
the Government urges that this is not the whole story. It points
out that, while a large part of British history was taken up with
Parliament's struggles to free itself from royal domination, the
balance of power was not always ranged against it. Once Parliament
succeeded in asserting rightful dominion over its members and the
conduct of its business, Parliament sought to extend its reach
Page 408 U. S. 545
into areas and for purposes that can only be labeled an abuse of
legislative power. Aware of these abuses, the Framers, the
Government submits, did not mean Congress to have exclusive power,
but one which, by congressional delegation, might be shared with
the Executive and Judicial Branches.
That the Parliamentary privilege was indeed abused is historical
fact. By the close of the 17th century, Parliament had succeeded in
obtaining rights of free speech and debate as well as the power to
punish offenses of its members contravening the good order and
integrity of its processes. In 1694, five years after incorporation
of the Speech or Debate Clause in the English Bill of Rights, Lord
Falkland was found guilty in Commons of accepting a bribe of 2,000
pounds from the Crown, and was imprisoned during the pleasure of
the House. The Speaker of the House of Commons, Sir John Trevor,
was censured for bribery the following year. [
Footnote 2/4]
But Parliament was not content with mere control over its
members' conduct. Independence brought an assertion of absolute
power over the definition and reach of institutional
privileges.
"[T]he House of Commons and the House of Lords claimed absolute
and plenary authority over their privileges. This was an
independent body of law, described by Coke as
lex
parliamenti. Only Parliament could declare what those
privileges were or what new privileges were occasioned, and only
Parliament could judge what conduct constituted a breach of
privilege."
Watkins v. United States, 354 U.
S. 178,
354 U. S. 188
(1957). Thus, having established the basic privilege of its
members
Page 408 U. S. 546
to be free from civil arrest or punishment, the House extended
the privilege to its members' servants, and punished trespass on
the estates of its members, or theft of their or their servants'
goods. The House went so far as to declare its members' servants to
be outside the reach of the common law courts during the time that
Parliament was sitting. This led to the sale of "protections"
providing that named persons were servants of a particular member
and should be free from arrest, imprisonment, and molestation
during the term of Parliament. [
Footnote 2/5] These abuses in turn were brought to
America. By 1662, for example, the Virginia House of Burgesses had
succeeded in exempting not only its members, but their servants as
well, from arrest and molestation. [
Footnote 2/6]
The Government is correct in pointing out that the Framers,
aware of these abuses, were determined to guard against them.
Madison stated that the "legislative department is every where
extending the sphere of its activity, and drawing all power into
its impetuous vortex." [
Footnote
2/7] And Jefferson looked on the "tyranny of the
Page 408 U. S. 547
legislatures" as "the most formidable dread at present, and will
be for long years." [
Footnote 2/8]
Therefore the Framers refused to adopt the
lex
parliamenti, which would have allowed Congressmen and their
servants to enjoy numerous immunities from ordinary legal
restraints. But it does not follow that the Framers went further
and authorized Congress to transfer discipline of bribe takers to
the Judicial Branch. The Government refers us to nothing in the
Convention debates or in writings of the Framers that even remotely
supports the argument. Indeed, there is much in the history of the
Clause to point the other way, toward a personalized legislative
privilege not subject to defeasance even by a specific
congressional delegation to the courts.
The
Johnson opinion details the history. The Clause was
formulated by the Convention's Committee on Style, which phrased it
by revising Article V of the Articles of Confederation which had
provided: "Freedom of speech and debate in Congress shall not be
impeached or questioned
in any court, or place out of
Congress." (Emphasis supplied.) This wording derived, in turn, from
the provision of the English Bill of Rights of 1689 that
"Freedom of Speech, and Debates or Proceedings in Parliament,
ought not to be impeached or questioned
in any Court or Place
out of Parliament."
(Emphasis supplied.) The same wording, or variations of it,
appeared in state constitutions. Article VIII of the Maryland
Declaration of Rights (1776) declared that legislative freedom
"ought not to be impeached in any other court or judicature." The
Massachusetts Bill of Rights (Art. XXI, 1780) provided that the
"freedom of deliberation, speech, and debate, in either house of
the legislature,
i.e., so essential to the rights of the
people, that it cannot be the foundation of any accusation or
prosecution,
Page 408 U. S. 548
action or complaint, in any other court or place
whatsoever."
The New Hampshire Constitution (Art. XXX, 1784) contained a
provision virtually identical to Massachusetts'. In short
"[f]reedom of speech and action in the legislature was taken as
a matter of course by those who severed the Colonies from the Crown
and founded our Nation."
Tenney v. Brandhove, 341 U.S. at
341 U. S.
372.
Despite his fear of "legislative excess,"
Tenney v.
Brandhove, supra, at
341 U. S. 375,
Jefferson, when confronted with criticism of certain Congressmen by
the Richmond, Virginia, grand jury, said:
"[T]hat in order to give to the will of the people the influence
it ought to have, and the information which may enable them to
exercise it usefully, it was a part of the common law, adopted as
the law of this land, that their representatives, in the discharge
of their functions, should be free from the cognizance or coercion
of the coordinate branches, Judiciary and Executive."
8 The Works of Thomas Jefferson 322 (Ford ed.1904). Jefferson's
point of view was shared by his contemporaries [
Footnote 2/9] and found judicial expression as
early as 1808, in the
Coffin opinion,
supra. It
was there stated:
"In considering this article, it appears to me that the
privilege secured by it is not so much the privilege of the house
as an organized body, as of each individual member composing it,
who is entitled to
Page 408 U. S. 549
this privilege,
even against the declared will of the
house. For he does not hold this privilege at the pleasure of
the house, but derives it from the will of the people, expressed in
the constitution, which is paramount to the will of either or both
branches of the legislature. In this respect, the privilege here
secured resembles other privileges attached to each member by
another part of the constitution, by which he is exempted from
arrests on
mesne (or original) process, during his going
to, returning from, or attending the general court. Of these
privileges, thus secured to each member, he cannot be deprived, by
a resolve of the house, or by an act of the legislature."
4 Mass. at 27. (Emphasis supplied.)
In short, if the Framers contemplated judicial inquiry into
legislative acts, even on the specific authorization of Congress,
that intent is not reflected in the language of the Speech or
Debate Clause or contemporary understanding of legislative
privilege. History certainly shows that the Framers feared
unbridled legislative power. That fact, however, yields no basis
for an interpretation that in Art. I, §§ 1 and 8, the Framers
authorized Congress to ignore the prohibition against inquiry in
"any other place" and enact a statute either of general application
or specifically providing for a trial in the courts of a member who
takes a bribe for conduct related to legislative acts. [
Footnote 2/10]
Page 408 U. S. 550
III
I yield nothing to the Court in conviction that this
reprehensible and outrageous conduct, if committed by the Senator,
should not have gone unpunished. But whether a court or only the
Senate might undertake the task is a constitutional issue of
portentous significance, which must of course be resolved
uninfluenced by the magnitude of the perfidy alleged. It is no
answer that Congress assigned the task to the judiciary in enacting
18 U.S.C. § 201. Our duty is to Nation and Constitution, not
Congress. We are guilty of a grave disservice to both Nation and
Constitution when we permit Congress to shirk its responsibility in
favor of the courts. The Framers' judgment was that the American
people could have a Congress of independence and integrity only if
alleged misbehavior in the performance of legislative functions was
accountable solely to a Member's own House and never to the
executive or judiciary. The passing years have amply justified the
wisdom of that judgment. It is the Court's duty to enforce the
letter of the Speech or Debate Clause in that spirit. We did so in
deciding Johnson. In turning its back on that decision today, the
Court arrogates to the judiciary an authority committed by the
Constitution, in Senator Brewster's case, exclusively to the Senate
of the United States. Yet the Court provides no principled
justification, and I can think of none, for its denial that
United States v. Johnson compels affirmance of the
District Court. That decision is only six years old, and bears the
indelible imprint of the distinguished constitutional scholar who
wrote the opinion for the Court.
Johnson surely merited a
longer life.
Page 408 U. S. 551
[
Footnote 2/1]
Although the Court does not reach this issue, it adopts many of
the Government's arguments to show that the Speech or Debate Clause
is or should be wholly inapplicable to this case. My disagreement
with these contentions applies equally to their use by the Court in
support of its position.
[
Footnote 2/2]
See 408
U.S. 501fn2/4|>n. 4,
infra and accompanying
text.
[
Footnote 2/3]
Cf. Conflict of Interest and Federal Service,
Association of the Bar of the City of New York 115 (1960):
"The congressman's representative status lies at the heart of
the matter. As a representative, he is often supposed to represent
a particular economic group, and in many instances his own economic
self-interest is closely tied to that group. That is precisely why
it selected him. It is common to talk of the Farm Bloc, or the
Silver Senators. We would think odd a fishing state congressman who
was not mindful of the interests of the fishing industry -- though
he may be in the fishing business himself, and though his campaign
funds come in part from this source. This kind of representation is
considered inevitable and, indeed, generally applauded. Sterile
application of an abstract rule against acting in situations
involving self-interest would prevent the farmer senator from
voting on farm legislation or the Negro congressman from speaking
on civil rights bills. At some point a purist attitude toward the
evils of conflicts of interest in Congress runs afoul of the basic
premises of American representative government."
[
Footnote 2/4]
R. Luce, Legislative Assemblies 401-402 (1924). Another notable
instance was that of Robert Walpole, who in 1711 was expelled and
imprisoned by the House on charges of corruption. T.
Taswell-Langmead's English Constitutional History 583-584 (11th
ed., T. Plucknett, 1960).
[
Footnote 2/5]
C. Wittke, The History of English Parliamentary Privilege 39-47
(1921); Taswell-Langmead,
supra, at 580. The abuse of the
privilege lay as much in its arbitrary contraction as extension. In
1763, the House of Commons reacted angrily to a tract written by
one of its own members, John Wilkes, and withdrew the privilege
from him in order to permit his prosecution for seditious libel.
The House also expelled Wilkes, and he fled to France as an outlaw.
Upon his return to England in 1768, he was reelected to Parliament,
again expelled, tried for seditious libel, and sentenced to 22
months' imprisonment. The House refused to seat him on three
further occasions, and it was not until 1782 that the resolutions
expelling Wilkes and declaring him incapable of reelection were
expunged from the records of the House. Taswell-Langmead,
supra, at 584-585;
Powell v. McCormack,
395 U. S. 486,
395 U. S.
527-528 (1969).
[
Footnote 2/6]
M. Clarke, Parliamentary Privilege in the American Colonies 99
(1943).
[
Footnote 2/7]
The Federalist No. 48.
[
Footnote 2/8]
Tenney v. Brandhove, 341 U. S. 367,
341 U. S. 375
n. 4 (1951).
[
Footnote 2/9]
James Wilson, a member of the Convention committee responsible
for the Clause, stated:
"In order to enable and encourage a representative of the
publick to discharge his publick trust with firmness and success,
it is indispensably necessary, that he should enjoy the fullest
liberty of speech, and that he should be protected from the
resentment of every one, however powerful, to whom the exercise of
that liberty may occasion offence."
1 The Works of James Wilson 421 (R. McCloskey ed.1967).
[
Footnote 2/10]
While it is true that Congress has made the acceptance of a
bribe a crime ever since 1853, it should be noted that the earliest
federal bribery statute, passed by Congress in 1790, applied only
to judges who took bribes in exchange for an "opinion, judgment or
decree." Act of April 30, 1790, 1 Stat. 112, 117. It also appears
that the common law did not recognize the charge of bribe-taking by
a legislator. Blackstone, for example, defined bribery as "when a
judge, or other person concerned in the administration of justice,
takes any undue reward to influence his behaviour in his office." 4
W. Blackstone, Commentaries *139. Coke also regarded bribery as a
crime committed by judges. Coke, Third Institute c. 68, �� 1-2.
MR. JUSTICE WHITE, with whom MR. JUSTICE DOUGLAS and MR. JUSTICE
BRENNAN join, dissenting.
The question presented by this case is not whether bribery or
other offensive conduct on the part of Members of Congress must or
should go unpunished. No one suggests that the Speech or Debate
Clause insulates Senators and Congressmen from accountability for
their misdeeds. Indeed, the Clause itself is but one of several
constitutional provisions that make clear that Congress has broad
powers to try and punish its Members:
"[T]he Constitution expressly empowers each House to punish its
own members for disorderly behavior. We see no reason to doubt that
this punishment may, in a proper case be imprisonment, and that it
may be for refusal to obey some rule on that subject made by the
House for the preservation of order."
"So also, the penalty which each House is authorized to inflict
in order to compel the attendance of absent members may be
imprisonment, and this may be for a violation of some order or
standing rule on that subject."
"Each House is, by the Constitution, made the judge of the
election and qualification of its members. In deciding on these, it
has an undoubted right to examine witnesses and inspect papers,
subject to the usual rights of witnesses in such cases; and it may
be that a witness would be subject to like punishment at the hands
of the body engaged in trying a contested election, for refusing to
testify, that he would if the case were pending before a court of
judicature."
"The House of Representatives has the sole right to impeach
officers of the government, and the Senate to try them. Where the
question of such impeachment is before either body acting in its
appropriate
Page 408 U. S. 552
sphere on that subject, we see no reason to doubt the right to
compel the attendance of witnesses, and their answer to proper
questions, in the same manner and by the use of the same means that
courts of justice can in like cases."
Kilbourn v. Thompson, 103 U. S. 168,
103 U. S.
189-190 (1881). The sole issue here is in what forum the
accounting must take place -- whether the prosecution that the
Government proposes is consistent with the command that, "for any
Speech or Debate in either House, they [Members of Congress] hall
not be questioned in any other Place." U.S.Const., Art. I, § 6, cl.
1.
The majority disposes of this issue by distinguishing between
promise and performance. Even if a Senator or Congressman may not
be prosecuted for a corrupt legislative act, the Speech or Debate
Clause does not prohibit prosecution for a corrupt promise to
perform that act. If a Member of Congress promises to vote for or
against a bill in return for money, casts his vote in accordance
with the promise and accepts payment, the majority's view is that,
even though he may not he prosecuted for voting as he did, although
the vote was corrupt, the executive may prosecute and the judiciary
may try him for the corrupt agreement or for taking the money
either under a narrowly drawn statute or one of general
application. This distinction between a promise and an act will not
withstand scrutiny in terms of the values that the Speech or Debate
Clause was designed to secure.
The majority agrees that, in order to assure the independence
and integrity of the legislature and to reinforce the separation of
powers so deliberately established by the Founders, the Speech or
Debate Clause prevents a legislative act from being the basis of
criminal or civil liability. Concededly, a Member of Congress may
not be prosecuted or sued
for making a speech or voting
in
Page 408 U. S. 553
committee or on the floor, whether he was paid to do so or not.
The majority also appears to embrace the holding in
United
States v. Johnson, 383 U. S. 169
(1966), that a Member of Congress could not be convicted of a
conspiracy to defraud the Government where the purposes or motives
underlying his conduct as a legislator are called into question. If
one follows the mode of the majority's present analysis, the
prosecution in
Johnson was not for speaking, voting, or
performing any other legislative act in a particular manner; the
criminal act charged was a conspiracy to defraud the United States
anterior to any legislative performance. To prove the crime,
however, the prosecution introduced evidence that money was paid to
make a speech, among other things, and that the speech was made.
This, the Court held, violated the Speech or Debate Clause, because
it called into question the motives and purposes underlying
Congressman Johnson's performance of his legislative duties.
The same infirmity inheres in the present indictment, which was
founded upon two separate statutes. Title 18 U.S.C. § 201(g)
requires proof of a defendant's receipt, or an agreement or attempt
to receive, anything of value "for or because of any official act
performed or to be performed by him. . . ." Of course, not all, or
even many, official acts would be legislative acts protected by the
Speech or Debate Clause; but whatever the act, the Government must
identify it to prove its case. Here, we are left in no doubt
whatsoever, for the official acts expressly charged in the
indictment were in respect to "his action, vote and decision on
postage rate legislation." Similarly, there is no basis for arguing
that the indictment did not contemplate proof of performance of the
act, for the indictment in so many words charged the arrangement
was
"for and because of official acts
performed by him in
respect to his action, vote and decision on postage rate
legislation which
had been pending before
Page 408 U. S. 554
him in his official capacity."
(Emphasis added.) It is this indictment, not some other charge,
that was challenged and dismissed by the District Court. Like that
court, I would take the Government at its word: it alleged and
intended to prove facts that questioned and impugned the motives
and purposes underlying specified legislative acts of the Senator
and intended to use these facts as a basis for the conviction of
the Senator himself. Thus, taking the charge at face value, the
indictment represents an attempt to prosecute and convict a Member
of Congress not only for taking money but also for performing a
legislative act. Moreover, whatever the proof might be, the
indictment on its face charged a corrupt undertaking with respect
to the performance of legislative conduct that had already occurred
and so, without more, "questioned in [some] other Place" the speech
and debate of a Member of Congress. Such a charge is precisely the
kind that the Senator should not have been called upon to answer if
the Speech or Debate Clause is to fulfill its stated purpose.
Insofar as it charged crimes under 18 U.S.C. § 201(c)(1), the
indictment fares little better. That section requires proof of a
corrupt arrangement for the receipt of money and also proof that
the arrangement was in return for the defendant's "being influenced
in his performance of any official act. . . ." Whatever the
official act may prove to be, the Government cannot prove its case
without calling into question the motives of the Member in
performing that act, for it must prove that the Member undertook
for money to be influenced in that performance. Clearly, if the
Government sought to prove its case against a Member of Congress by
evidence of a legislative act, conviction could not survive in the
face of the holding in
Johnson. But even if an offense
under the statute could be established merely by proof of an
undertaking to cast a vote, which is not alleged in the indictment
or
Page 408 U. S. 555
shown at trial to have taken place one way or the other, the
motives of the legislator in performing his duties with respect to
the subject matter of the undertaking would nevertheless inevitably
be implicated. In charging the offense under § 201 (c)(1), the
indictment alleged a corrupt arrangement made
"in return for being influenced in his performance of official
acts in respect to his action, vote, and decision on postage
legislation which might at any time be pending before him in his
official capacity."
Again, I would take the Government at its word: it charged and
intended to prove facts that could not fail to implicate Senator
Brewster's performance of his legislative duties.
*
The use of criminal charges
"against critical or disfavored legislators by the executive in
a judicial forum was the chief fear prompting the long struggle for
parliamentary privilege,"
United States v. Johnson, 383 U.S. at
383 U. S. 182
(1966), and in applying the privilege "we look particularly to the
prophylactic purposes of the clause."
Ibid. Let us suppose
that the Executive Branch is informed that private interests are
paying a Member of Congress to oppose administration-sponsored
legislation. The Congressman is chairman of a key committee where a
vote is pending. A representative from the Executive Branch informs
the Congressman of the allegations against him, hopes the charges
are not true, and expresses confidence that the committee will
report the bill and that the Member will support it on the floor.
The pressure on the Congressmen, corrupt or not, is undeniable.
He
Page 408 U. S. 556
will clearly fare better in any future criminal prosecution if
he answers the charge of corruption with evidence that he voted
contrary to the alleged bargain. Even more compelling is the
likelihood that he will not be prosecuted at all if he follows the
administration's suggestion and supports the bill. Putting aside
the potential for abuse in ill-conceived, mistaken, or false
accusations, the Speech or Debate Clause was designed to prevent
just such an exercise of executive power. It is no answer to
maintain that the potential for abuse does not inhere in a
prosecution for a completed bribery transaction where the
legislative act has already occurred. A corrupt vote may not be
made the object of a criminal prosecution because otherwise the
Executive would be armed with power to control the vote in
question, if forewarned, or, in any event, to control other
legislative conduct.
All of this comes to naught if the executive may prosecute for a
promise to vote though not for the vote itself. The same hazards to
legislative independence inhere in the two prosecutions. Bribery is
most often carried out by prearrangement; if that part of the
transaction may be plucked from its context and made the basis of
criminal charges, the Speech or Debate Clause loses its force. It
will be small comfort for a Congressman to know that he cannot be
prosecuted for his vote, whatever it may be, but he can be
prosecuted for an alleged agreement even if he votes contrary to
the asserted bargain.
The realities of the American political system, of which the
majority fails to take account, render particularly illusory a
Speech or Debate Clause distinction between a promise to perform a
legislative act and the act itself. Ours is a representative
government. Candidates for office engage in heated contests and the
victor is he who receives the greatest number of votes from his
constituents. These campaigns are run on
Page 408 U. S. 567
platforms that include statements of intention and undertakings
to promote certain policies. These promises are geared, at least in
part, to the interests.of the Congressman's constituency. Members
of Congress may be legally free from dictation by the voters, but
there is a residual conviction that they should have due regard for
the interests of their States or districts, if only because on
election day a Member is answerable for his conduct.
Serving constituents is a crucial part of a legislator's ongoing
duties. Congressmen receive a constant stream of complaints and
requests for help or service. Judged by the volume and content of a
Congressman' mail, the right to petition is neither theoretical nor
ignored. It has never been thought unethical for a Member of
Congress whose performance on the job may determine the success of
his next campaign not only to listen to the petitions of interest
groups in his State or district, which may come from every
conceivable group of people, but also to support or oppose
legislation serving or threatening those interests.
Against this background a second fact of American political life
assumes considerable importance for the purposes of this case.
Congressional campaigns are most often financed with contributions
from those interested in supporting particular Congressmen and
their policies. A legislator must maintain a working relationship
with his constituents not only to garner votes to maintain his
office but to generate financial support for his campaigns. He must
also keep in mind the potential effect of his conduct upon those
from whom he has received financial support in the past and those
whose help he expects or hopes to have in the next campaign. An
expectation or hope of future assistance can arise because
constituents have indicated that support will be forthcoming if the
Member of Congress champions their point of view.
Page 408 U. S. 558
Financial support may also arrive later from those who approve
of a Congressman's conduct and have an expectation it will
continue. Thus, mutuality of support between legislator and
constituent is inevitable. Constituent contributions to a
Congressman and his support of constituent interests will
repeatedly coincide in time or closely follow one another. It will
be the rare Congressman who never accepts campaign contributions
from persons or interests whose view he has supported or will
support, by speech making, voting, or bargaining with fellow
legislators.
All of this, or mot of it, may be wholly within the law and
consistent with contemporary standards of political ethics.
Nevertheless, the opportunities for an Executive, in whose sole
discretion the decision to prosecute rests under the statute before
us, to claim that legislative conduct has been sold are obvious and
undeniable. These opportunities, inherent in the political process
as it now exists, create an enormous potential for executive
control of legislative behavior by threats or suggestions of
criminal prosecution -- precisely the evil that the Speech or
Debate Clause was designed to prevent.
Neither the majority opinion nor the statute under which
Brewster is charged distinguishes between campaign contributions
and payments designed for or put to personal use. To arm the
Executive with the power to prosecute for taking political
contributions in return for an agreement to introduce or support
particular legislation or policies is to vest enormous leverage in
the Executive and the courts. Members of Congress may find
themselves in the dilemma of being forced to conduct themselves
contrary to the interests of those who provide financial support or
declining that support. They may also feel constrained to listen
less often to the entreaties and demands of potential contributors.
The threat of prosecution for supposed missteps that
Page 408 U. S. 559
are difficult to define and fall close to the line of what
ordinarily is considered permissible, even necessary, conduct
scarcely ensures that legislative independence that is the root of
the Speech or Debate Clause.
Even if the statute and this indictment were deemed limited to
payments clearly destined for, or actually put to, personal use in
exchange for a promise to perform a legislative act, the Speech or
Debate Clause would still be offended. The potential for executive
harassment is not diminished merely because the conduct made
criminal is more clearly defined. A Member of Congress becomes
vulnerable to abuse each time he makes a promise to a constituent
on a matter over which he has some degree of legislative power, and
the possibility of harassment can inhibit his exercise of power as
well as his relations with constituents. In addition, such a
prosecution presents the difficulty of defining when money obtained
by a legislator is destined for or has been put to personal use.
For the legislator who uses both personal funds and campaign
contributions to maintain himself in office, the choice of which to
draw upon may have more to do with bookkeeping than bribery; yet
any interchange of funds would certainly render his conduct
suspect. Even those Members of Congress who keep separate accounts
for campaign contributions but retain unrestricted drawing rights
would remain open to a charge that the money was, in fact, for
personal use. In both cases, the possibility of a bribery
prosecution presents the problem of determining exactly those
purposes for which campaign contributions can legitimately be used.
The difficulty of drawing workable lines enhances the prospects for
executive control and correspondingly diminishes congressional
freedom of action.
The majority does not deny the potential for executive control
that inheres in sanctioning this prosecution. Instead, it purports
to define the problem away by asserting
Page 408 U. S. 560
that the Speech or Debate Clause reaches only prosecutions for
legislative conduct and that a promise to vote for a bill, as
distinguished from the vote itself, does not amount to a
legislative act. The implication is that a prosecution based upon a
corrupt promise no more offends the Speech or Debate Clause than
the prosecution of a Congressman for assault, robbery, or murder.
The power to prosecute may threaten legislative independence, but
the Constitution does not, for that reason, forbid it. I find this
unpersuasive.
The fact that the Executive may prosecute Members of Congress
for ordinary criminal conduct, which surely he can despite the
potential for influencing legislative conduct, cannot itself
demonstrate that prosecutions for corrupt promises to perform
legislative acts would be equally constitutional. The argument
proves too much, for it would as surely authorize prosecutions for
the legislative act itself. Moreover, there is a fundamental
difference in terms of potential abuse between prosecutions for
ordinary crime and those based upon a promise to perform a
legislative act. Even the most vocal detractor of Congress could
not accurately maintain that the Executive would often have
credible basis for accusing a member of Congress of murder, theft,
rape, or other such crimes. But the prospects for asserting an
arguably valid claim are far wider in scope for an Executive prone
to fish in legislative waters and to search for correlations
between legislative performance and financial support. The
possibilities are indeed endless, as is the potential for
abuse.
The majority ignores another vital difference between executive
authority to prosecute for ordinary crime and the power to
challenge undertakings or conspiracies to corrupt the legislative
process. In a prosecution for drunken driving or assault, the
manner in which a Congressman performed his legislative tasks is
quite irrelevant
Page 408 U. S. 561
to either prosecution or defense. In the trial of a Congressman
for making a corrupt promise to vote, on the other hand, proof that
his vote was, in fact, contrary to the terms of the alleged bargain
will make a strong defense.
See United States v. Johnson,
383 U.S. at
383 U. S.
176-177. A Congressman who knows he is under
investigation for a corrupt undertaking will be well advised to
conduct his affairs in a manner wholly at odds with the theory of
the charge which may be lodged against him. As a practical matter,
to prosecute a Congressman for agreeing to accept money in exchange
for a promise to perform a legislative act inherently implicates
legislative conduct. And to divine a distinction between promise
and performance is wholly at odds with protecting that legislative
independence that is the heart of the Speech or Debate Clause.
Congress itself clearly did not make the distinction that the
majority finds dispositive. The statute before us is a
comprehensive effort to sanitize the legislative environment. It
expressly permits prosecutions of members of Congress for voting or
promising to vote in exchange for money. The statute does not
concern itself with murder or other undertakings unrelated to the
legislative process. Congress no doubt believed it consistent with
the Speech or Debate Clause to authorize executive prosecutions for
corrupt voting. Equally obvious is the fact that Congress drew no
distinction in legislative terms between prosecutions based upon
voting and those based upon motivations underlying legislative
conduct.
The arguments that the majority now embraces were the very
contentions that the Government made in
United States v.
Johnson, supra. In rejecting those arguments on the facts of
that case, where legislative conduct as well as a prior conspiracy
formed a major part of the Government's proof, the Court referred
with
Page 408 U. S. 562
approval to
Ex parte Wason, L.R. 4 Q.B. 573 (1869), in
which the question was whether members of the House of Lords could
be prosecuted for a conspiracy to prevent presentation of a
petition on the floor of Lords.
Johnson, supra, at
383 U. S. 183,
sets out the reaction of the English court:
"The court denied the motion, stating that statements made in
the House"
"could not be made the foundation of civil or criminal
proceedings. . . . And a conspiracy to make such statements would
not make the person guilty of it amenable to the criminal law."
"
Id. at 576. (Cockburn, C.J.) Mr. Justice Lush
added,"
"I am clearly of opinion that we ought not to allow it to be
doubted for a moment that the motives or intentions of members of
either House cannot be inquired into by criminal proceedings with
respect to anything they may do or say in the House."
"
Id. at 577."
The
Wason court clearly refused to distinguish between
promise and performance; the legislative privilege applied to both.
Mr. Justice Harlan, writing for the Court in
Johnson, took
no issue with this position. Indeed, he indicated that the Speech
or Debate Clause barred any prosecution under a general statute
where there is drawn in question "the legislative acts of . . . the
member of Congress
or his motives for performing them."
383 U.S. at
383 U. S. 185
(emphasis added). I find it difficult to believe that, under the
statute there involved, the
Johnson Court would have
permitted a prosecution based upon a promise to perform a
legislative act.
Because it gives a begrudging interpretation to the clause, the
majority finds it can avoid dealing with the position upon which
the Government placed principal reliance in its brief in this
Court.
Johnson put aside the question whether an otherwise
impermissible prosecution
Page 408 U. S. 563
conducted pursuant to a statute such as we now have before us --
a statute specifically including congressional conduct and
purporting to be an exercise of congressional power to discipline
its Members -- would be consistent with the Speech or Debate
Clause. As must be apparent from what so far has been said, I am
convinced that such a statute contravenes the letter and purpose of
the Clause. True, Congress itself has defined the crime and
specifically delegated to the Executive the discretion to prosecute
and to the courts the power to try. Nonetheless, I fail to
understand how a majority of Congress can bind an objecting
Congressman to a course so clearly at odds with the constitutional
command that legislative conduct shall be subject to question in no
place other than the Senate or the House of Representatives. The
Speech or Debate Clause is an allocation of power. It authorizes
Congress to call offending members to account in their appropriate
Houses. A statute that represents an abdication of that power is,
in my view, impermissible.
I return to the beginning. The Speech or Debate Clause does not
immunize corrupt Congressmen. It reserves the power to discipline
in the Houses of Congress. I would insist that those Houses develop
their own institutions and procedures for dealing with those in
their midst who would prostitute the legislative process.
* In
Gravel v. United States, post, p.
408 U. S. 606, it
is held that the Speech or Debate Clause does not immunize criminal
acts performed in preparation for or execution of a legislative
act. But the unprotected acts referred to there were criminal in
themselves, provable without reference to a legislative act and
without putting the defendant Member to the task of defending the
integrity of his legislative performance. Here, as stated, the
crime charged necessarily implicates the Member's legislative
duties.