delivered the opinion of the court.
These are proceedings for alleged criminal contempts in the matter that was before this court in
Gompers
v.
Bucks
The committee, on June 26, 1911, reported and charged that the parties severally were guilty of specified acts in violation of the injunction, being the same acts of which they had been found guilty by the Supreme Court in the former case.' Rules to show cause were issued on the same, day. The defendants pleaded the Statute of Limitations, Rev. Stat., § 1044, as to most of the charges, and not guilty. There was a trial, the Statute of Limitations was held inapplicable and the defendants were found guilty and sentenced to imprisonment for terms of different lengths, subject to exceptions which by agreement were embodied in a single bill.. The Court of Appeals reduced the sentences to .imprisonment for thirty days in the case of Gompers and fines of $500 for each, of the other two-. 40 App. D. C. 293. The defendants brought a writ of error and an appeal to this court and also petitioned for a writ of certiorari. Of course an appeal does not lie, nor does a writ of error, but the writ of certiorari is granted.
The injunction, subsequently held too broad, not only forbade the defendants to combine to obstruct the business of the Bucks Stove and Range Company, or to declare or threaten any boycott against it (such a boycott already having been declared), but also to publish any statement calling attention of any body to any such boycott, or any statement of like effect, tending to any injury of the Company’s business. This decree, although made on December 18, didmot become operative until December 23,1907. Before going to the Court of Appeals the injunction in substantially the same form was made permanent on March 23, 1908. It may be assumed for the purposes'of our decision that the evidence not only warranted but required a finding that the defendants were guilty of some at least of the violations of this decree that were charged against them, and so we come at once to consider the Statute of Limitations, which is their only real defence. A preliminary objection was urged, to be sure, that the question of the validity of that defence was not reserved, but there is nothing in it. The bar was pleaded; there was a motion to dismiss on that ground for want of a replication, there was a decision that the statute did not apply to contempts, and the counsel for the plaintiffs in error stated at the trial that there was one general exception presented on their behalf with regard to that. We cannot doubt that it was perfectly understood, or that the record shows, that the plaintiffs in error preserved all their rights.
The statute provides that 'no person shall be prosecuted, tried, or punished for any offense, not capital, except . . . , unless the indictment is found, or the information is instituted within three years nexLafter such offense shall have been committed.’ Rev. Stat., § 1044. Act of April 13, 1876, c. 56, 19 Stat. 32. The plaintiffs in
The charges against Gompers are: 1, hurrying the publication of the January number of the American Federationist and distributing many copies after the injunction was known and before it went into effect, in which number the Bucks Stove and Range Company was included in the 'We don’t patronize’ list; 2, circulating other copies in January, 1908; 3, on and after December 23,1907, circulating another document to the like effect with comments, some of which were lawful criticism but others of which suggested that the injunction left the members of labor organizations free to continue their boycott; 4, publishing in February, 1908, a copy of the decree with the suggestion that those who violated the injunction outside of the District could not be punished unless they came within it; 5, in January and February, 1908, publishing in conjunction with' the other defendants a paper appealing for financial aid, commenting on the injunction as invading the liberty of the press and free speech and reprinting the before-mentioned comments and suggestions; 6, in March, 1908, again suggesting that no law compelled the purchase
The boycott against the Company was not called off until July 19 to 29, 1910, and it is argued that even if the statute applies the conspiracy was continuing until that date,
United States
v.
Kissel,
It is urged in the first place that contempts cannot be crimes, because, although punishable by imprisonment and therefore, if crimes, infamous, they are not within the protection of the Constitution and the amendments giving a right to trial by jury &c. to persons charged with such crimes. But the provisions of the Constitution are not mathematical formulas having their essence in their form; they are organic living institutions transplanted from English soil. Their significance is vital not formal; it is to be gathered not simply by taking the words and a dictionary, but by considering their .origin and the line of their growth.
Robertson
v.
Baldwin,
We come then to the construction of the Statute. It has been assumed that the concluding words 'unless the indictment is found or the information is instituted within three years’ limit the offences given the benefit of the act to those usually prosecuted in that way, and the counsel for the petitioners were at some pains to argue that the charges of- the committee amounted to an information; a matter that opens vistas of antiquarian speculation. But this question is not. one to be answered by refinements and curious inquiries. — In- our opinion the proper interpretation of the Statute begins with the substantive not with the adjective part. The substantive portion of the section is that no person shall be .tried for any offence not capital except within a certain time. Those words are of universal scope. What follows is a natural way of expressing that the proceedings miist be begun within 3 years; (indictment and information being the usual modes by which they are begun and very likely .no other having occurred to those who drew the law. But it seems to us plain that the dominant words of the act are 'no person shall be prosecuted, tried, or punished for any offence not capital’ unless.—
No reason has been suggested to us for npt giving to the
Even -if the statute does not cover the case by its express words; as we think it does, still, in dealing with the punishment of crime a rule should be laid down, if not by Congress by .this court. The power to punish for contempt must have some limit in time, and in defining that limit we should have regard to what has been the policy of the law from the foundation of the Government. By analogy if not by enactment the limit is three years. The case cannot be concluded otherwise so well as in the language of’Chief Justice Marshall in a case where the statute was held applicable to an action of debt for a penalty.
Adams
v.
Woods,
, Judgments reversed.
