This сase is before us on an application for the allowance of a direct aрpeal as of right from a judgment of the district court sentencing applicant to death, it being сontended that such an appeal may be taken pursuant to the section appеaring in the United States Code (1940 edition) as § 681 of Title 18. The application was presented to Mr. Justice Reed, and by him referred to the full Court. Cf.
Budlong
v.
Budlong,
Stephan was convicted of treason upon a jury trial and sentenced to death. 18 U. S. C. § 2. The Circuit Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit, sitting en banc, affirmed the conviction,
This section of the Code has its origin in § 6 of the Act of February 6, 1889, 25 Stat. 655, 656, which granted a writ of error as of right from this Court to any federal trial court “in all cases of conviction of crime the punishment of which provided by law is death.” This prоvision preceded the creation of circuit courts of appeals by the Act of Mаrch 3, 1891,. 26 Stat. 826. See
United States
v.
Rider,
The Act of January 20, 1897, 29 Stat. 492, withdrew from this Court and transferred to the circuit courts of apрeals appellate jurisdiction in criminal cases not capital. This was accomрlished by deleting, from the clause of § 5 of the Act of March 3, 1891, just quoted, the phrase “or otherwise infаmous,” so that the direct appeal to this Court was preserved only “in cases of conviction of a capital crime.”
Section 5 remained in that form until the enactment of the Judiciаl Code. Act of March 3, 1911, 36 Stat. 1087. Section 238 of the Judicial Code (36 Stat. 1157), which in connection with § 236 (36 Stat. 1156) defined the jurisdiction of this Court on direct appeals from district courts, set forth the substance of § 5 of thе Act of March 3,1891, except that it omitted the clause providing for appeals from the trial court to this Court “in cases of conviction of a capital crime.” This omission was not aсcidental, but deliberate, and its purpose was to withdraw the jurisdiction of this Court to entertain a dirеct appeal from a district court in a capital case. This may be seen from the nоtes of the Revisers, which state:
“The only change made in the section is in striking out the words fin cases оf conviction of a capital crime.5 The effect of this is to take from the Supreme Court jurisdiction in capital cases and to transfer the jurisdiction it now possesses to the circuit сourts of appeals." S. Rep. No. 388, Part 1, 61st Cong., 2d Sess., p. 77; and also H. R. Doc. No. 783, Part 1, 61st Cong., 2d Sess., p. 81.
*426 Consistеntly with this purpose, § 128 of the Judicial Code provided (36 Stat. 1133) that “The circuit courts of appeаls shall exercise appellate jurisdiction ... in all cases other than those in which apрeals and writs of error may be taken direct to the Supreme Court, as provided in section two hundred and thirty-eight, unless otherwise provided by law.” And § 297 directed (36 Stat. 1169) that “all other Acts and parts of Acts, in so far as they are embraced within and superseded by this Act, are hereby repealed.”
Such a plain purpose, established both by language of the Judicial Code and its legislative history, cannot be ignored. Our appellate jurisdiction is defined by statute
(Ex parte McCardle,
Accordingly the application for leave to appeal is denied, and the stay heretofore granted is vacated.
So ordered.
