27 Tex. 627 | Tex. | 1864
The present proceeding originated in the caption by the defendant Sparks, by means of the military force subject
For the better understanding of the present case, it is necessary for us to state briefly some of the facts connected with the proceeding on the habeas corpus. On the 14th day of March, A. D. 1864, on the return of the writ previously issued by it, the above named parties were brought before this court. And at the same time a return or answer to the writ was made by Lieut. Thomas E. Sneed, who stated that said prisoners were in his custody, at the service of the writ, as commander of the post at San Antonio; that they were confined by order of Major Gen. J. Bankhead Magruder, commander of the military district of Texas, New Mexico and Arizona, on the charge of treason and conspiracy against the government of the Confederate States.
The court deemed it proper that Major Gen. Magruder should be informed of the issuance of the writ, and the answer which had been made to it, and, as he appeared from it to be the real respondent, that an opportunity should be afforded him of making such answer as he believed necessary for the proper disposal of the case. For this purpose, Charles L. Robards and Spencer Ford, esquires, two of the attorneys of this court, were appointed to represent the respondent in the writ, and cause the action taken by the court to be communicated to Major Gen. Magruder, and the case, at their instance, was continued until the 21st day of the month. At the same time the court ordered, pending the proceedings in the case, the prisoners into the custody of the sheriff of Travis county, who is the ministerial officer of this court, to be kept by him, subject to its control, under proper guard. On the day to which the case had been postponed, Horace Cone, Esq., an officer of the Confederate States, and also an attorney of this court, appeared on behalf of Major Gen. Magruder, and filed the answer of that officer, which states, in substance, that the applicants for the writ were arrested and held by his order, as com
On the application of the counsel for the respondent, the case was again continued by the court until the 25th day of the month. On this day, all the parties being before the court, the respondent, Major Gen. Magruder, (for such the facts, as well as his answer, show to be his true position,) by his counsel, and the prisoners in person, attended by their counsel, a motion was submitted to the court by the counsel for the respondent, that the court should remand the prisoners to the custody of the military authorities. This motion was accompanied by an affidavit of the defendant, Major J. H. Sparks, stating, in substance, that the prisoners before the court, who were arrested by order of Major Gen. Magruder, have been ordered by Lieut. Gen. Smith, commanding the Trans-Mississippi Department, to be detained as prisoners under the provisions of the recent act of Congress suspending the writ of habeas corpus, which order having been communicated to him by Major Gen. Magruder, he was required to execute. There was, also, filed with the motion a letter from Major Sparks to the court, stating substantially the same facts, and requesting the delivery of the prisoners to him by the court, with as little delay as possible. The motion was also accompanied by a letter to Mr. Cone by Edmund P. Turner, A. A. G., stating that he was instructed by Major Gen. Magruder to say, “ that he wishes you to represent to the honorable judges of the Supreme Court, now in session in Austin city, that in directing the commanding officer at Austin to detain the prisoners who are before the court, and to remove them to Houston, no disrespect or discourtesy is intended; but that he has acted under the law of Congress, and in accordance with the Lieutenant General commanding the department.” On the next day, an amendment of the motion was filed, accompanied by an affidavit of Major Guy M. Bryan, of Lieut. Gen. Smith’s staff, but this has, properly, no connection with the matter now before the court.
On the presentation of this motion and the accompanying papers, the court stated, if it was desired, time would be given to examine and consider the question raised by the motion, and the
Attached to, and forming a part of the defendant’s answer, are the following extracts from the orders received by him from Maj. Gen. Magruder:
“ That as congress has passed an act suspending the writ of habeas corpus in the case of such persons as may be designated by his Excellency, the President, the Hon. Secretary of War, and the Lieut. General commanding the Trans-Mississippi Department, .and the following named persons, to wit: Dr. Peebles, Messrs. Baldwin, Zinke and Hildebrand, having been ordered by Lieut. Gen. Smith, commanding Trans-Mississippi Department, to be «detained as prisoners,” &c.
“ No. 2. You will yourself disregard the present writ of habeas corpus, or any .writ which may subsequently be issued.”
“ Headquarters of Texas, &c.
“ Houston, Texas, March 19th, 1864.
" To the commanding officer at Austin :
“Sir: I am instructed by Maj. Gen. Magruder to direct that you furnish such guards as may be necessary to place the escape of the political prisoners beyond a doubt, and to escort them where the commanding General may wish.
“I am, Sir, very respectfully,
“ Your ob’t serv’t,
“ Edmond P. Turner, A. A. G.”
The facts which we have recited show that the prisoners heretofore named were in the custody of the court, acting through its ministerial officer, for their judicial action in a matter with which they are charged by the constitution and laws of the State. It certainly needs neither argument or authority to show that there is no officer or tribunal, civil or military, known to the law of the land, that could, without a violation of law and a contempt of this court, forcibly take from under its control, and without its consent, said prisoners, until the final adjudication of the court upon ¡the matter before it. The answer of the defendant, when ana
The continuance of a question by. a court, that it may be correctly determined by the aid of proper reflection and the examination of precedent and authority, can only be regarded as a justification or extenuation of such an act as was- committed by the defendant, when the civil tribunals of the country sit merely for the purpose of registering the edicts of the military authorities. The presentation of such a matter in an answer is rather an aggravartion than an extenuation of the outrage committed upon the authority of the court.
Hor can an illegal act be justified, no matter how high the source from which it emanates, by an order from superior authority. Military officers are bound to obey all legal orders of those by whom they are commanded. But there is nothing better settled, as well by the military as the civil law, than that neither officers nor soldiers are bound to obey any illegal order of their superior officers; but, on the contrary, it is their bounden duty to disobey them. The soldier is still a citizen, and as such is always amenable to the civil authority. We are of opinion, therefore,, that the orders of Maj. Gen. Magruder can furnish the defendant,
But if these considerations extenuate the act of Maj. Sparks, they do so only by inculpating Maj. Gen. Magruder. If the act was done in obedience to his order, he is the principal offender. Those by whom he has, if this be so, perpetrated so glaring and palpable an outrage upon the law and the authority of this court, are alike subordinates in criminality, as inferiors in rank. But the high position of this officer and the important duties with which he is entrusted by the country, forbid that we should indulge the supposition, in a state of case upon which he has not been heard, that “he has converted the means of discipline, intended for the defence of order, into a means of disturbing that order, and thus has turned the instrument against the power that ought to wield it; for it is the civil government alone that stands for the State, and the military is only an instrument that it uses as its judgment requires.” Better far would it have been, for the prisoners who are in custody of the court, though doubly guilty beyond all that has been charged against them, to go unwhipped of justice, than for the civil authorities of the State to be subordinated to military control, and made dependent upon the consent of the latter for the exercise of their legitimate functions. The one, though to be deprecated, would be of comparatively little importance, but the other would be a vital blow at the constitution, and the principle upon which our government is organized.
It is much to be regretted, especially at a time like the present, that the Major General charged with the defence of the State,
Ordered accordingly.