The petitioner Pitts was convicted in the Supreme Court of the District of Columbia on an indictment charging conspiracy under section 37 of the Federal Criminal Code (18 USCA § 88). After sentence, he filed a petition for a writ of habeas corpus, alleging that the Supreme Court of the District was without jurisdiction. On appeal to this court, petitioner correctly states that the only question for decision here is whether the Supreme Court of the District of Columhia, holding a criminal court, had jurisdiction to try him upon an indictment alleging’ a violation of section 88, title 18, USCA (Criminal Code, § 37). The statute in question makes it a crime to conspire to commit any offense against the United States, and a subsequent section (546) makes the offense triable in the District Court of the United States for the appropriate district. From this petitioner argues that since by statutory enactment the offense of conspiracy is triable in a district court of the United States, his indictment and trial in the Supreme Court of the District of Columbia was unlawful, and the sentence imposed wholly without effect. We think there is no merit in this contention.
Section 81 of title 18, D. C. Code, 1929, provides’: “Except as otherwise provided in section 258 of this title, the trial of crimes and misdemeanors committed in the District of Columbia shall be in the supreme court of the District of Columbia holding a special term as a criminal court.”
Section 258 referred to in the statute deals solely with the jurisdiction of the juvenile court, and therefore is without any significance so far as the question here is concerned. And section 43 of the same title provides: “The said court shall possess the same powers and exercise the same jurisdiction as the district courts of the United
It is, of course, not contended that the act of Congress creating the offense of conspiracy and its punishment is not applicable to the District of Columbia, for section 21, title 1, D. C. Code 1929, provides: “The common law, the principles of equity and admiralty, all general acts of Congress not locally inapplicable in the District of Columbia, and all acts of Congress by their terms applicable to the District of Columbia and to other places under the jurisdiction of the United States, in force in the District of Columbia on March 3, 1901, shall remain in force except in so far as the same are inconsistent with, or are replaced by, subsequent legislation of Congress.”
But it is contended that because it is not specifically made an offense under the laws of the District, an indictment under it must be tried in a District Court of the. United States, and that since, under the provisions of the District law, section 56, title 18, D. C. Code 1929, providing for special terms. of the Supreme Court, one of said terms in designated as “the district court of the United States,” and by the act of April 19, 1920 (section 347, title 18, D. C. Code 1929), Congress has provided for the drawing of petit jurors for service in the various special terms, including inferentially said term as District Court of the United States, the trial of petitioner should have been had in a court so designated rather than in the Supreme Court of the District of Columbia holding a special term as a criminal , court, but we regard this as a play upon words, for, first of all, it overlooks section 58 of title 18, wherein it is provided that the several terms “are declared to be terms of the supreme court,” arid more particularly section 81 of title 18 which specifically provides that the trial of crimes and misdemeanors committed in the 'District shall be had in the Supreme Court holding a special term as a criminal court, and this we think means all crimes, and so we have already had occasion to hold in Arnstein v. U. S., 54 App. D. C. 199, 201,
We therefore reach the conclusion that the Supreme Court of the District of Columbia, by that name, is the proper tribunal, under the acts of Congress, for the trial of offenses which outside the District would be triable in a District Court, and that therefore the denial of the habeas corpus and the dismissal of the writ was in all respects correct and should be and is affirmed.
Affirmed.
