39 F. 49 | E.D. Mo. | 1889
1. The first question raised by the demurrer filed in this ease is whether the court of criminal correction of the county (now city) of St. Louis has power to naturalize aliens. Section 2165, Rev. St. U. S., confers such power on “courts of record of any of the states having common-law jurisdiction.” The court of criminal correction is declared to be a- court of record by the second section of the act establishing that court. 2 Rev. St. Mo. 1879, p. 1511. Hence the sole point for consideration is whether it is also a court “having common-law jurisdiction ” within the meaning of the federal statute. That is a question, as it appears to me, that admits of little controversy. The jurisdiction of all the courts in this and other states is defined with greater or less particularity by statute, and in that sense their jurisdiction is statutory. But, as is well known, certain courts in this as well as in other states have power to punish offenses that existed at common law, and to enforce private rights and to redress private wrongs recognized by the common law, and in the exercise of that power their action is governed by the principles, rules, and usages of the common law, in so far as they have
2. It is further insisted that the oath alleged to have been made by the defendant was not required to be made by any provision of the naturalization laws,' and hence that no offense was committed under section 5424 of the Revised Statutes, on which the indictment is predicated, even though the oath was false. With respect tó this contention it will suffice to say that an offense was committed under section 5424 if the oath alleged to have been made by the accused was either “ required or authorized ” by the naturalization laws, and if the same was false-. According to the view-taken of the question raised by the point of the demurrer now under consideration, it is unnecessary to decide whether an applicant for naturalization under section 2167 must prove his residence in the United States for three years before attaining his majority by the oath of some third party, as required by the third subdivision, § 2165, or whether the law permits the applicant to prove that fact by his own oath. That, in my opinion, is an immaterial question, so far as the demurrer is concerned. Section 2167 at least requires the court before whom the application for admission to citizenship is made to ascertain that the applicant has resided in this country for the requisite period of three years before attaining his majority. That is the basal fact on which the right to naturalization depends. It does not provide that such fact shall be established only ,by the oath of the applicant, or that no other testimony shall be received. Hence, according to
3. A further objection is made to the indictment on the ground that it is not averred that the deputy-clerk of the court of criminal correction, before whom the oath is said to have been taken, was appointed deputy, as required by the act creating the court, or that ho was authorized to administer an oath to the defendant. The first of these objections is not tenable. The indictment alleges that the person who administered the oath to the accused was the deputy-clerk of the court, and was acting as such when the oath was administered, and that it was administered in open court. That, in my opinion, is sufficient. It was not necessary to allege the successive steps taken by which the officer became deputy-clerk. The fact alleged, that he was such clerk and was so acting, implies a legal appointment. Everything else connected therewith is evidential, and need not be averred. The second objection mentioned above would be tenable were it not for the fact that the court of criminal correction is so located with respect to this that this court is hound to take judicial notice of its powers and of the authority of its clerk to administer oaths. If the oath had been taken before some officer, of whose power to administer oaths this court is not bound to take judicial notice, the objection would, of course, be fatal. But, inasmuch as the court takes judicial notice of the general laws of the state and of the fact that the deputy-clerk of the court of criminal correction has power to administer oaths to persons appearing as witnesses in that court, I am inclined to the view, and accordingly hold, that the allegation that the accused appeared and was sworn in open court by the deputy-clerk thereof is sufficient, even in an indictment. Certainly the government on the trial will not be bound to prove anything more in the way of establishing
Some other more technical objections were made to the indictment, which on due consideration do not seem to be well founded. The demurrer is accordingly overruled.