79 F. 308 | U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Washington | 1897
(orally). If this petition tendered an issue of fact upon which the right of the petitioner depended, I would be bound to grant the writ, and allow an issue to be joined, and to hear the testimony, and determine the question of fact in the usual manner. But where it appears plainly, as a matter of law, on the facts alleged in the petition, that issuance of a writ of habeas corpus would be an unwarranted interference on the part of this court with the execution of the laws of the state, I cannot conceive that it is tlie duty of the court to issue the writ. This application is something more than an application to tlie court to issue a summons or a notice to bring in the opposite party to join issue here. It is an application to this court to issue a writ by which to take the defendant out of the custody of the sheriff; of the county, who has him in custody, pursuant to a final adjudication of a court of competent jurisdiction; and, before issuing a writ to interfere with the execution of the laws of the state, the court should properly inquire into the facts, or require the facts to be set forth in the application, so that the court can see that there is a proper case to be investigated in this manner. There are cases wherein individuals complain of being deprived of their liberty in violation of the constitution or a law. of the United States, where it is
Interruption by Col. Lewis: We are not making that contention.
You stated in arguing here that this is not a good indictment, and therefore no indictment, and therefore he has not been indicted, and therefore this provision of the constitution is violated, because he is being deprived of liberty upon a conviction that was not founded upon an indictment. ^ 1 say that it is not true that the petitioner has any right to insist that the; federal constitution is violated by a procedure against him without a good indictment,—without an indictment that informs him fully of the facts alleged to be criminal. There is nothing in the constitution that reaches that point of his case. Now, there is no statute of the United States that has been violated by this proceeding. The use of public money by an office]1 of this state or of a municipality of this state in a manner to make a profit for himself is not an act that comes under the protection of any clause; of the constitution or any statute;. We are; relegated, them, to the* proposition that, under the; fifth amendment and the fourteenth amendment, he is entitled to due process of law befe>re lie can lie deprived of liberty, and it is a violation of the constitution to deprive him of the equal proteetiem of the laws because he is a citizen. Now, let ns see about that. The supreme court has determined the matter, and puts it certainly beyond any question of power in this court to inquire, further, that in criminal cases, the manner in which a defendant may he arraigned and accused by state laws, is a matter entirely of state regulation. Tiie constitution of the United States does not attempt in any way to say how the state shall regulate its procedure in enforcing its own laws. There is therefore no deprivation of liberty without due process of law by a proceeding that is in conformity with the state law, no matter how the state has seen fit: to legislate as to procedure.
Then comes the question whether Mr. Krug has been deprived of the equal protection of the laws. It is said that this indictment would not he a good indictment,—the supreme court would not have held it to be a good indictment,—on account of its insufficiency ,of details in regard to the facts charged had it been any other crime than the crime of using money unlawfully by a public officer. The supreme court of the state of Washington held in Mr. Krug’s 'Case that, as a general proposition of law, under the ordinary rules and under the common-law requirements, the indictment would not be sufficient, hut that this case is governed by section 58 of the Penal Code, which provides that:
“In prosecutions for the offenses named In the next preceding section [the section under which this indictment was brought], it shall be sufficient to allege generally, in the information or indictment, that any such officer *' * " has made profit out of the public money in his possession or under his control, or has used the same for any purpose not authorized by law, to a certain value or amount, without specifying any further particulars in regard thereto; and on the trial evidence may be given of all the facts constituting the offense and defense thereto.” State v. Krug, 12 Wash. 288-309, 41 Pac. 126.
Now, it is shown upon the face of Mr. Krug’s petition that the supreme court of the state of Washington has adjudged that this information is valid and sufficient, as tested by the constitution and laws of the state of Washington. Whether that decision is right or wrong, it establishes the law' in his case clearly, in any tribunal into which the case may be carried. I would be very reluctant to make a ruling here which would deprive Mr. Krug of his right to appeal from my decision, but counsel is wrong in supposing that a refusal to grant this writ will deprive Mr. Krug of his right to appeal. It will deprive him of a right to be in the custody of the United States marshal, or to be admitted to bail pending the hearing of his appeal, but his appeal can go.
The right of an appeal that is based upon a constitutional question goes directly from this court to the supreme court of the United States, as in the Friedrich Case. The procedure in habeas corpus cases is not the same as in criminal cases. The change of the law in taking away the jurisdiction of criminal cases from the supreme court, except in capital cases, applies to cases that are prosecuted as criminal cases in the federal court; and it does not diminish or take from the supreme court its jurisdiction over constitutional questions, whether in civil or criminal cases. If the petitioner is not seeking, or does not intend to take, an appeal on the constitutional question, but purely upon a question of federal law, this case will go to the circuit court of appeals. In refusing to grant the writ, I am doing no more than depriving Mr. Krug of the right to be admitted to