delivered the opinion of the court.
This wаs an action of debt prosecuted by the United States, under § & of the act of February 20, 1907, c. 1134, 34 Stat. 898, 900, known as the Alien Immigration Act, to recover $1,000 as a penalty for an alleged violation by the defendant of § 4 of that act; and the question now to be considered is, whether it was essential to a recovery that the evidence should establish the violation beyond a reasonable doubt. The District Court instructed the jury that this measure of proof was required, and the instruction was approved by the. Circuit Court of Appeals. 183 Fed. Rep. 293; 203 Fed. Rep. 433. The two sections are as follows:
“Sec. 4. That it shall be a misdemeanor for any person, company, partnership, or corporation, in any manner whatsoever, to prepay the transportation or in any wаy to assist or encourage the importation or migration of any contract laborer or contract laborers into the United States, unless such contract laborer or contract laborers are exempted under the terms of the last two provisos contained in section two of this Act.
“Sec. 5. That for every violation of any of the provisions of section four of this Act the persons, partnership, company, or corporation violating the same, by knowingly assisting, encouraging, or soliciting the migration or importation of any contract laborer into the United States shall forfeit and pay for every such offense the sum of one thousand dollars, which may be sued for and recovered by the United States, or by any person who shall first bring his action thеrefor in his own name and for his own benefit, including any such alien thus promised labor or service of -any kind as aforesaid, as debts of like amount are now recovered in the courts of the United States; and Separate suits may be brought for each alien thus promised *41 labor or service of any kind as aforesaid. And it shall be the duty of the district attorney of the proper district to prоsecute ¿very such suit when brought by the United States.”-' • ■
These sections are largely copied from the like-numbered sections of the act of March 3,11)03, c.1012, 32 Stat. 1213, the words “shall be Unlawful” in § 4 being changed to “shall be-a misdemeanor,” and the words “shall forfeit and pay for every such offense” in § 5, with what follows them, remaining as before. ■ ■ '■ ■ ’
Whether cases like this are civil or criminal'and whether they are attended by the incidents of the one or the other have been so- often considered-by this court that our present duty, as we shall see, is chiefly that of applying settled rules of decision. ■ • .
In
Stockwell
v.
United States,
In
United States
v.
Zucker,
In
Hepner
v.
United States,
(p. 108) “It must be taken as settled law that a certain sum, or a sum which can readily be reduced to a certainty, prescribed in a statute as a penalty for the violation of law, may be recovered by civil action, even if it may also be recovered in a proceeding which is technically criminal. Of course, if the statute by which the penalty was imposed contemplated recovery only by a criminal proceeding, a civil remedy could not be adopted..-
United States
v.
Claflin,
íjí í]i sjí
(p. Ill) “But the decision in the Zucker case is important in that it recognizes the right of the Government, by a civil action of debt, to recover a statutory penalty, although such penalty arises from the commission of a public offense. It is important also in that it decides that an action of that kind is not of such a criminal nature as to preclude the Government from establishing, according to the practice in strictly civil cases, its right to a judgment by depositions taken in the usual form, without confronting the defendant with the witnesses against him.
(p. 115) “The defendant was, of course, entitled to have a jury summoned in this case, but that right was subject . to the condition, fundamental in the conduct of civil actions, that the court may withdraw a case from the jury and direct a verdict, according to the law, if the evidence is uncontradicted and raises only a question of law.”
In Atcheson v. Everitt, approvingly cited in that case, the question for decision was, whether certain testimony, admissible by statute in civil but not in criminal causes, could be’received in an action of debt for the pecuniary penalty for bribery at an election of a Member of Parliament, an act not merely prohibited but indictable as a crime. Notwithstanding the defendant’s insistent objection, the testimony was held to be rightly receivable, it being said by Lord Mansfield, who spoke for the entire court (1. Cowp. 391): “Penal actions were never yet put under the head of criminal law, or crimes. The.construction of the statute must be extended by equity to make this a criminal case. It is as much a civil action, as an action for money had and received.”
*45 In Wilson v. Rastall, 4 D. & E. 753,758, also approvingly-cited in the Hepner Case, one of the questions was, whether, .after a- verdict for the defendant, a new triаl could be granted, upon the plaintiff’s motion, in an action of debt for the pecuniary penalty for bribing voters, an indictable crime, and the court gave an affirmative answer and awarded a new trial, Lord Kenyon, Ch. J., observing: “All the cases of indictments I lay out of the case, because they are criminal cases, and are exceptions to the general rule. But I consider this as a civil action.”
In
United States
v.
Stevenson,
The latest case in this court bearing upon the subject is
Chicago, Burlington & Quincy Railway Co.
v.
United States,
It is a necessary conclusion from these cases (1) that, as respects a pecuniary penalty for the commission of a public offense, Congress competently may authorize, and ixi this, instance has authorized, the enforcement of such penalty by either a criminal prosecution or a civil action; (2) that the present action is a civil one and appropriatе under the statute; and (3) that, if not directed otherwise, such an action is to be conducted and determined accord *47 ing to the same rules and with the same incidents as are other civil actions.
It is of no moment in this case that the act penalized, which theretofore was declared unlawful and styled an offense, was By the statute of 1907 denominated a misdemeanor, for the purрose in that, as was explained in United States v. Stevenson, was merely to make clear the Government’s alternative right to prosecute as for a crime. There was no purpose to revoke the existing right to resort to a civil action or to take from the action any of the usual incidents of a civil case. Indeed, a purpose to the contrary is shown by the reenactment, without chаnge, of the provision authorizing the action. It not only specifies who shall have the civil right of recovery, but also the mode of its exercise and enforcement; for it declares that the penalty “may be sued for and recovered ” by the United States, or by any person, including the alien, who shall first bring the action in his own name and for his own benefit, “as debts of like amount are now recovered in the courts of the United States.” This plainly contemplates that the proceedings in the action are to be in conformity with the recognized mode of adjudicating and enforcing debts of like amount in those courts, and. this whether the action be by the Government or by an individual.
While the defendant was entitled to have the issues tried before a jury, this right did not arise from Article III of the Constitution or from the Sixth Amendment, for both relate to prosecutions which are strictly criminal in their nature
(Counselman
v.
Hitchcock,
So, in providing that the penalty may be sued for and recovered as debts of like amount are recovered, we think it was intended that a reasonable preponderance of the prоof should be sufficient, that being one of the recognized incidents of an action of debt as well as of other civil actions.
This is the view which other Federal courts have generally applied in the administration of statutes authorizing a civil recovery of such penalties.'
United States
v.
Brown,
*49 “The rule of evidence requiring proof beyond a reasonable doubt is generally applicable only in strictly .criminal proceedings. It is founded upon the reason that a greater degree of probability should be required as a ground of judgment in criminal cases, which affect life or liberty, than may safely be adopted in cases where civil rights only are ascertained. 2 Russell on Crimes (7th Am. ed.), 727. It often happens that civil suits involve the proof of acts which expose the party to a criminal prosecution. Such are proceedings under the statute for the maintenance of bastard childrеn, proceedings to obtain a divorce for adultery, actions for assaults, actions for criminal conversation or for seduction, and others which might be named. And in such actions, which are brought for the determination of civil rights, the general rule applicable to civil suits prevails, that proof by a reasonable preponderance of the evidence is sufficient.”
The cases upon which the defendant relies do not compel or lead to a different conclusion. While in
United States
v.
The Brig Burdett,
We conclude that it was error to apply to this case the standard of persuasion applicable to criminal prosecutions; and the judgment is accordingly reversed, with a direction for a new trial.
Judgment reversed.
