1 Brunn. Coll. Cas. 686 | U.S. Circuit Court for the District of South Carolina | 1860
The- question raised in this case is of so much importance that I have considered it proper to set forth the reasons which had led me to the conclusion I shall announce. And to the right understanding of the case, it is necessary to give a concise statement of it, from the time when first it was brought before me to the present moment.
The first proceeding in this court against Wm. C. Corrie rested upon an affidavit made by Mr. Ganahl, then the attorney of the United States for the district of Georgia, in which it was charged, from “credible information.” that William C. Corrie, master or commander of the vessel called Wanderer, did land in the Southern district of Georgia certain negros not held to service by the laws of either of the states or territories of the United States, with intent to make them slaves; and that the said William C. Corrie, master or commander of a vessel called the Wanderer, on a foreign shore, did seize, decoy, and forcibly bring, carry and receive on board the said vessel such negros, landed by. him as aforesaid in the Southern district of Georgia, with intent to make them slaves, contrary to the fourth and fifth sections of the act of congress of the 15th May. 1820 [3 Stat. 600]. The affidavit, of course, is more full and circumstantial than this synopsis of it. Upon this affidavit a warrant was ordered to issue for the arrest of the said William C. Corrie, to answer the charge so made against him. At the same time an order was asked for his removal to the state of Georgia, there to be tried for the offence with which he was charged. I considered the question, and refused to make the order, because by the express provision of the act of congress of the 15th May, 1820, under which he was charged and arrested, jurisdiction of the offence)', was in the circuit courts of the state m which!' the offender was “brought” or "found,” and! the offender having been.‘.‘found” in the state] of South Carolina. It was at the same timejj declared that the jurisdiction which thus became vested in the courts of the United States for the state of South Carolina was exclusive of jurisdiction in the courts of any other state; and application having been made in that behalf, he was admitted to bail, and became bound with sureties to appear and answer the charge against him, at the next ensuing term of the circuit court of the United States for the state of South Carolina. After these proceedings had taken place, and before the term of the circuit court of the United States, for the state of South Carolina, to which the accused had been bound to appear; in the district court of the United States for the state of Georgia, a true bill was returned to that court, by the grand jury, against Wm. C. Corrie for piracy, under the act of May 15, 1820. An exemplification of it was laid before me, and the motion renewed for the removal of the accused to the state of Georgia for trial. I refused again to order the removal, but ordered that the amount of the recognizances in which
At Greenville no proceedings were- taken, and the ease was postponed to the next term of the circuit court in Columbia. And, at at that term, the attorney for the United States, having read to the court the evidences of all efforts used to obtain the necessary witness, upon his motion, the accused was ordered again to enter into new recognizances to appear and answer at this term of the circuit court of the United States. It is proper to bear in mind that the accused, so far as is known to this court, has never, in the terms of the act of 1820, been “brought” or “found” within the limits of the state of Georgia; it is believed of this there can be no doubt. But he was “found” within the limits of the state of South Carolina. And, as already said, when “found” within the limits of the state of South Carolina, jurisdiction of the o'ffenee was vested, by the express provisions of the act of 1820, in the circuit court of the United States for this state. While held subject to the jurisdiction of this court, the grand jury of the United' States court in Georgia returned into court a true bill against him for a violation of the same act. which he was here held to answer. In regard to these cases there was a direct conflict of jurisdiction. In the proceedings subsequently adopted against him in the courts of the United States for Georgia, and which related to a violation of an act of 1818 (a minor offence), it never was denied in this court that there was jurisdiction of that of-fence in the courts of the United States for the state of Georgia.
Nor was it because of a question of jurisdiction that the order for his removal was refused. Two reasons did, however, induce the refusal. The one, stated in the opinion then delivered in this court, already noticed, and which was, that, while held here to answer for a capital offenee, he could not be transferred to another court, there to be tried for a misdemeanor. It was in relation to a question similar to that then before the court, but not presented with so many objectionable circumstances, that Chief Justice Marshall said: “Such a thing has never, been done; it is contrary, to all correct principles.” But this sufficient in itself, as it undoubtedly was, did not alone guide me in the decision. I had great reason to believe that the application to remove him, under a charge of having violated the act of 1818, was not intended to secure his presence at the trial of that charge; but that when removed under the charge of having violated the act of 1818, he was to be tried for a violation of the act of 1820—the same offence for which he was held here to answer, and of which it had been decided by this court that it alone had rightful and exclusive jurisdiction. To Judge Wayne all the reasons which led me to refuse the order asked wgre fully communicated. It is proper to say that Judge Wayne assured me that
In the act of 1820, congress has plainly declared the places in which there shall be jurisdiction of the offences it creates. These places exclude the idea of any of these of-fences being considered by congress as of-fences to be committed within the limits of a state. To none other than such offences is the designation of the place of jurisdiction consistent with the constitution. If, then, we regard congress as legislating under the sanction of the constitution, we must consider the offences created by the act of 1820. because of the place or places at which they are to be tried, as offences committed without the limits of a state. If we insist that the offences, any or all, are to be considered as committed within the limits of a state, then did the congress which passed the act of 1820, either not know the article in the constitution and the amendment to which I have referred; or, knowing them, willfully violate their positive command. In .the interpretation of a statute, a cardinal rule instructs us to read it so that all its provisions may be consistently preserved. It is enough, according to this rule, to show that by the interpretation of certain words in one sense, other material words must be rejected which by another construction, may be preserved, to command us to adopt that which preserves every provision of the law. In this act of 1820, the place for the trial of offences is plainly and positively expressed. If such offences are regarded as offences not to be considered as committed within the limits of a state, but outside of such limits, then is the designation of the place for the trial thereof constitutional and operative. But if they are considered: as to be committed within the limits of a state, the designation of a place or places for the trial thereof is unconstitutional and inoperative. Is there any room for a court, under such circumstances, to entertain a doubt of the construction which it is bound to adopt? If there is an offence under the act of 1820 which is to be held an offence committed within the limits of a state, then that part of the same act which declares the place or places at which jurisdiction shall be exercised of the offences it creates, must be stricken out, because in such a case it would be unconstitutional. I can very well understand in what manner, if any of the offences-created by the act of 1820, should or could occur on land, or within the limits of a state, a court would refuse its cognizance of it; because the act in fixing a place for the trial, had so evidently intended to create an offence not to be committed within the limits of a state; but I cannot understand why with, that intention of congress so plainly manifested by the designation of a place for tidal, exclusively appropriate for offences not committed within the limits of a state, it should be insisted that offences not intended to be included should be included.
To insist that other offences can be tried under the act of 1820, than such as are cognizable, according to the words of the act. in the circuit court of the United States for the state in which the offender is brought or found, is subversive of a fundamental principle in the construction of any criminal law. It has been sometimes contended, but never permitted by a court, that the intention of a law should give a meaning to its words wider than they generally receive. But I have never known before of a ease in which the oper
When, therefore, I have claimed that the rightful jurisdiction of the offence with which the accused is charged is in the circuit court of the United States for the state of South Carolina, I do so because the act which creates the offence has so declared it. It was here that he was first arrested. When rightful jurisdiction of the case once vested in the circuit court of the United States for the state of South Carolina, it became exclusive of jurisdiction, elsewhere, and the accused could not be transported to a different district for trial. And when, . because of offences charged to have been committed in violation of the act of 1820, jurisdiction was claimed by the circuit court of the United States for Georgia of the offence then before this court, and of the offender held to answer here, it could not maintain its claim while in this court there was jurisdiction. And when the right to the exercise of jurisdiction over the offence was claimed by the circuit court of the United States for the state of Georgia, the offence being a violation of the act of 1820, because it was alleged that the offence was committed within the limits of the state of Georgia, the answer is to be derived from the principles laid down by Chief Justice Marshall. No offence committed-under the act of 1820 can be within the limits of a state: the place or places appointed for such trials are applicable exclusively to offences committed without the limits of a state. To construe the act as relating to offences within the limits of a state, is to disregard, in its designation of the place or places for trial, “a distinction which the legislature has taken, and must of course be respected by the court.” The designation of a place or places for trial, applicable only to offences which could be committed outside of the limits of a state, is equivalent to the words, if used “without the jurisdiction of any state.” The creation by congress, therefore, of an offence not cognizable in courts having jurisdiction of offences committed outside of the limits of a state, but cognizable in courts having-jurisdiction of offences committed within the limits of a state, is a matter of which the legislature has been silent. “Congress has not made such punishable, and the court cannot enlarge the statute.” It seems to me, therefore, that the circumstance relied on to support a claim for the exercise of jurisdiction in this case by the courts of the United States for the state of Georgia, which is that the violation of the act of 1820 occurred within the limits of the state of Georgia, and therefore must be tried in the courts of that state, is the circumstance which conclusively repels the claim so made for jurisdiction, because an act committed within the limits of the state of Georgia, and cognizable therefore, only in the courts of the United States for that state, is not an offence within the terms of the act of 1820, which relates exclusively to offences cognizable in courts exercising jurisdiction under the act of congress over crimes and offences not committed within the jurisdiction of any state. Cognizance of this offence, therefore, by the courts of the United States for the state of Georgia, because alleged to have been committed within the limits of the state of Georgia, and, therefore, cognizable only in the courts of that state, is not consistent with the plain meaning or obvious intention of the act of 1820. It does not respect a distinction which congress has taken; operates to enlarge a penal statute; makes punishable other offences than such as congress has declared; and this no court can do, according to the judgment of the supreme court And thus, the alleged locality of the offence, under the act of 1820, upon which jurisdiction is claimed, is the ’ circumstance which, if it does exist, would disprove any right to jurisdiction under the act of 1820, because no such offence is declared by that act. It is proper always to bear in mind,
The great vital principle, that the powers exercised in ail or any of the departments, by which the government of the United States is administered, are delegated and specific, applies to the judicial as strongly as to the executive or legislative departments. No court of the United States can take cognizance of a crime or offence, until that charged to be such crime or offence shall have been so declared by the congress of the United States;' nor can eongress declare it to be a crime or offence, unless authorized by the constitution of the United States so to do? Nor with these sanctions, can a court proceed to the trial- of such a crime or offence, unless it shall have been authorized to take cognizance thereof? I have said that the ground upon which jurisdiction is claimed for the courts of the United States in Georgia of itself defeats the claim, because it creates an offence within a locality, inconsistent with the intention and language of congress as they appear in the act of 1820. And I will-now proceed to show what are the crimes declared by the act of the 15th May, 1820. This act has been in the statute book for nearly forty years; but as yet no court has been called on to give to it a construction which would show the true nature of the offences which it creates. Whatever hesitancy I might feel in undertaking now to give a construction to this act it is, as it should be, altogether removed by the reflection, that it is proper, nay imperative, as I conceive upon those whose duty it is to expound the law, to declare what this act means.
I consider it, moreover, necessary to do so, because there have been verdicts of acquittal-rendered by juries in the case of persons charged with a violation of this act; and such verdicts have been regarded as indicative of a purpose on the part of juries not to enforce its provisions. How far such an opinion has a just foundation, may be seen in the statement which X now make; that no case has been tried in the court of the United States for the state of South Carolina, for alleged violations of the act of 15th May, 1820, in which any other verdict than that which acquitted could have been given consistently with the law and the. evidence in such case. I will go farther and say, that had in any of the cases which were tried in the courts of the United States for this state a verdict of guilty been rendered, I do not believe that any judge of the United States would have hesitated in directing a new trial. And this declaration is warranted by the construction which Judge Story, and after him Judge Woodbury, both judges of the supreme court, have given to the criminal intent by the act itself, made ah essential part of the’ crime which the same act has declared. I am now referring to my own opinion, but I have not any reason to suppose, that, in this respect, there was or is any difference between the judges before whom these cases in the courts of the United States, in this state were tried. I have always thought, and the most careful consideration has strengthened the conviction, that there exists a misapprehension of the act of congress of the 15th May, 1820.
It has been- said that by this act of congress the slave trade has been declared piracy. I cannot find in this act anything which sustains that construction; while in the act, and in the other acts distinctly passed for the suppression of the slave trade, everything leads us to reject that conclusion. Offences similar to such as are prohibited by the act of congress of 1820. were declared to be; and punished as offences by the British parliament, when the slave trade itself was legalized by that body. I intend to speak from the act itself. The authority to which I refer for the correctness of ,the opinion I am expressing, is in the words which congress has used in this declaration of its purpose. It is the legislature, not the court, which is to define a crime and ordain its punishment; and the intention of that legislature is to be found in the words they employ. “To determine that a case is within the in-' tention of a statute, its language must authorize us to say so.” And this rule, declared by Chief Justice Marshall, has been affirmed in terms equally explicit by Chief Justice Taney. • “The law, as it passed, is the will of the majority of both houses; and the only mode in which that will is spoken is in the act itself; and we must gather their intern tion from the language there used, comparing it -when any ambiguity exists with the laws upon the same subject, and looking, if necessary, to the history of the times in which it passed.”
The first thing which strikes attention in the consideration of the act of 182Ü, is that it does not, in its title, nor in any part of the act. either by way of modification, amendment or repeal, refer to the previously existing slave trade laws, or to the slave trade as the object for which its provisions were intended. In every other act passed for the suppression of the slave trade, the purpose is plainly declared in the title and every section of such act. In the only portions of this act in which the slave trade is mentioned; to the mention of it are added certain other things; which other things, when committed, constitute the offences which the act prohibits. These offences, referring to them,
Xo one can be punished under the act of 1820, unless he is of the crew or ship’s company. Hence no one on board, although the owner of the negros or mulattos, with which the vessel is laden, can be convicted or punished under its provisions. In all other acts of congress passed for the suppression of the slave trade, all persons are embraced, who by violating these laws, can be made liable for such offences in- the courts of the United States. In the act of 1794 the prohibition is directed to a citizen or citizens of the United States, or any other person coming into or residing in the same; and words of the same or like general description in regard to persons who shall be liable to the punishment
A brief reference thus to the act of 1820, its language and some reference to the history of the times in which it was passed, and the only persons upon whom its penalties can be imposed, indicate that line of reasoning, which has led me to the conclusion that it is not a part of the slave trade laws of the United States, using that term as it is generally received; as referring to a trade, traffic, business, or employment, in which sense it is used in all of the acts passed expressly for the suppression of the slave trade. And a brief examination of the intent, a material element in the offence under the act of 1820, confirms this view. The intent which the act prohibits is to make a slave of such negro or mulatto. It is peculiar to the act of 1820. What does it mean? If expressed in language different from such as is used in any other act, and if the words used have in themselves a “plain meaning,” that meaning they must have. “Where there is no ambiguity, there is no room for construction.” It has been said that it matters not in the consideration of an offence under the act of 1820, what may have been on a foreign coast, the condition of the negro or mulatto, whether he was bond or free. But from such a proposition I dissent altogether. And to me it seems not only a matter of easy demonstration to show that, in regard to the of-fences created by this act, it is of much consequence under the fourth and fifth sections to determine whether the negro or mulatto was bond or free, but that the act itself plainly teaches by the line of evidence which it prescribes, that the court must have that fact established. It seems to me that a regard to his antecedent condition is indispensably necessary in the consideration of the intent. The intent is to make a slave. Of whom? A negro or mulatto; I omit as unnecessary here all other circumstances; not held to service by the laws of either of the states or territories ot the United States. The negative of this servitude is part of the evidence to sustain the prosecution. But why disprove this servitude? Of a negro or mulatto decoyed or seized on the coast of Africa, why negative a servitude by the laws of either the states or territories of the United States? The explanation seems plain. The intent prohibited is to make a slave. To make implies the creation of that condition. Of one already a slave it could never be said of him
Whether the negro or mulatto was held to servitude by the laws of either of the states or territories of the United States, by the laws of Brazil, of Cuba or of Africa, of him it could not be said that there was proof of an intent to make him a slave, if he was already a slave. To purchase on that foreign coast a slave may be by other laws of the United States, passed for the suppression of the slave trade, an offence punishable by fine and imprisonment; but no law has yet said that it is piracy. Now, the intent being as is said to make a slave,— that is, create a servitude which did not exist until it was imposed by him who was charged with its commission,—it will be seen how consistent is such an intent with the offence which the act creates. The whole scope of the act of 1820 in regard to the 4th and 5th sections is not perceived unless the 3d section of the same act is also considered. The 3d, 4th, and 5th sections embrace all the cases in which robbery may be committed; and whether that robbery relates to the rights of property or the rights of persons. As in the 3rd section, whatever may be the subject of property, if stolen, is declared piracy, for which, upon conviction, the offender shall suffer death; so in the 4th and 5th sections, the right of personal freedom is protected; and he who violates it by force or fraud, in whatever stage of the transaction he is detected, is a pirate, and upon conviction will suffer death. Such crimes are piracies, because robberies. Bobberies, because, by force, fraud, or indirect practices they deprive the negro or mulatto of his right to freedom; that right to freedom being a presumption upon which the court is to act, when the servitude recognized by the constitution and laws , of the United States are proved not to exist in the particular case. But if that presumption is repelled by proof of antecedent servitude, then the intent to make a slave or rob him of his right to freedom cannot be sustained; for he cannot be robbed of that which .he did not possess. And the possession of the negro or mulatto under such circumstances would be a violation, according to the circumstances of some of the laws passed for •the suppression of the slave trade; but it is not a piracy nor a violation of the act of 1820.
This exposition of my construction of the act of 1820, and of the true nature of the crimes which it declares, has been given in explanation of the opinion I hold as to the jurisdiction which the act confers. I have not elaborated nor said more than seemed necessary for the apprehension of that view of the law which I have adopted. But it would not be proper to leave it without applying a few tests, which, perhaps, will serve to show how far the construction which I have given is proper. I have said that the object of the law was to protect in his right to freedom, a negro or mulatto, by force or fraud, taken with the intent to make him a slave. And that every one of the offences mentioned in the 4th and 5th sections, which are but successive stages in the same transaction, relate to the negro or mulatto so taken. If this is not so,—if the several offences as set forth in the 4th and 5th sections
If the act of 1820 is a part of the slave trade legislation of the United States, there are many portions of that legislation, with which it is in conflict, and which, therefore, it must repeal. But no principle which governs a repeal by implication, will sanction it here. It is only by assuming that it is a part of the legislation of the United States, passed for the suppression of the slave trade, that you produce an inconsistency between it and the slave trade laws of the United States. Regarding the various acts passed from 1794 to 1819, as intended for the suppression of trade, traffic, business or employment, in slaves; which is not permitted; and the act of 1820 as intended to suppress acts of piracy, consisting in the unlawful possession of negros, with the intent to make slaves of those, by force or fraud, who are entitled to their freedom; no inconsistency is created between any of these acts. If the most complete evidence should be sought' of the difference between legislation which makes the slave trade, as a trade, piracy, and the legislation of congress in the act of 1820, it would be found in a comparison of the act of 1820 with the act of the British, parliament, the 9th section of 5 Geo. IV. c. 113. in which the slave trade is made piracy. 5 Geo. IV. c. 113, in the 9th section, plainly sets forth the of-fence; makes all persons who violate it liable to its penalties; and in the 10th section includes and makes subject to the penalties declared in fhe 9th section, the captain, mate, surgeon and supercargo, if they know that the vessel is employed or intended so to be, in violation of the act. But the 11th section makes the petty officers, seamen, marines or servants, liable only for a misdemeanor. In another circumstance the difference is still more remarkable. While in the United States, by the most forced construction, it is sought to make the act of 1820 apply to the slave trade as a trade, and extend its penalties to those who cannot be brought within its provisions, the British parliament in 1 Viet. c. 91, abolished the' punishment of death, which it enacted in 5 Geo. IV., and substituted therefor other punishment. It declared death as the penalty for being engaged in the slave trade in 1824; it repealed that penalty in 1837. I have already shown that if jurisdiction is claimed in the courts of the United States for Georgia, because, as is said, the crime charged against the accused was committed within the limits of that state, that the statement itself would exclude jurisdiction because the act of 1820 creates no crime which could be committed within the limits of the state.
I have now examined the act, for the purpose of showing, from the nature of the crimes it creates, that they are not such as can be committed within the limits of a state. I come now to the consideration of the motion made in this case to enter a nolle prosequi in the proceedings against William O. Corrie. By the act of congress of 1789. it is directed that there shall be appointed in each district, “a meet person learned in the law to act as attorney for the United States in such district, who shall be sworn or affirmed to the faithful execution of his office; whose duty it shall be to prosecute in such district all delinquents for crimes and offences cognizable under the authority of the United States, and all civil actions in which the United States shall be concerned except before the supreme court in the district in which that court shall be holden.” And this law continues to be the source from which this officer derives the knowledge of his duties. The prosecution of offenders is thus made the special duty of this officer. His control over and direction of cases thus committed to his charge is exclusive, until they come under the control of the court. In that stage of the ease it becomes subject to judicial power, and this is vested in certain courts, according to article 3, § 1, of the constitution. But although the case may have eome under the control of the judicial power,. yet, practically, the discretion of the district attorney is exercised in relation to it and its discontinuance, until the trial has commenced, as freely as before. This difference is, however, always recognized, that after it has become subject to judicial control, the district attorney then acts with the express assent or tacit acquiescence of the court.
It would be difficult to describe the relation which the court and the prosecuting officer bear to each other with more exactness than was done by Hr. Taney, now the chief justice, when attorney-general for the United States: ‘'This power (said he, referring to the nolle prosequi) over criminal prosecution has been familiarly exercised by the attorneys for the United States, and also by the attorneys for the several states prosecuting in behalf of the public. It is true that in all such cases, they uniformly act, I believe, with the approbation of the court: but this approbation is commonly asked for by the attorney for his own protection. It is not necessary in order to give him the authority, but it is his justification for the manner in which his authority is used, and since he cannot consult his client (the United States) the sanction of the court is regarded as sufficient evidence that he exercised his power honestly and discreetly. Hence he
But it should be remembered, that a general power, derived in the manner we have seen, to interfere with public prosecutions, and direct their abandonment, would, in like manner, justify the president in requiring the prosecuting officer to institute and conduct prosecutions, in cases where the judgment of that officer would suggest a contrary course. Such a power existing without the color of law, in derogation of law, so far as it would impose on the prosecuting officer a control unknown to the law, and, by the imposition of that control, extinguish his responsibility to the law, and substitute therefor a dependence on the president, would be in itself so full of mischief, and so much at war with the system of direct responsibility to" the country intended to be imposed on all public officers, through the laws which define their duties, that it only requires to be stated, to be fully understood. Of this, however,, there can be no doubt. The right of the president to interfere in criminal cases, and cause the abandonment of prosecutions, is exercised only for the purpose of putting an end to such prosecution and discharging the accused. It has never been claimed, never exercised, never permitted, for the purpose of changing the proceedings; still less for the purpose of changing the place of the trial of the accused. So jealous is the law of the United States in this regard, that, as we have seen, it requires the place of trial to
___ It will be seen with what'pertinency I am led to the consideration of the. relations of these officers when in the argument it is said that the attorney of the United States for the state of South Carolina may enter a nolle prosequi without leave of the court; but that his discretion in doing so is controlled by the president I speak of the president because I am bound to suppose that the directions said to have been given by the attorney-general have the sanction of the president. It is true that the court has no power to command the prosecuting officer to proceed in a criminal case if he is unwilling to do so. It is equally true that when the court permits an entry to be made in its minutes of the entry of a nolle prosequi it adopts and justifies that proceeding. If then, the court cannot refuse its leave to the entry of a nolle prosequi, ■ it cannot refuse its assent or withhold its justification to the prosecuting officer, however desirous or even bound it may be to do so. That to answer all the purposes for which a nolle prosequi is intended, it should be entered in the minutes of the court; that it cannot be entered in these minutes without the assent of a judge; would seem to lead to no other conclusion than that a motion to enter it must be addressed to the discretion of the. court. In this case I refuse assent to an entry of it. It is not made in the exercise of that discretion of the attorney of the United States, which is necessary, if not indispensable with me, as the evidence of its-propriety. It is not made for the purpose-either of abandoning a prosecution, for any of the various causes which suggest that course; but to prepare the way for other proceedings, which, in their practical operation., overrule and set aside a judgment of the-court. Such a proceeding, operating for such purposes, has nothing to recommend it to me, nor can it have a place in the minutes of this court. I have thus fairly, and I hope plainly, set forth the grounds upon which all of the proceedings in this court have rested. The opinion which I have given as to the true construction of the act of 15th May, 1S20, is the same which was by me made known to those who had a right to be informed of it, before this case in which it is. now expressed had any- existence. When in Columbia, at the term of the United States-court, I delivered an opinion upon the general question of the right in congress to declare the slave-trade piracy; it was not intended then to decide that the act of the-15th May, 1820, was the exercise of that right. It was considered proper not at that time, to signify a difference in the court as-to the construction of that act. But now the necessity does exist, because the question of jurisdiction involves that of the nature of the offence, and that involves the-construction of the act. I think now, as I did then, that congress had the power, but that the power has not been exercised by the-act of the 15th May, 1820. If the slave trade, regarding it as a trade or business, is to be declared piracy, the act is yet to be passed by congress. If the power to congress was granted at a time and under circumstances which are so wholly different from the time in which we live and the circumstances which surround us, as to show that the grant of it without restriction was improvident, it is for the states by whom the grant of power was made, to resume it or require modifications of its exercise.
[The 4th and 5th sections of the act of May 15, 1820 (Act 1820, c. 113; 3 Stat. 600), are as follows:
[Sec. 4. If any citizen of the United States, being of the crew or ship’s company of any foreign ship or vessel engaged in the slave-trade, or any person whatever, being of the crew or ship's company of any ship or vessel, owned in the whole or part, or navigated for or in behalf of any citizen or citizens of the United States, shall land, from any such ship or vessel, and, on any foreign shore, seize any negro or mulatto, not held to service or labor by the laws of either of the states or territories of the United States, with intent to make such negro or mulatto a slave, or shall decoy, or forcibly bring, or carry, or shall receive such negro or mulatto on board any such ship or vessel, with intent as aforesaid, such citizen or person shall be adjudged a pirate; and on conviction thereof before the circuit court of the United States for the district wherein he may be brought or found, shall suffer death.
[See. 5. If any citizen of the United States, being of the crew or ship’s company of any foreign ship or vessel engaged in' the slave-trade, or any person whatever, being of the crew or ship’s company of any ship or vessel, owned wholly or in part, or navigated for or in behalf of any citizen or citizens of the United States, shall forcibly confine or detain, or aid and abet in forcibly confining or detaining, on board such ship or vessel, any negro or mulatto, not held to service by the laws of either of the states or territories of the United States, with intent to make such negro or mulatto a slave, or shall, on board any such ship or vessel, offer or attempt to sell, as a slave, any negro or mulatto not held to service as aforesaid, or shall, on the high seas, or anywhere on tide-water, transfer or deliver over, to any other ship or vessel, any negro or mulatto,