40 F. 62 | U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Southern California | 1889
The petitioner applied to me some days ago in San Francisco for a writ of habeas corpus, alleging that he is unlawfully imprisoned by the marshal of the United States for the southern district of California, and the warden of the jail of Los Angeles county, contrary to the constitution and laws of the United States; that such imprisonment is had under and by virtue of a warrant of commitment based upon a judgment of the district court of the United States for the southern district of California, adjudging him guilty of contempt, and sentencing him to imprisonment in that jail for the period of six months. An order was thereupon made that a writ issue, to be directed to the marshal, and made returnable before me at this place, Los Angeles, on the 10th instant. The petition sets forth the judgment of the district court, rendered on the 13th of February, 1889, upon which the writ of commitment was issued under which the petitioner is held. It is as follows:
“Whereas, in the progress of the trial of .the action of The United States of America v. W. More Young, on the. 12th day of February, 1889, upon the examination of the term-trial juror Robert McGarvin as to his qualilication to sit as a trial juror in the said action, the said McGarvin testified, among other things, in effect, that on the day previous he was approached by one Thomas J. Cuddy, with the object on Cuddy’s part to influence his (McGar-vin’s) action as a juror in the said ease in the event that he should be sworn to try the said action; and whereas, from the testimony, this court, on the said 12th day of February, 1889, entered an order directing the said Thomas J. Cuddy to show cause before this court, at the court-room thereof, at 10 o’clock on the 13th day of February, 1889, why he should not be adjudged guilty of a contempt of this court; and whereas, in response to the said citation, said Thomas J. Cuddy did, on the said 13th day of February, 1889, appear before the said court; and whereas, testimony was then and there introduced in respect to the matter both for and against him, — the court, having duly considered the testimony, does now find the fact to be that the said Thomas J. Cuddy did, upon the 11th day of February, 1889, approach the said Robert McGar-vin, at the time being a term juror duly impaneled in this court, with a view to improperly influence the said MeGarvin’s action in the case of the United*63 States of America against tho said Young in tho event tlie said McG-arvin should be sworn as a juror in said action. Now, it is here adjudged by the court that tho said Thomas J. Cuddy did thereby commit a contempt of this court, for which contempt it is now here ordered and adjudged that the said Tilomas J. Cuddy be imprisoned in the county jail of tlie county of Los An-geles for the period of six months from this date, and the marshal of this district will execute this judgment forthwith.”
The petition sets forth the proceedings taken by the court, and alleges that the transaction which was tlie basis of the charge against the petitioner, and for which the judgment was rendered, took place on the 11th day of February, 1889, when the district court was not in session, and nearly a quarter of a mile distant from the court-house in which that court is held. He therefore claims that the district court had no jurisdiction to try and sentence him for the alleged contempt, because the act charged as such was committed at the time and place designated, and was not adjudged to have been done corruptly, or by threats or force. The purport of the objection is that the act charged as a contempt was not committed in tlie presence of the court, or so near thereto as to obstruct the administration of justice; and therefore did not present a case within the power of the court to punish summarily, under section 725 of the Revised Statutes, and therefore that the judgment was illegal and void. That seriion reads as follows:
“The said courts [of the United ¡States] shall have power ⅜ s * to punish by fine or imprisonment, at the discretion of the court, contempts of their authority: provided, that such power to punish contempts shall not; bo construed to extend to any case except the misbehavior of any person in their presence, or so near thereto as to obstruct tlie administration of justice; the misbehavior of any of tlie officers of said courts in their official transactions, and the disobedience or resistance by any such officer, or by any party, juror, witness, or other person, to any lawful writ, process, order, rule, decree, or command of said courts.”
The marshal returns the warrant of commitment under which he holds the prisoner. Ey consent of parties the record in the case of tho petitioner before the district court and in the supreme court of the United Btates is also presented. By that record it appears that the petitioner, on tho 9th day of April, 1889, applied to the district court for the southern district of California for a writ of habeas corpua in order that he might be discharged from the imprisonment now complained of, asserting, as now, that tho same was illegal for the reason that the court, had no jurisdiction to try and sentence him, because the matters set forth in the judgment do not constitute any contempt under section 725 of the Revised Statutes, and because the judgment was not founded upon proceedings in due course of law; that the district court, after due consideration, denied the application for a writ; that thereupon an appeal was taken from the judgment to the supremo court of the United States, where, after argument and due consideration, tho judgment was affirmed. 131 U. S. 280, 9 Sup. Ct. Rep. 703. Tho additional matter sot forth in the present application consists only of the testimony which was before tho district court when the question of contempt charged against the petitioner was
The petitioner, in the present application, as appears from what has already been said, supplies what was omitted in his record to the supreme court. At the outset the question is thus presented whether it is permissible for a party to appeal from a judgment denying his application, voluntarily omitting a material portion of his case, and, after invoking the judgment of the appellate court upon the record presented, and failing therein, to renew his application before another court or justice of the United States, without first having obtained leave for that purpose from the appellate court. Before passing upon this question some consideration should be given to the position of the district attorney as to the jurisdiction of the court to punish summarily as a contempt an act obstructing the administration of justice in pending cases, even if committed at a distance from the court-room. He contends, if I rightly understand him, that all the officers and parties necessarily attending or summoned to attend in pending cases in the courts of the United States as marshals, clerks, jurors, and witnesses “are so near thereto,” that is, so connected therewith, — applying-the terms “so near thereto” as indicating relationship of subject, rather than relationship of place, — that misbehavior towards them, though they are distant at the time from the court-room, or during the temporary adjournment of the court, constitutes a contempt punishable under the statute. Certain it is that attempts to turn such officers or parties from the performance of their duty, in order to secure the selection of particular persons as jurors, or to bias the judgment of the jurors selected, or to influence witnesses to suppress or qualify their testimony, or to absent themselves from the court, or threats of violence, or the use of insulting language to them respecting, or to influence, their conduct, though uttered or done outside of the court-house, and at a distance from it, are as much an obstruction to the administration of justice as though uttered or done within its walls. Though I am not quite prepared to accept this position of the district attorney, it is entitled to grave consideration.
The statute also declares the disobedience or resistance by any person of any “la-wful writ, process, order, rule, decree, or command” of the courts of the United States to be a contempt. It is the practice of the district courts of the United States to command all persons summoned and sworn as term-trial jurors to avoid speaking with others, and not to allow others to speak to them with respect to cases which may be tried before them. Such a command, if a standing rule of the court, or given, as usual, in its instruction to the jurors, when accepted, would bind all persons, jurors, parties, and others cognizant of it: and a disobedience of it would be a flagrant contempt. Nothing, indeed, can tend more to pollute the administration of justice than to allow tampering with jurors. Any attempts, however slight, to swerve them from the strict line of their duty, should be punished with the utmost rigor. Purity in the adiniu-dstration of justice could not otherwise be maintained, and such purity is the only safety of the people under a free and popular government. I suppose such a command was given by the district court in its instructions to the trial jurors of the term, to one of whom the improper approach was made which constitutes the contempt for which the petitioner was sentenced to be imprisoned; but, as no record is preserved of it, I cannot act upon the suggestion of the fact.
I return, therefore, to the question whether the petitioner can renew his application for a writ after the decision of the supremo court on his appeal to that tribunal, without first having obtained its leave. If he c'an renew it on another record, which may also be in some other particular defective, and so on indefinitely whenever he fails on appeal, it is plain that the writ may often become an instrument of oppression, instead of a means of relieving one from an unjust and illegal imprisonment. The writ of habeas corpus, it is true, is the writ of freedom, and is so highly esteemed' that by the common law of England applications can be made for its issue by one illegally restrained of his liberty to every justice of the kingdom having the right to grant such writs. No appeal or writ of error was allowed there from a judgment refusing^ writ of habeas corpus; nor, indeed, could there have been any occasion for such an appeal or writ of error, as a renewed application could be made to every other justice of the realm. The doctrine of res judicata was not held applicable to a decision of one court or justice thereon; the entire judicial power of the country could thus be exhausted. Ex parte Koine, 3 Blatchf. 5, and cases there,cited. The same doctrine formerly prevailed in the several states of the Union, and, in the absence of statutory provisions, is the doctrine prevailing now. In many instances great abuses have attended this privilege, which have led in some of the states to legislation on the subject. And, in the absence of such legislation/while the doctrine of res judicata does not apply, it is held that the officers before whom the second application is made may take into consideration the fact that a previous application