83 F. 159 | D. Wash. | 1897
The motion in behalf of the respondents to remand will be denied, and I shall order that the petitioners be discharged from custody. In deciding this case, I do not’ mean to say that the warrant which Mr. Kiefer issued was a lawful warrant, nor that the proceedings under it were proper proceedings. I do not mean to say that the petitioners were lawfully discharging their official duties in what they did. In my opinion, the warrant itself was improvidently and erroneously issued, and the proceedings were all ill-advised, and conducted with bad judgment. But where an officer, from excess of zeal or misinformation, or lack of good judgment in the performance of what he conceives to be his duties as an officer, in fact transcends his authority, and invades the rights of individuals, he is answerable to the government or power under whose appointment he is acting, and may also lay himself liable to answer to a private individual who is injured or oppressed by his action; yet where there is no criminal intent on his part he does not become liable to answer to the criminal process of a different government. With our complex system of government,- state and national, we would be in an intolerable condition if the state could put in force its criminal laws to discipline United States officers for the manner in which they discharge their duties. Or, take it the other way, if the government of the United States should prosecute as criminals sheriffs and other ministerial, officers, justices of the peace, and judges of superior courts for errors of judgment, or ignorance, causing blunders in the discharge of their duties, it would bring on a condition of chaos in a short time.
Counsel is mistaken, I think, in assuming that the court in this proceeding is so limited in its powers that it cannot consider the question of whether the defendants are guilty or not guilty of the charge of robbery upon which they were committed. It is true that this court could never adjudicate that question finally, so as to convict and punish these men for robbery if they were robbers; but in a proceeding of this kind it is absolutely necessary for the court to consider the question so far as to determine whether the officers acted wantonly and with criminal intent, or whether, in so far as their acts may be regarded as wrongful, they were mere errors of judgment. Take, for instance, the Neagle Case, 10 Sup. Ct. 658. It is not to be conceived that, if Neagle had actually committed a murder, the federal court would have shielded him from punishment. Suppose that Judge Terry had made no assault upon Judge Field, and there were no such appearances as to give reasonable ground to a person in the situation that Neagle was in to suppose that it was necessary to use a deadly weapon in defense of Judge Field, and that while acting as a protector for Judge Field, in accordance with instructions from the attorney general of the United States, he had wantonly shot and killed Judge Terry, or some other man, so that his act would have been an actual murder; certainly Judge Sawyer and the supreme court of the United States would not have justified the use of the writ of habeas corpus to shield him from punishment. If the marshal of the United States, whose duty it is to attend ses
The undisputed and established facts in this case are that a, warrant was issued by an officer authorized by the laws of the United States to issue warrants in x>rox>er cases. These petitioners were in, the service of the government of the United States, and were acting in and about matters which, pertained to their duties as public officers. In going with the deputy marshal, who had this warrant issued to him. they went by request, and with his sanction; and all that they did was in an official capacity, without any private or individual malice, and without any felonious intent to commit a robbery or to do any criminal act. According' to the evidence, they did things which, in my judgment, they had no right to do. It is my opinion that they .went beyond the line to which the warrant authorized them to go, and pried inio matters which the warrant, did not authorize them to pry into. All that is plain enough, but the felonious intent necessary to make robbers of them is entirely lacking. If they were guilty of robbery, Judge Kiefer is a robber, and