HURTADO v. PEOPLE OF CALIFORNIA.
SUPREME COURT OF THE UNITED STATES
110 U.S. 516; 4 S. Ct.
111; 1884 U.S. LEXIS 1716; 28 L. Ed. 232
Argued January 22, 23, 1884.
March 3, 1884, Decided
PRIOR HISTORY: [***1]
IN ERROR TO THE SUPREME COURT OF CALIFORNIA.
The Constitution of the State of California, adopted in 1879, in article I.,
section 8, provides as follows:
"Offences heretofore required to be prosecuted by indictment shall be
prosecuted by information, after examination and commitment by a magistrate, or
by indictment, with or without such examination and commitment, as may be
prescribed by law. A grand jury shall be drawn and summoned at least once a
year in each county."
Various provisions of the Penal Code regulate proceedings before the examining
and committing magistrate in cases of persons arrested and brought before him
upon charges of having committed public offences. These require, among other
things, that the testimony of the witnesses shall be reduced to writing in the
form of depostions; and section 872 declares that if it appears from the
examination that a public offence has been committed, and there is sufficient
cause to believe the defendant guilty thereof, the magistrate must indorse on the
depositions an order, signed by him, to that effect, describing the general
nature of the offence committed, and ordering that the defendant be held to
answer thereto. Section [***2] 809 of the Penal Code is as follows:
"When a defendant has been examined and committed, as provided in section
872 of this Code, it shall be the duty of the district attorney, within thirty
days thereafter, to file in the Superior Court of the county in which the
offence is triable, an information charging the defendant with such offence.
The information shall be in the name of the people of the State of California,
and subscribed by the district attorney, and shall be in form like an
indictment for the same offence."
In pursuance of the foregoing provision of the Constitution, and of the several
sections of the Penal Code of California, the district attorney of Sacramento
County, on the 20th day of February, 1882, made and filed an information
against the plaintiff in error, charging him with the crime of murder in the
killing of one Jose Antonio Stuardo. Upon this information, and without any
previous investigation of the cause by any grand jury, the plaintiff in error
was arraigned on the 22d day of March, 1882, and pleaded not guilty. A trial of
the issue was thereafter had, and on May 7th, 1882, the jury rendered its
verdict, in which it found the plaintiff in error guilty [***3] of
murder in the first degree.
On the 5th day of June, 1882, the Superior Court of Sacramento County, in which
the plaintiff in error had been tried, rendered its judgment upon said verdict,
that the said Joseph Hurtado, plaintiff in error, be punished by the infliction
of death, and the day of his execution was fixed for the 20th day of July,
1882.
From this judgment an appeal was taken, and the Supreme Court of the State of
California affirmed the judgment.
On the 6th day of July, 1883, the Superior Court of said county of Sacramento
ordered that the plaintiff in error be in court on the 11th day of July, 1883,
in order that a day for the execution of the judgment in said cause should be
fixed. In pursuance of said order, plaintiff in error, with his counsel,
appeared at the bar of the court, and thereupon the judge asked him if he had
any legal reason to urge why said judgment should not be executed, and why an
order should not then be made fixing the day for the execution of the same.
Thereupon the plaintiff in error, by his counsel, objected to the execution of
said judgment and to any order which the court might make fixing a day for the
execution of the same, upon the [***4] grounds:
"7th. That it appeared upon the face of the judgment that the plaintiff in
error had never been legally, or otherwise, indicted or presented by any grand
jury, and that he was proceeded against by information made and filed by the
district attorney of the county of Sacramento, after examination and commitment
by a magistrate of the said county.
"8th. That the said proceedings, as well as the laws and Constitution of
California, attempting to authorize them, and the alleged verdict of the jury,
and judgment of the said Superior Court of said county of Sacramento, were in
conflict with and prohibited by the Fifth and Fourteenth Articles of Amendment
of the Constitution of the United States, and that they were therefore void.
"9th. That the said plaintiff in error had been held to answer for the
said crime of murder by the district attorney of the said county of Sacramento,
upon an information filed by him, and had been tried and illegally found guilty
of the said crime, without any presentment or indictment of any grand or other
jury, and that the judgment rendered upon the alleged verdict of the jury in
such case was and is void, and if executed would deprive the plaintiff
[***5] in error of his life or liberty without due process of
law."
Thereupon the court overrluled the said objections, and fixed the 30th day of
August, 1883, as the time for the execution of the sentence. From this latter
judgment the plaintiff in error appealed to the Supreme Court of the State.
On the 18th day of September, 1883, the Supreme Court of the State affirmed the
said judgment, to review which the present writ of error was allowed and has
been prosecuted.
Turn Off Lawyers' Edition Display
OPINION: [*519] [**113] MR. JUSTICE
MATTHEWS delivered the opinion of the court. After reciting the facts in the
foregoing language, he continued:
It is claimed on behalf of the prisoner that the conviction and sentence are
void, on the ground that they are repugnant to that clause of the Fourteenth
Article of Amendment of the Constitution of the United States which is in these
words:
[*520] "Nor [***7] shall any State deprive any
person of life, liberty, or property without due process of law."
The proposition of law we are asked to affirm is that an indictment or
presentment by a grand jury, as known to the common law of England, is
essential to that "due process of law," when applied to prosecutions
for felonies, which is secured and guaranteed by this provision of the
Constitution of the United States, and which accordingly it is forbidden to the
States respectively to dispense with in the administration of criminal law.
The question is one of grave and serious import, affecting both private and
public rights and interests of great magnitude, and involves a consideration of
what additional restrictions upon the legislative policy of the States has been
imposed by the Fourteenth Amendment to the Constitution of the United States.
The Supreme Court of California, in the judgment now under review, followed its
own previous decision in Kalloch v. Superior Court, 56 Cal. 229, in which the
question was deliberately adjudged. Its conclusion was there stated as follows:
"This proceeding, as [it] is regulated by the Constitution and laws of
this State, is not opposed to any [***8] of the definitions given
of the phrases 'due process of law' and 'the law of the land;' but, on the
contrary, it is a proceeding strictly within such definitions, as much so in
every respect as is a proceeding by indictment. It may be questioned whether
the proceeding by indictment secures to the accused any superior rights and
privileges; but certainly a prosecution by information takes from him no
immunity or protection to which he is entitled under the law."
And the opinion cites and relies upon a decision of the Supreme Court of
Wisconsin in the case of Rowan v. The State, 30 Wis. 129. In that case the
court, speaking of the Fourteenth Amendment, says:
"But its design was not to confine the States to a particular mode of
procedure in judicial proceedings, and prohibit them from [*521]
prosecuting for felonies by information instead of by indictment, if they chose
to abolish the grand jury system. And the words 'due process of law' in the
amendment do not mean and have not the effect to limit the powers of State
governments to prosecutions for crime by indictment; but these words do mean
law in its regular course of administration, according to prescribed [***9]
forms, and in accordance with the general rules for the protection of
individual rights. Administration and remedial proceedings must change, from
time to time, with the advancement of legal science and the progress of
society; and, if the people of the State find it wise and expedient to abolish
the grand jury and prosecute all crimes by information, there is nothing in our
State Constitution and nothing in the Fourteenth Amendment to the Constitution
of the United States which prevents them from doing so."
On the other hand, it is maintained on behalf of the plaintiff in error that
the phrase "due process of law" is equivalent to "law of the
land," as found in the 29th chapter of Magna Charta; that by immemorial
usage it has acquired a fixed, definite, and technical meaning; that it refers
to and includes, not only the general principles of public liberty and private
right, [**114] which lie at the foundation of all free government,
but the very institutions which, venerable by time and custom, have been tried
by experience and found fit and necessary for the preservation of those
principles, and which, having been the birthright and inheritance of every
English subject, crossed [***10] the Atlantic with the colonists
and were transplanted and established in the fundamental laws of the State;
that, having been originally introduced into the Constitution of the United
States as a limitation upon the powers of the government, brought into being by
that instrument, it has now been added as an additional security to the
individual against oppression by the States themselves; that one of these
institutions is that of the grand jury, an indictment or presentment by which
against the accused in cases of alleged felonies is an essential part of due
process of law, in order that he may not be harassed or destroyed by
prosecutions founded only upon private malice or popular fury.
This view is certainly supported by the authority of the [*522]
great name of Chief Justice Shaw and of the Court in which he presided, which,
in Jones v. Robbins, 8 Gray, 329, decided that the 12th article of the Bill of
Rights of Massachusetts, a transcript of Magna Charta in this respect, made an
indictment or presentment of a grand jury essential to the validity of a conviction
in cases of prosecutions for felonies. In delivering the opinion of the court
in that case, Merrick, J., alone [***11] dissenting, the Chief
Justice said:
"The right of individual citizens to be secure from an open and public
accusation of crime, and from the trouble, expense, and anxiety of a public
trial before a probable cause is established by the presentment and indictment
of a grand jury, in case of high offences, is justly regarded as one of the
securities to the innocent against hasty, malicious, and oppressive public
prosecutions, and as one of the ancient immunities and privileges of English
liberty." . . . "It having been stated," he continued, "by
Lord Coke, that by the 'law of the land' was intended a due course of proceeding
according to the established rules and practice of the courts of common law, it
may, perhaps, be suggested that this might include other modes of proceeding
sanctioned by the common law, the most familiar of which are, by informations
of various kinds, by the officers of the crown in the name of the King. But, in
reply to this, it may be said that Lord Coke himself explains his own meaning
by saying 'the law of the land,' as expressed in Magna Charta, was intended due
process of law, that is, by indictment or presentment of good and lawful men.
And further, it [***12] is stated, on the authority of Blackstone,
that informations of every kind are confined by the constitutional law to
misdemeanors only. 4 Bl. Com. 310."
Referring again to the passage from Lord Coke, he says, p. 343:
"This may not be conclusive, but, being a construction adopted by a writer
of high authority before the emigration of our ancestors, it has a tendency to
show how it was then understood."
This passage from Coke seems to be the chief foundation of the opinion for
which it is cited; but a critical examination and [*523] comparison
of the text and context will show that it has been misunderstood; that it was
not intended to assert that an indictment or presentment of a grand jury was
essential to the idea of due process of law in the prosecution and punishment
of crimes, but was only mentioned as an example and illustration of due process
of law as it actually existed in cases in which it was customarily used. In
beginning his commentary on this chapter of Magna Charta, 2 Inst. 46, Coke
says:
"This chapter containeth nine several branches:
"1. That no man be taken or imprisoned but per legem terrae, that is, by
the common law, statute law, or custom of England; [***13] for the
words per legem terrae, being towards the end of this chapter, doe referre to
all the precedent matters in the chapter, etc.
"2. No man shall be disseised, etc., unless it be by the lawful judgment,
that is, verdict of his equals, (that is of mean of his own condition,) or by
the law of the land, (that is to speak it once for all,) by the due course and
process of law."
He then proceeds to state that, 3, no man shall be [**115]
outlawed, unless according to the law of the land; 4, no man shall be exiled,
unless according to the law of the land; 5, no man shall be in any sort
destroyed, "unless it be by the verdict of his equals, or according to the
law of the land;" 6, "no man shall be condemned at the King's suite,
either before the King in his bench, where the pleas are coram rege, (and so
are the words nec super eum ibimus to be understood,) nor before any other
commissioner or judge whatsoever, and so are the words nec super eum mittemus
to be understood, but by the judgment of his peers, that is, equals, or
according to the law of the land."
Recurring to the first clause of the chapter, he continues:
"1. No man shall be taken (that is) restrained of liberty
[***14] by petition or suggestion to the King or to his council,
unless it be by indictment or presentment of good and lawfull men, where such
deeds be done. This branch and divers other parts of this act have been notably
explained by divers acts of Parliament, &c., quoted in the margent."
The reference is to various acts during the reign of Edward [*524]
III. And reaching again the words "nisi per legem terrae," he
continues:
"But by the law of the land. For the true sense and exposition of these
words see the statute of 37 E. 3, cap. 8, where the words, by the law of the
land, are rendered, without due process of the law, for there it is said,
though it be contained in the Great Charter, that no man be taken, imprisoned,
or put out of his freehold without proces of the law, that is, by indictment of
good and lawfull men, where such deeds be done in due manner, or by writ
original of the common law. Without being brought in to answer but by due
proces of the common law. No man be put to answer without presentment before
justices, or thing of record, or by due proces, or by writ original, according
to the old law of the land. Wherein it is to be observed that his
[***15] chapter is but declaratory of the old law of England."
It is quite apparent from these extracts that the interpretation usually put
upon Lord Coke's statement is too large, because if an indictment or
presentment by a grand jury is essential to due process of law in all cases of
imprisonment for crime, it applies not only to felonies but to misdemeanors and
petty offences, and the conclusion would be inevitable that informations as a
substitute for indictments would be illegal in all cases. It was indeed so
argued by Sir Francis Winninton in Mr. Prynn's Case, 5 Mod. 459, from this very
language of Magna Charta, that all suits of the King must be by presentment or
indictment, and he cited Lord Coke as authority to that effect. He attempted to
show that informations had their origin in the act of 11 Hen. 7, c. 3, enacted
in 1494, known as the infamous Empson and Dudley act, which was repealed by
that of 1 Hen. 8, c. 6, in 1509. But the argument was overruled, Lord Holt
saying that to hold otherwise "would be a reflection on the whole
var." Sir Bartholomew Shower, who was prevented from arguing in support of
the information, prints his intended argument in his report of the case [***16]
under the name of The King v. Berchet, 1 Show. 106, in which, with great
thoroughness, he arrays all the learning of the time on the subject. He
undertakes to "evince that this method of prosecution is noways
contrariant [*525] to any fundamental rule of law, but agreeable to
it." He answers the objection that it is inconvenient and vexatious to the
subject by saying (p. 117):
"Here is no inconvenience to the people. Here is a trial per pais, fair
notice, liberty of pleading dilatories as well as bars. Here is subpaena and
attachment, as much time for defence, charge, &c., for the prosecutor makes
up the record, &c.; then, in case of malicious prosecution, the person who
prosecutes is known by the note to the coroner, according to the practice of
the court."
He answers the argument drawn from Magna Charta, and says:
"That this method of prosecution no way contradicts that law, for we say
this is per legem terrae et per communem legem terrae, for otherwise there
never had been so universal a practice of it in all ages."
And referring to Coke's comment, that "no man shall be taken," i.
[**116] e., restrained of liberty by petition or suggestion to the
King or his Council [***17] unless it be by indictment or
presentment, he says (p. 122):
"By petition or suggestion can never be meant of the King's Bench, for he
himself had preferred several here; that is meant only of the the King alone,
or in Council, or in the Star Chamber. In the King's Bench the information is
not a suggestion to the King, but to the court upon record."
And he quotes 3 Inst. 136, where Coke modifies the statement by saying,
"The King cannot put any to answer, but his court must be apprized of the
crime by indictment, presentment, or other matter of record," which, Shower
says, includes an information.
So it has been recently held that upon a coroner's inquisition taken concerning
the death of a man and a verdict of guilty of murder or manslaughter is
returned, the offender may be prosecuted and tried without the intervention of
a grand jury. Reg. v. Ingham, 5 B. & S. 257. And it was said by Buller, J.,
in [*526] Rex v. Joliffe, 4 T.R. 285-293, that if to an action for
slander in charging the plaintiff with felony a justification is pleaded which
is found by the jury, that of itself amounts to an indictment, as if it had
been found by the grand jury, and is sufficient to put [***18] the
party thus accused on his trial.
The language of Lord Coke applies only to forfeitures of life and liberty at
the suit of the King, and hence appeals of murder, which were prosecutions by
private persons, were never regarded as contrary to Magna Charta. On the
contrary, the appeal of death way by Lord Holt "esteemed a noble remedy
and a badge of the rights and liberties of an Englishman." Rex v. Toler, 1
Ld. Raymond, 555-557; 12 Mod. 375; Holt, 483. We are told that in the early
part of the last century, in England, persons who had been acquitted on
indictments for murder were often tried, convicted and executed on appeals. Kendall
on Trial by Battel (3d Ed.), 44-47. An appeal of murder was brought in England
as lately as 1817, but defeated by the appellant's declining to accept the
wager of battle. Schford v. Thornton, 1 B. & Ald. 405. The English statutes
concerning appeals of murder were in force in the Provinces of Pennsylvania and
Maryland. Report of Judges, 3 Binn. 599-604; Kilty on Maryland Statutes, 141,
143, 158. It is said that no such appeal was ever brought in Pennsylvania; but
in Maryland, in 1765, a negro was convicted and executed upon such an appeal.
Soper [***19] v. Tom, 1 Har. & McHen. 227. See note to Paxton's
Case, Quincy's Mass. Rep. 53, by Mr. Justice Gray.
This view of the meaning of Lord Coke is the one taken by Merrick, J., in his
dissenting opinion in Jones v. Robbins, 8 Gray, 329, who states his conclusions
in these words:
"It is the forensic trial, under a broad and general law, operating
equally upon every member of our community, which the words, 'by the law of the
land,' in Magna Charta, and in every subsequent declaration of rights which has
borrowed its phraseology, make essential to the safety of the citizen, securing
thereby both his liberty and his property, by preventing the unlawful arrest of
his person or any unlawful interference with his estate." See also State
v. Starling, 15 Rich. (S.C.) Law, 120.
[*527] Mr. Reeve, in 2 History of Eng. Law, 43, translates the
phrase, nisi per legale judicium parium suorum vel per legem terrae,
"But by the judgment of his peers, or by some other legal process or
proceeding adapted by the law to the nature of the case."
Chancellor Kent, 2 Com. 13, adopts this mode of construing the phrase. Quoting
the language of Magna Charta, and referring to Lord Coke's [***20]
comment upon it, he says:
"The better and larger definition of due process of law is that it means
law in its regular course of administration through courts of justice."
This accords with what is said in Westervelt v. Gregg, 12 N.Y. 202, by Denio,
J., p. 212:
"The provision was designed to protect the citizen against all mere acts
of power, whether flowing from the legislative or executive branches of the
government."
The principal and true meaning of the phrase has never been more tersely or
accurately stated than by Mr. Justice Johnson, in Bank of Columbia v. Okely, 4
Wheat. 235-244:
[**117] "As to the words from Magna Charta, incorporated into
the Constitution of Maryland, after volumes spoken and written with a view to
their exposition, the good sense of mankind has at last settled down to this:
that they were intended to secure the individual from the arbitrary exercise of
the powers of government, unrestrained by the established principles of private
right and distributive justice."
And the conclusion rightly deduced is, as stated by Mr. Cooley, Constitutional
Limitations, 356:
"The principles, then, upon which the process is based, are to determine
whether [***21] it is 'due process' or not, and not any
considerations of mere form. Administrative and remedial process may [*528]
be changed from time to time, but only with due regard to the landmarks
established for the protection of the citizen."
It is urged upon us, however, in argument, that the claim made in behalf of the
plaintiff in error is supported by the decision of this court in Murray's
Lessee v. Hoboken Land & Improvement Company, 18 How. 272. There Mr.
Justice Curtis, delivering the opinion of the court, after showing, p. 276,
that due process of law must mean something more than the actual existing law
of the land, for otherwise it would be no restraint upon legislative power,
proceeds as follows:
"To what principle, then, are we to resort to ascertain whether this
process, enacted by Congress, is due process? To this the answer must be
twofold. We must examine the Constitution itself to see whether this process be
in conflict with any of its provisions. If not found to be so, we must look to
those settled usages and modes of proceeding existing in the common and statute
law of England before the emigration of our ancestors, and which are shown not
to have been unsuited [***22] to their civil and political
condition by having been acted on by them after the settlement of this
country."
This, it is argued, furnishes an indispensable test of what constitutes
"due process of law;" that any proceeding otherwise authorized by
law, which is not thus sanctioned by usage, or which supersedes and displaces
one that is, cannot be regarded as due process of law.
But this inference is unwarranted. The real syllabus of the passage quoted is,
that a process of law, which is not otherwise forbidden, must be taken to be
due process of law, if it can show the sanction of settled usage both in
England and in this country; but it by no means follows that nothing else can be
due process of law. The point in the case cited arose in reference to a summary
proceeding, questioned on that account, as not due process of law. The answer
was: however, exceptional it may be, as tested by definitions and principles of
ordinary procedure, nevertheless, this, in substance, has been immemorially the
actual law of the land, and, therefore, is due process of law.
[*529] But to hold that such a characteristic is essential to due
process of law, would be to deny every quality of [***23] the law
but its age, and to render it incapable of progress or improvement. It would be
to stamp upon our jurisprudence the unchangeableness attributed to the laws of
the Medes and Persians.
This would be all the more singular and surprising, in this quick and active
age, when we consider that, owing to the progressive development of legal ideas
and institutions in England, the words of Magna Charta stood for very different
things at the time of the separation of the American colonies from what they
represented originally. For at first the words nisi per legale judicium parium
had no reference to a jury; they applied only to the pares regni, who were the
constitutional judges in the Court of Exchequer and coram rege. Bac. Abr.
Juries, 7th Ed., Lond., note, Reeve, H.L. 41. And as to the grand jury itself,
we learn of its constitution and functions from the Assize of Clarendon, A.D.
1164, and that of Northampton, A.D. 1176, Stubbs' Charters, 143-150. By the
latter of these, which was a republication of the former, it was provided, that
"if any one is accused before the justices of our Lord the King of murder,
or theft, or robbery, or of harboring persons committing those crimes,
[***24] or of forgery or arson, by the oath of twelve knights of
the hundred, or, if there are no knights, by the oath of twelve free
[**118] and lawful men, and by the oath of four men from each
township of the hundred, let him go to the ordeal of water, and, if he fails,
let him lose one foot. And at Northampton it was added, for greater strictness
of justice (pro rigore justitiae), that he shall lose his right hand at the
same time with his foot, and abjure the realm and exile himself from the realm
within forty days. And if he is acquitted by the ordeal, let him find pledges
and remain in the kingdom, unless he is accused of murder or other base felony
by the body of the country and the lawful knights of the country; but if he is
so accused as aforesaid, although he is acquitted by the ordeal of water,
nevertheless he must leave the kingdom in forty days and take his chattels with
him, subject to the rights of his lords, and he must abjure the kingdom at the
mercy of our Lord the King."
[*530] "The system thus established," says Mr. Justice
Stephens, 1 Hist. Crim. Law of England, 252, "is simple. The body of the
country are the accusers. Their accusation is practically equivalent
[***25] to a conviction, subject to the chance of a favorable
termination of the ordeal by water. If the ordeal fails, the accused person
loses his foot and his hand. If it succeeds, he is nevertheless to be banished.
Accusation, therefore, was equivalent to banishment, at least."
When we add to this that the primitive grand jury heard no witnesses in support
of the truth of the charges to be preferred, but presented upon their own
knowledge, or indicted upon common fame and general suspicion, we shall be
ready to acknowledge that it is better not to go too far back into antiquity
for the best securities for our "ancient liberties." It is more
consonant to the true philosophy of our historical legal institutions to say
that the spirit of personal liberty and individual right, which they embodied,
was preserved and developed by a progressive growth and wise adaptation to new
circumstances and situations of the forms and processes found fit to give, from
time to time, new expression and greater effect to modern ideas of
self-government.
This flexibility and capacity for growth and adaptation is the peculiar boast
and excellence of the common law. Sir James Mackintosh ascribes
[***26] this principle of development to Magna Charta itself. To
use his own language:
"It was a peculiar advantage that the consequences of its principles were,
if we may so speak, only discovered slowly and gradually. It gave out on each
occasion only so much of the spirit of liberty and reformation as the
circumstances of succeeding generations required and as their character would
safely bear. For almost five centuries it was appealed to as the decisive
authority on behalf of the people, though commonly so far only as the
necessities of each case demanded." I Hist. of England, 221.
The Constitution of the United States was ordained, it is true, by descendants
of Englishmen, who inherited the traditions of English law and history; but it
was made for an undefined [*531] and expanding future, and for a
people gathered and to be gathered from many nations and of many tongues. And
while we take just pride in the principles and institutions of the common law,
we are not to forget that in lands where other systems of jurisprudence
prevail, the ideas and processes of civil justice are also not unknown. Due
process of law, in spite of the absolutism of continental governments, is
[***27] not alien to that code which survived the Roman Empire as
the foundation of modern civilization in Europe, and which has given us that
fundamental maxim of distributive justice -- suum cuique tribuere. There is
nothing in Magna Charta, rightly construed as a broad charter of public right
and law, which ought to exclude the best ideas of all systems and of every age;
and as it was the characteristic principle of the common law to draw its
inspiration from every fountain of justice, we are not to assume that the
sources of its supply have been exhausted. On the contrary, we should expect
that the new and various experiences of our own situation and system will mould
and shape it into new and not less useful forms.
[**119] The concessions of Magna Charta were wrung from the King as
guaranties against the oppressions and usurpations of his prerogative. It did
not enter into the minds of the barons to provide security against their own
body or in favor of the Commons by limiting the power of Parliament; so that
bills of attainder, ex post facto laws, laws declaring forfeitures of estates,
and other arbitrary acts of legislation which occur so frequently in English
history, were [***28] never regarded as inconsistent with the law
of the land; for notwithstanding what was attributed to Lord Coke in Bonham's
Case, 8 Rep. 115, 118 a, the omnipotence of Parliament over the common law was
absolute, even against common right and reason. The actual and practical
security for English liberty against legislative tyranny was the power of a
free public opinion represented by the Commons.
It this country written constitutions were deemed essential to protect the
rights and liberties of the people against the encroachments of power delegated
to their governments, and the provisions of Magna Charta were incorporated into
Bills of [*532] Rights. They were limitations upon all the powers
of government, legislative as well as executive and judicial.
It necessarily happened, therefore, that as these broad and general maxims of
liberty and justice held in our system a different place and performed a
different function from their position and office in English constitutional
history and law, they would receive and justify a corresponding and more
comprehensive interpretation. Applied in England only as guards against executive
usurpation and tyranny, here they have become [***29] bulwarks also
against arbitrary legislation; but, in that application, as it would be
incongruous to measure and restrict them by the ancient customary English law,
they must be held to guarantee not particular forms of procedure, but the very
substance of individual rights to life, liberty, and property.
Restraints that could be fastened upon executive authority with precision and
detail, might prove obstructive and injurious when imposed on the just and
necessary discretion of legislative power; and, while in every instance, laws
that violated express and specific injunctions and prohibitions, might, without
embarrassment, be judicially declared to be void, yet, any general principle or
maxim, founded on the essential nature of law, as a just and reasonable
expression of the public will and of government, as instituted by popular
consent and for the general good, can only be applied to cases coming clearly
within the scope of its spirit and purpose, and not to legislative provisions
merely establishing forms and modes of attainment. Such regulations, to adopt a
sentence of Burke's, "may alter the mode and application but have no power
over the substance of original justice." Tract [***30] on the
Popery Laws, 6 Burke's Works, ed. Little & Brown, 323.
Such is the often-repeated doctrine of this court. In Munn v. Illinois, 94 U.S.
113-134, the Chief Justice, delivering the opinion of the court, said:
"A person has no property, no vested interest, in any rule of the common
law. That is only one of the forms of municipal law, and is no more sacred than
any other. Rights of property which have been created by the common law cannot
be taken [*533] away without due process; but the law itself, as a
rule of conduct, may be changed at the will or even at the whim of the
legislature, unless prevented by constitutional limitations. Indeed, the great
office of statutes is to remedy defects in the common law as they are
developed, and to adapt it to the changes of time and circumstances."
And in Walker v. Savinet, 92 U.S. 90, the court said:
"A trial by jury in suits at common law pending in State courts is not,
therefore, a privilege or immunity of national citizenship which the States are
forbidden by the Fourteenth Amendment to abridge. A State cannot deprive a
person of his property without due process of law; but this does not
necessarily imply that all trials [***31] in the State courts
affecting the property of persons must be by jury. This requirement of the
Constitution is met if the trial is had according to the settled course of
judicial proceedings. Due process of law is process according to the
[**120] law of the land. This process in the States is regulated by
the law of State."
In Kennard v. Louisiana ex rel. Morgan, 92 U.S. 480, the question was whether a
mode of trying the title to an office, in which was no provision for a jury,
was due process of law. Its validity was affirmed. The Chief Justice, after
reciting the various steps in the proceeding, said:
"From this it appears that ample provision has been made for the trial of
the contestation before a court of competent jurisdiction; for bringing the
party against whom the proceeding is had before the court and notifying him of
the case he is required to meet; for giving him an opportunity to be heard in
his defence; for the deliberation and judgment of the court; for an appeal from
this judgment to the highest court of the State, and for hearing and judgment
there. A mere statement of the facts carries with it a complete answer to all
the constitutional objections [***32] urged against the validity of
the act."
And Mr. Justice Miller, in Davidson v. New Orleans, 96 U.S. 97-105, after
showing the difficulty, if not the impossibility of framing a definition of
this constitutional phrase, which [*534] should be "at once
perspicuous, comprehensive, and satisfactory," and thence deducing the
wisdom "in the assertaining of the intent and application of such an
important phrase in the Federal Constitution, by the gradual process of
judicial inclusion and exclusion, as the cases presented for decision shall
require," says, however, that:
"It is not possible to hold that a party has, without due process of law,
been deprived of his property, when, as regards the issues affecting it, he has
by the laws of the State a fair trial in a court of justice, according to the
modes of proceeding applicable to such a case." See also Missouri v.
Lewis, 101 U.S. 22-31; Ex parte Wall, 107 U.S. 288-290.
We are to construe this phrase in the Fourteenth Amendment by the usus loquendi
of the Constitution itself. The same words are contained in the Fifth
Amendment. That article makes specific and express provision for perpetuating
the institution of the grand jury, [***33] so far as relates to
prosecutions for the more aggravated crimes under the laws of the United
States. It declares that:
"No person shall be held to answer for a capital or otherwise infamous
crime, unless on a presentment or indictment of a grand jury, except in cases
arising in the land or naval forces, or in the militia when in actual service
in time of war or public danger; nor shall any person be subject for the same
offence to be twice put in jeopardy of life or limb; nor shall he be compelled
in any criminal case to be witness against himself." [It then immediately
adds]: "Nor be deprived of life, liberty, or property, without due process
of law."
According to a recognized canon of interpretation, especially applicable to formal
and solemn instruments of constitutional law, we are forbidden to assume,
without clear reason to the contrary, that any part of this most important
amendment is superfluous. The natural and obvious inference is, that in the
sense of the Constitution, "due process of law" was not meant or
intended to include, ex vi termini, the institution and procedure of a grand
jury in any case. The conclusion is equally [*535] irresistible,
that when [***34] the same phrase was employed in the Fourteenth
Amendment to restrain the action of the States, it was used in the same sense
and with no greater extent; and that if in the adoption of that amendment it
had been part of its purpose to perpetuate the institution of the grand jury in
all the States, it would have embodied, as did the Fifth Amendment, express
declarations to that effect. Due process of law in the latter refers to that
law of the land which derives its authority from the legislative powers
conferred upon Congress by the Constitution of the United States, exercised
within the limits therein prescribed, and interpreted according to the
principles of the common law. In the Fourteenth Amendment, by parity of reason,
it refers to that law of the land in each State, which derives its authority
from the inherent and reserved powers of the State, exerted within the limits
of those fundamental principles of liberty and justice which lie at the base of
all our civil and political institutions, [**121] and the greatest
security for which resides in the right of the people to make their own laws,
and alter them at their pleasure.
"The Fourteenth Amendment" [as was said by [***35] Mr.
Justice Bradley in Missouri v. Lewis, 101 U.S. 22-31] "does not profess to
secure to all persons in the United States the benefit of the same laws and the
same remedies. Great diversities in these respects may exist in two States
separated only by an imaginary line. On one side of this line there may be a
right of trial by jury, and on the other side no such right. Each State
prescribes its own modes of judicial proceeding."
But it is not to be supposed that these legislative powers are absolute and
despotic, and that the amendment prescribing due process of law is too vague
and indefinite to operate as a practical restraint. It is not every act,
legislative in form, that is law. Law is something more than mere will exerted
as an act of power. It must be not a special rule for a particular person or a
particular case, but, in the language of Mr. Webster, in his familiar definition,
"the general law, a law which hears before it condemns, which proceeds
upon inquiry, and renders judgment only after trial," so "that every
citizen shall [*536] hold his life, liberty, property and
immunities under the protection of the general rules which govern
society," and thus excluding, [***36] as not due process of
law, acts of attainder, bills of pains and penalties, acts of confiscation,
acts reversing judgments, and acts directly transferring one man's estate to
another, legislative judgments and decrees, and other similar special, partial
and arbitrary exertions of power under the forms of legislation. Arbitrary
power, enforcing its edicts to the injury of the persons and property of its
subjects, is not law, whether manifested as the decree of personal monarch or
of an impersonal multitude. And the limitations imposed by our constitutional
law upon the action of the governments, both State and national, are essential
to the preservation of public and private rights, notwithstanding the representative
character of our political institutions. The enforcement of these limitations
by judicial process is the device of self-governing communities to protect the
rights of individuals and minorities, as well against the power of numbers, as
against the violence of public agents transcending the limits of lawful
authority, even when acting in the name and wielding the force of the
government.
The Supreme Court of Mississippi, in a well-considered case, Brown
[***37] v. Levee Commissioners, 50 Miss. 468, speaking of the
meaning of the phrase "due process of law," says:
"The principle does not demand that the laws existing at any point of time
shall be irrepealable, or that any forms of remedies shall necessarily
continue. It refers to certain fundamental rights which that system of
jurisprudence, of which ours is a derivative, has always recognized. If any of
these are disregarded in the proceedings by which a person is condemned to the
loss of life, liberty, or property, then the deprivation has not been by 'due
process of law.'"
This court, speaking by Mr. Justice Miller, in Loan Association v. Topeka, 20
Wall, 655-662, said:
"It must be conceded that there are such rights in every free government
beyond the control of the State. A government [*537] which
recognized no such rights, which held the lives, the liberty, and the property
of its citizens subject at all times to the absolute disposition and unlimited
control of even the most democratic depository of power, is after all but a
despotism. It is true it is a despotism of the many, of the majority, if you
choose to call it so, but it is nevertheless a despotism. It may be
[***38] doubted, if a man is to hold all that he is accustomed to
call his own, all in which he has placed his happiness and the security of
which is essential to that happiness, under the unlimited dominion of others,
whether it is not wiser that this power should be exercised by one man than by
many."
It follows that any legal proceeding enforced by public authority, whether
sanctioned by age and custom, or newly devised in the discretion of the
legislative power, in furtherance of the general public good, which regards and
[**122] preserves these principles of liberty and justice, must be
held to be due process of law.
The Constitution of Connecticut, adopted in 1818 and in force when the
Fourteenth Amendment took effect, requires an indictment or presentment of a
grand jury only in cases where the punishment of the crime charged is death or
imprisonment for life, and yet it also declares that no person shall "be
deprived of life, liberty, or property but by due course of law." It falls
short, therefore, of that measure of protection which it is claimed is
guaranteed by Magna Charta to the right of personal liberty; notwithstanding
which it is no doubt justly said in Swift's Digest, [***39] 17,
that
"This sacred and inestimable right, without which all others are of little
value, is enjoyed by the people of this State in as full extent as in any
country on the globe, and in as high a degree as is consistent with the nature
of civil government. No individual or body of men has a discretionary or
arbitrary power to commit any person to prison; no man can be restrained of his
liberty, be prevented from removing himself from place to place as he chooses,
be compelled to go to a place contrary to his inclination, or be in any way
imprisoned or confined, unless by virtue of the express laws of the land."
[*538] Tried by these principles, we are unable to say that the
substitution for a presentment or indictment by a grand jury of the proceeding
by information, after examination and commitment by a magistrate, certifying to
the probable guilt of the defendant, with the right on his part to the aid of
counsel, and to the cross-examination of the witnesses produced for the
prosecution, is not due process of law. It is, as we have seen, an ancient
proceeding at common law, which might include every case of an offence of less
grade than a felony, except misprision of [***40] treason; and in
every circumstance of its administration, as authorized by the statute of
California, it carefully considers and guards the substantial interest of the
prisoner. It is merely a preliminary proceeding, and can result in no final judgment,
except as the consequence of a regular judicial trial, conducted precisely as
in cases of indictments.
In reference to this mode of proceeding at the common law, and which he says
"is as ancient as the common law itself," Blackstone adds (4 Com. 305):
"And as to those offences in which informations were allowed as well as
indictments, so long as they were confined to this high and respectable
jurisdiction, and were carried on in a legal and regular course in His
Majesty's Court of King's Bench, the subject had no reason to complain. The
same notice was given, the same process was issued, the same pleas were
allowed, the same trial by jury was had, the same judgment was given by the
same judges, as if the prosecution had originally been by indictment."
For these reasons, finding no error therein, the judgment of the Supreme Court
of California is
Affirmed.
DISSENTBY: HARLAN
DISSENT: MR. JUSTICE HARLAN, dissenting.
The plaintiff in [***41] error, Joseph Hurtado, now under sentence
of death pronounced in one of the courts of California, brings this writ of
error upon the ground that the proceedings against him are in violation of the
Constitution of the United States. The crime charged, and of which he was found
guilty, is murder. The prosecution against him is not based upon any
presentment or indictment of a grand jury, but upon an information filed
[*539] by the district attorney of the county in which the crime
was alleged to have been committed. His contention is that an information for a
capital offence is forbidden by that clause of the Fourteenth Amendment of the
Constitution of the United States which declares that no State shall
"deprive any person of life, liberty, or property without due process of
law." As I cannot agree that the State may, consistently with due process
of law, require a person to answer for a capital offence, except upon the
presentment or indictment of a grand jury, and as human life is involved in the
judgment rendered here, I do not feel at liberty to withhold a statement of the
reasons for my dissent from the opinion of the court.
The phrase "due process of law" is not new [***42] in the
constitutional history of this country or of England. It antedates the
establishment of our institutions. Those who had been driven from the mother
country by oppress on and persecution brought with them, as their inheritance,
which no government could rightfully impair or destroy, certain guaranties of
the rights of life and liberty, and property, which had long been deemed
fundamental in Anglo-Saxon institutions. In the Congress of the Colonies held
in New York in 1765, it was declared that the colonies were entitled to all the
essential rights, liberties, privileges, and immunities, confirmed by Magna
Charta to the subjects of Great Britain. Hutch. Hist. Mas. Bay, Appendix F.
"It was under the consciousness," says Story, "of the full
possession of the rights, liberties and immunities of British subjects, that
the colonists in almost all the early legislation of their respective
assemblies insisted upon a declaratory act, acknowledging and confirming
them." 1 Story Const. § 165. In his speech in the House of Lords, on the
doctrine of taxation without representation, Lord Chatham maintained that the
inhabitants of the colonies were entitled to all the rights [***43]
and the peculiar privileges of Englishmen; that they were equally bound by the
laws, and equally entitled to participate in the constitution of England. On
the 14th of October, 1774, the delegates from the several Colonies and
Plantations, in Congress assembled, made a formal declaration of the rights to
which their people were entitled, by the immutable laws [*540] of
nature, the principles of the English Constitution, and the several charters or
compacts under which the colonial governments were organized. Among other
things, they declared that their ancestors who first settled the colonies were,
at the time of their immigration, "entitled to all the rights, liberties,
and immunities of free and natural born subjects within the realm of
England;" that by such immigration they by no means forfeited,
surrendered, or lost any of those rights, but that they were, and their
descendants now are, entitled to the exercise and enjoyment of all such of them
as their local and other circumstances entitle them to exercise and
enjoy;" and that "the respective colonists are entitled to the common
law of England, and more especially to the great and inestimable privilege of
being tried by [***44] their peers of the vicinage, according to
the course of that law." 1 Journal of Congress, 27-8-9.
These declarations were subsequently emphasized in the most imposing manner,
when the doctrines of the common law respecting the protection of the people in
their lives, liberties and property were incorporated into the earlier
constitutions of the original States. Massachusetts, in its Constitution of
1780, and New Hampshire in 1784, declared in the same language that "no
subject shall be arrested, imprisoned, despoiled, or deprived of his property,
immunities, or privileges, put out of the protection of the law, exiled, or
deprived of his life, liberty, or estate, but by the judgment of his peers or
the law of the land;" Maryland and North Carolina in 1776 and South
Carolina in 1778, that "no freeman of this State be taken or imprisoned,
or disseized of his freehold, liberties, or privileges, outlawed, exiled, or in
any manner destroyed or deprived of his life, liberty, or property, but by the
judgment of his peers or the law of the land;" Virginia in 1776, that
"no man be deprived of his liberty except by the law of the land or the
judgment of his peers;" and Delaware, in 1792, that [***45] no
person "shall be deprived of life, liberty, or property, unless by the
judgment of his peers or the law of the land." In the ordinance of 1789
for the government of the Northwestern Territory, it was made one of the
articles of compact between the original States and the people and States to be
formed out of [*541] that Territory -- "to remain forever
unalterable unless by common consent" -- that "no man shall be
deprived of his life, liberty, or property, but by the judgment of his peers or
the law of the land." These fundamental doctrines were subsequently
incorporated into the Constitution of the United States. The people were not
content with the provision in section 2 of article 3, that "the trial of
all crimes, except in cases in impeachment, shall be by jury." They
desired a fuller and broader enunciation of the fundamental principles of freedom,
and therefore demanded that the guaranties of the rights of life, liberty, and
property, which experience had proved to be essential to the safety and
security of the people, should be placed beyond all danger of impairment or
destruction by the general government through legislation by Congress. They
perceived no reason why, [***46] in respect of those rights, the
same limitations should not be imposed upon the general government that had
been imposed upon the States by their own Constitutions. Hence the prompt
adoption of the original amendments, by the Fifth of which it is, among other
things, provided that "no person shall be deprived of life, liberty, or
property, without due process of law." This language is similar to that of
the clause of the Fourteenth Amendment now under examination. That similarity
was not accidental, but evinces a purpose to impose upon the States the same
restrictions, in respect of proceedings involving life, liberty and property,
which had been imposed upon the general government.
"Due process of law," within the meaning of the national
Constitution, does not import one thing with reference to the powers of the
States, and another with reference to the powers of the general government. If
particular proceedings conducted under the authority of the general government,
and involving life, are prohibited, because not constituting that due process
of law required by the Fifth Amendment of the Constitution of the United
States, similar proceedings, conducted under the authority of
[***47] a State, must be deemed illegal as not being due process of
law within the meaning of the Fourteenth Amendment. What, then, is the meaning
of the words "due process of law" in the latter amendment?
[*542] In seeking that meaning we are, fortunately, not left
without authoritative directions as to the source, and the only source, from
which the necessary information is to be obtained. In Murray's Lessees v.
Hoboken, &c., 18 How. 272, 276-7, it was said: "The Constitution contains
no description of those processes which it was intended to allow or forbid. It
does not even declare what principles are to be applied to ascertain whether it
be due process. It is manifest that it was not left to the legislative power to
enact any process which might be devised. The article is a restraint on the
legislative as well as on the executive and judicial powers of the government,
and cannot be so construed as to leave Congress free to make any process 'due
process of law' by its mere will. To what principles are we to resort to
ascertain whether this process enacted by Congress is due process? To this the
answer must be two-fold. We must examine the Constitution itself
[***48] to see whether this process be in conflict with any of its
provisions. If not found to be so, we must look to those settled usages and
modes of proceeding existing in the common and statute law of England before
the emigration of our ancestors, and which are shown not to have been unsuited
to their civil and political condition by having been acted on by them after
the settlement of this country."
Magna Charta -- upon which rested the rights, liberties and immunities of our
ancestors -- was called, said Coke, "the Charter of the Liberties of the
Kingdom, upon great reason, because liberos facit, it makes the people
free." Hallam characterizes the signing of it as the most important event
in English history, and declares that the instrument is still the keystone of
English liberty. "To have produced it," said Mackintosh, "to have
preserved it, to have matured it, constitute the immortal claim of England upon
the esteem of mankind." By that instrument the King, representing the
sovereignty of the nation, declared that "no freeman shall be taken, or
imprisoned, or be disseized of his freehold, or liberties, or free customs, or
be outlawed, or exiled, or any otherwise destroyed; nor [***49]
will we [not] pass upon him, nor condemn him, but by lawful judgment of his
peers, or by the law of the land."
[*543] "The words due 'process of law' were undoubtedly
intended," said this court, in Murray's Lessees v. Hoboken, &c.,
"to convey the same meaning as the words 'by the law of the land' in Magna
Charta." That the one is the equivalent of the other was recognized in
Davidson v. New Orleans, 96 U.S. 97. See also 2 Kent, 13; 2 Story Const. §
1789; Cooley's Const. Lim. 353; Pomeroy's Const. Law, § 245; Greene v. Briggs,
1 Curtis, 325. Whether the phrase in our American constitutions, national or
State, be "law of the land" or "due process of law," it
means in every case the same thing. Cooley's Const. Lim. 352.
Declining to follow counsel in their search for precedents in England in
support or in refutation of the proposition that the common law permitted
informations in certain classes of public offences, and conceding that in some
cases, such as Mr. Prynn's Case, 5 Mod. 459, which was an information for a
riot, tried before Chief Justice Holt, the requirement of due process of law
was met by that mode of procedure, let us inquire -- and no other inquiry is at
[***50] all pertinent -- whether according to the settled usages
and modes of proceeding to which, this court has said, reference must be had,
an information for a capital offence was, prior to the adoption of our Constitution,
regarded as due process of law.
Erskine, in his speech delivered in 1784, in defence of the Dean of St. Asaph,
said, in the presence of the judges of the King's Bench: "If a man were to
commit a capital offence in the face of all the judges of England, their united
authority could not put him upon his trial; they could file no complaint
against him, even upon the records of the supreme criminal court, but could
only commit him for safe custody, which is equally competent to every common
justice of the peace. The grand jury alone could arraign him, and in their
discretion might likewise finally discharge him, by throwing out the bill, with
the names of all your lordships as witnesses on the back of it. If it be said
that this exclusive power of the grand jury does not extend to lesser
misdemeanors, which may be prosecuted by information, I answer, that for that
reason it becomes doubly necessary to preserve the power of the other jury
which [*544] is left." [***51] That this defender
of popular rights against official oppression was not in error when saying that
no person could be arraigned for a capital offence except upon the presentment
or indictment of a grand jury, is shown upon almost every page of the common
law.
Blackstone says: "But to find a bill there must be at least twelve of the
jury agree; for, so tender is the law of England of the lives of the subjects,
that no man can be convicted at the suit of the King of any capital offence,
unless by an unanimous voice of twenty-four of his equals and neighbors, that
is, by twelve at least of the grand jury, in the first place, assenting to the
accusation, and afterwards by the whole petit jury, of twelve more, finding him
guilty upon his trial." 4 Bl. Com. 306. The same author, after referring
to prosecutions by information, describing their different kinds, and stating
that the mode of prosecution by information (or suggestion) filed on record by
the King's attorney-general, or by his coroner or master of the crown office in
the Court of King's Bench, was as ancient as the common law itself, proceeds:
"But these informations (of every kind) are confined by the constitutional
law to [***52] mere misdemeanors only; for, wherever any capital
offence is charged, the same law requires that the accusation be warranted by
the oath of twelve men, before the party shall be put to answer it." 4 Bl.
Com. 309-10. Again, in his discussion of the trial by jury, Blackstone, after
observing that the English law has "wisely placed this strong and two-fold
barrier, of a presentment and a trial by jury, between the liberties of the
people and the prerogative of the crown," says: "The founders of the
English law have, with excellent forecast, contrived that no man shall be
called to answer the King for any capital crime, unless upon the peremptory
accusation of twelve or more of his fellow-subjects, the grand jury; and that
the truth of any accusation, whether preferred in the shape of an indictment,
information, or appeal, should afterwards be confirmed by the unanimous suffrage
of twelve of his equals and neighbors, indifferently chosen and superior to all
suspicion. So that the liberties of England cannot but subsist so long as this
palladium remains sacred and inviolate, not only from all [*545]
open attacks (which none will be so hardy as to make), but also from all secret
machinations [***53] which may sap and undermine it, by introducing
new and arbitrary methods of trial, by justices of the peace, commissioners of
the revenue, and courts of conscience. And however convenient these may appear
at first (as doubtless all arbitrary powers, well executed, are the most
convenient), yet let it be again remembered that delays and little
inconveniences in the forms of justice, are the price that all free nations
must pay for their liberty in more substantial matters; that these inroads upon
the sacred bulwark of the nation are fundamentally opposite to the spirit of
our constitution; and that, though begun in trifles, the precedent may
gradually increase and spread to the utter disuse of jurors in questions of the
most momentous concern." 4 Bl. Com. 349-50.
Hawkins, in his Pleas of the Crown (Bk. 2, chap. 26), after saying that it is
every-day practice to proceed by information in certain cases, says: "But
I do not find it anywhere holden that such an information will lie for any
capital crime, or for misprision of treason." In Wooddeson's Lectures on
the Laws of England (Lect. 38), it is said that "informations cannot be
brought in capital cases, nor for misprision [***54] of
treason." Bacon, in his Abridgment, lays it down: "But though, as my
Lord Hale observes, in all criminal causes the most regular and safe way, and
most consonant to the statute of Magna Charta, &c., is by presentment or
indictment of twelve sworn men, yet he admits that, for crimes inferior to
capital ones, the proceedings may be by information." Title Information A.
See also 2 Hal. Hist. P.C. c. 201; Jacobs' Law Dictionary, Title Information;
Broom's Com. Laws England, vol. 4, p. 396; Story's Const. § 1784.
I omit further citations of authorities, which are numerous, to prove that,
according to the settled usages and modes of proceeding existing under the
common and statute law of England at the settlement of this country,
information in capital cases was not consistent with the "law of the
land," or with "due process of law." Such was the understanding
of the patriotic men who established free institutions upon this continent.
[*546] Almost the identical words of Magna Charta were incorporated
into most of the State Constitutions before the adoption of our national
Constitution. When they declared, in substance, that no person should be
deprived of life, liberty, or [***55] property, except by the
judgment of his peers or the law of the land, they intended to assert his right
to the same guaranties that were given in the mother country by the great
charter and the laws passed in furtherance of its fundamental principles.
My brethren concede that there are principles of liberty and justice, lying at
the foundation of our civil and political institutions, which no State can
violate consistently with that due process of law required by the Fourteenth
Amendment in proceedings involving life, liberty, or property. Some of these
principles are enumerated in the opinion of the court. But, for reasons which
do not impress my mind as satisfactory, they exclude from that enumeration the
exemption from prosecution, by information, for a public offence involving
life. By what authority is that exclusion made? Is it justified by the settled
usages and modes of procedure existing under the common and statute law of
England at the emigration of our ancestors, or at the foundation of our
government? Does not the fact that the people of the original States required
an amendment of the national Constitution, securing exemption from prosecution,
for a capital offence, [***56] except upon the indictment or
presentment of a grand jury, prove that, in their judgment, such an exemption
was essential to protection against accusation and unfounded prosecution, and,
therefore, was a fundamental principle in liberty and justice? By the side of
that exemption, in the same amendment, is the declaration that no person shall
be put twice in jeopardy for the same offence, nor compelled to criminate
himself, nor shall private property be taken for public use without just
compensation. Are not these principles fundamental in every free government
established to maintain liberty and justice? If it be supposed that immunity
from prosecution for a capital offence, except upon the presentment or
indictment of a grand jury, was regarded at the common law any less secured by
the law of the land, or [*547] any less valuable, or any less
essential to due process of law, than the personal rights and immunities just
enumerated, I take leave to say that no such distinction is authorized by any
adjudged case, determined in England or in this country prior to the adoption
of our Constitution, or by any elementary writer upon the principles established
by Magna Charta and the [***57] statutes subsequently enacted in
explanation or enlargement of its provisions.
But it is said that the framers of the Constitution did not suppose that due
process of law necessarily required for a capital offence the institution and
procedure of a grand jury, else they would not in the same amendment
prohibiting the deprivation of life, liberty, or property, without due process
of law, have made specific and express provision for a grand jury where the
crime is capital or otherwise infamous; therefore, it is argued, the
requirement by the Fourteenth Amendment of due process of law in all
proceedings involving life, liberty, and property, without specific reference
to grand juries in any case whatever, was not intended as a restriction upon
the power which it is claimed the States previously had, so far as the express
restrictions of the national Constitution are concerned, to dispense altogether
with grand juries.
This line of argument, it seems to me, would lead to results which are
inconsistent with the vital principles of republican government. If the
presence in the Fifth Amendment of a specific provision for grand juries in
capital cases, alongside the provision for due [***58] process of
law in proceedings involving life, liberty, or property, is held to prove that
"due process of law" did not, in the judgment of the framers of the
Constitution, necessarily require a grand jury in capital cases, inexorable
logic would require it to be, likewise, held that the right not to be put twice
in jeopardy of life and limb for the same offence, nor compelled in a criminal
case to testify against one's self -- rights and immunities also specifically
recognized in the Fifth Amendment -- were not protected by that due process of
law required by the settled usages and proceedings existing under the common
and statute law of England at the settlement of this country. More than that,
other amendments of the Constitution [*548] proposed at the same
time, expressly recognize the right of persons to just compensation for private
property taken for public use; their right, when accused of crime, to be
informed of the nature and cause of the accusation against them, and to a
speedy and public trial, by an impartial jury of the State and district wherein
the crime was committed; to be confronted by the witnesses against them; and to
have compulsory process for obtaining [***59] witnesses in their
favor. Will it be claimed that these rights were not secured by the "law
of the land" or by "due process of law," as declared and
established at the foundation of our government? Are they to be excluded from
the enumeration of the fundamental principles of liberty and justice, and,
therefore, not embraced by "due process of law?" If the argument of
my brethren be sound, those rights -- although universally recognized at the
establishment of our institutions as secured by that due process of law which
for centuries had been the foundation of Anglo-Saxon liberty -- were not deemed
by our fathers as essential in the due process of law prescribed by our
Constitution; because, -- such seems to be the argument -- had they been
regarded as involved in due process of law they would not have been
specifically and expressly provided for, but left to the protection given by
the general clause forbidding the deprivation of life, liberty, or property
without due process of law. Further, the reasoning of the opinion indubitably
leads to the conclusion that but for the specific provisions made in the Constitution
for the security of the personal rights enumerated, [***60] the
general inhibition against deprivation of life, liberty, and property without
due process of law would not have prevented Congress from enacting a statute in
derogation of each of them.
Still further, it results from the doctrines of the opinion -- if I do not
misapprehend its scope -- that the clause of the Fourteenth Amendment
forbidding the deprivation of life or liberty without due process of law, would
not be violated by a State regulation, dispensing with petit juries in criminal
cases, and permitting a person charged with a crime involving life to be tried
before a single judge, or even a justice of the peace, upon a rule to show
cause why he should not be hanged. I do no [*549] injustice to my
brethren by this illustration of the principles of the opinion. It is
difficult, in my judgment, to over-estimate the value of the petit jury system
in this country. A sagacious statesman and jurist has well said that it was "the
best guardian of both public and private liberty which has been hitherto
devised by the ingenuity of man," and that "liberty can never be
insecure in that country in which the trial of all crimes is by the jury."
Mr. Madison observed, that while [***61] trial by jury could not be
considered as a natural right, but one resulting from the social compact, yet
it was "as essential to secure the liberty of the people as any one of the
pre-existent rights of nature." 1 Lloyd's Deb. 430. "When our more
immediate ancestors," says Story, "removed to America, they brought
this privilege with them, as their birthright and inheritance, as a part of
that admirable common law, which had fenced round and interposed barriers on
every side against the approaches of arbitrary power." Story's Const. §
1779. I submit, however, with confidence, there is no foundation for the
opinion that, under Magna Charta or at common law, the right to a trial by jury
in a capital case was deemed of any greater value to the safety and security of
the people than was the right not to answer, in a capital case, upon a mere
information filed by an officer of the government, without previous inquiry by
a grand jury. While the former guards the citizen against improper conviction,
the latter secures him against unfounded accusation. A State law which
authorized the trial of a capital case before a single judge, perhaps a justice
of the peace, would -- if a petit jury [***62] in a capital case be
not required by the fundamental principles of liberty and justice -- meet all
the requirements of due process of law, as indicated in the opinion of the
court; for such a law would not prescribe a special rule for particular
persons; it would be a general law which heard before it condemned, which
proceeded upon inquiry, and under which judgment would be rendered only after
trial; it would be embraced by the rule laid down by the court when it declares
that any legal proceeding enforced by public authority, whether sanctioned by
age and custom, or newly devised in the discretion of the legislative power, in
furtherance of the public [*550] good, which regards and preserves
those principles of liberty and justice, must be held to be due process of law.
It seems to me that too much stress is put upon the fact that the framers of
the Constitution made express provision for the security of those rights which
at common law were protected by the requirement of due process of law, and, in
addition, declared, generally, that no person shall "be deprived of life,
liberty or property without due process of law." The rights, for the
security of which these express [***63] provisions were made, were
of a character so essential to the safety of the people that it was deemed wise
to avoid the possibility that Congress, in regulating the processes of law,
would impair or destroy them. Hence, their specific enumeration in the earlier
amendments of the Constitution, in connection with the general requirement of
due process of law, the latter itself being broad enough to cover every right
of life, liberty or property secured by the settled usages and modes of
proceeding existing under the common and statute law of England at the time our
government was founded. Pomeroy's Municipal Law, 366, 372.
The views which I have attempted to express are supported by the Supreme
Judicial Court of Massachusetts, in Jones v. Robbins, 8 Gray, 329, reaffirmed
in Nolan's Case, 122 Mass. 330, 332, and in Commonwealth v. Honeman, 127 Mass.
450. Among the questions there presented was whether a statute of Massachusetts
which gave a single magistrate authority to try an offence punishable by
imprisonment in the State prison, without the presentment by a grand jury,
violated that provision of the State Constitution which declared that "no
man shall be arrested, imprisoned, [***64] exiled, or deprived of
his life, liberty, or estate, but by the judgment of his peers, or the law of
the land." It was held that it did.
"This clause, in its whole structure," said Chief Justice Shaw,
speaking for the court, "is so manifestly conformable to the words of
Magna Charta, that we are not to consider it as a newly invented phrase, first
used by the makers of our Constitution; but we are to look at it as the
adoption of one of the great securities of private right, handed to us as among
the liberties and privileges which our ancestors enjoyed at the time of
[*551] their emigration and claimed to hold and retain as their
birth-right.
"These terms, in this connection, cannot, we think, be used in their most
bald and literal sense to mean the law of the land at the time of their trial;
because the laws may be shaped and altered by the legislature, from time to
time; and such a provision, intended to prohibit the making of any law
impairing the ancient rights and liberties of the subject, would under such a
construction be wholly nugatory and void. The legislature might simply change
the law by statute, and thus remove the landmark and the barrier intended
[***65] to be set up by this provision in the Bill of Rights. It
must, therefore, have intended the ancient established law and course of legal
proceedings, by an adherence to which our ancestors in England, before the
settlement of this country, and the emigrants themselves and their descendants,
had found safety for their personal rights." After recognizing "law
of the land" in Magna Charta and in the Constitution of Massachusetts as
having the same meaning as "due process of law," and after stating
that the people of the original States deemed it essential for the better
security of their rights of life, liberty, and property, that their
Constitutions should set forth and declare the fundamental principles of free
government, Chief Justice Shaw proceeds: "Most of the State Constitutions
did contain these declarations, more or less detailed and explicit; but the
general purpose was to assert and maintain the great rights of English
subjects, as they had been maintained by the ancient laws, and the actual
enjoyment of civil rights under them. 'The sense of America was,' says
Chancellor Kent, 'more fully ascertained, and more explicitly and solemnly
promulgated, in the memorable Declaration [***66] of Rights of the
first Continental Bill of Rights, in October, 1774, and which was a
representation of all the States except Georgia. That declaration contained the
assertion of several great and fundamental principles of American liberty; and
it constituted the basis of those subsequent bills of rights which, under
various modifications, pervaded all our Constitutional charters' 2 Kent, 5, 6.
"The right of individual citizens to be secure from an open
[*552] and public accusation of crime, and from the trouble,
expense, and anxiety of a public trial, before a probable cause is established
by the presentment and indictment of a grand jury, in case of high offences, is
justly regarded as one of the securities to the innocent against hasty,
malicious, and oppressive public prosecutions, and as one of the ancient
immunities and privileges of English liberty."
Chancellor Kent, referring to the rights of personal security, as guarded by
constitutional provisions, which were transcribed into the Constitutions of
this country from Magna Charta and other fundamental acts of the English
Parliament, says: "And where express constitutional provisions on the
subject appear to be wanting, [***67] the same principles are
probably asserted by declaratory legislative acts; and they must be regarded as
fundamental doctrines in every State for the colonies were parties to the
national declaration of rights in 1774, in which the trial by jury, and the
other rights and liberties of English subjects, were peremptorily claimed as
their undoubted inheritance and birthright. It may be received as a
proposition, universally understood and acknowledged throughout this country,
that no person can be taken or imprisoned, or disseized of his freehold or
estate, or exiled or condemned, or deprived of life, liberty, or property,
unless by the law of the land or the judgment of his peers. The words by the
law of the land, as used originally in Magna Charta in reference to this
subject, are understood to mean due process of law, that is, by indictment or
presentment of good and lawful men; and this, says Lord Coke, is the true sense
and exposition of these words." And Kent immediately added: "The
better and larger definition of due process of law is that it means law in its
regular course of administration through courts of justice."
Because of this general definition of due process of law, [***68] that
distinguished jurist, it seems is claimed as authority for the present
decision. When Lord Coke said that indictment or presentment was due process of
law, he had reference, of course, to proceedings in cases in which, by the law
of the land, that kind of procedure was required. In no commentary upon Magna
Charta is it more distinctly stated than in Coke's that [*553]
informations were consistent with the law of the land in certain cases, and no
one has more emphatically declared that, in capital cases, informations are not
allowed by that law and were not due process of law. He referred to indictments
and presentments to illustrate what was due process of law in prosecutions
against persons accused of the higher grades of crime, and not for the purpose
of giving a full definition of the phrase "due process of law," as
applicable to both civil and criminal cases. The definition by Kent of
"due process of law" was, therefore, better and larger, because it
embraced cases civil and criminal, in rem and in personam, and included
proceedings affecting every right, whether of life, liberty, or property,
guaranteed by the law of the land. He was very far from saying that every
[***69] proceeding, involving new methods of trial, was due process
of law, because declared by the legislature to be such, or because it may be
regular in the sense that it is established by a general statute.
It is said by the court that the Constitution of the United States was made for
an undefined and expanding future, and that its requirement of due process of
law in proceedings involving life, liberty and property, must be so interpreted
as not to deny to the law the capacity of progress and improvement; that the
greatest security for the fundamental principles of justice resides in the
right of the people to make their own laws and alter them at pleasure. It is
difficult, however, to perceive anything in the system of prosecuting human
beings for their lives, by information, which suggests that the State which
adopts it has entered upon an era of progress and improvement in the law of
criminal procedure. Even the statute of H. 7, c. 3, allowing informations, and,
"under which Empson and Dudley, and an arbitrary star chamber, fashioned
the proceedings of the law into a thousand tyrannical forms," expressly
declared that it should not extend "to treason, murder or felony, or to
any [***70] other offence wherefor any person should lose life or
member." So great, however, were the outrages perpetrated by those men,
that this statute was repealed by 1 H. 8, c. 6. Under the local statutes in
question, even the district attorney of the county is deprived of any
discretion in the premises; for, [*554] if in the judgment of the
magistrate before whom the accused is brought -- and, generally, he is only a
justice of the peace -- a public offence has been committed, it becomes the
duty of the district attorney to proceed against him by information for the
offence indicated by the committing magistrate. Thus, in California, nothing
stands between the citizen and prosecution for his life, except the judgment of
a justice of the peace. Had such a system prevailed in England, in respect of
all grades of public offences, the patriotic men who laid the foundation of our
government would not have been so persistent in claiming, as the inheritance of
the colonists, the institutions and guaranties which had been established by
her fundamental laws for the protection of the rights of life, liberty and
property. The royal governor of New York would not have had occasion
[***71] to write in 1697 to the home government that the members of
the provincial legislature were "big with the privileges of Englishmen and
Magna Charta." 3 Bancroft, 56. Nor would the Colonial Congress of 1774,
speaking for the people of twelve colonies, have permitted, as it did, the
journal of their proceedings to be published with a medallion on the
title-page, "representing Magna Charta as the pedestal on which was raised
the column and cap of liberty, supported by twelve hands, and containing the
words 'Hanc Tuemur, Hac Nitimur.'" Hurd on Habeas Corpus, 108. Anglo-Saxon
liberty would, perhaps, have perished long before the adoption of our
Constitution, had it been in the power of government to put the subject on
trial for his life whenever a justice of the peace, holding his office at the
will of the crown, should certify that he had committed a capital crime. That
such officers are, in some of the States, elected by the people, does not add
to the protection of the citizen; for, one of the peculiar benefits of the
grand jury system, as it exists in this country and England, is that it is
composed, as a general rule, of a body of private persons, who do not hold
office at the will [***72] of the government, or at the will of voters.
In many if not in all of the States civil officers are disqualified to sit on
grand juries. In the secrecy of the investigations by grand juries, the weak
and helpless -- proscribed, perhaps, because of their race, or pursued by an
unreasoning [*555] public clamor -- have found, and will continue
to find, security against official oppression, the cruelty of mobs, the
machinations of falsehold, and the malevolence of private persons who would use
the machinery of the law to bring ruin upon their personal enemies. "Grand
juries perform," says Story, "most important public functions, and
are a great security to the citizens against vindictive prosecutions either by
the government, or by political partisans, or by private enemies." Story's
Const. § 1785.
To the evidence already adduced to show the necessity and value of that system,
I may add the testimony of Mr. Justice Wilson, formerly of this court, and one
of the foremost of the great men who have served the cause of constitutional
government. He said that "among all the plans and establishments which
have been devised for securing the wise and uniform execution of the criminal
[***73] laws, the institution of grand juries holds the most
distinguished place. This institution is, at least in the present times, the
peculiar boast of the common law. The era of its commencement, and the
particulars attending its gradual progress and improvement, are concealed
behind a thick veil of a very remote antiquity. But one thing concerning it is
certain. In the annals of the world there is not found another institution so
well adapted for avoiding all the inconveniences and abuses, which would
otherwise arise from malice, from rigor, from negligence, or from partiality in
the prosecution of crimes." 3 Wilson's Works, 363-4.
Mr. Justice Field, referring to the ancient origin of the grand jury system in
England, said, that it was, "at the time of the settlement of this
country, an informing and accusing tribunal, without whose previous action no
person charged with a felony could, except in certain special cases, be put
upon his trial. And in the struggles which at times arose in England between
the powers of the King and the rights of the subject, it often stood as a
barrier against persecution in his name; until, at length, it came to be
regarded as an institution by which [***74] the subject was
rendered secure against oppression from unfounded prosecution of the crown. In
this country, from the popular character of our institutions, there has seldom
been any contest [*556] between the government and the citizen,
which required the existence of the grand as a protection against oppressive
action of the government. Yet the institution was adopted in this country, and
is continued from considerations similar to those which give to it its chief
value in England, and is designed as a means, not only of bringing to trial
persons accused of public offences upon just grounds, but also as a means of
protecting the citizen against unfounded accusation, whether it comes from
government, or be prompted by partisan passion or private enmity." 2
Sawyer, 668-9. He quoted with approval the observations of a distinguished
judge to the effect that "into every quarter of the globe in which the
Anglo-Saxon race have formed settlements, they have carried with them this
time-honored institution, ever regarding it with the deepest veneration, and
connecting its perpetuity with that of civil liberty." In their
independent action," said the same jurist, "the persecuted have
[***75] found the most fearless protectors; and in the records of
their doings are to be discovered the noblest stands against the opressions of
power, the virulence of malice, and the intemperance of prejudice."
We have already seen that for centuries before the adoption of our present
Constitution, due process of law according to the maxims of Magna Charta and
the common law -- the interpreters of constitutional grants of power -- which
even the British Parliament with all its authority could not rightfully disregard,
Cooley's Const. Lim. 175, absolutely forbade that any person should be required
to answer for his life except upon indictment or presentment of a grand jury.
And we have seen that the people of the original States deemed it of vital
importance to incorporate that principle into our Constitution, not only by
requiring due process of law in all proceedings involving life, liberty, or
property, but by specific and express provision giving immunity from
prosecution, in capital cases, except by that mode of procedure.
To these considerations may be added others of very great significance. When
the Fourteenth Amendment was adopted, all the States of the Union, some in
terms, [***76] all substantially, declared, in their constitutions,
that no person shall be deprived [*557] of life, liberty, or
property, otherwise than "by the judgment of his peers, or the law of the
land," or "without due process of law." When that Amendment was
adopted, the constitution of each State, with few exceptions, contained, and
still contains, a Bill of Rights, enumerating the rights of life, liberty and
property which cannot be impaired or destroyed by the legislative department.
In some of them, as in those of Pennsylvania, Kentucky, Ohio, Alabama,
Illinois, Arkansas, Florida, Mississippi, Missouri and North Carolina, the
rights enumerated were declared to be embraced by "the general, great and
essential principles of liberty and free government;" in others, as in
those of Connecticut, in 1818, and Kansas, in 1857, to be embraced by "the
great and essential principles of free government." Now, it is a fact of
momentous interest in third discussion, that, when the Fourteenth Amendment was
submitted and adopted, the Bill of Rights and the constitutions of twenty-seven
States expressly forbade criminal prosecutions, by information, for capital
cases; * while, in the [***77] remaining ten States, they were
impliedly forbidden by a general clause declaring that no person should be
deprived of life otherwise than by "the judgment of his peers or the law
of the land," or "without due process of law." + It may be
safely affirmed that, when that Amendment was adopted, a criminal prosecution,
by information, for a crime involving life, was not permitted in any one of the
States composing the Union. So that the court, in this case, while conceding
that the requirement [*558] of due process of law protects the
fundamental principles of liberty and justice, adjudges, in effect, that an
immunity or right, recognized at the common law to be essential to personal
security, jealously guarded by our national Constitution against violation by
any tribunal or body exercising authority under the general government, and
expressly or impliedly recognized, when the Fourteenth Amendment was adopted, in
the Bill of Rights or Constitution of every State in the Union, is, yet, not a
fundamental principle in governments established, as those of the States of the
Union are, to secure to the citizen liberty and justice, and, therefore, is not
involved in that due process of [***78] law required in proceedings
conducted under the sanction of a State. My sense of duty constrains me to
dissent from this interpretation of the supreme law of the land.
* Ala., 1867, Art. 1, § 10; Ark., 1868, Art. 1, § 9; Cal., 1849, Art. 1, § 8;
Conn., 1818, Art., 1, § 9; Del., 1831, Art. 1, § 8; Flor., 1868, Art. 1, § 9;
Ill., 1848, Art. 13, § 10; Iowa, 1857, Art. 1, § 11; Ky., 1850, Art. 13, § 13;
Me., 1820, Art. 1, § 7; Mass., 1780, Pt. 1, Art. 12, as contained in Jones v. Robbins,
8 Gray 329; Minn., 1857, Art. 1, § 7; Miss., 1868, Art. 1, § 31; Mo., 1865,
Art. 1, § 24; Nebraska, 1866-7, Art. 1, § 8; Nev., 1864, Art. 1, § 8; N.J.,
1844, Art. 1, § 9; N.Y., 1846, Art. 1, § 6; N.C., 1868, Art. 1, § 12; Ohio,
Art. 1, § 10; Penn., 1838, Art. 9, § 10; R.I., 1842, Art. 1, § 7; S.C., 1868,
Art. 1, § 19; Tenn., 1834, Art. 1, § 14; Tex., 1868, Art. 1, § 8; W. Va.,
1861-3, Art. 2, § 1; Wis., 1848, Art. 1, § 8.
+ Geo., 1868, Art. 1, § 3; Ind., Art. 1, § 12; Kansas, 1859, Bill of Rights, §
18; La., 1868, Telle. 1, Art. 10; Md., 1867, Declaration of Rights, Art. 23;
Mich., 1850, Art. 6, § 32; N.H., 1792, Pt. 1, Art. 15; Oregon, 1857, Art. 1, §
10; Vt., 1793, Chap. 1, Art. 10; Va., 1850, Bill of Rights, Art. 8.
[***79]
MR. JUSTICE FIELD did not take part in the decision of this case.