delivered the opinion of the court.
This is a writ of error to a judgment of the Circuit Court of the United States for the Western District of Oklahoma, upon a.conviction in a capital case, sued out by the plaintiff in error, the defendant below, by authority of the fifth section of the act of March 3; 1891, 26 Stat. 826, 827.
The plaintiff- in error, Silas Pickett, a negro, was indicted .in the District Court of the United States for the Western District of Oklahoma for the murder of a negro, known as Walter, the Kid, within the limits of the Osage Indian, Reservation. The indictment was remitted to the Circuit Court for the same
The averments of the indictment make it plain that the crime charged was committed within a “place or district” at that time exclusively under the jurisdiction of the United States, being Indian Country, not within any State. ' As it also averred that the plaintiff in error was a negro, and not an Indian, and the person slain- a negro and not an Indian, the exceptions made by § 21'45, Rev. Stat., do not apply-.
The crime was charged to have been committed on October 14,1907, a date subsequent to the enabling.act of June 16, 1906, under which, on November 20, 1907, Oklahoma was admitted to the Union.
The jurisdiction of the District- Court of the United' States exercised in respect to the indictment and trial of this plaintiff
. It was, therefore, altogether competent for Congress to provide, as it did in the 14th section of this enabling act, for the transfer of jurisdiction in respect of all crimes against the United States — for the act must be read as applying to crimes . under the general criminal law of the United States — to the ' Federal courts provided by the same act. If this could not be done, the change from a territorial condition to that of a State would operate as an automatic amnesty for crimes committed against the general law of the United States within districts exclusively under its jurisdiction, and not within the jurisdiction of any State, for the court of the State could not be empowered to prosecute crimes against the laws of another sovereignty.
Martin
v.
Hunter,
Section 13 of the enabling act referred to provides “that the State
when admitted
[italics ours] shall be divided into
“That all prosecutions for crimes or offenses hereafter committed in either of said judicial districts as hereby constituted shall be cognizable within the district in which committed, and all prosecutions for crimes or offenses committed before' the passage of this act in which indictments have not yet been found or proceedings instituted shall be cognizable within the judicial district as hereby constituted in which such crimes or offenses were committed.”
There may be some doubt as to whether the section set out should be construed as applying to crimes and offenses committed before and after the passage of the enabling act or only to such 'crimes committed before and after the admission of the State. The reference'to “the passage of this act,” in the second clause, would tend to the first construction. But such a construction would leave out of consideration the fact that neither the 'courts nor the judicial districts referred to would exist until the admission of the State by the express terms of the preceding section, which should be read in connection with the fourteenth section. No construction should be adopted, if another equally admissible can be given, which would result in what might be called a judicial chasm. Under the first interpretation, crimes committed after the passage of this enabling act could not be prosecuted until the admission of the State and’ the coming into existence of the courts and judicial districts, to which jurisdiction of such' crimes was to be transferred. If such crimes’could only be prosecuted in courts organized upon the admission of the State there would be an indefinite period during which such crimes might go unpunished. In fact, there elapsed seventeen months between the date of this enabling act and the admission of the State
There are a number of errors assigned. The first and tenth are for error in denying a new trial: The granting or denying of a new trial is a matter not assignable as error.
Bucklin
v.
United States,
Aside from the question of jurisdiction, considered heretofore, the remaining assignments are. for alleged errors in admitting or rejecting evidence. But as no bill of exceptions was taken, these assignments cannot be considered,
Storm
v.
United
States,
Judgment, affirmed.
