Layton appeals the District Court’s order,
I.
On October 9, 1980, Layton was indicted by a federal grand jury in the Northern District of California. The indictment contained four counts: (1) conspiracy to murder a United States Congressman in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 351(d); (2) aiding and abetting the murder of a Congressman in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 351(a); (3) conspiracy to murder an internationally protected person in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 1117; and (4) aiding and abetting the attempted murder of an internationally protected person in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 1116(a). The charges arise from events which occurred at the Port Kaiturna, Guyana airport on November 18, 1978. Those events resulted in the death of Leo J. Ryan, the United States Congressman from the 11th Congressional District of California, and the wounding of Richard Dwyer, the Deputy Chief of Mission for the United States in the Republic of Guyana. Layton was in custody in Guyana at the time the indictment was returned.
Layton’s motion to dismiss the indictment for lack of subject matter jurisdiction was based on his contentions that § 351 has no extraterritorial effect and that §§ 1116 and 1117 require that a defendant be physically within the United States when indicted.
II.
Before we can reach the questions of statutory interpretation, we must address the threshold question whether the denial of a motion to dismiss for lack of subject matter jurisdiction is appealable prior to final judgment.
The right of appeal in criminal cases “is purely a creature of statute.”
Abney v. United States,
“The ease with which the finality rule is stated, however, belies the difficulty of its application.”
United States v. Garner,
Such a challenge to “the very authority of the prosecution to hale the defendant into court in the first place,”
Griffin,
We need not determine whether Layton’s challenge to the subject matter jurisdiction of the trial court satisfies the first two prongs of the
Cohen
test, for it clearly fails to satisfy the third requirement. Unlike the protection afforded by the Double Jeopardy Clause, the Indictment Clause, the Speech or Debate Clause, and the prohibitions of vindictive or selective prosecution, the requirement that a federal court have subject matter jurisdiction “does not . .. encompass a ‘right not to be tried’ which must be upheld prior to trial if it is to be enjoyed at all.”
United States v. MacDonald,
Although we know of no case decided after
Abney
that has directly presented the issue, we think that the case law supports our conclusion that a challenge to subject matter jurisdiction is not appealable before trial. A motion to dismiss for lack of personal jurisdiction is a much more attractive candidate for interlocutory appeal. Pre-trial appeal of challenges to personal jurisdiction, however, have been rejected, even in the criminal context.
See United States v. Sorren,
The Supreme Court’s discussion of the subject matter jurisdiction of federal courts confirms that the requirement of such jurisdiction does not confer upon litigants a right to be free from trial itself. Rather, the Court’s concern has been with protecting the judicial system — and thus only indirectly the litigants — from the institutional consequences of permitting to stand
the judgment
of a court which lacks jurisdiction.
See American Fire & Casualty Co. v.
*684
Finn,
Although we do not reach today the merits of Layton’s challenge to the jurisdiction of the district court, we observe that his argument undercuts, to an extent, his claim that the denial of his motion to dismiss for lack of subject matter jurisdiction should be immediately appealable. Layton concedes that a grant of jurisdiction over the alleged acts would be constitutional under Article III, even though they were committed in a foreign country. His contention is that Congress, although it could confer such extraterritorial jurisdiction on the federal courts, has not done so in the statutes in question. This alleged failure by Congress to extend jurisdiction, rather than being based on some concern that persons accused of such acts should be spared the ordeal of trial in the federal courts of this country, is based, he suggests, on a reluctance to make a “significant intrusion on the delicate issues of foreign relations” which are involved in such an extraterritorial grant. This belies any contention that limitations on the federal courts’ subject matter jurisdiction involve a right to be free not merely from conviction, but from prosecution itself. The interest in protecting intergovernmental relations does not require that jurisdictional questions be finally resolved prior to trial. Rather, it is adequately served by ensuring, through postjudgment appeal, that federal courts not enter final judgments in cases not within their subject matter jurisdiction.
In sum, we agree with the 1st Circuit’s conclusion in
Sorren, supra,
that “the essence of a litigant’s jurisdictional ‘right’ is that the court not impose a
judgment
against him unless it has ... subject matter jurisdiction.”
The appeal is DISMISSED. The mandate shall issue forthwith.
