34 F. 86 | U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Northern California | 1888
(Hoffman, J., concurring.) The defendant is indicted for the murder of Samuel M. Soper, alleged to have been committed on July 5,1887, within the limits of the military reservation situate within the city and county of San Eran cisco, and known as the “Presidio.” The indictment is found under section 5339, Rev. St., which provides for punishing a murder committed “within any fort, arsenal, dock-yard,
Upon the foregoing state of facts, is the point where the homicide is alleged to have been committed “a place * * * under the exclusive jurisdiction of the United States?” We do nol think it is, and not being so, the act is not an offense against the United States, within the meaning of section 5339, Rev. St., or an offense over which the United States courts have jurisdiction. This point is authoritatively determined by the supreme court of the United States in the late case of Railroad Co. v. Lowe, 114 U. S. 525, 5 Sup. Ct. Rep. 995. In that case the reservation at Fort Leavenworth -was situate precisely like that at the Presidio, at the time of the admission of Kansas into the Union. Says the court:
*89 ssThe land constituting t,lie reservation was part of the territory acquired in 1808 by cession from 'France, and, until the formation of the state of Kansas, and her admission into the Union, the United States possessed the rights of a proprietor, and liad political dominion and sovereignty over -it. For many years before that admission it had been reserved from sale by the proper authorities of the United States, for military purposes, and occupied by them as a military post. The jurisdiction of the United States over it during this time was necessarily paramount. JBut in 1861 Kansas was admitted into the Union upon an equal footing with the original states; that is, with the same rights of political dominion and sovereignty, subject like them only to the constitution of the United States. Congress might undoubtedly, upon such admission, have stipulated for the retention of the political authority, dominion, and legislative power of the United States over the reservation, so long as it should be used for military purposes by the government; that is, it could have excepted the place from the jurisdiction of Kansas, as one needed for the uses of the general government. But from some cause, — inadvertence perhaps or over confidence that a recession of such jurisdiction could be had whenever desired, — no such stipulation or exception was made. The United States therefore retained, after the admission of the state, only the rights of an ordinary proprietor.”
These observations are as applicable to the Presidio as to the Fort Leavenworth reservation, as will be seen by reference to the act admitting California. Tlie only reservation relating to the public land a fleeted the proprietary interest of the United States in tiie lands. That interest was to be in no way interfered with. There was no reservation whatever as to sovereignty, or governmental powers or jurisdiction. There was no distinction made ixr the act of admission between these lands and other lands constituting the public domain in California. There being no reservation of governmental powers or jurisdiction over the Presidio lands in the act admitting California into the Union, in the language of the supreme court in the case cited, “the United States, therefore, retained, after the admission of ilio state, only the rights of an ordinary proprietor.” And again, says the court:
“ The consent of the states to the purchase of lands within them for the special purposes named is, however, essential, under the constitution, to the transfer to the general government, with the title, of political jurisdiction and dominion. Where lands are acquired without such consent, the possession of the United States, unless political jurisdiction be ceded to them in some other way, is simply that of an ordinary proprietor.”
The United States were both proprietors and sovereigns of the Presidio binds till the admission of the state of California into the Union. By the act of admission, reserving only their proprietary right over those lands, they relinquished to the state their governmental or local sovereign right, and jurisdiction, and were thenceforth only proprietors in the sense that any natural person owning land is a proprietor. Having- so relinquished their sovereign rights, that condition remains to this day, unless the state has in some way, either directly or by implication, receded to the United States its sovereign jurisdiction. This could be done by direct cession, or by consenting through its legislature to the purchase of land for such governmental purposes, and a purchase for such purposes in pursuance of such consent. Neither has been done in this in
We know of no other act of the state of California, through its legislature or otherwise, by which a retrocession of its sovereign jurisdiction over the Presidio military reservation has been made to the United States. The result is, the Presidio reservation is not within the exclusive jurisdiction of the United States, and the acts charged do not constitute an offense against the United States under section 5389, Rev. St., or <jf which this court has jurisdiction. The indictment must, therefore, be quashed on that ground, and it is so ordered.