In Re Snow
Supreme Court of the United States | 1887-01-24
7 S. Ct. 556,30 L. Ed. 658,120 U.S. 274,1887 U.S. LEXIS 1974
delivered the opinion of the court.
Section 3 of the act of Congress approved March 22, 1882, c. 47, 22 Stat. 31, provides as follows: “ Sec. 3. That if any male person, in a territory or other place over which the. United States have exclusive jurisdiction, hereafter cohabits with more than one woman, he shall be deemed guilty of a misdemeanor, *276 and on conviction thereof shall be punished by a fine of not more than three hundred dollars, or by imprisonment for not more than six months, or by both said punishments, in the discretion of the court.”
The grand jury of the United States for November Term, 1885, in the District Court of the First judicial District in and for the Territory of Utah, on the ’5th of December; 1885, presented and filed in that court, in open court, three several indictments, in the name of the United States, against Lorenzo Snow, each of them found December 2, 1885, designated as No. 711, No. 712, and No. 713. Each of them was founded on the foregoing statute, and they were alike, in all respects except that each' covered a different period of time. No. 711 alleged that Snow, on the 1st of January, 1883, “at the county of Box Elder, in - the said district, territory aforesaid, and within the jurisdiction of this court, and on divers other days and times thereafter, and continuously between said first day of January, a.d. 1883, and the thirty-first day of December, a.d. 1883, did then and there unlawfully live and cohabit with more than one woman, to wit, with Adeline Snow, Sarah Snow, Harriet Snow, Eleanor Snow, Mary H. Snow, Phoebe W. Snow, and Minnie Jensen Snow, and during all the period aforesaid, at the county aforesaid, he, the said Lorenzo Snow, did unlawfully claim, live, and cohabit with all of said women as his Avives.” No. 712 alleged that Snow, on the 1st of January, 1885, “ and on divers other days and times thereafter, and continuously betAveen said first day of January, a.d. 1885, and the first day of December, a.d. 1885, did then and' there unlawfully live and cohabit with more than one woman, to Avit, with ” the seven persons above named, “ and during all the period aforesaid ” £-£ did unlawfully claim, liAre, and cohabit with all of said women as Ms wives.” No. 713 alleged that Snow, on the 1st of January, 1881, “ and on divers other days and times thereafter, and continuously between said first day of January, a.d. 1881, and the thirty-first day of December, a.d. 1881, did then and there unlawfully live and cohabit with more than one woman, to wit, Avith ” the seven persons above named, “ and during all the period aforesaid ” “ did un *277 lawfully claim, live, and cohabit with all of said women as his wives.”
At the time of fifing each indictment it was properly indorsed “ a true bill, etc., and with the names of the witnesses.” The same sixteen witnesses were examined before the grand jury, “on one oath and one examination, as to the alleged offence during tlie entire time mentioned in all of said three indictments, and” they were found “upon the testimony of witnesses given on an examination covering the whole time specified in said three indictments.” On the 11th of December, 1885, the defendant was arraigned on each of the three indictments, and interposed a demurrer to each, which being overruled, he pleaded not guilty to each.
Indictment No. 142 was first tried, covering the period from and including January 1, 1885, to December 1, 1885. On the 31st of December, 1885, a verdict of guilty was rendered, and the court fixed the 16th of January,-1886, as the time for passing sentence.
Indictment 143 was next tried, covering the period from and including-January 1,1884, to December 31,1884. The defendant orally put in an additional plea in bar, setting up his prior conviction on indictment No. 142; and that the offence charged in all of the indictments was one continuous offence and the same offence, and not divisible. On an oral demurrer to this plea, the demurrer was sustained. On the trial by the jury, a' verdict of guilty was rendered on the 5th of January, 1886, and the court fixed the 16th of January, 1886, as the time for passing sentence.
Indictment No. 141 was next tried, covering the period from .and including January 1, 1883, to’December 31, 1883. The defendant orally put in an additional plea in bar, setting up his prior convictions on indictments Nos. 142 and 148; and that the offence charged in all of the indictments was one continuous offence, and the same offence, and not divisible. On an oral demurrer to this plea, the demurrer was sustained. On the trial by the jury, a verdict of guilty was rendered on the 5th of January, 1886, and the court fixed the 16th of January, 1886, as the time for passing sentence.
*278 The record of the court states that on the last-named day the following proceedings took place, in open court:
“ (Title of court and cause.)
“ The defendant and his counsel, F.’ S-. Bdehards, and C. C. Bichards, Esq’rs (of counsel) came into court. The defendant was duly informed of the nature of the indictments- found against him on the 5th day of December, 1885, by the grand jury of this court, for the crime of unlawful cohabitation, committed as stated in said indictments, and during the time, as follows, viz.: Indictment No. 741, between the first day of January, a.d. 1883, and the thirty-first day of December, a.d. 1883; indictment No. 742, between the first day of January, a.d. 1885, and the first day of December, a.d. 1885; indictment No. 743, between the first day of January, a.d.-1884,- and the thirty-first day of December, a.d. . 1884; of his arraignment and plea of not guilty as charged in said three indictments, on the sixteenth day of December, a.d. 1885; of ' his trial and the verdicts of the juries; indictment No. 742, ‘ Guilty as charged in the indictment,’ on December 31, 1885; indictment No. 743, ‘ Guilty as charged in the indictment,’ on 'January 5, 1886; indictment No. 741, ‘Guilty as charged in the indictment,’ on January 5, 1886.
“ The said defendant was then asked if he had any legal cause to show why judgment should not be pronounced against him, to which he replied that he had none; and no sufficient cause being shown or appearing to the court, thereupon the court renders its judgment, that whereas said Lorenzo Snow having been duly convicted in this court of the crime of unlawful cohabitation:
“ It is ordered, adjudged, and decreed, that said Lorenzo - Snow be hhprisoned in the penitentiary of the Territory- of Utah for a period of six months, and that he do forfeit and pay to the United States a fine of three hundred dollars and the costs of this prosecution, and that he do stand committed into the custody of the United Stateshnarshal for said territory until such fine and costs be paid in full. (As to indictment No. 741.)
*279 “ And it is further ordered, adjudged, and decreed, that at • the expiration of the sentence- and judgment rendered on said indictment No. 741, said Lorenzo Snow be imprisoned in .the-penitentiary of Utah Territory for a period of six months, and that he do forfeit and pay to the United States the sum of three hundred' dollars and the costs of this prosecution, and that he do stand committed into the custody of the United States marshal for said territory until such fine and costs be • paid in full. (As to indictment No. 742.)
“ And it is further ordered, adjudged, and decreed, that at the expiration of the sentence and judgment, as last above rendered, on said indictment No. 742, said Lorenzo. Snow be imprisoned in the penitentiary of Utah Territory for a period of six months, and that he do forfeit and pay to the United States the sum of three hundred dollars and the costs of this prosecution, and that he do stand committed into. the custody of the United States marshal for said territory until such fine and costs be paid in full. (As to indictment No. 743.)
“ The said defendant, Lorenzo Snow, is remanded into the custody of the United States marshal for Utah Territory, to be by him delivered into, the custody of the warden or other proper officer in charge of said penitentiary; and said .warden or other proper officer of said penitentiary 'is hereby commanded to receive of and from the said United States-marshal, him, the said Lorenzo Snow, convicted and sentenced as aforesaid, and him, the said Lorenzo Snow, keep and imprison in said penitentiary for the periods as in this judgment ordered and specified.
“ Orlando- W. Powers, Judge?'
■ - On the 22d of October, 1886, the defendant, filed in the District Court-of the Third Judicial District of the Territory of .Utah a petition setting forth that he is. a prisoner confined in the penitentiary of the Territory of Utah, “by virtue of the warrant, judgment, and proceedings of record, including, three indictments' against your petitioner, his arraignment thereon, and pleas thereto, respectively, as well as demurrers to such pleas, decisions thereof, and verdicts of the jury, *280 being the record of said matters in the District Court of the First Judicial District of the Territory of Utah,” copies of all. which papers, sixteen in number, were annexed to the petition; that, under said judgment, and in execution thereof, he had been imprisoned in said penitentiary for more than six months, to wit, continuously since the 12th day of March, 1886, and had paid $300 in satisfaction of the fine adjudged against him, and “all the costs awarded and- assessed against him on said prosecution; ” that his imprisonment is .illegal in that “ the court, had no jurisdiction to pass judgment” against him “upon more than one of the indictments or records referred to in its said1 judgment, for the reason that the offence therein . set out is the same as that contained and set out in each of the other said indictments and records, and the maximum punishment which the court had authority to impose was six months’ imprisonment and a fine of three hundred dollars ; ” and “ that by his said imprisonment your petitioner is being punished twice for one and the same offence.” The prayer is for a writ of habeas corpus, to the end that the petitioner may be discharged from custody.
On a hearing on the petition the following order was made by the court, on the 23d of October, 1886:
“ The petition of Lorenzo Snow for a writ of habeas corpus having been presented to the court, with the exhibits attached as a part thereof, and the court having fully considered the application and petition and the exhibits attached, finds that the facts alleged and shown by the petition and exhibits are insufficient to authorize the issuance of the writ; and the court being of the opinion, from the allegations and facts stated in the petition and exhibits, that, if the writ be granted and a hearing given, the petitioner could not be dischai’ged from custody, it is ordered and adjudged by the court that the said application for a writ of habeas corpus be, and the same is hereby, refused; to which ruling and refusal applicant, by his counsel, excepts.”
From this order and judgment the petitioner has appealed to this court.
There can be no doubt that the action of the District Court. *281 as set forth in its order and judgment refusing to .issue .the writ, was, so far as an appeal is concerned, equivalent to a refusal to discharge the petitioner on a hearing on the return to a writ; and that, under § 1909 of the Revised Statutes, an appeal lies to this court from that order and judgment.
It is contended for the United States, that, as the court which tried the indictments had jurisdiction over the offences charged in them, it had jurisdiction to determine, the questions raised by the demurrers to the oral pleas in bar in the cases secondly and thirdly tried; that it tried those questions; that, those questions are the same which are .raised in the present proceeding; that they cannot be reviewed on habeas corpus by any court; and that they could only be reexamined here on a writ of error, if one were authorized. For these propositions the case of Ex parte Bigelow, 113 U. S. 328, is cited. But, for the reasons hereafter stated, we are of opinion that the decision in that case does not apply to the present one.
The offence of cohabiting with more than one woman, in the sense of the section of the statute on which the indictments were founded, may be committed by a man by living in the same house with two women whom he had theretofore acknowledged as his wives, and eating at -their respective tables, and holding them out to the world by his language or conduct, or both, as his wives, though he may not occupy the same bed or sleep in the same room with them, or either of them, or have sexual intercourse with either of them. The offence of cohabitation, in the sense of this statute, is committed if there is' a living or dwelling together as husband and wife. It is, inherently, a continuous offence, having duration; and not an offence consisting óf an isolated act. That' it was intended in that sense in these indictments is shown by the fact that in each the charge laid is that the defendant did on the day named and “ thereafter and continuously,” for the time specified, “ live and cohabit with more than one woman, to wit, with ” the seven women named, and “ during all the period aforesaid” “did unlawfully claim, five and cohabit with all of- said women as his wives.” Thus, in each indict *282 ment, the offence is laid as a continuing one, and a single one, ■ for'aJI the time covered by the'indictment; and, taking the three indictments together, there is charged a continuing of-fence.-for the .entire .time covered by all three of the indictments. There was but a single offence committed prior to the time the indictments were found. This appears on the face,-of the judgment. It refers to the indictments as found - “for the crime of unlawful cohabitation éommitted” “during the time” stated, divided into three periods, according to each indictment. For so much of the offence as covered each of these periods the defendant is, according to the judgment, to be imprisoned for six months and to pay a fine of $300. The division of ■ the two years and eleven months- is wholly arbitrary. On the- same principle there might have been an indictment covering each of the thirty-five months, with imprisonment for.seventeen years and a half .and fines amounting to $10,500, or even an indictment covering every week, with imprisonment- for seventy-four years and fines amounting to $44,400; and so on, ad mfaiitum, for smaller periods of time. It is to prevent such an application of penal laws, that the rule has obtained that a continuing offence of the character of the one in this case.can be committed but once, for the purposes of indictment or prosecution, prior to the time the prosecution is instituted. Here each indictment charged unlawful cohabitation with the same seven women; all the indictments were found at the same time, by the same grand jury, and on the testimony of the same witnesses, covering a continuous period of thirty-five months; and it was the mere will of the, grand jury which divided the time among three indictments, and stopped short of dividing it among 'thirty-five, or one hundred and fifty-two, or even more. It was; quite in consonance with this action, that the prosecuting officer tried the indictments in the inverse order of the time to which each related, that for 1885 first, that for 18S4 next, and that for 1883 last. Hence the defendant could nof, on any trial, plead or show that he hafcl before been tried on an indictment in respect to a period of time antedating that laid in the indictment on trial. Then,' after the verdicts, there was *283 not a separate judgment in each, case; but only one judgment in form was rendered for all the .cases. The judgment says, on its face, that the proper officer of the penitentiary is. to imprison the defendant therein “for the periods aS'in this judgment ordered and specified,” that is, for three successive periods of six months each, the first period to apply to the indictment thirdly tried; the second period to apply to the indictment first tried, and to begin when the sentence and judgment on the indictment thirdly tried should .expire; and the third period to apply to the indictment secondly tried,- and to begin when the sentence and judgment on the indictment secondly tried should expire.
No case is cited where what has been done in the present case has been held to be lawful. But the uniform current of authority is to the contrary, both in England and in the United States. ,
A leading case on the subjéct in England is Crepps v. Durden, Cowper, 640. In that case the statute, 29 Car. 2, c. 7, provided “ that no tradesman or other person shall do or exercise any worldly labor, business, or work of their ordinary calling on the Lord’s day, works of- necessity and charity, only-excepted.” A penalty of five shillings was affixed to each offence, and it was made cognizable by a justice, of the peace. Crepps, a baker, was. convicted before Durden, a justice, by four separate convictions, “ of selling small hot loaves of bread, the same not being any work of charity,- on the same day, being Sunday,” in violation of that statute. Durden issued four warrants, one on each conviction, to officers, who, under them, levied four penalties, of five shillings each, on the goods of Crepps. The latter sued Durden and the others, in trespass, in the King’s Bench, in 1W, and had a verdict before Lord Mansfield, for three sums of .five shillings each, subject to the opinion of the court. The .first question raised was whether, in-the action of trespass, and before the convictions were quashed, their legality could be objected to; and, next, whether the levy under the last three warrants could be justified. " It was contended for the plaintiff that the last three convictions were in excess of the jurisdiction of the justice, *284 because tbe offence created by tbe statute was tbe exercising •of a-calling on the Lord’s day, and, if tbe plaintiff bad contin-ued baking from morning till, night, it would still be but one offence;. that tbe four convictions were for one and tbe same offence; and that an action would be against the justice and tbe officers. On tbe other side it was urged, that, as tbe jus-' tice bad general jurisdiction of tbe offence in question, tbe convictions must be quashed, or reversed on appeal, before they could be questioned. At a subsequent day, • tbe unanimous opinion of tbe court was delivered by Lord Mansfield. He first considered tbe question whether tbe legabty of- the convictions could be objected to before they were quashed. 'As to tins be said: “Here are three convictions of a baker, for exercising bis. trade on one and tbe same day, he having been before convicted- for exercising bis ordinary calling on that identical day. If tbe act of Parbament gives authority to levy but one penalty, there is an end of tbe question;- for there is no penalty at common law. On the construction of tbe act of Parbament tbe offence is ‘ exercising bis ordinary trade upon tbe Lord’s day ’;' and that without any fractions of a day, hours or minutes. It is .but one entire offence, whether longer or shorter in point of duration; so, whether it consists of- one, or of á number of particular acts. Tbe penalty incurred for this-offence is five shillings. There is no idea conveyed by tbe act itself, that, if a tailor sews -on tbe Lord’s day, every , stitch be takes is a separate offence; or, if a shoemaker or carpenter work for different.customers at different times, on tbe same Sunday, that those are so many separate and distinct offences. There can be but one entire offence on one and tbe same- day. And' this is a much stronger case than that which has been alluded to, of killing more bares than one on tbe same day. Killing a single bare is an offence; but tbe killing ten more on tbe same dajr will not multiply tbe offence, óf tbe penalty ' imposed by tbe statute for killing one. Here, repeated offences are not tbe object which the legislature bad in view in making the statute; but singly, to punish a man for exercising bis ordinary trade and cabing on a Sunday. Upon this construc- . tion, tbe justice bad no jurisdiction whatever in respect of tbe *285 three last convictions. How, then, can there he a doubt but that the plaintiff might take this objection at the trial ? ” As to justifying the levy under the last three warrants, Lord Mansfield said: “ But what could the justification have been in this case, if any had been attempted to be set up % It could only have been this: That, because therplaintiff had been convicted of one' offence on that day, therefore the justice had-convicted him in three other offences for the same act. By, law that is no justification. It is illegal on the face of it; and, therefore, as was very rightly admitted by the counsel for the defendant, in the argument, if put upon the record by way of plea, Would have been bad, and on demurrer must have been so adjudged. Most clearly, then, it was open to the plaintiff, upon the general issue, to take advantage of it -at the trial. The question does not turn upon niceties; upon a computation how many hours distant the several bakings happened; or upon the fact of which conviction was prior in point of time; or that for uncertainty in that respect they should all four be held bad. But it goes upon the ground that the offence itself can be committed only once in the same day.”
In the case at bar the statute provides, that if any male person shall thereafter cohabit with more than one woman, he shall, on conviction, be punished • thus and so. The judgment in the case, taken- in connecti|>n with the other proceedings in the ‘ record and the statute,j shows, within the principle pf. Crepps v. Durden, that there.was but one entire offence, whether longer or shorter in point, of duration, between the earliest day laid in any indictment and the'latest day laid in any: There can be but one offence between such earliest ,day and the end of the continuous time embraced by all of the indictments. Not only had the court Avhich tried them no jurisdiction to ‘inflict a punishment in respect of more than one of the convictions, but, as the want of jurisdiction appears on the face of the judgment, the objection may be taken on habeas corpus, when the sentence on more, than one of the convictions is sought to be enforced. If such an objection could be taken in Crepps v. Durden, in a collateral action for damages, it can be taken on a habeas corpus to release the party *286 from imprisonment under the illegal judgment. These considerations distinguish the case from that of Ex parte Bigelow, (ubi supra,) and bring it within the principle of such cases as Ex parte Milligan, 4 Wall. 2, 131; Ex parte Lange, 18 Wall. 163, 178 ; and Ex parte Wilson, 114 U. S. 411.
A distinction is laid down in adjudged cases and in text-writers between an offence continuous in its character, like the one'at har, and a case where the statute is aimed at an offence that can be committed uno ictn. The subject is discussed in 1 Wharton’s Criminal Law, 9th ed., §§ 21, 931, and the cases on the subject are cited. ■
The principle which governs the present case has been recognized and approved in many cases in the United States : Washburn v. McInroy (1810), 7 Johns. 134; Mayor v. Ordrenan (1815), 12 Johns. 122; Tiffany v. Driggs (1816), 13 Johns. 253; State v. Commissioners (1818), 2 Murph. (N. C.), 371; United States v. McCormick (1830), 4 Cranch C. C. 104; State v. Nutt (1856), 28 Vt. 598 ; State v. Lindley (1860), 14 Ind. 430; Sturgis v. Spofford (1811), 45 N. Y. 446; Fisher v. New York Central & Hudson River Railroad (1811), 46 N. Y. 644; State v. Egglesht (1815); 41 Iowa, 514; United States v. New York-Guaranty & Indemnity Co. (1815), 8 Ben. 269; United States v. Erie Railway Co. (1811), 9 Ben. 67, 68.
The case of Commonwealth v. Connors, 116 Mass. 35, gives no support to the view that a grand jury may divide a single continuous offence, running through a past period of time, into such parts as it may please, and call each part a separate offence. On the contrary, in Commonwealth v. Robinson, 126 Mass. 259, it is said that the offence of keeping a tenement for the illegal sale of intoxicating liquors on a day named, and on divers other days and times between that day and a subsequent day, is but one offence, even, though the tenement is kept during every hour of the time between those two days, such offence being continuous in its character.
On the whole case we are unanimously of opinion that
The order cmd judgment of the District Court for the Third Judicial District of Utah Territory must be reroersed and the case be remanded to that court, with a direction to grant *287 the writ of habeas corpus prayed for, and to take such proceedings thereon as may be in conformity with la/w cmd not inconsistent with the opinion of this court.
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