94 P. 553 | Okla. | 1908
We have decided at this term of court in the case ofHiggins v. Brown, reported in this volume,
Section 1 of the Schedule of the Constitution provides that "no existing rights, actions, suits, proceedings, contracts, or claims shall be affected by the change in the forms ofgovernment, but all shall continue as if no change in the formsof government had taken place." Section 2 of the Schedule,supra, further provides "that all laws in force in the territory of Oklahoma at the time of the admission of the state into the Union, which are not repugnant *500 to this Constitution, and which are not locally inapplicable, shall be extended to and remain in force in the state of Oklahoma until they expire by their own limitation or are altered or repealed by law." As was stated in the case ofHiggins v. Brown, supra, into every Constitution of the states admitted into the Union since 1791 similar provisions to those of sections 1 and 2 of the Schedule, supra, have been incorporated without any concurrence of the federal government, except by implication by acts of Congress, there being no prior enabling act, admitting such state or states into the Union, or by express or reasonable implication in the enabling act, offenses, not of a federal character, committed under the territorial government heretofore have been originally instituted after the admission of the state into the Union, and prosecuted to final determination in the state courts.
The states of Nevada, Colorado, Montana, North Dakota, South Dakota, Washington, and Utah were admitted under enabling acts similar to that of Oklahoma, and wherein no express provision was made for nonpending cases; but in their respective Constitutions practically the same language as that in the Constitution of this state is used for the continuance of rights, actions, and prosecutions just as if there had been no change in the form of government from a territory to a state. Sections 1 and 2 of the Schedule of the Constitution of Washington are almost identically, word for word, the same as sections 1 and 2 of the Schedule of the Constitution of Oklahoma. In the former state offenses not of a federal character committed prior to the admission of the state first instituted after such time were prosecuted to final determination in the state courts as successors of the territorial courts. State v. Stowe, 3 Wn. St. 206, 28 P. 337, 14 L. R. A. 609; Lybarger v. State, 2 Wn. St. 553, 27 P. 449, 1029; State v. Freidrich,
It will be observed that the Supreme Court of the United States in Benner v. Porter, 9 How. (U.S.) 247, 13 L.Ed. 119, stresses the fact that the acts of Congress in the several instances of the admission of a state provide for the transfer of the federal causes to the district court, as in the case of Florida, nothing being said at the time in respect to those belonging to state authority, and the court added that such an omission "may very well imply an assent to the transfer of them by the state to the appropriate tribunal" — and adding that "even the omission on the part of Congress to interfere at all in the matter may be subject to a like implication; and a subsequent assent would doubtless operate upon past acts of transfer by the state authority." Mr. Justice Nelson, speaking for the court, says:
"We have said that the assent of Congress was essential to the authorized transfer of the records of the territorial courts, in suits pending at the time of the change of government, to the custody of state tribunals. It is proper to add, to avoid misconstruction, that we do not mean thereby to imply or express any opinion on the question whether or not, without such assent, the state judicatures would acquire such jurisdiction. That is altogether *502 a different question. And, besides, the acts of Congress that have been passed in several instances, on the admission of a state, providing for the transfer of federal causes to the district court, as in the case of the admission of Florida, already referred to, and saying nothing at the time in respect to those belonging to state authority, may very well imply an assent to the transfer of them by the state to the appropriate tribunal. Even the omission on the part of Congress to interfere at all in the matter may be subject to a like implication; and a subsequent assent would, doubtless, operate upon past acts of transfer by the state authority."
In Re Hastings v. Johnson,
"Now, the Constitution of Nevada provides for the transfer of all pending cases from the territorial to the state courts. Congress receives the state into the Union, and admits her representatives under said Constitution without objection. Congress makes no provision for these pending causes, nor any provision for the records of the late territorial courts. Here it appears to us is such tacit assent to the action of the state authorities as the court seems to intimate would be sufficient. It is true the records of the late territorial courts belong to the general government. Congress has the power to do what it pleases with them. It might order them to be removed to Washington City. This might create trouble and inconvenience; but we do not think it affects the question of power. The state may, as long as the records of the territorial courts are within her territory and control, use those records as the foundation of civil proceedings to determine the rights of the citizens in its own courts. If Congress should remove these records or restrain their use by the state courts, some law to substitute copies, or some other remedial statute, would have to be passed by the state courts."
In Re Inerarity, Adm'r v. Curtis and Griswold, Trustees,
"There is, we think, much force in this view of the question as to causes pending of which the courts of the United States have not exclusive jurisdiction, or cannot, under the Constitution and laws of the United States, take jurisdiction at all; and where, as in the case of Florida, the act of February 22, 1847 (9 Stat. p. 28, c. 17), provides for the transfer of the records and proceedings *503 of certain classes of cases, saying nothing about other classes of which the state courts could take jurisdiction, the inference is irresistible that Congress intended that the state authorities should assume jurisdiction over the latter, or if they had already assumed it, the omission may well be considered as a tacit acquiescence in, and a ratification of, the authority thus claimed and exercised, and in view of the difficulties and confusion which would otherwise arise, in case of a hasty or improvident assumption of authority over the subject by the new state, we should be so inclined to consider the question. Concurring as we do in the opinion expressed by the Supreme Court of the United States in the cases referred to, we feel no hesitation in declaring that the courts of the territory of Florida were courts of the United States, and the records of said courts the records of that government; that the state authorities had no just right to assume the exercise of any authority of jurisdiction over them, except so far as the government of the United States, by express authority or just implication, shall accord the power to do so. So far as Congress, by the act of February 22, 1847, claimed to exercise jurisdiction over certain classes of records and pending causes, it is in our opinion the exercises of a rightful power, and the courts to which the jurisdiction and authority over them is granted are entitled to the custody; and, so far as Congress has not claimed these records, it may be considered as the sanction of the general government to the exercise of jurisdiction by the state authorities over the subject."
In Re Carter v. Bennett,
"We have shown that, so far as the state Legislature was competent to give it, the circuit court had full authority to hear and determine this case. Had it the sanction of Congress, which we have admitted was necessary to the legal transfer of the records and proceedings therein? The act of Congress of February 22, 1847, was designated to transfer to the United States District Court organized in Florida all such records of the late territorial courts as belonged appropriately to that court. A careful specific enumeration was made of all the classes of cases so as to be transferred as we have already mentioned. It was made the duty of the district judge to take the necessary steps to get possession of these specific records from the clerks of the old courts, or persons or officers having them in their possession, these expressions, 'other officers or persons,' pointing obviously to the clerks of the *504 state courts, who had in fact succeeded to the custody of the papers. This precise enumeration of cases to be transferred from the state courts leads irresistibly to the inference that Congress acquiesced in the retention by the state courts of all the other cases and the papers belonging to them. The act of the Legislature providing for the transfer of all these cases not thus enumerated had been passed more than a year and a half, and the state courts, under authority of that law, had possessed themselves of them, and had been adjudicating them for nearly the same period. It is impossible to avoid the conclusion that this act of the Legislature and the action of the courts under it received the sanction of Congress in the act of 1847, so far as they were not in conflict with that act. Besides this, Florida has followed many an elder sister into the Union, and the same provisions had been repeatedly made for the transfer of federal causes to the district courts, accompanied by long acquiescence in the assumption by the courts of the new states of the jurisdiction over causes not federal. The clearness and force of this inferential sanction of Congress is fully recognized both by the Supreme Court of the United States and by the Supreme Court of this state. * * *Even the omission on the part of Congress to interfere at all in the matter may be subject to a like implication, and a subsequent assent would doubtless operate upon past acts of transfer by the state authority."
Section 4 of the enabling act, as approved June 16, 1906. (Stat. at Large U.S. 1905-06, pt. 1, p. 271, c. 3335), provides as follows:
"And if the Constitution and government of said proposed state are republican in form, and if the provisions of this act have been complied with in the formation thereof, it shall be the duty of the President of the United States, within twenty days from the receipt of the certificate of the results of said election and the statement of the votes cast thereon and a copy of said Constitution, articles, propositions and ordinances, to issue his proclamation announcing the result of said election; and thereupon the proposed state of Oklahoma shall be deemed admitted by Congress into the Union, under and by virtue of this act, on an equal footing with the original states."
The only limitation is that the Constitution and state government shall be "republican in form" and comply with the provisions of said act. All other provisions which the constitutional convention *505 had the power to insert by reasonable implication are permitted and concurred in, the act of the President consummating the same.
We conclude that the district court of Oklahoma county has jurisdiction of this offense and the power to prosecute it to final determination. The relator is remanded to the custody of the respondent.
Writ of habeas corpus is denied.
All the Justices concur.