1. The act of Congress of January 24th, 1865, providing that,
after its passage, no person shall be admitted as an attorney and
counselor to the bar of the Supreme Court, and, after March 4th,
1865, to the bar of any Circuit or District Court of the United
States, or Court of Claims, or be allowed to appear and be heard by
virtue of any previous admission, or any special power of attorney,
unless he shall have first taken and subscribed to the oath
prescribed in the act of July 2d, 1862 -- which latter act requires
the affiant to swear or affirm that he has never voluntarily borne
arms against the United States since he has been a citizen thereof,
that he has voluntarily given no aid, countenance, counsel, or
encouragement to persons engaged in armed hostility thereto, that
he has neither sought nor accepted, nor attempted to exercise the
functions of any office whatever under any authority or pretended
authority in hostility to the United States, and that he has not
yielded a voluntary support to any pretended government, authority,
power, or constitution within the United States hostile or inimical
thereto -- operates as a legislative decree excluding from the
practice of the law in the courts of the United States all parties
who have offended in any of the particulars enumerated.
2. Exclusion from the practice of the law in the Federal courts,
or from any of the ordinary avocations of life for
past
conduct is punishment for such conduct. The exaction of the
oath is the mode provided for ascertaining the parties upon whom
the act is intended to operate.
3. The act being of this character partakes of the nature of a
bills of pains and penalties, and is subject to the constitutional
inhibition against the passage of bills of attainder, under which
general designation bills of pains and penalties are included.
4. In the exclusion which the act adjudges, it imposes a
punishment for some of the acts specified which were not punishable
at the time they were committed, and for other of the acts, it adds
a new punishment to that before prescribed, and it is thus within
the inhibition of the Constitution against the passage of an
ex
post facto law.
5. Attorneys and counselors are not officers of the United
States; they are officers of the court, admitted as such by its
order upon evidence of their possessing sufficient legal learning
and fair private character.
6. The order of admission is the judgment of the court that the
parties possess the requisite qualifications and are entitled to
appear as attorneys and counselors and conduct causes therein. From
its entry, the parties become officers of the court, and are
responsible to it for professional misconduct. They hold their
office during good behavior, and can only be deprived of it for
misconduct ascertained and declared by the judgment of the court
after opportunity to be heard has been afforded. Their
admission and their exclusion are the exercise of judicial
power.
Page 71 U. S. 334
7. The right of an attorney and counselor, acquired by his
admission, to appear for suitors and to argue causes, is not a mere
indulgence -- a matter of grace and favor -- revocable at the
pleasure of the court, or at the command of the legislature. It is
a right of which he can only be deprived by the judgment of the
court, for moral or professional delinquency.
8. The admitted power of Congress to prescribe qualifications
for the office of attorney and counselor in the Federal courts
cannot be exercised as a means for the infliction of punishment for
the past conduct of such officers, against the inhibition of the
Constitution.
9. The power of pardon conferred by the Constitution upon the
President is unlimited except in cases of impeachment. It extends
to every offence known to the law, and may be exercised at any time
after its commission, either before legal proceedings are taken or
during their pendency, or after conviction and judgment. The power
is not subject to legislative control.
10. A pardon reaches the punishment prescribed for an offence
and the guilt of the offender. If granted before conviction, it
prevents any of the penalties and disabilities consequent upon
conviction from attaching; if granted after conviction, it removes
the penalties and disabilities and restores him to all his civil
rights. It gives him a new credit and capacity. There is only this
limitation to its operation: it does not restore offices forfeited,
or property of interests vested in others in consequence of the
conviction and judgment.
11. The petitioner in this case, having received a full pardon
for all offences committed by his participation, direct or implied,
in the Rebellion, is relieved from all penalties and disabilities
attached to the offence of treason, committed by such
participation. For that offence, he is beyond the reach of
punishment of any kind. He cannot, therefore, be excluded by reason
of that offence from continuing in the enjoyment of a previously
acquired right to appear as an attorney and counselor in the
Federal courts.
On the 2d of July, 1862, Congress, by "An act to prescribe an
oath of office, and for other purposes," [
Footnote 1] enacted:
"That hereafter every person elected or appointed to any office
of honor or profit under the government of the United States,
either in the civil, military, or naval departments of the public
service, excepting the President of the United States, shall,
before entering upon the duties of such office, take and subscribe
the following oath or affirmation:"
"I, A. B., do solemnly swear (or affirm) that I have never
voluntarily borne arms against the United States since I have been
a citizen thereof;
that I have voluntarily given no aid,
countenance, counsel, or encouragement to
Page 71 U. S. 335
persons engaged in armed hostility thereto; that I have
neither sought nor accepted, not attempted to exercise the
functions of
any office whatever, under any authority or
pretended authority in hostility to the United States; that I
have not yielded a voluntary support to any pretended government,
authority, power, or constitution with the United States, hostile
or inimical thereto. And I do further swear (or affirm) that, to
the best of my knowledge and ability, I will support and defend the
Constitution of the United States against all enemies, foreign and
domestic; that I will bear true faith and allegiance to the same;
that I take this obligation freely, without any mental reservation
or purpose of evasion, and that I will well and faithfully
discharge the duties of the office on which I am about to enter, so
help me God;"
&c.
"Any person who shall falsely take the said oath shall be guilty
of perjury, and, on conviction, in addition to the penalties now
prescribed for that offence, shall be deprived of his office, and
rendered incapable forever after of holding any office or place
under the United States."
On the 24th of January, 1865, [
Footnote 2] Congress passed a supplementary act extending
these provisions so as to embrace attorneys and counselors of the
courts of the United States. I t is as follows:
"No person, after the date of this act, shall be admitted to the
bar of the
Supreme Court of the United States, or at any
time after the fourth of March next, shall be admitted to the bar
of any Circuit or District Court of the United States, or of
the Court of Claims, as an attorney or counselor of such
court, or shall be allowed to appear and be heard in any such
court, by virtue of any previous admission, or any special power of
attorney, unless he shall have first taken and subscribed the oath
prescribed in 'An act to prescribe an oath of office and for other
purposes,' approved July 2d, 1862. And any person who shall falsely
take the said oath shall be guilty of perjury, and, on
conviction,"
&c.
By the Judiciary Act of 1789, the Supreme Court has power to
make rules and decide upon the qualifications of attorneys.
At the December Term of 1860, A. H. Garland, Esquire, was
admitted as an attorney and counselor of the court, and took and
subscribed the oath then required. The second rule, as it then
existed, was as follows:
Page 71 U. S. 336
"It shall be requisite to the admission of attorneys and
counselors to practise in this court that they shall have been such
for three years past in the Supreme Courts of the States to which
they respectively belong,
and that their private and
professional character shall appear to be fair."
"They shall respectively take the following oath or affirmation,
viz.:"
"I, A. B., do solemnly swear (or affirm, as the case may be)
that I will demean myself as an attorney and counselor of this
court, uprightly, and according to law, and that I will support the
Constitution of the United States."
There was then no other qualification for attorneys in this
court than such as are named in this rule.
In March, 1865, this rule was changed by the addition of a
clause requiring an oath, in conformity with the act of
Congress.
At the same term at which he was admitted, Mr. Garland appeared,
and presented printed argument in several cases in which he was
counsel. His name continued on the roll of attorneys from then to
the present time. but the late Rebellion intervened, and all
business in which he was concerned at the time of his admission
remained undisposed of. In some of the cases alluded to, fees were
paid, and in others, they were partially paid. Having taken part in
the Rebellion against the United States by being in the Congress of
the so-called Confederate States from May, 1861, until the final
surrender of the forces of such Confederate States -- first in the
lower house and afterwards in the Senate of that body as the
representative of the State of Arkansas, of which he was a citizen
-- Mr. Garland could not take the oath prescribed by the acts of
Congress before mentioned and the rule of the court of March,
1865.
The State, in May, 1861, passed an ordinance of secession,
purporting to withdraw herself from the Union, and afterwards, in
the same year, by another ordinance, attached herself to the
so-called Confederate States.
In July, 1865, Mr. Garland received from the President
Page 71 U. S. 337
a pardon, by which the chief magistrate, reciting that Mr.
Garland, "by taking part in the late Rebellion against the
government, had made himself liable to heavy pains and penalties,"
&c., did thereby
"Grant to the said A. H. Garland a FULL PARDON AND AMNESTY for
all offences by him committed, arising from participation, direct
or implied, in the said Rebellion, conditioned as follows: this
pardon to begin and take effect from the day on which the said A.
H. Garland shall take the oath prescribed in the proclamation of
the President, dated May 29th, 1865, and to be void and of no
effect if the said A. H. Garland shall hereafter at any time
acquire any property whatever in slaves, or make use of slave
labor, and that he first pay all costs which may have accrued in
any proceedings hitherto instituted against his person or property.
And upon the further condition that the said A. H. Garland shall
notify the Secretary of State in writing that he has received and
accepted the foregoing pardon."
The oath required was taken by Mr. Garland and annexed to the
pardon. It was to the purport that he would thenceforth
"faithfully support, protect, and defend the Constitution of the
United States and the union of the States thereunder, and that he
would in like manner abide by and faithfully support all laws and
proclamations which had been made during the existing Rebellion
with reference to the emancipation of slaves."
Mr. Garland now produced this pardon, and, by petition filed in
court, asked permission to continue to practise as an attorney and
counselor of the court, without taking the oath required by the act
of January 24th, 1865, and the rule of the court. He rested his
application principally upon two grounds:
1st. That the act of January 24th, 1865, so far as it affected
his status in the court, was unconstitutional and void, and,
2d. That, if the act were constitutional, he was released from
compliance with its provisions by the pardon of the President.
Page 71 U. S. 374
Mr. Justice FIELD delivered the opinion of the court.
On the second of July, 1862, Congress passed an act prescribing
an oath to be taken by every person elected or appointed to any
office of honor or profit under the government of the United
States, either in the civil, military, or naval departments of the
public service, except the President, before entering upon the
duties of his office, and before being entitled to its salary, or
other emoluments. On the 24th of January, 1865, Congress, by a
supplementary act, extended its provisions so as to embrace
attorneys and counselors of the courts of the United States. This
latter act provides that, after its passage, no person shall be
admitted as an attorney and counselor to the bar of the Supreme
Court, and, after the fourth of March, 1865, to the bar of any
Circuit or District Court of the United States, or of the Court of
Claims, or be allowed to appear and be heard by virtue of any
previous admission, or any special power of attorney,
Page 71 U. S. 375
unless he shall have first taken and subscribed the oath
prescribed by the act of July 2d, 1862. It also provides that the
oath shall be preserved among the files of the court, and if any
person take it falsely, he shall be guilty of perjury and, upon
conviction, shall be subject to the pains and penalties of that
offence.
At the December Term, 1860, the petitioner was admitted as an
attorney and counselor of this court, and took and subscribed the
oath then required. By the second rule, as it then existed, it was
only requisite to the admission of attorneys and counselors of this
court that they should have been such officers for the three
previous years in the highest courts of the States to which they
respectively belonged, and that their private and professional
character should appear to be fair.
In March, 1865, this rule was changed by the addition of a
clause requiring the administration of the oath in conformity with
the act of Congress.
In May, 1861, the State of Arkansas, of which the petitioner was
a citizen, passed an ordinance of secession which purported to
withdraw the State from the Union, and afterwards, in the same
year, by another ordinance, attached herself to the so-called
Confederate States, and by act of the congress of that confederacy
was received as one of its members.
The petitioner followed the State, and was one of her
representatives -- first in the lower house and afterwards in the
senate of the congress of that confederacy, and was a member of the
senate at the time of the surrender of the Confederate forces to
the armies of the United States.
In July, 1865, he received from the President of the United
States a full pardon for all offences committed by his
participation, direct or implied, in the Rebellion. He now produces
his pardon, and asks permission to continue to practise as an
attorney and counselor of the court without taking the oath
required by the act of January 24th, 1865, and the rule of the
court, which he is unable to take by reason of the offices he held
under the Confederate government.
Page 71 U. S. 376
He rests his application principally upon two grounds:
1st. That the act of January 24th, 1865, so far as it affects
his status in the court, is unconstitutional and void, and,
2d. That, if the act be constitutional, he is released from
compliance with its provisions by the pardon of the President.
The oath prescribed by the act is as follows:
1st. That the deponent has never voluntarily borne arms against
the United States since he has been a citizen thereof;
2d. That he has not voluntarily given aid, countenance, counsel,
or encouragement to persons engaged in armed hostility thereto;
3d. That he has never sought, accepted, or attempted to exercise
the functions of any office whatsoever, under any authority, or
pretended authority, in hostility to the United States;
4th. That he has not yielded a voluntary support to any
pretended government, authority, power, or constitution, within the
United States, hostile or inimical thereto; and,
5th. That he will support and defend the Constitution of the
United States against all enemies, foreign and domestic, and will
bear true faith and allegiance to the same.
This last clause is promissory only, and requires no
consideration. The questions presented for our determination arise
from the other clauses. These all relate to past acts. Some of
these acts constituted, when they were committed, offences against
the criminal laws of the country; others may or may not have been
offences according to the circumstances under which they were
committed and the motives of the parties. The first clause covers
one form of the crime of treason, and the deponent must declare
that he has not been guilty of this crime not only during the war
of the Rebellion, but during any period of his life since he has
been a citizen. The second clause goes beyond the limits of
treason, and embraces not only the giving of aid and encouragement
of a treasonable nature to a public enemy, but also the giving of
assistance of any kind to persons engaged
Page 71 U. S. 377
in armed hostility to the United States. The third clause
applies to the seeking, acceptance, or exercise not only of offices
created for the purpose of more effectually carrying on
hostilities, but also of any of those offices which are required in
every community, whether in peace or war, for the administration of
justice and the preservation of order. The fourth clause not only
includes those who gave a cordial and active support to the hostile
government, but also those who yielded a reluctant obedience to the
existing order, established without their co-operation.
The statute is directed against parties who have offended in any
of the particulars embraced by these clauses. And its object is to
exclude them from the profession of the law, or at least from its
practice in the courts of the United States. As the oath prescribed
cannot be taken by these parties, the act, as against them,
operates as a legislative decree of perpetual exclusion. And
exclusion from any of the professions or any of the ordinary
avocations of life for past conduct can be regarded in no other
light than as punishment for such conduct. The exaction of the oath
is the mode provided for ascertaining the parties upon whom the act
is intended to operate, and, instead of lessening, increases its
objectionable character. All enactments of this kind partake of the
nature of bills of pains and penalties, and are subject to the
constitutional inhibition against the passage of bills of
attainder, under which general designation they are included.
In the exclusion which the statute adjudges, it imposes a
punishment for some of the acts specified which were not punishable
at the time they were committed, and, for other of the acts, it
adds a new punishment to that before prescribed, and it is thus
brought within the further inhibition of the Constitution against
the passage of an
ex post facto law. In the case of
Cummings against The State of Missouri, just decided, we
have had occasion to consider at length the meaning of a bill of
attainder and of an
ex post facto law in the clause of the
Constitution forbidding their passage by the States, and it is
unnecessary to repeat here
Page 71 U. S. 378
what we there said. A like prohibition is contained in the
Constitution against enactments of this kind by Congress, and the
argument presented in that case against certain clauses of the
constitution of Missouri is equally applicable to the act of
Congress under consideration in this case.
The profession of an attorney and counselor is not like an
office created by an act of Congress, which depends for its
continuance, its powers, and its emoluments upon the will of its
creator, and the possession of which may be burdened with any
conditions not prohibited by the Constitution. Attorneys and
counselors are not officers of the United States; they are not
elected or appointed in the manner prescribed by the Constitution
for the election and appointment of such officers. They are
officers of the court, admitted as such by its order upon evidence
of their possessing sufficient legal learning and fair private
character. It has been the general practice in this country to
obtain this evidence by an examination of the parties. In this
court, the fact of the admission of such officers in the highest
court of the States to which they respectively belong, for three
years preceding their application, is regarded as sufficient
evidence of the possession of the requisite legal learning, and the
statement of counsel moving their admission sufficient evidence
that their private and professional character is fair. The order of
admission is the judgment of the court that the parties possess the
requisite qualifications as attorneys and counselors, and are
entitled to appear as such and conduct causes therein. From its
entry, the parties become officers of the court, and are
responsible to it for professional misconduct. They hold their
office during good behavior, and can only be deprived of it for
misconduct ascertained and declared by the judgment of the court
after opportunity to be heard has been afforded. [
Footnote 3] Their admission or their
exclusion is not the exercise of a mere ministerial power. It is
the exercise of
Page 71 U. S. 379
judicial power, and has been so held in numerous cases. It was
so held by the Court of Appeals of New York in the matter of the
application of Cooper for admission. [
Footnote 4] "Attorneys and counselors," said that
court,
"are not only officers of the court, but officers whose duties
relate almost exclusively to proceedings of a judicial nature. And
hence their appointment may, with propriety, be intrusted to the
courts, and the latter in performing this duty may very justly be
considered as engaged in the exercise of their appropriate judicial
functions."
In
Ex parte Secombe, [
Footnote 5] a mandamus to the Supreme Court of the
Territory of Minnesota to vacate an order removing an attorney and
counselor was denied by this court on the ground that the removal
was a judicial act. "We are not aware of any case," said the
court,
"where a mandamus was issued to an inferior tribunal, commanding
it to reverse or annul its decision, where the decision was in its
nature a judicial act and within the scope of its jurisdiction and
discretion."
And, in the same case, the court observed that
"it has been well settled by the rules and practice of common
law courts that it rests exclusively with the court to determine
who is qualified to become one of its officers as an attorney and
counselor, and for what cause he ought to be removed."
The attorney and counselor, being by the solemn judicial act of
the court clothed with his office, does not hold it as a matter of
grace and favor. The right which it confers upon him to appear for
suitors and to argue causes is something more than a mere
indulgence, revocable at the pleasure of the court or at the
command of the legislature. It is a right of which he can only be
deprived by the judgment of the court for moral or professional
delinquency.
The legislature may undoubtedly prescribe qualifications for the
office to which he must conform, as it may, where it has exclusive
jurisdiction, prescribe qualifications for the pursuit of any of
the ordinary avocations of life. The
Page 71 U. S. 380
question in the case is not as to the power of Congress to
prescribe qualifications, but whether that power has been exercised
as a means for the infliction of punishment, against the
prohibition of the Constitution. That this result cannot be
effected indirectly by a State under the form of creating
qualifications we have held in the case of
Cummings v. The
State of Missouri, and the reasoning by which that conclusion
was reached applies equally to similar action on the part of
Congress.
This view is strengthened by a consideration of the effect of
the pardon produced by the petitioner, and the nature of the
pardoning power of the President.
The Constitution provides that the President "shall have power
to grant reprieves and pardons for offences against the United
States, except in cases of impeachment." [
Footnote 6]
The power thus conferred is unlimited, with the exception
stated. It extends to every offence known to the law, and may be
exercised at any time after its commission, either before legal
proceedings are taken or during their pendency or after conviction
and judgment. This power of the President is not subject to
legislative control. Congress can neither limit the effect of his
pardon nor exclude from its exercise any class of offenders. The
benign prerogative of mercy reposed in him cannot be fettered by
any legislative restrictions.
Such being the case, the inquiry arises as to the effect and
operation of a pardon, and on this point all the authorities
concur. A pardon reaches both the punishment prescribed for the
offence and the guilt of the offender, and when the pardon is full,
it releases the punishment and blots out of existence the guilt, so
that, in the eye of the law, the offender is as innocent as if he
had never committed the offence. If granted before conviction, it
prevents any of the penalties and disabilities consequent upon
conviction from attaching; if granted after conviction, it removes
the penalties and disabilities and restores him to all his civil
rights; it makes
Page 71 U. S. 381
him, as it were, a new man, and gives him a new credit and
capacity.
There is only this limitation to its operation: it does not
restore offices forfeited or property or interests vested in others
in consequence of the conviction and judgment. [
Footnote 7]
The pardon produced by the petitioner is a full pardon "for all
offences by him committed, arising from participation, direct or
implied, in the Rebellion," and is subject to certain conditions
which have been complied with. The effect of this pardon is to
relieve the petitioner from all penalties and disabilities attached
to the offence of treason, committed by his participation in the
Rebellion. So far as that offence is concerned, he is thus placed
beyond the reach of punishment of any kind. But to exclude him, by
reason of that offence, from continuing in the enjoyment of a
previously acquired right is to enforce a punishment for that
offence notwithstanding the pardon. If such exclusion can be
effected by the exaction of an expurgatory oath covering the
offence, the pardon may be avoided, and that accomplished
indirectly which cannot be reached by direct legislation. It is not
within the constitutional power of Congress thus to inflict
punishment beyond the reach of executive clemency. From the
petitioner, therefore, the oath required by the act of January
24th, 1865, could not be exacted even if that act were not subject
to any other objection than the one thus stated.
It follows, from the views expressed, that the prayer of the
petitioner must be granted.
The case of R. H. Marr is similar in its main features to that
of the petitioner, and his petition must also be granted.
And the amendment of the second rule of the court, which
requires the oath prescribed by the act of January 24th, 1865, to
be taken by attorneys and counselors, having been unadvisedly
adopted, must be rescinded.
AND IT IS SO ORDERED.
Page 71 U. S. 382
[
Footnote 1]
12 Stat. at Large 502.
[
Footnote 2]
13 Stat. at Large 424.
[
Footnote 3]
Ex parte Heyfron, 7 Howard, Mississippi 127;
Fletcher v. Daingerfield, 20 California 430.
[
Footnote 4]
22 New York 81.
[
Footnote 5]
60 U. S. 19 Howard
9.
[
Footnote 6]
Article II, § 2.
[
Footnote 7]
4 Blackstone's Commentaries, 402; 6 Bacon's Abridgment, tit.
Pardon; Hawkins, book 2, c. 37, §§ 34 and 54.
Mr. Justice MILLER, on behalf of himself and the CHIEF JUSTICE,
and Justices SWAYNE and DAVIS, delivered the following dissenting
opinion, which applies also to the opinion delivered in
Cummings v. Missouri. (
See supra, p.
71 U. S.
316.)
I dissent from the opinions of the court just announced.
It may be hoped that the exceptional circumstances which give
present importance to these cases will soon pass away, and that
those who make the laws, both state and national, will find in the
conduct of the persons affected by the legislation just declared to
be void sufficient reason to repeal, or essentially modify it.
For the speedy return of that better spirit which shall leave us
no cause for such laws all good men look with anxiety and with a
hope, I trust, not altogether unfounded.
But the question involved, relating, as it does, to the right of
the legislatures of the nation and of the state to exclude from
offices and places of high public trust, the administration of
whose functions are essential to the very existence of the
government, those among its own citizens who have been engaged in a
recent effort to destroy that government by force can never cease
to be one of profound interest.
It is at all times the exercise of an extremely delicate power
for this court of declare that the Congress of the nation, or the
legislative body of a State, has assumed an authority not belonging
to it, and, by violating the Constitution, has rendered void its
attempt at legislation. In the case of an act of Congress, which
expresses the sense of the members of a coordinate department of
the government, as much bound by their oath of office as we are to
respect that Constitution, and whose duty it is, as much as it is
ours, to be careful that no statute is passed in violation of it,
the incompatibility of the act with the Constitution should be so
clear as to leave little reason for doubt before we pronounce it to
be invalid.
Unable to see this incompatibility either in the act of Congress
or in the provision of the constitution of Missouri upon which this
court has just passed, but entertaining a
Page 71 U. S. 383
strong conviction that both were within the competency of the
bodies which enacted them, it seems to me an occasion which demands
that my dissent from the judgment of the court, and the reasons for
that dissent, should be placed on its records.
In the comments which I have to make upon these cases, I shall
speak of principles equally applicable to both, although I shall
refer more directly to that which involves the oath required of
attorneys by the act of Congress, reserving for the close some
remarks more especially applicable to the oath prescribed by the
constitution of the State of Missouri.
The Constitution of the United States makes ample provision for
the establishment of courts of justice to administer her law and to
protect and enforce the rights of her citizens. Article III,
section 1 of that instrument, says that
"[t]he judicial power of the United States shall be vested in
one Supreme Court, and such inferior courts as the Congress may,
from time to time, ordain and establish."
Section 8 of article I closes its enumeration of the powers
conferred on Congress by the broad declaration that it shall have
authority
"to make all laws which shall be necessary and proper for
carrying into execution the foregoing powers, and all other powers
vested by the Constitution in the government of the United States,
or in any department thereof."
Under these provisions, Congress has ordained and established
circuit courts, district courts, and territorial courts, and has,
by various statutes, fixed the number of the judges of the Supreme
Court. It has limited and defined the jurisdiction of all these,
and determined the salaries of the judges who hold them. It has
provided for their necessary officers, as marshals, clerks,
prosecuting attorneys, bailiffs, commissioners, and jurors. And, by
the act of 1789, commonly called the Judiciary Act, passed by the
first Congress assembled under the Constitution, it is, among other
things enacted that,
"[i]n all the courts of the United States, the parties may plead
and manage their causes personally, or by the
Page 71 U. S. 384
assistance of such counsel or attorneys at law as, by the rules
of the said courts respectively, shall be permitted to manage and
conduct causes therein."
It is believed that no civilized nation of modern times has been
without a class of men intimately connected with the courts, and
with the administration of justice, called variously attorneys,
counselors, solicitors, proctors, and other terms of similar
import. The enactment which we have just cited recognizes this body
of men, and their utility in the judicial system of the United
States, and imposes upon the courts the duty of providing rules by
which persons entitled to become members of this class may be
permitted to exercise the privilege of managing and conducting
causes in these courts. They are as essential to the successful
working of the courts as the clerks, sheriffs, and marshals, and
perhaps as the judges themselves, since no instance is known of a
court of law without a bar.
The right to practise law in the courts as a profession is a
privilege granted by the law under such limitations or conditions
in each state or government as the lawmaking power may prescribe.
It is a privilege, and not an absolute right. The distinction may
be illustrated by the difference between the right of a party to a
suit in court to defend his own cause and the right of another to
appear and defend for him. The one, like the right to life,
liberty, and the pursuit of happiness, is inalienable. The other is
the privilege conferred by law on a person who complies with the
prescribed conditions.
Every State in the Union, and every civilized government, has
laws by which the right to practise in its courts may be granted,
and makes that right to depend on the good moral character and
professional skill of the party on whom the privilege is conferred.
This is not only true in reference to the first grant of license of
practise law, but the continuance of the right is made by these
laws to depend upon the continued possession of those
qualities.
Attorneys are often deprived of this right upon evidence of bad
moral character or specific acts of immorality or dishonesty
Page 71 U. S. 385
which show that they no longer posses the requisite
qualifications.
All this is done by law, either statutory or common, and whether
the one or the other, equally the expression of legislative will,
for the common law exists in this country only as it is adopted or
permitted by the legislatures or by constitutions.
No reason is perceived why this body of men, in their important
relations to the courts of the nation, are not subject to the
action of Congress to the same extent that they are under
legislative control in the States or in any other government, and
to the same extent that the judges, clerks, marshals, and other
officers of the court are subject to congressional legislation.
Having the power to establish the courts, to provide for and
regulate the practice in those courts, to create their officers,
and prescribe their functions, can it be doubted that Congress has
the full right to prescribe terms for the admission, rejection, and
expulsion of attorneys, and for requiring of them an oath, to show
whether they have the proper qualifications for the discharge of
their duties?
The act which has just been declared to be unconstitutional is
nothing more than a statute which requires of all lawyers who
propose to practise in the national courts that they shall take the
same oath which is exacted of every officer of the government,
civil or military. This oath has two aspects, one which looks to
the past conduct of the party and one to his future conduct, but
both have reference to his disposition to support or to overturn
the government in whose functions he proposes to take part. In
substance, he is required to swear that he has not been guilty of
treason to that government in the past, and that he will bear
faithful allegiance to it in the future.
That fidelity to the government under which he lives, a true and
loyal attachment to it, and a sincere desire for its preservation
are among the most essential qualifications which should be
required in a lawyer seems to me to be too clear for argument. The
history of the Anglo-Saxon
Page 71 U. S. 386
race shows that, for ages past, the members of the legal
profession have been powerful for good or evil to the government.
They are, by the nature of their duties, the moulders of public
sentiment on questions of government, and are every day engaged in
aiding in the construction and enforcement of the laws. From among
their numbers are necessarily selected the judges who expound the
laws and the Constitution. To suffer treasonable sentiments to
spread here unchecked is to permit the stream on which the life of
the nation depends to be poisoned at its source.
In illustration of this truth, I venture to affirm that if all
the members of the legal profession in the States lately in
insurrection had possessed the qualification of a loyal and
faithful allegiance to the government, we should have been spared
the horrors of the Rebellion. If, then, this qualification be so
essential in a lawyer, it cannot be denied that the statute under
consideration was eminently calculated to secure that result.
The majority of this court, however, do not base their decisions
on the mere absence of authority in Congress and in the States to
enact the laws which are the subject of consideration, but insist
that the Constitution of the United States forbids, in prohibitory
terms, the passage of such laws both to the Congress and to the
States. The provisions of that instrument relied on the sustain
this doctrine are those which forbid Congress and the States,
respectively, from passing bills of attainder and
ex post
facto laws. It is said that the act of Congress and the
provision of the constitution of the State of Missouri under review
are in conflict with both these prohibitions, and are therefore
void.
I will examine this proposition in reference to these two
clauses of the Constitution in the order in which they occur in
that instrument.
1. In regard to bills of attainder, I am not aware of any
judicial decision by a court of Federal jurisdiction which
undertakes to give a definition of that term. We are therefore
compelled to recur to the bills of attainder passed by the English
Parliament, that we may learn so much of their
Page 71 U. S. 387
peculiar characteristics, as will enable us to arrive at a sound
conclusion as to what was intended to be prohibited by the
Constitution.
The word attainder is derived, by Sir Thomas Tomlins, in his law
dictionary, from the words
attincta and
attinctura, and is defined to be
"the stain or corruption of the blood of a criminal capitally
condemned; the immediate inseparable consequence of the common law
on the pronouncing the sentence of death."
The effect of this corruption of the blood was that the party
attainted lost all inheritable quality, and could neither receive
nor transmit any property or other rights by inheritance.
This attainder or corruption of blood as a consequence of
judicial sentence of death continued to be the law of England in
all cases of treason to the time that our Constitution was framed,
and, for aught that is known to me, is the law of that country on
condemnation for treason at this day.
Bills of attainder, therefore, or acts of attainder, as they
were called after they were passed into statutes, were laws which
declared certain persons attainted, and their blood corrupted so
that it had lost all heritable quality. Whether it declared other
punishment or not, it was an act of attainder if it declared this.
This also seems to have been the main feature at which the authors
of the Constitution were directing their prohibition, for, after
having, in article I, prohibited the passage of bills of attainder
-- in section nine to Congress and in section ten to the States --
there still remained to the judiciary the power of declaring
attainders. Therefore, to still further guard against this odious
form of punishment, it is provided, in section three of article
III, concerning the judiciary, that, while Congress shall have
power to declare the punishment of treason, no attainder of treason
shall work corruption of blood or forfeiture except during the life
of the person attainted.
This, however, while it was the chief, was not the only,
peculiarity of bills of attainder which was intended to be included
within the constitutional restriction. Upon an attentive
Page 71 U. S. 388
examination of the distinctive features of this kind of
legislation, I think it will be found that the following comprise
those essential elements of bills of attainder, in addition to the
one already mentioned, which distinguish them from other
legislation, and which made them so obnoxious to the statesmen who
organized our government:
1. They were convictions and sentences pronounced by the
legislative department of the government, instead of the
judicial.
2. The sentence pronounced and the punishment inflicted were
determined by no previous law or fixed rule.
3. The investigation into the guilt of the accused, if any such
were made, was not necessarily or generally conducted in his
presence or that of his counsel, and no recognized rule of evidence
governed the inquiry. [
Footnote
2/1]
It is no cause for wonder that men who had just passed
successfully through a desperate struggle in behalf of civil
liberty should feel a detestation for legislation of which these
were the prominent features. The framers of our political system
had a full appreciation of the necessity of keeping separate and
distinct the primary departments of the government.
Mr. Hamilton, in the seventy-eighth number of the Federalist,
says that he agrees with the maxim of Montesquieu that "there is no
liberty if the power of judging be not separated from the
legislative and executive powers." And others of the ablest numbers
of that publication are devoted to the purpose of showing that. in
our Constitution. these powers are so justly balanced and
restrained that neither will probably be able to make much
encroachment upon the others. Nor was it less repugnant to their
views of the security of personal rights that any person should be
condemned without a hearing and punished without a law previously
prescribing the nature and extent of that punishment. They
therefore struck boldly at all this machinery of legislative
despotism by forbidding the passage of bills of attainder and
ex post facto laws, both to Congress and to the
States.
Page 71 U. S. 389
It remains to inquire whether, in the act of Congress under
consideration (and the remarks apply with equal force to the
Missouri constitution), there is found any one of these features of
bills of attainder, and, if so, whether there is sufficient in the
act to bring it fairly within the description of that class of
bills.
It is not claimed that the law works a corruption of blood. It
will, therefore, be conceded at once that the act does not contain
this leading feature of bills of attainder.
Nor am I capable of seeing that it contains a conviction or
sentence of any designated person or persons. It is said that it is
not necessary to a bill of attainder that the party to be affected
should be named in the act, and the attainder of the Earl of
Kildare and his associates is referred to as showing that the act
was aimed at a class. It is very true that bills of attainder have
been passed against persons by some description when their names
were unknown. But, in such cases, the law leaves nothing to be done
to render its operation effectual but to identify those persons.
Their guilt, its nature, and its punishment are fixed by the
statute, and only their personal identity remains to be made out.
Such was the case alluded to. The act declared the guilt and
punishment of the Earl of Kildare, and all who were associated with
him in his enterprise, and all that was required to insure their
punishment was to prove that association.
If this were not so, then the act was mere
brutum
fulmen, and the parties other than the earl could only be
punished, notwithstanding the act, by proof of their guilt before
some competent tribunal.
No person is pointed out in the act of Congress, either by name
or by description, against whom it is to operate. The oath is only
required of those who propose to accept an office or to practise
law, and, as a prerequisite to the exercise of the functions of the
lawyer or the officer, it is demanded of all persons alike. It is
said to be directed, as a class, to those alone who were engaged in
the Rebellion, but this is manifestly incorrect, as the oath is
exacted alike from the
Page 71 U. S. 390
loyal and disloyal under the same circumstances, and none are
compelled to take it. Neither does the act declare any conviction
either of persons or classes. If so, who are they, and of what
crime are they declared to be guilty? Nor does it pronounce any
sentence or inflict any punishment. If by any possibility it can be
said to
provide for conviction and sentence, though not
found in the act itself, it leaves the party himself to determine
his own guilt or innocence and pronounce his own sentence. It is
not, then, the act of Congress, but the party interested, that
tries and condemns. We shall see, when we come to the discussion of
this act in its relation to
ex post facto laws, that it
inflicts no punishment.
A statute, then, which designates no criminal, either by name or
description -- which declares no guilt, pronounces no sentence, and
inflicts no punishment -- can in no sense be called a bill of
attainder.
2. Passing now to consider whether the statute is an
ex post
facto law, we find that the meaning of that term, as used in
the Constitution, is a matter which has been frequently before this
court, and it has been so well defined as to leave no room for
controversy. The only doubt which can arise is as to the character
of the particular case claimed to come within the definition, and
not as to the definition of the phrase itself.
All the cases agree that the term is to be applied to criminal
causes alone, and not to civil proceedings. In the language of
Justice Story, in the case of
Watson v. Mercer, [
Footnote 2/2]
"
Ex post facto laws relate to penal and criminal
proceedings, which impose punishment and forfeiture, and not to
civil proceedings, which affect private rights retrospectively.
[
Footnote 2/3]"
The first case on the subject is that of
Calder v.
Bull, and it is the one in which the doctrine concerning
ex post facto laws is most fully expounded. The court
divides all laws
Page 71 U. S. 391
which come within the meaning of that clause of the Constitution
into four classes:
1st. Every law that makes an action done before the passing of
the law, and which was innocent when done, criminal, and punishes
such action.
2d. Every law that aggravates a crime, or makes it greater than
it was when committed.
3d. Every law that changes the punishment, and inflicts a
greater punishment than the law annexed to the crime when
committed.
4th. Every law that alters the rule of evidence, and receives
less or different testimony than the law required at the time of
the commission of the offence to convict the offender.
Again, the court says, in the same opinion, that "the true
distinction is between
ex post facto laws and
retrospective laws," and proceeds to show that, however unjust the
latter may be, they are not prohibited by the Constitution, while
the former are.
This exposition of the nature of
ex post facto laws has
never been denied, nor has any court or any commentator on the
Constitution added to the classes of laws here set forth as coming
within that clause of the organic law. In looking carefully at
these four classes of laws, two things strike the mind as common to
them all:
1st. That they contemplate the trial of some person charged with
an offence.
2d. That they contemplate a punishment of the person found
guilty of such offence.
Now, it seems to me impossible to show that the law in question
contemplates either the trial of a person for an offence committed
before its passage or the punishment of any person for such an
offence. It is true that the act requiring an oath provides a
penalty for falsely taking it. But this provision is prospective,
as no one is supposed to take the oath until after the passage of
the law. This prospective penalty is the only thing in the law
which partakes of a criminal character. It is in all other respects
a civil proceeding.
Page 71 U. S. 392
It is simply an oath of office, and it is required of all
officeholders alike. As far as I am informed, this is the first
time in the history of jurisprudence that taking an oath of office
has been called a criminal proceeding. If it is not a criminal
proceeding, then, by all the authorities, it is not an
ex post
facto law.
No trial of any person is contemplated by the act for any past
offence. Nor is any party supposed to be charged with any offence
in the only proceeding which the law provides.
A person proposing to appear in the court as an attorney is
asked to take a certain oath. There is no charge made against him
that he has been guilty of any of the crimes mentioned in that
oath. There is no prosecution. There is not even an implication of
guilt by reason of tendering him the oath, for it is required of
the man who has lost everything in defence of the government, and
whose loyalty is written in the honorable scars which cover his
body, the same as of the guiltiest traitor in the land. His refusal
to take the oath subjects him to no prosecution. His taking it
clears him of no guilt, and acquits him of no charge.
Where, then, is this
ex post facto law which tries and
punishes a man for a crime committed before it was passed? It can
only be found in those elastic rules of construction which cramp
the powers of the Federal government when they are to be exercised
in certain directions, and enlarges them when they are to be
exercised in others. No more striking example of this could be
given than the cases before us, in one of which the Constitution of
the United States is held to confer no power on Congress to prevent
traitors practising in her courts, while in the other it is held to
confer power on this court to nullify a provision of the
constitution of the State of Missouri relating to a qualification
required of ministers of religion.
But the fatal vice in the reasoning of the majority is in the
meaning which they attach to the word punishment in its application
to this law and in its relation to the definitions which have been
given of the phrase
ex post facto laws.
Webster's second definition of the word "punish" is this:
Page 71 U. S. 393
"In a loose sense, to afflict with punishment, &c., with a
view to amendment, to chasten." And it is in this loose sense that
the word is used by this court as synonymous with chastisement,
correction, loss, or suffering to the party supposed to be
punished, and not in the legal sense, which signifies a penalty
inflicted for the commission of crime.
And so, in this sense, it is said that, whereas persons who had
been guilty of the offences mentioned in the oath were, by the laws
then in force, only liable to be punished with death and
confiscation of all their property, they are, by a law passed since
these offences were committed, made liable to the enormous
additional punishment of being deprived of the right to practise
law!
The law in question does not in reality deprive a person guilty
of the acts therein described of any right which he possessed
before, for it is equally sound law as it is the dictate of good
sense that a person who, in the language of the act, has
voluntarily borne arms against the government of the United States
while a citizen thereof, or who has voluntarily given aid, comfort,
counsel, or encouragement to persons engaged in armed hostility to
the government, has, by doing those things, forfeited his right to
appear in her courts and take part in the administration of her
laws. Such a person has exhibited a trait of character which,
without the aid of the law in question, authorizes the court to
declare him unfit to practise before it, and to strike his name
from the roll of its attorneys if it be found there.
I have already shown that this act provides for no indictment or
other charge, that it contemplates and admits of no trial, and I
now proceed to show that, even if the right of the court to prevent
an attorney guilty of the acts mentioned from appearing in its
forum depended upon the statute, that still it inflicts no
punishment in the legal sense of that term.
"Punishment," says Mr. Wharton in his Law Lexicon, "is the
penalty for transgressing the laws," and this is perhaps as
comprehensive and at the same time as accurate a definition as can
be given. Now what law is it whose transgression
Page 71 U. S. 394
is punished in the case before us? None is referred to in the
act, and there is nothing on its face to show that it was intended
as an additional punishment for any offence described in any other
act. A part of the matters of which the applicant is required to
purge himself on oath may amount to treason, but surely there could
be no intention or desire to inflict this small additional
punishment for a crime whose penalty already was death and
confiscation of property.
In fact, the word "punishment" is used by the court in a sense
which would make a great number of laws, partaking in no sense of a
criminal character, laws for punishment, and therefore
ex post
facto.
A law, for instance, which increased the facility for detecting
frauds by compelling a party to a civil proceeding to disclose his
transactions under oath would result in his punishment in this
sense if it compelled him to pay an honest debt which could not be
coerced from him before. But this law comes clearly within the
class described by this court in
Watson v. Mercer as civil
proceedings which affect private rights retrospectively.
Again, let us suppose that several persons afflicted with a form
of insanity heretofore deemed harmless shall be found all at once
to be dangerous to the lives of persons with whom they associate.
The State, therefore, passes a law that all persons so affected
shall be kept in close confinement until their recovery is assured.
Here is a case of punishment in the sense used by the court for a
matter existing before the passage of the law. Is it an
ex post
facto law? And, if not, in what does it differ from one? Just
in the same manner that the act of Congress does, namely, that the
proceeding is civil, and not criminal, and that the imprisonment in
the one case, and the prohibition to practise law in the other, are
not punishments in the legal meaning of that term.
The civil law maxim, "
Nemo debet bis vexari, pro un a et
eadam causa," has been long since adopted into the common law
as applicable both to civil and criminal proceedings, and one of
the amendments of the Constitution incorporates this
Page 71 U. S. 395
principle into that instrument so far as punishment affects life
or limb. It results from this rule that no man can be twice
lawfully punished for the same offence. We have already seen that
the acts of which the party is required to purge himself on oath
constitute the crime of treason. Now if the judgment of the court
in the cases before us, instead of permitting the parties to appear
without taking the oath, had been the other way, here would have
been the case of a person who, on the reasoning of the majority, is
punished by the judgment of this court for the same acts which
constitute the crime of treason.
Yet if the applicant here should afterwards be indicted for
treason on account of these same acts, no one will pretend that the
proceedings here could be successfully pleaded in bar of that
indictment. But why not? Simply because there is here neither trial
nor punishment within the legal meaning of these terms.
I maintain that the purpose of the act of Congress was to
require loyalty as a qualification of all who practise law in the
national courts. The majority say that the purpose was to impose a
punishment for past acts of disloyalty.
In pressing this argument, it is contended by the majority that
no requirement can be justly said to be a qualification which is
not attainable by all, and that to demand a qualification not
attainable by all is a punishment.
The Constitution of the United States provides as a
qualification for the offices of President and Vice-President that
the person elected must be a native-born citizen. Is this a
punishment to all those naturalized citizens who can never attain
that qualification? The constitutions of nearly all the States
require as a qualification for voting that the voter shall be a
white male citizen. Is this a punishment for all the blacks who can
never become white?
Again, it was a qualification required by some of the State
constitutions for the office of judge that the person should not be
over sixty years of age. To a very large number of the ablest
lawyers in any State, this is a qualification to which they can
never attain, for every year removes
Page 71 U. S. 396
them farther away from the designated age. Is it a
punishment?
The distinguished commentator on American law, and chancellor of
the State of New York, was deprived of that office by this
provision of the constitution of that State, and he was thus, in
the midst of his usefulness, not only turned out of office, but he
was forever disqualified from holding it again, by a law passed
after he had accepted the office.
This is a much stronger case than that of a disloyal attorney
forbid by law to practise in the courts, yet no one ever thought
the law was
ex post facto in the sense of the Constitution
of the United States.
Illustrations of this kind could be multiplied indefinitely, but
they are unnecessary.
The history of the time when this statute was passed -- the
darkest hour of our great struggle -- the necessity for its
existence, the humane character of the President who signed the
bill, and the face of the law itself, all show that it was purely a
qualification, exacted in self-defence, of all who took part in
administering the government in any of its departments, and that it
was not passed for the purpose of inflicting punishment, however
merited, for past offences.
I think I have now shown that the statute in question is within
the legislative power of Congress in its control over the courts
and their officers, and that it was not void as being either a bill
of attainder or an
ex post facto law.
If I am right on the questions of qualification and punishment,
that discussion disposes also of the proposition that the pardon of
the President relieves the party accepting it of the necessity of
taking the oath, even if the law be valid.
I am willing to concede that the presidential pardon relieves
the party from all the penalties, or, in other words, from all the
punishment, which the law inflicted for his offence. But it
relieves him from nothing more. If the oath required as a condition
to practising law is not a punishment, as I think I have shown it
is not, then the pardon of the President has no effect in releasing
him from the requirement to take it. If it is a qualification which
Congress
Page 71 U. S. 397
had a right to prescribe as necessary to an attorney, then the
President cannot, by pardon or otherwise, dispense with the law
requiring such qualification.
This is not only the plain rule as between the legislative and
executive departments of the government, but it is the declaration
of common sense. The man who, by counterfeiting, by theft, by
murder, or by treason is rendered unfit to exercise the functions
of an attorney or counselor at law, may be saved by the executive
pardon from the penitentiary or the gallows, but is not thereby
restored to the qualifications which are essential to admission to
the bar. No doubt it will be found that very many persons among
those who cannot take this oath deserve to be relieved from the
prohibition of the law, but this in no wise depends upon the act of
the President in giving or refusing a pardon. It remains to the
legislative power alone to prescribe under what circumstances this
relief shall be extended.
In regard to the case of
Cummings v. The State of
Missouri, allusions have been made in the course of argument
to the sanctity of the ministerial office and to the inviolability
of religious freedom in this country.
But no attempt has been made to show that the Constitution of
the United States interposes any such protection between the State
governments and their own citizens. Nor can anything of this kind
be shown. The Federal Constitution contains but two provisions on
this subject. One of these forbids Congress to make any law
respecting the establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free
exercise thereof. The other is that no religious test shall ever be
required as a qualification to any office or public trust under the
United States.
No restraint is placed by that instrument on the action of the
States, but on the contrary, in the language of Story, [
Footnote 2/4]
"the whole power over the subject of religion is left
exclusively to the State governments, to be acted upon according to
their own sense of justice and the State constitutions. "
Page 71 U. S. 398
If there ever was a case calling upon this court to exercise all
the power on this subject which properly belongs to it, it was the
case of the Rev. B. Permoli. [
Footnote
2/5]
An ordinance of the first municipality of the city of New
Orleans imposed a penalty on any priest who should officiate at any
funeral in any other church than the obituary chapel. Mr. Permoli,
a Catholic priest, performed the funeral services of his church
over the body of one of his parishioners inclosed in a coffin in
the Roman Catholic Church of St. Augustine. For this, he was fined,
and, relying upon the vague idea advanced here that the Federal
Constitution protected him in the exercise of his holy functions,
he brought the case to this court.
But hard as that case was, the court replied to him in the
following language:
"The Constitution (of the United States) makes no provision for
protecting the citizens of the respective States in their religious
liberties; this is left to the State constitutions and laws; nor is
there any inhibition imposed by the Constitution of the United
States in this respect on the States."
Mr. Permoli's writ of error was therefore dismissed for want of
jurisdiction.
In that case, an ordinance of a mere local corporation forbid a
priest, loyal to his government, from performing what he believed
to be the necessary rites of his church over the body of his
departed friend. This court said it could give him no relief.
In this case, the constitution of the State of Missouri, the
fundamental law of the people of that State, adopted by their
popular vote, declares that no priest of any church shall exercise
his ministerial functions unless he will show by his own oath that
he has borne a true allegiance to his government. This court now
holds this constitutional provision void on the ground that the
Federal Constitution forbids it. I leave the two cases to speak for
themselves.
In the discussion of these cases, I have said nothing, on the
one hand, of the great evils inflicted on the country by
Page 71 U. S. 399
the voluntary action of many of those persons affected by the
laws under consideration, nor, on the other hand, of the hardships
which they are now suffering much more as a consequence of that
action than of any laws which Congress can possibly frame. But I
have endeavored to bring to the examination of the grave questions
of constitutional law involved in this inquiry those principles
alone which are calculated to assist in determining what the law
is, rather than what, in my private judgment, it ought to be.
[
Footnote 2/1]
See Story on the Constitution § 1344.
[
Footnote 2/2]
Calder v. Bull,
3 Dallas 386;
Fletcher v.
Peck, 6 Cranch 87;
Ogden
v. Saunders, 12 Wheaton 266;
Satterlee
v. Matthewson, 2 Peters 380.
[
Footnote 2/3]
33 U. S. 8 Pet.
88.
[
Footnote 2/4]
Commentaries on the Constitution § 1878.
[
Footnote 2/5]
44 U. S. 3 How.
589.