11 F. Cas. 1010 | U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Kansas | 1877
This is an application for a writ of habeas corpus, on behalf of Samuel Hebard. The petitioner states that he is held a prisoner for want of bail, under a commitment on a charge of larceny, the order committing him to the custody of the United States marshal having been made by Samuel D. Lecompte, a commissioner of the circuit court of the United States. It appears, very clearly, that the offence for which plaintiff is held to bail was committed on the military reservation of Fort Leavenworth, and the only question in the case is, whether the officer of the United States who ordered the imprisonment of the petitioner had jurisdiction of the case. This is asserted by the district attorney, on the ground that Fort Leavenworth iu within the exclusive jurisdiction of congress, under the provision of the constitution on that subject.
This jurisdiction is denied by counsel for petitioner, and as this is the only question in the case, and all the facts necessary to its decision are before us, it can be as well disposed of on the application for the writ as on a return to the writ when issued.
What constitutes the military reservation of Fort Leavenworth is now, and has been the property of .the United States ever since the country of which it is a part was purchased from France. There is not, and never could be, any consent of the state of Kansas to that purchase, literally speaking, because the state of Kansas had no existence for fifty years after that transaction, and her consent, since, she became a state, could in no way affect that purchase, or the title by which the United States holds the reservation.
The locus in quo had a military fort on it, and had been reserved for military purposes for many years before Kansas was admitted into the Union as a state, but when congress
If matters had remained in this condition to the present time, there can be no doubt that the warrant under which the prisoner is now held would be void, because the jurisdiction of the offence would be in the state, and not in the federal government. But on the .suggestion of the war department of the federal government to the authorities of the state of Kansas, the legislature passed a law, approved February 22, 1875 '[Laws 1875, p. 95], granting to the United States exclusive jurisdiction over the military reservation, and if this act is effective for that purpose, the writ must be denied.
It is objected that the legislature has no constitutional power to part with its jurisdiction over any part of the- soil within the boundaries of the statp. Unless the act in question is within the purview of section 8, art. 1, of the constitution of the United States, it is unnecessary to inquire further as ,to its validity. If it is, then it is valid, for .the reason that the constitution has expressly conferred on the legislatures of the states the right to give consent to such jurisdiction. It is also urged that some act of congress assuming this jurisdiction is necessary, even if the statute of Kansas be valid; but I am of •opinion that when the locus in quo is under •the control of the United States and is used .as a fort, magazine, or other purpose mentioned in the constitution, the laws of the United States, framed for such places, become the law of these places upon the con■sent of the state lawfully given for that purpose.
We then come to the question whether this act, conferring jurisdiction, passed by. the state of Kansas, is within the meaning of the •constitutional provision referred to — “congress shall have power to exercise exclusive legislation in all eases whatsoever over such dis■trict, not exceeding ten miles square, as may, by cession of particular states, and the ac•ceptance of congress, become the seat of gov-ernment of the United States, and to exercise like authority over all places purchased by -consent of the legislature of the state in which the same shall be, for the erection of forts, magazines, arsenals, dock-yards, and •other needful buildings.” If the consent of the state to the act of buying the land, or acquiring the title to it, is all that can be considered in construing this provision, then, as we have already said, the state of Kansas .has never given any such consent. But if this Is a form of expression whose true meaning is that the general government, as respects lands needed for forts, etc., may, whether such lands are owned by it or shall be purchased from others, exercise exclusive jurisdiction! whenever the consent of the legislature of the state to the exercise of such jurisdiction shall be given, then the legislature of Kansas, in the act referred to, has given the consent required by the federal constitution. As this court remarked in the case of U. S. v. Stahl [supra], it can hardly be supposed that the constitution intended to make the consent of a state necessary to Its power to erect forts, etc., in that state, nor to the acquisition of title to land used for that purpose. Such a proposition would be placing the military power of the government, which in every other respect is so am-' pie, at the mercy of the states as regards forts, arsenals, etc. A similar remark will apply to buildings for post-offices, courthouses, etc. It is impossible to believe that the constitution intended to restrict the right of eminent domain, and to declare that in any such instance the consent of the state is necessary to the validity of a purchase for such purpose. If, however,* we suppose that in many such cases it would be desirable for the national government to hold such places free from the general jurisdiction, which the state in all other cases exercises within her boundaries, but that she shall not be ousted of that jurisdiction except by her own consent, and that this consent shall be given by her legislature, we have at once a motive and a reasonable explanation of the purpose of the provision of the constitution. The consent of the state being necessary for no other purpose than that of plenary jurisdiction in the federal government, it is consent to this which is provided for in the constitution.
This consent may be given whether the land is purchased in the common meaning of that word or not, and may be given either before or after title is acquired by the United States. The elements necessary to render valid this consent to the exercise of federal jurisdiction are, title in the United States and possession for one of the purposes mentioned in the constitution. In 6 Op. Attys. Gen. 577, many of the statutes of the states granting this exclusive jurisdiction are examined, and their language criticised, and in very few instances is any expression of consent to the purchase used, but a direct and express grant of jurisdiction, with occasional qualifications on that point This is an implied construction, that the thing to be granted by the state Is her consent to the exercise of jurisdiction, and not to the mere purchase which is provided for in the constitution.
The constitution was adopted at a time when the federal government owned no land. Hence, when it desired any it must pay for it, whatever might be the uses to which it was appropriated. It was, therefore, a very natural form of expression to say that when