149 F. 302 | W.D. Wash. | 1906
The indictment in this case charges the commission of - a crime on board an American vessel on the high seas within the admiralty and. maritime jurisdiction of the United States, out of the jurisdiction of any particular state or district, and that this .is the district into which the defendant was first brought and' ’arrested. After his arraignment, the defendant filed a plea in abatement, alleging that he was arrested in Alaska and there charged with the same crime, and that the District Court for the Second Division, of Alaska is the only court which has jurisdiction of the case.
Section 730, Rev. St. U. S. [U. S. Comp. St. 1901, p. 585], prescribes that offenses committed on the high seas and within the admiralty and maritime jurisdiction of the United States shall be cognizable-in the district where the offender is found or into which he is first brought, and I hold that a district, within the meaning of this law,, is not a mere geographical division of country, but a judicial district defined by an act of Congress, pursuant to the constitutional requirements that criminal prosecutions shall be in the state and district in which the offense shall have been committed, which district shall have been previously ascertained by law; but, when the offense was not committed within any state, the trial shall be at such place or plac
In saying that the existing courts of Alaska are not vested with jurisdiction of the case, I have not overlooked the argument made in behalf of the defendant, based upon the act of Congress of 1881, providing a civil government for Alaska. 23 Stat. 24, c. 53, 1 Supp. Rev. St. U. S. 1891, p. 430. This statute, for convenience, will, when hereafter mentioned, be called the “Organic Act.” The third section provides :
“That there shall be, and hereby is, established a District Court for said district, with the civil and criminal jurisdiction of District Courts of the United States, and the civil and criminal jurisdiction of District Courts of the United States exercising the jurisdiction of Circuit Courts, and such other jurisdiction, not inconsistent with this act, as may be established by law.”
That court, however, was supplanted, if not intentionally abolished, by the Alaska Code, enacted by Congress June 6, 1900 (31 Stat. 321. c. 786), which divided Alaska into three divisions, and created a new District Court, with a judge to preside in each of the three divisions, and defined the jurisdiction of the new court. The last section of the Code repeals all laws inconsistent with its provisions, and as the broader provisions of the organic act by which jurisdiction was conferred are inconsistent with the more limited jurisdiction defined by the Code, there can be no justification for assuming that the jurisdiction vested by the organic act was transferred to the existing courts by judicial construction of the laws. The opinion of the Circuit Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit in the case of Tornanses v. Melsing, 106 Fed. 779, 45 C. C. A. 615, expresses the view of that court on the point, to the effect that the Code abolished the District Court for Alaska created by the organic act.
The crime charged is cognizable in this court, and, as the Alaska courts have not jurisdiction of the case, it follows that by virtue of section 730, Rev. St. U. S., this is the proper district for the defend
The plea in abatement is’ overruled.