SUPREME COURT OF
UNITED STATES
Brown
Vs.
Walker
23.03.1896
This was an appeal from an order
of the circuit court, made upon the return of a writ of habeas corpus,
remanding the petitioner, Brown, to the custody of the marshal, the respondent
in this case. 70 Fed. 46.
It appeared that the petitioner
had been subpoenaed as a witness before the grand jury, at a term of the
district court for the Western district of Pennsylvania, to testify in relation
to a charge then under investigation by that body against certain officers and
agents of the Alleghany Valley Railway Company, for an alleged violation of the
interstate commerce act. Brown, the appellant, appeared for examination, in
response to the subpoena, and was sworn. After testifying that he was auditor
of the railway company, and that it was his duty to audit the accounts of the
various officers of the company, as well as the accounts of the freight
department of such company during the years 1894 and 1895, he was asked the
question:
'Do you know whether or not the
Alleghany Valley Railway Company transported, for the Union Coal Company,
during the months of Jul , August, and September, 1894, coal, from any point on
the Low Grade Division of said railroad company to Buffalo, at a less rate than
the established rates in force between the terminal points at the time of such
transportation?'
To this question he answered:
'That question, with all respect
to the grand jury and yourself, I must decline to answer, for the reason that
my answer would tend to accuse and incriminate myself.'
He was then asked:
'Do you know whether the
Alleghany Valley Railway Company, during the year 1894, paid to the Union Coal
Company any rebate, refund, or commission on coal transported by said railroad
company, from points on its Low Grade Division, to Buffalo, whereby the Union
Coal Company obtained a transportation of such coal between the said terminal
points at a less rate than the open tariff rate, or the rate established by
said company? If you have such knowledge, state the amount of such rebates or
drawbacks or commissions paid, to whom paid, the date of the same, and on what
shipments, and state fully all the particulars within your knowledge relating
to such transaction or transactions.'
Answer: 'That question I must
also decline to answer, for the reason already given.' The grand jury reported
these questions and answers to the court, and prayed for such order as to the
court might seem meet and proper. Upon the presentation of this report, Brown
was ordered to appear and show cause why he should not answer the said
questions or be adjudged in contempt, and, upon the hearing of the rule to show
cause, it was found that his excuses were insufficient, and he was directed to
appear and answer the questions, which he declined to do. Whereupon he was
adjudged to be in contempt and ordered to pay a fine of five dollars, and to be
taken into custody until he should have answered the questions.
He thereupon petitioned the
circuit court for a writ of habeas corpus, stating, in his petition, the
substance of the above facts. The writ was issued, petitioner was produced in
court, the hearing was had, and on the 11th day of September, 1895, it was
ordered that the petition be dismissed, the writ of habeas corpus discharged,
and the petitioner remanded to the custody of the marshal.
From that judgment Brown appealed
to this court.
Per Mr. Justice Shiras, mr.
Justice Gray, and Mr. Justice White, dissenting.
James C. Carter, for appellant.
George F. Edmunds, for appellee.
Mr. Justice BROWN, after stating
the facts in the foregoing language, delivered the opinion of the court.
This case involves an alleged
incompatibility between that clause of the fifth
amendment to the constitution which declares that no person
'shall be compelled in any criminal case to be a witness against himself,' and
the act of congress of February 11, 1893 (27 Stat. 443), which enacts that 'no
person shall be excused from attending and testifying or from producing books,
papers, tariffs, contracts, agreements and documents before the interstate
commerce commission, or in obedience to the subpoena of the commission, * * *
on the ground or for the reason that the testimony or evidence, documentary or
otherwise, required of him, may tend to criminate him or subject him to a
penalty or forfeiture. But no person shall be prosecuted or subjected to any
penalty or forfeiture for or on account of any transaction, matter or thing,
concerning which he may testify, or produce evidence, documentary or otherwise,
before said commission, or in obedience to its subpoena, or the subpoena of
either of them, or in any such case or proceeding.'
The act is supposed to have been
passed in view of the opinion of this court in Counselman v. Hitchcock, [1892]
USSC 17; 142 U. S.
547, 12 Sup.
Ct. 195, to the effect that section 860 of the Revised
Statutes, providing that no evidence given by a witness shall be used against
him, his property or estate, in any manner, in any court of the United States,
in any criminal proceeding, did not afford that complete protection to the
witness which the a endment was intended to guaranty. The gist of that decision
is contained in the following extracts from the opinion of Mr. Justice Blatchford,
referring to section 860: 'It could not, and would not, prevent the use of his
testimony to search out other testimony to be used in evidence against him or
his property in a criminal proceeding in such court. It could not prevent the
obtaining and the use of witnesses and evidence which should be attributable
directly to the testimony he might give under compulsion, and on which he might
be convicted, when otherwise, and if he had refused to answer, he could not
possibly have been convicted.' And again: 'We are clearly of opinion that no
statute which leaves the party or witness subject to prosecution, after he
answers the criminating question put to him, can have the effect of supplanting
the privilege conferred by the constitution
of the United States. Section 860 of the Revised Statutes does not supply a
complete protection from all the perils against which the constitutional
prohibition was designed to guard, and is not a full substitute for that
prohibition. In view of the constitutional provision, a statutory enactment, to
be valid, must afford absolute immunity against future prosecutions for the
offense to which the question relates.'
The inference from this language
is that, if the statute does afford such immunity against future prosecution,
the witness will be compellable to testify. So also in Emery's Case, 107 Mass. 172, 185, and in Cullen v.
Com., 24 Grat. 624, upon which much reliance was placed in Counselman v.
Hitchcock, it was intimated that the witness might be required to forego an
appeal to the protection of the fundamental law, if he were first secured from
future liability and exposure to be prejudiced, in any criminal proceeding
against him, as fully and extensively as he would be secured by availing
himself of the privilege accorded by the constitution.
To meet this construction of the constitutional provision, the act in question
was passed, exempting the witness from any prosecution on account of any
transaction to which he may testify. The case before us is whether this
sufficiently satisfies the constitutional guaranty of protection.
The clause of the constitution
in question is obviously susceptible of two interpretations. If it be construed
literally, as authorizing the witness to refuse to disclose any fact which
might tend to incriminate, disgrace or expose him to unfavorable comments,
then, as he must necessarily, to a large extent, determine, upon his own
conscience and responsibility, whether his answer to the proposed question will
have that tendency (1 Burr's Trial, 244; Fisher v. Ronalds, [1852]
EngR 1047; 12 C. B.
762; Reynell v. Sprye, 1 De Gex, M. & G. 656; Adams v. Lloyd,
[1858]
EngR 835; 3 Hurl.
& N. 351; Merluzzi v. Gleeson, 59 Md. 214; Bunn v. Bunn, [1864]
EngR 305; 4 De Gex,
J. & S. 316; Ex parte Reynolds, 20 Ch. Div. 294; Ex parte
Schofield, 6 Ch. Div. 230), the practical result would be that no one could be compelled
to testify to a material fact in a criminal case, unless he chose to do so, or
unless it was entirely clear that the privilege was not set up in good faith.
It, upon the other hand, the object of the provision be to secure the witness
against a criminal prosecution, which might be aided directly or indirectly by
his disclosure, then, if no such prosecution be possible,—in other words, if
his testimony operate as a complete pardon for the offense to which it
relates,—a statute absolutely securing to him such immunity from prosecution
would satisfy the demands of the clause in question.
Our attention has been called to
but few cases wherein this provision, which is found with slight variation in
the constitution
of every state, has been construed in connection with a statute similar to the
one before us, as the decisions have usually turned upon the validity of
statutes providing, as did section 860, that the testimony given by such
witness should never be used against him in any criminal prosecution. It can
only be said, in general, tha the clause should be construed, as it was
doubtless designed, to effect a practical and beneficent purpose, not
necessarily to protect witnesses against every possible detriment which might
happen to them from their testimony, nor to unduly impede, hinder, or obstruct
the administration of criminal justice. That the statute should be upheld, if
it can be construed in harmony with the fundamental law, will be admitted.
Instead of seeking for excuses for holding acts of the legislative power to be
void by reason of their conflict with the constitution, or with certain
supposed fundamental principles of civil liberty, the effort should be to
reconcile them if possible, and not to hold the law invalid unless, as was
observed by Mr. Chief Justice Marshall, in Fletcher v. Peck, [1810]
USSC 10; 6 Cranch,
87, 128, 'the opposition between the constitution and the law
be such that the judge feels a clear and strong conviction of their
incompatibility with each other.'
The maxim, 'Nemo tenetur seipsum
accusare,' had its origin in a protest against the inquisitorial and manifestly
unjust methods of interrogating accused persons, which has long obtained in the
continental system, the British throne in 1688, and the erection of additional
barriers for the protection of the people against the exercise of arbitrary
power, was not uncommon even in England. While the admissions or confessions of
the prisoner, when voluntarily and freely made, have always ranked high in the
scale of incriminating evidence, if an accused person be asked to explain his
apparent connection with a crime under investigation, the ease with which the
questions put to him may assume an inquisitorial character, the temptation to
press the witness unduly, to browbeat him if he be timid or reluctant, to push
him into a corner, and to entrap him into fatal contradictions, which is so
painfully evident in many of the earlier state trials, notably in those of Sir
Nicholas Throckmortion, and Udal, the Puritan minister, made the system so
odious as to give rise to a demand for its total abolition. The change in the
English criminal procedure in that particular seems to be founded upon no
statute and no judicial opinion, but upon a general and silent acquiescence of
the courts in a popular demand. But, however adopted, it has become firmly
inbedded in English, as well as in American, jurisprudence. So deeply did the
iniquities of the ancient system impress themselves upon the minds of the
American colonists that the states, with one accord, made a denial of the right
to question an accused person a part of their fundamental law, so that a maxim,
which in England was a mere rule of evidence, became clothed in this country
with the impregnability of a constitutional enactment.
Stringent as the general rule is,
however, certain classes of cases have always been treated as not falling
within the reason of the rule, and, therefore, constituting apparent
exceptions. When examined, these cases will all be found to be based upon the
idea that, if the testimony sought cannot possibly be used as a basis for, or
in aid of, a criminal prosecution against the witness, the rule ceases to
apply, its object being to protect the witness himself and no one else; much
less, that it shall be made use of as a pretext for securing immunity to
others.
1. Thus, if the witness himself
elects to waive his privilege, as he may doubtless do, since the privilege is
for his protection, and not for that of other parties, and discloses his
criminal connections, he is not permitted to stop, but must go on and make a
full disclosure. 1 Greenl. Ev. § 451; Dixon v. Vale, [1824]
EngR 616; 1 Car.
& P. 278; East v. Chapman, [1827]
EngR 337; 2 Car. & P. 570, 1 Moody
& M. 46; State v. K_____, 4 N. H. 562; Low v. Mitchell, 18 Me. 372; Coburn v. Odell, 10 Fost.
(N. H.) 540; Town of Norfolk v. Gaylord, 28 Conn.
309; Austin v. Poiner, 1 Sim. 348; Com. v. Pratt, 126 Mass. 462; Chamberlain v. Wilson, 12 Vt. 491; Locket v. State, 63 Ala. 5; People v. Freshour, 55 Cal. 375.
So, under modern statutes
permitting accused persons to take the stand in their own behalf, they may be
subjected to cross-examination upon their statements. State v. Wentworth, 65 Me. 234; State v. Witham, 72
Me. 531; State v. Ober, 52 N. H. 495; Com.
v. Bonner, 97 Mass. 587; Com. v. Morgan, 107 Mass. 199; Com. v. Mullen, 97
Mass. 545; Connors v. People, 50 N. Y. 240;
People v. Casey, 72 N. Y. 393.
2. For the same reason, if a
prosecution for a crime, concerning which the witness is interrogated, is
barred by the statute of limitations, he is compellable to answer. Parkhurst v.
Lowten, [1816] EngR 485; 1
Mer. 391, 400; Calhoun v. Thompson, 56 Ala. 166;
Mahanke v. Cleland, 76 Iowa, 401, 41 N. W. 53; Weldon v. Burch, 12
Ill. 374; U. S. v. Smith, 4 Day, 123, Fed. Cas. No. 16,332; Close v.
Olney, 1 Denio, 319; People v. Mather, 4 Wend. 229, 252-255; Williams v. Farrington, 2 Cox Ch. 202; Davis v. Reed, 5 Sim. 443; Floyd v.
State, 7 Tex. 215; Maloney v. Dows, 2 Hilt. 247;
Wolfe v. Goulard, 15 Abb. Prac. 336.
3. If the answer of the witness
may have a tendency to disgrace him or bring him into disrepute, and the
proposed evidence be material to the issue on trial, the great weight of
authority is that he may be compelled to answer, although, if the answer can
have no effect upon the case, except so far as to impair the credibility of the
witness, he may fall back upon his privilege. 1 Greenl. Ev. §§ 454, 455; People
v. Mather, 4 Wend. 229; Lohman v. People, 1 N. Y. 379; Com. v. Reberts, Brightly N. P. 109;
Weldon v. Burch, 12 Ill. 374; Cundell v. Pratt, 1 Moody & M. 108; Ex parte Rowe, 7 Cal. 184. But, even in the latter case, if the answer
of the witness will not directly show his infamy, but only tend to disgrace
him, he is bound to answer. 1 Greenl. Ev. § 456. The cases of Respublica v.
Gibbs, 3 Yeates, 429, and Lessee of Galbraith v.
Eichelberger, Id. 515, to the contrary are opposed to the weight of authority.
The extent to which the witness
is compelled to answer such questions as do not fix upon him a criminal
culpability is within the control of the legislature. State v. Nowell, 58 N. H. 314, 316.
4. It is almost a necessary
corollary of the above propositions that, if the witness has already received a
pardon, he cannot longer set up his privilege, since he stands, with respect to
such offense, as if it had never been committed. Roberts v. Allatt, Moody &
M. 192, overruling Rex v. Reading, 7 How. State Tr. 259, 296, and Rex v. Earl
of Shaftesbury, 8 How. St. Tr. 817; Reg. v.
Boyes, [1861] EngR 626; 1
Best & S. 311, 321. In the latter case it was suggested, in answer
to the production by the solicitor general of a pardon of the witness under the
great seal, that, by statute, no such pardon under the great seal was pleadable
to an impeachment by the commons in parliament; and it was insisted that this
was a sufficient reason for holding that the privilege of the witness still
existed, upon the ground that, though protected, by the pardon, against every
other form of prosecution, the witness might possibly be subjected to
parliamentary impeachment. It was also contended in that case, as it is in the
one under consideration, 'that a bare possibility of legal peril was sufficient
to entitle a witness to protection; nay, further, that the witness was the sole
judge as to whether his evidence would bring him into the danger of the law,
and that the statement of his belief to that effect, if not manifestly made
mala fide, would be received as conclusive.' It was held, however, by Lord
Chief Justice Cockburn, that, 'to entitle a party called as a witness to the
privilege of silence, the court must see, from the circumstances of the case
and the nature of the evidence which the witness is called to give, that there
is reasonable ground to apprehend danger to the witness from his being
compelled to answer,' although, 'if the fact of the witness being in danger be
once made to appear, great latitude should be allowed to him in judging for
himself of the effect of any particular question.'
'Further than this,' said the
chief justice, 'we are of opinion t at the danger to be apprehended must be
real and appreciable, with reference to the ordinary operation of law in the
ordinary course of things; not a danger of an imaginary and unsubstantial character,
having reference to some extraordinary and barely possible contingency, so
improbable that no reasonable man would suffer it to influence his* conduct. We
think that a merely remote and naked possibility, out of the ordinary course of
the law, and such as no reasonable man would be affected by, should not be
suffered to obstruct the administration of justice. The object of the law is no
afford to a party, called upon to give evidence in a proceeding inter alios,
protection against being brought by means of his own evidence within the
penalties of the law. But it would be to convert a salutary protection into a
means of abuse if it were to be held that a mere imaginary possibility of
danger, however remote and improbable, was sufficient to justify the
withholding of evidence essential to the ends of justice.'
All of the cases above cited
proceed upon the idea that the prohibition against his being compelled to
testify against himself presupposes a legal detriment to the witness arising
from the exposure. As the object of the first eight amendments to the constitution was to incorporate into the fundamental
law of the land certain principles of natural justice which had become
permanently fixed in the jurisprudence of the mother country, the construction
given to those principles by the English courts is cogent evidence of what they
were designed to secure and of the limitations that should be put upon them.
This is but another application of the familiar rule that, where one state
adopts the laws of another, it is also presumed to adopt the known and settled
construction of those laws by the courts of the state from which they are
taken. Cathcart v. Robinson, [1831] USSC 12; 5 Pet. 264, 280; McDonald v. Hovey, [1884] USSC 88; 110 U. S. 619,
4 Sup. Ct. 142.
The danger of extending the
principle announced in Counselman v. Hitchcock is that the privilege may be put
forward for a sentimental reason, or for a purely fanciful protection of the
witness against an imaginary danger, and for the real purpose of securing
immunity to some third person, who is interested in concealing the facts to
which he would testify. Every good citizen is bound to aid in the enforcement
of the law, and has no right to permit himself, under the pretext of shielding
his own good name, to be made the tool of others, who are desirous of seeking
shelter behind his privilege.
The act of congress in question, securing
to witnesses immunity from prosecution, is virtually an act of general amnesty,
and belongs to a class of legislation which is not uncommon either in England
(2 Tayl. Ev. § 1455, where a large number of similar acts are collated) or in
this county. Although the constitution vests in
the president 'power to grant reprieves and pardons for offenses against the
United States, except in cases of impeachment,' this power has never been held
to take from congress the power to pass acts of general amnesty, and is
ordinarily exercised only in cases of individuals after conviction, although,
as was said by this court in Ex parte Garland, [1866]
USSC 33; 4 Wall. 333, 380, 'it extends to
every offense known to the law, and may be exercised at any time after its
commission, either before legal proceedings are taken, or during their
pendency, or after conviction and judgment.'
In the case of The Laura[1885] USSC 126; , 114 U. S. 411,
5 Sup. Ct. 881, objection was made that a
remission by the secretary of the treasury, under Rev. St. § 4294, of penalties
incurred by a steam vessel for taking on board an unlawful number of
passengers, was ineffectual to destroy liability, by reason of the fact that it
involved an exercise of the pardoning power. It was held that, in view of the
practice in reference to remissions by the secretary of the treasury and other
officers, which had been sanctioned by statute and acquiesced in for nearly a
century, the power vested in the president was not e clusive, in the sense that
no other officer could remit forfeitures or penalties incurred for the
violation of the laws of the United States, citing U. S. v. Morris, [1832] USSC 29; 10 Wheat. 246.
The distinction between amnesty
and pardon is of no practical importance. It was said in Knote v. U. S., [1877] USSC 124; 95 U. S. 149,
152; 'The constitution does not use the word
'amnesty,' and, except that the term is generally applied where pardon is extended
to whole classes or communities, instead of individuals, the distinction
between them is one rather of philological interest than of legal importance.'
'Amnesty' is defined by the lexicographers to be an act of the sovereign power
granting oblivion, or a general pardon for a past offense, and is rarely, if
ever, exercised in favor of single individuals, and is usually exerted in
behalf of certain classes of persons, who are subject to trial, but have not
yet been convicted.
While the decisions of the
English courts construing such acts are of little value here, in view of the
omnipotence of parliament, such decisions as have been made under similar acts
in this country are, with one or two exceptions, we believe, unanimous in favor
of their constitutionality.
Thus, in State v. Nowell, 58 N. H. 314, a statute which provided that a clerk, servant,
or agent should not be excused from testifying against his principal, and that
he should not thereafter be prosecuted for any offense disclosed by him, was
held to have deprived him of his privilege of silence. In delivering the
opinion, the court observed 'that the legislature, having undertaken to obtain
the testimony of the witness without depriving him of his constitutional
privilege of protection, must relieve him from all liabilities on account of
the matters which he is compelled to disclose; otherwise, the statute would be
ineffectual. He is to be secured against all liability to future prosecution as
effectually as if he were wholly innocent. This would not be accomplished if he
were left liable to prosecution criminally for any matter in respect to which
he may be required to testify. * * * The conditional exemption becomes absolute
when the witness testifies, and, being no longer liable to prosecution, he is
not compelled, by testifying, to accuse or furnish evidence against himself. *
* * The constitutional privilege of the witness protects, not another against
whom the witness testifies, but the witness himself. The legal protection of
the witness against prosecution for crime disclosed by him is, in law,
equivalent to his legal innocence of the crime disclosed. * * * The witness,
regarded in law as innocent if prosecuted for a crime which he has been
compelled by the statute to disclose, will stand as well as other innocent
persons, and it was not the design of the common-law maxim, affirmed by the
bill of rights, that he should stand any better.'
In Kendrick v. Com., 78 Va. 490, a statute secured to a witness, called to
testify concerning unlawful gaming, immunity against prosecution for any
offense committed by him at the time and place indicated, and it was held that,
as it gave to the witness full indemnity and assurance against any liability to
prosecution, it was his duty to testify, notwithstanding that his answer might
have a tendency to disgrace him.
The same construction was given
to a similar statute of Texas in Floyd v. State, 7 Tex. 215, though the opinion
is brief, and does little more than state the conclusions of the court.
In the recent case of Ex parte
Cohen, 104 Cal. 524, 38
Pac. 364, one Steinberger was charged, under a statute of California,
with allowing Cohen to be registered as a vote, knowing that he was not
entitled to registration. Cohen, being called as a witness, was asked certain
questions with regard to the charge, and set up his privilege. The election law
of California provided, not only that the testimony given should not be used in
any prosecution against the witness, but that he should not thereafter be
liable to indictment, information, or prosecution for the offense with
reference to which his testimony was given. The court held that it was only
when his evidence might tend to establish an offense for which he might be
punished under the laws of the state that a person is a witness 'against
himself' in a criminal case, and the fact that, in a proceeding in which he is
not the defendant, his testimony might tend to show that he had violated the
laws of the state, was not sufficient to entitle him to claim this protection
of the constitution, unless he is at the same
time liable to prosecution and punishment for such crime.
'If,' said the court, 'at the
time of the transactions respecting which his testimony is sought, the acts
themselves did not constitute an offense, or if, at the time of giving the
testimony, the acts are no longer punishable; if the statute creating the
offense has been repealed; if the witness has been tried for the offense and
acquitted, or, if convicted, has satisfied the sentence of the law; if the
offense is barred by the statute of limitations, and there is no pending
prosecution against the witness,—he cannot claim any privilege under this
provision of the constitution, since his
testimony could not be used against him in any criminal case against himself,
and, consequently, he is not compelled to be a witness 'against himself.'
Equally is he deprived of claiming this exemption from giving evidence if the
legislature has declared that he shall not be prosecuted or punished for any
offense of which he gives evidence. Any evidence that he may give under such a
statutory direction will not be 'against himself,' for the reason that, by the very
act of giving the evidence, he becomes exempted from any prosecution or
punishment for the offense respecting which his evidence is given. In such a
case, he is not compelled to give evidence which may be used against himself in
any criminal case, for the reason that the legislature has declared that there
can be no criminal case against him which the evidence which he gives may tend
to establish.'
In Hirsch v. State, 8 Baxt. 89,
the same construction was given to a similar statute in Tennessee, which
exempted witnesses from prosecution for offenses as to which they had given
testimony before the grand jury, the court holding that this was 'an abrogation
of the offense'; that the witness could neither be accused by another, nor
could he accuse himself, and therefore he could not criminate himself by such
testimony. It is but just to say, however, that in Warner v. State, 13 Lea, 52, the same statute was construed as merely
offering a reward to a witness for waiving his constitutional privilege, and
not as compelling him to answer. But, for the reasons already given, we think
that the witness cannot properly be said to give evidence against himself,
unless such evidence may in some proceeding be used against him, or unless he
may be subjected to a prosecution for the transaction concerning which he
testifies. In each of the last two cases there were dissenting opinions.
In Frazee v. State, 58 Ind. 8, a section of the Criminal Code of Indiana,
compelling a witness to testify against another for gaming, and providing that
he should not be liable to indictment or punishment in such case, was enforced,
though its constitutionality was not considered at length.
Finally, in People v. Sharp, 107 N. Y. 427, 14 N. E. 319,
a section of the Penal Code declared that any person offending against certain
provisions of the Code relating to bribery might be compelled to testify, but
that the person testifying to the giving of a bribe, which has been accepted,
shall not thereafter be liable to indictment, prosecution, or punishment for
that bribery. This statute was held not to be violative of the constitutional provision
that no person shall be compelled in any criminal case to be a witness against
himself. Counsel in that case seem to have pursued much the same line of
argument that was made in the case under consideration, claiming that the
statutory protection did not go ar enough; that the indemnity that it offered
to the witness was partial, and not complete; that, while it might save him
from the penitentiary by excluding his evidence, it did not prevent the infamy
and disgrace of its exposure. But that, said the court, quoting from People v.
Kelly, 24 N. Y. 83, 'is the misfortune of his
condition, and not any want of humanity in the law.'
It is entirely true that the
statute does not purport, nor is it possible for any statute, to shield the
witness from the personal disgrace or opprobrium attaching to the exposure of
his crime; but, as we have already observed, the authorities are numerous, and
very nearly uniform, to the effect that, if the proposed testimony is material
to the issue on trial, the fact that the testimony may tend to degrade the
witness in public estimation does not exempt him from the duty of disclosure. A
person who commits a criminal act is bound to contemplate the consequences of
exposure to his good name and reputation, and ought not to call upon the courts
to protect that which he has himself esteemed to be of such little value. The
safety and welfare of an entire community should not be put into the scale
against the reputation of a self-confessed criminal, who ought not, either in
justice or in good morals, to refuse to disclose that which may be of great
public utility, in order that his neighbors may think well of him. The design
of the constitutional privilege is not to aid the witness in vindicating his
character, but to protect him against being compelled to furnish evidence to
convict him of a criminal charge. If he secure legal immunity from prosecution,
the possible impairment of his good name is a penalty which it is reasonable he
should be compelled to pay for the common good. If it be once conceded that the
fact that his testimony may tend to bring the witness into disrepute, though
not to incriminate him, does not entitle him to the privilege of silence, it
necessarily follows that, if it also tends to incriminate, but at the same time
operates as a pardon for the offense, the fact that the disgrace remains no
more entitles him to immunity in this case than in the other.
It is argued, in this connection,
that, while the witness is granted immunity from prosecution by the federal
government, he does not obtain such immunity against prosecution in the state
courts. We are unable to appreciate the force of this suggestion. It is true
that the constitution does not operate upon a
witness testifying in the state courts, since we have held that the first eight
amendments are limitations only upon the powers of congress and the federal
courts, and are not applicable to the several states, except so far as the
fourteenth amendment may have made them applicable. Barron v. Mayor, [1833] USSC 15; 7 Pet. 243;
Fox v. State, 5 How. 410; Withers v. Buckley, 20 How. 84; Twitchell v. Com., [1868] USSC 100; 7 Wall. 321;
Presser v. State, [1886] USSC 13; 116 U. S. 252, 6 Sup. Ct. 580.
There is no such restriction,
however, upon the applicability of federal statutes. The sixth article of the constitution declares that 'this constitution, and the
laws of the United States which shall be made in pursuance thereof, and all
treaties made, or which shall be made, under the authority of the United
States, shall be the supreme law of the land; and the judges in every state
shall be bound thereby, anything in the constitution or laws of any state to
the contrary notwithstanding.'
The language of this article is
so direct and explicit that but few cases have arisen where this court has been
called upon to interpret it, or to determine its applicability to state courts.
But, in the case of Stewart v. Kahn, [1870] USSC 132;
11 Wall. 493, the question arose whether a debt
contracted by a citizen of New Orleans, prior to the breaking out of the
Rebellion, was subject in a state court to the statute of limitations passed by
congress June 11, 1864, declaring that, as to actions which should accrue
during the existence of the Rebellion, against persons who could not be served
with process by reason of the war the time when such persons were beyond the
reach of judicial process should not be taken or deemed to be any part of the
time limited by law for the commencement of such actions. The court held,
unanimously, that the debt was subject to this act, and, in delivering the
opinion of the court, Mr. Justice Swayne said: 'But it has been insisted that
the act of 1864 was intended to be administered only in the federal courts, and
that it has no application to cases pending in the courts of the state. The
language is general. There is nothing in it which requires or will warrant so
narrow a construction. It lays down a rule as to the subject, and has no
reference to the tribunals by which it is to be applied. A different
interpretation would defeat, to a large extent, the object of its enactment. *
* * The judicial anomaly would be presented of one rule of property in the
federal courts, and another and a different one in the courts of the states,
and debts could be recovered in the former which would be barred in the latter.'
This case was affirmed in U. S. v. Wylie, [1870] USSC
151; 11 Wall. 508; and in Mayfield v.
Richards, [1885] USSC 169; 115 U. S. 137, 5 Sup. Ct. 1187.
See, also, Mitchell v. Clark, [1884] USSC 89; 110 U. S. 633, 4 Sup. Ct. 170,
312. The same principle has also been applied in a number of cases turning upon
the effect to be given to treaties in actions arising in the state courts.
Foster v. Neilson, [1829] USSC 16; 2 Pet. 253; Cherokee Tobacco[1870]
USSC 20; , 11 Wall. 616; Head Money Cases[1884] USSC 260; , 112 U. S. 580,
5 Sup. Ct. 247. Of similar character are the
cases in which we have held that the laws of the several states upon the
subjects of pilotage, quarantines, inspections, and other similar regulations
were operative only so long as congress failed to legislate upon the subject.
The act in question contains no
suggestion that it is to be applied only to the federal courts. It declares,
broadly, that 'no person shall be excused from attending and testifying * * *
before the interstate commerce commission * * * on the ground * * * that the
testimony * * * required of him may tend to criminate him,' etc. 'But no person
shall be prosecuted or subjected to any penalty or forfeiture for or on account
of any transaction, matter or thing concerning which he may testify,' etc. It
is not that he shall not be prosecuted for or on account of any crime
concerning which he may testify, which might possibly be urged to apply only to
crimes under the federal law, and not to crimes, such as the passing of
counterfeit money, etc., which are also cognizable under state laws; but the
immunity extends to any transaction, matter, or thing concerning which he may
testify, which clearly indicates that the immunity is intended to be general,
and to be applicable whenever and in whatever court such prosecution may be
had.
But, even granting that there
were still a bare possibility that, by his disclosure, he might be subjected to
the criminal laws of some other sovereignty, that, as Chief Justice Cockburn
said in Queen v. Boyes, [1861] EngR 626; 1 Best & S. 311, in reply to the argument that the
witness was not protected by his pardon against an impeachment by the house of
commons, is not a real and probable danger, with reference to the ordinary
operations of the law in the ordinary courts, but 'a danger of an imaginary and
unsubstantial character, having reference to some extraordinary and barely
possible contingency, so improbable that no reasonable man would suffer it to
influence his conduct.' Such dangers it was never the object of the provision
to obviate.
The same answer may be made to
the suggestion that the witness is imperfectly protected by reason of the fact
that he may still be prosecuted and put to the annoyance and expense of
pleading his immunity by way of confession and avoidance. This is a detriment
which the law does not recognize. There is a possibility that any citizen,
however innocent, may be subjected to a civil or criminal prosecution, and put
to the expense of defending himself; but, unless such presecution be malicious,
he is remediless, except so far as a recovery of osts may partially indemnify
him. He may even be convicted of a crime, and suffer imprisonment or other
punishment before his innocence is discovered; but that gives him no claim to
indemnity against the state, or even against the prosecutor, if the action of
the latter was taken in good faith, and in a reasonable belief that he was
justified in so doing.
In the case under consideration,
the grand jury was engaged in investigating certain alleged violations of the
interstate commerce act, among which was a charge against the Alleghany Valley
Railway Company of transporting coal of the Union Coal Company, from
intermediate points to Buffalo, at less than the established rates between the
terminal points, and a further charge of discriminating in favor of such coal
company by rebates, drawbacks, or commissions on its coal, by which it obtained
transportation at less than the tariff rates. Brown, the witness, was the
auditor of the road, whose duty it was to audit the accounts of the officers,
and the money paid out by them. Having audited the accounts of the freight
department during the time in question, he was asked whether he knew of any
such discrimination in favor of the Union Coal Company, and declined to answer
upon the ground that he would thereby incriminate himself.
As he had not apparent authority
to make the forbidden contracts, to receive the money earned upon such
contracts, or to allow or pay any rebates, drawbacks, or commissions thereon,
and was concerned only in auditing accounts, and passing vouchers for money
paid by others, it is difficult to see how, under any construction of section
10 of the interstate commerce act, he could be said to have willfully done
anything, or aided or abetted others in doing anything, or in omitting to do
anything, in violation of the act,—his duty being merely to see that others had
done what they purported to have done, and that the vouchers rendered by them
were genuine. But, however this may be, it is entirely clear that he was not
the chief, or even a substantial, offender against the law, and that his
privilege was claimed for the purpose of shielding the railway or its officers
from answering a charge of having violated its provisions. To say that,
notwithstanding his immunity from punishment, he would incur personal odium and
disgrace from answering these questions, seems too much like an abuse of
language to be worthy of serious consideration. But, even if this were true,
under the authorities above cited, he would still be compelled to answer, if
the facts sought to be elucidated were material to the issue.
If, as was justly observed in the
opinion of the court below, witnesses standing in Brown's position were at
liberty to set up an immunity from testifying, the enforcement of the
interstate commerce law, or other analogous acts, wherein it is for the
interest of both parties to conceal their misdoings, would become impossible,
since it is only from the mouths of those having knowledge of the inhibited
contracts that the facts can be ascertained. While the constitutional provision
in question is justly regarded as one of the most valuable prerogatives of the
citizen, its object is fully accomplished by the statutory immunity, and we are
therefore of opinion that the witness was compehable to answer, and that the
judgment of the court below must be affirmed.
*Mr. Justice SHIRAS, with whom
concurred
Mr. Justice GRAY and Mr. Justice
WHITE, dissenting.
It is too obvious to require
argument that when the people of the United States, in the fifth amendment to the constitution, declared that no
person should be compelled in any criminal case to be a witness against
himself, it was their intention, not merely that every person should have such
immunity, but that his right thereto should not be divested or impaired by any
act of congress.
Did congress, by the act of
February 11, 1893, which enacted that 'no person shall be excused from
attending and testifying or from producing books, papers, tariffs, contracts,
agreements and documents before the interstate commerce commission, or in
obedience to the subpoena of the commission, on the ground or for the reason
that the testimony or evidence, documentary or otherwise, required of him may
tend to criminate him or subject him to a penalty or forfeiture,' seek to
compel any person to be a witness against himself? And, if so, was such
provision of that act void because incompatible with the constitutional
guaranty? That it was the intention of the act to exact compulsory disclosure
by every witness of all 'testimony or evidence, documentary or otherwise,
required of him,' regardless of the fact that such disclosure might tend to
criminate him or subject him to a penalty or forfeiture, was held by the court
below, and such seems to be the plain meaning of the language of the act.
That the questions put to the
witness, in the present case, tended to accuse and incriminate him, was sworn
to by the witness himself, and was conceded or assumed by the court below. The
refusal by the witness, in the exercise of his constitutional immunity, to
answer the questions put, was held by the court to be an act of contempt, and
the witness was ordered to pay a fine, and to be imprisoned until he should
have answered the questions.
The validity of the reasons urged
in defense of the action of the court below is the matter which this court has
to consider.
Those reasons are found in that
other provision of the act, which enacts that 'no person shall be prosecuted or
subjected to any penalty or forfeiture for or on account of any transaction,
matter or thing concerning which he may testify, or produce evidence,
documentary or otherwi e, before said commission, or in obedience to its
subpoena, or either of them, or in any such case or proceeding'; and it is
claimed that it was competent for congress to avoid the plea by a witness of
his constitutional immunity, in proceedings under the act in question, by that
provision.
As the apparent purpose of the constitution was to remove the immunity from
self-accusation from the reach of legislative power, the first and natural
impulse is to regard any act of congress which authorizes courts to fine and
imprison men for refusing to criminate themselves as obviously void. But it is
the duty of this court, as the final expositor as well of the constitution as
of the acts of congress, to dispassionately consider and determine this
question.
It is sometimes said that if the
validity of a statute is merely doubtful, if its unconstitutionality is not
plainly obvious, the courts should not be ready to defeat the action of the
legislative branch of the government; and it must be conceded that when such
questions arise, under the ordinary exercise of legislative power, it is
plainly the duty of the courts not to dispense with the operation of laws
formally enacted, unless the constitutional objections are clear and
indisputable.
On the other hand, when the
courts are confronted with an explicit and unambiguous provision of the constitution, and when it is proposed to avoid or
modify or alter the same by a legislative act, it is their plain duty to
enforce the constitutional provision, unless it is clear that such legislative
act does not infringe it in letter or spirit.
Before addressing ourselves
immediately to the case in hand, it may be well to examine the authorities
respectively cited.
The first case in which there was
any consideration of this constitutional provision was the proceeding in the
circuit court of the United States for the district of Virginia, in the year
1807, wherein Aaron Burr was indicted and tried for treason, and for a
misdemeanor in preparing the means of a military expedition against Mexico, a
territory of the king of Spain, with whom the United States were at peace.
It appears from the report of
that case, as made by David Robertson, and published in two volumes by Hopkins
& Earle, in Philadelphia, in 1808, that, in the first place, an application
was made to Chief Justice Marshall, sitting as a committing magistrate, by the
district attorney of the United States, to commit the accused on two charges:
(1) For setting on foot and providing the means for an expedition against the
territories of a nation at peace with the United States; and (2) for committing
high treason against the United States. Burr was committed to answer the first
charge only; but, at the subsequent term of the court, the application to
commit him on a charge of high treason was renewed, testimony to sustain the
charge was adduced, Burr was bound over to answer the charge, and a grand jury
was impaneled and charged by the chief justice.
While the grand jury was
considering the case, the district attorney called to be sworn Dr. Erick
Bollman, with a view that he should testify before the grand jury; and, as it
appeared that the facts to which he was expected to testify might involve him
as an accessory, the district attorney produced and tendered the witness a
pardon by the president of the United States. This pardon the witness declined
to accept, and thereupon argument was had as to the operation of a pardon which
the witness declined to accept, and as to whether the witness or the court was
to be the judge as to the propriety of answering the questions put. Upon those
points the chief justice reserved his decision. Nor does it appear that he made
any decision, probably because Dr. Bollman went voluntarily before the grand
jury, and testified. 1 Burr's Trial, pp. 190, 193. Subsequently, while the
grand jury were still considering the case, one Willie was called, and asked
whether he had, under instructions from Aaron Burr, copied a certain paper, which
was then exhibited to him. This question the witness refused to answer, lest he
might thereby incriminate himself. The chief justice, observing that, if the
witness was to decide upon this, it must be on oath, interrogated the witness
whether his answering the question would criminate himself, to which he replied
that it might in a certain case. Thereupon the chief justice withheld the point
for argument. A full and able argument was had, and, after consideration, the
chief justice expressed himself as follows: 'When a question is propounded, it
belongs to the court to consider and to decide whether any direct answer to it
can implicate the witness. If this be decided in the negative, then he may
answer it without violating the privilege which is secured to him by law. If a
direct answer to it may criminate himself, then he must be the sole judge what
his answer would be. The court cannot participate with him in this judgment,
because they cannot decide on the effect of his answer without knowing what it would
be; and a disclosure of that fact to the judges would strip him of the
privileges which the law allows, and which he claims. It follows, necessarily,
then, from this state of things, that if the question be of such a description
that an answer to it may or may not criminate the witness, according to the
purport of that answer, it must rest with himself, who alone can tell what it
would be, to answer the question or not. If, in such a case, he say, upon his
oath, that his answer would criminate himself, the court can demand no other
testimony of the fact. If the declaration be untrue, it is in conscience and in
law as much a perjury as if he had declared any other untruth upon his oath; as
it is one of those cases in which the rule of law must be abandoned, or the
oath of the witness be received. The counsel for the United States have also
laid down this rule, according to their understanding of it, but they appear to
the court to have made it as much too narrow as the counsel for the witness
have made it too broad. According to their statement, a witness can never
refuse to answer any question, unless that answer, unconnected with other
testimony, would be sufficient to convict him of a crime. This would be
rendering the rule almost perfectly worthless. Many links frequently compose
that chain of testimony which is necessary to convict any individual of a
crime. It appears to the court to be the true sense of the rule that no witness
is compellable to furnish any one of them against himself. It is certainly not
only a possible, but a probable, case, that a witness, by disclosing a single
fact, may complete the testimony against himself, and to every effectual
purpose accuse himself as entirely as he would by stating every circumstance
which would be required for his conviction. That fact of itself might be
unavailing; but all other facts without it might be insufficient. While that
remains concealed within his own bosom, he is safe; but draw it from thence,
and he is exposed to a prosecution. The rule which declares that no man is
compelled to accuse himself would most obviously be infringed by compelling a
witness to disclose a fact of this description. What testimony may be possessed
or is attainable against any individual the court can never know. It would
seem, then, that the court ought never to compel a witness to give an answer
which discloses a fact that might form a necessary and essential part of a
crime, which is punishable by the laws. * * * In such a case, the witness must
himself judge what his answer will be; and if he say, on oath, that he cannot
answer without accusing himself, he cannot be compelled to answer.' 1 Burr's
Tr. 244, 245.
In Boyd v. U. S., [1886] USSC 48; 116 U. S. 616,
6 Sup. Ct. 524, there came into question the
validity of the fifth section of the act of June 22, 1874 (18 Stat. 186),
wherein it was provided that, 'in all suits and proceedings other than criminal
arising under any of the revenue laws of the United States, the attorney
representing the government, whe ever in his belief any business book, invoice
or paper belonging to, or under the control of, the defendant or claimant, will
tend to prove any allegation made by the United States, may make a written
motion, particularly describing such book, invoice or paper, and setting forth
the allegation which he expects to prove; and thereupon the court in which suit
or proceeding is pending may, at its discretion, issue a notice to the defendant
or claimant to produce such book, invoice or paper in court, at a day and hour
to be specified in said notice, which, together with a copy of said motion,
shall be served formally on the defendant or claimant by the United States
marshal by delivering to him a certified copy thereof, or otherwise serving the
same as original notices of suits in the same court are served; and if the
defendant or claimant shall fail or refuse to produce such book, invoice or
paper, in obedience to such notice, the allegations stated in the said motion
shall be taken as confessed, unless his failure or refusal shall be explained
to the satisfaction of the court.'
This section was held to be unconstitutional
and void as applied to suits for penalties, or to establish a forfeiture of the
party's goods, as being repugnant to the fourth and fifth amendments of the constitution.
55
It was contended on behalf of the
government that the act of February 25, 1868 (15 Stat. 37), whereby it was
enacted that 'no answer or other pleading of any party, and no discovery, or
evidence obtained by means of any judicial proceeding from any party or witness
in this or any foreign country, shall be given in evidence or in any manner
used against such party or witness, or his property or estate, in any court of
the United States, or in any proceeding by or before any officer of the United
States in respect to any crime, or for the enforcement of any penalty or
forfeiture by reason of any act or omission of such party or witness,' relieved
the act of June 22, 1874, of the objections made. But this court said, by Mr.
Justice Bradley: 'No doubt it was supposed that in this new form, couched, as
it was, in almost the language of the fifteenth section of the old judiciary
act, except leaving out the restriction to cases in which the court of chancery
would decree a discovery, it would be free from constitutional objection. But
we think it has been made to appear that this result has not been attained, and
that the law, though speciously worded, is still obnoxious to the prohibition
of the fourth amendment of the constitution as
well as of the fifth.'
Other observations made by Mr.
Justice Bradley in that case are worthy to be quoted:
'As, therefore, suits for
penalties and forfeitures incurred by the commission of offenses against the
law are of this quasi criminal nature, we think that they are within the reason
of criminal proceedings for all the purposes of the fourth
amendment of the constitution, and of that portion of the fifth
amendment which declares that no person shall be compelled in any criminal case
to be a witness against himself; and we are further of opinion that a
compulsory production of the private books and papers of the owner of goods
sought to be forfeited in such a suit is compelling him to be a witness against
himself, within the meaning of the fifth amendment of the constitution, and is
the equivalent of a search and seizure,—and an unreasonable search and
seizure,—within the meaning of the fourth amendment. Though the proceeding in
question is divested of many of the aggravating incidents of actual search and
seizure, yet, as before said, it contains their substance and essence, and
effects their substantial purpose. It may be that it is the obnoxious thing in
its mildest and least repulsive form; but illegitimate and unconstitutional
practices get their first footing in that way, namely, by silent approaches and
slight deviations from legal modes of procedure. This can only be obviated by
adhering to the rule that constitutional provisions for the security of person
and pro erty should be liberally construed. A close and literal construction
deprives them of half their efficacy, and leads to gradual depreciation of the
right as if it consisted more in sound than in substance. It is the duty of
courts to be watchful for the constitutional rights of the citizen, and against
any stealthy encroachments thereon. Their motto should be, 'Obsta principiis.'
We have no doubt that the legislative body is actuated by the same motives; but
the vast accumulation of public business brought before it sometimes prevents
it, on a first presentation, from noticing objections which become developed by
time and the practical application of the objectionable law.' 116 U. S. 634,
635[1886] USSC 48; , 6
Sup. Ct. 524.
In the recent case of Counselman
v. Hitchcock, [1892] USSC 17; 142 U. S. 547, 12 Sup. Ct. 195,
there was a proceeding before a grand jury to investigate certain alleged
violations of the act to regulate commerce; and one Charles Counselman, having
appeared before the grand jury and been sworn, declined to answer certain
questions put to him, on the ground that the answers might tend to criminate
him. The district court of the United States for the Northern district of
Illinois, after a hearing, adjudged Counselman to be in contempt of court, and
made an order fining him, and directing that he be kept in custody by the
marshal until he should have answered said questions. Thereupon Counselman
filed a petition in the circuit court of the United States, setting forth the
facts, and praying for a writ of habeas corpus. That court held that the
district court was in the exercise of its lawful authority in doing what it had
done, dismissed Counselman's petition, and remanded him to the custody of the
marshal. 44 Fed. 268. An appeal was taken to this
court, by which the judgment of the circuit court was reversed, and the cause
was remanded to that court, with a direction to discharge the appellant from
custody. Mr. Justice Blatchford, in delivering the opinion of the court, made a
careful review of the adjudged cases, including several decisions in states
where there is a like constitutional provision to that contained in the federal
constitution, and where attempts had been made by
legislation to avoid the constitutional provision by substituting provisions
relieving the witness from future criminal prosecution. It is needless to here
examine those cases.
The contention there made on
behalf of the government was that a witness is not entitled to plead the privilege
of silence, except in a criminal case against himself; but this court said:
'Such is not the language of the constitution. Its provision is that no person shall be
compelled in any criminal case to be a witness against himself. This provision
must have a broad construction in favor of the right which it was intended to
secure. The matter under investigation by the grand jury in this case was a
criminal matter, to inquire whether there had been a criminal violation of the
interstate commerce act. If Counselman had been guilty of the matters inquired
of in the questions which he refused to answer, he himself was liable to
criminal prosecution under the act. The case before the grand jury was
therefore a criminal case. The reason given by Counselman for his refusal to
answer the questions was that his answers might tend to criminate him, and
showed that his apprehension was that, if he answered the questions truly and
fully (as he was bound to do if he should answer them at all), the answers
might show that he had committed a crime against the interstate commerce act,
for which he might be prosecuted. His answers, therefore, would be testimony
against himself, and he would be compelled to give them in a criminal case.
'It is impossible that the
meaning of the constitutional provision can only be that a person shall not be
compelled to be a witness against himself in a criminal prosecution against
himself. It would doubtless cover such cases; but it is not limited to them.
The object was to insure that a person should not be compelled, when a ting as
a witness in any investigation, to give testimony which might tend to show that
he had himself committed a crime. The privilege is limited to criminal matters,
but it is as broad as the mischief against which it seeks to guard.' [1892] USSC 17; 142 U. S. 562,
12 Sup. Ct. 195.
To the argument that section 860
of the Revised Statutes, which provides that 'no pleading of a party, nor any
discovery or evidence obtained from a party or witness by means of a judicial
proceeding in this or any foreign country, shall be given in evidence, or in
any manner used against him or his property or estate, in any court of the
United States in any criminal proceeding, or for the enforcement of any penalty
or forfeiture,' removed the constitutional privilege of Counselman, the court said:
'That section must be construed as declaring that no evidence obtained from a
witness by means of a judicial proceeding shall be given in evidence, or in any
manner used against him or his property or estate, in any court of the United
States, in any criminal proceeding, or for the enforcement of any penalty or
forfeiture. This, of course, protected him against the use of his testimony
against him or his property in any prosecution against him or his property in
any criminal proceeding in a court of the United States. But it had only that
effect. It could not, and would not, prevent the use of his testimony to search
out other testimony to be used in evidence against him or his property in a
criminal proceeding in such court. It would not prevent the obtaining and the
use of witnesses and evidence which should be attributable directly to the
testimony which he might give under compulsion, and on which he might be
convicted, when otherwise, and if he had refused to answer, he could not
possibly have been convicted.
'The constitutional provision
distinctly declares that a person shall not 'be compelled in any criminal case
to be a witness against himself'; and the protection of section 860 is not
coextensive with the constitutional provision. Legislation cannot detract from
the privilege afforded by the constitution. It
would be quite another thing if the constitution had provided that no person
shall be compelled in any criminal case to be a witness against himself, unless
it should be provided by statute that criminating evidence extracted from a
witness against his will should not be used against him. But a mere act of
congress cannot amend the constitution, even if it should ingraft thereon such
a proviso.' [1892] USSC 17; 142 U. S. 565, 12 Sup. Ct. 195.
It is, however, now contended,
and that is the novel feature of the present case, that the following provision
in the act of February 11, 1893, removes the constitutional difficulty: 'But no
person shall be prosecuted or subjected to any penalty or forfeiture for or on
account of any transaction, matter or thing, concerning which he may testify,
or produce evidence, documentary or otherwise, before said commission.' And it
is surmised that this proviso was enacted in view of a suggestion to that
effect in the opinion in the Counselman Case.
It is, indeed, true that Mr.
Justice Blatchford did say that 'no statute which leaves the party or witness
subject to prosecution after he answers the criminating question put to him can
have the effect of supplanting the privilege conferred by the constitution of the United States. Section 860 of the
Revised Statutes does not supply a complete protection from all the perils
against which the constitutional prohibition was designed to guard, and is not
a full substitute for that prohibition. In view of the constitutional
provision, a statutory enactment, to be valid, must afford absolute immunity
against future prosecution for the offense to which the question relates.' And
it may be inferred from this language that there might be framed a legislative
substitute for the constitutional privilege which would legally empower a court
to compel an unwilling witness to criminate himself. But the case did not call
for such expression of opinion. or did Mr. Justice Blatchford undertake to
suggest the form of such an enactment. Indeed, such a suggestion would not have
comported with his previous remarks, above cited, that 'legislation cannot
detract from the privilege afforded by the constitution. It would be quite
another thing if the constitution had provided that no person shall be
compelled, in any criminal case, to be a witness against himself, unless it
should be provided by statute that criminating evidence extracted from a
witness against his will should not be used against him. But a mere act of
congress cannot amend the constitution, even if it should ingraft thereon such
a proviso.'
Is, then, the undeniable
repugnancy that exists between the constitutional guaranty and the compulsory
provisions of the act of February 11, 1893, overcome by the proviso relieving
the witness from prosecution and from any penalty or forfeiture 'for or on
account of any transaction, matter or thing, concerning which he may testify or
produce evidence'?
As already said, the very fact
that the founders of our institutions, by making the immunity an express
provision of the constitution, disclosed an
intention to protect it from legislative attack, creates a presumption against
any act professing to dispense with the constitutional privilege. It may not be
said that by no form of enactment can congress supply an adequate substitute,
but doubtfulness of its entire sufficiency, uncertainty of its meaning and
effect, will be fatal defects.
What, then, is meant by the
clause in this act that 'no person shall be prosecuted * * * for or on account
of any transaction, matter or thing, concerning which he may testify, or
produce evidence, documentary or otherwise'? How, possibly, can effect be given
to this provision, if taken literally? If a given person is charged with a
willful violation of the interstate commerce act, how can the prosecuting
officers or the grand juries know whether he has been examined as a witness
concerning the same matter before the commission or some court? Nor can the
accused himself necessarily know what particular charge has been brought
against him until an indictment has been found. But when an indictment has been
found, and the accused has been called upon to plead to it, he assuredly has
been prosecuted. So that all that can be said is that the witness is not
protected by the provision in question from being prosecuted, but that he has
been furnished with a good plea to the indictment, which will secure his
acquittal. But is that true? No unless the plea is sustained by competent
evidence. His condition, then, is that he has been prosecuted, been compelled
presumably, to furnish bail, and put to the trouble and expense of employing
counsel and furnishing the evidence to make good his plea. It is no reply to
this to say that his condition, in those respects, is no worse than that of any
other innocent man, who may be wrongfully charged. The latter has not been
compelled, on penalty of fine and imprisonment, to disclose, under oath, facts
which have furnished a clue to the offense with which he is charged.
Nor is it a matter of perfect
assurance that a person who has compulsorily testified, before the commission,
grand jury, or court, will be able, if subsequently indicted for some matter or
thing concerning which he testified, to procure the evidence that will be
necessary to maintain his plea. No provision is made in the law itself for the
preservation of the evidence. Witnesses may die or become insane, and papers
and records may be destroyed by accident or design.
Again, what is the meaning of the
clause of the act that 'no person so testifying shall be exempt from
prosecution and punishment for perjury committed in so testifying'? The
implication would seem to be that, except for such a clause, perjury could not
be imputed to a witness who had been compelled to so testify. However that may
be, and whether or not the clause is surplusage, it compels attention to the
unfortunate situation in which the witness is placed by the provisions of this
act. If he declines to testify on the ground that his answer may incriminate
himself, he is fined and imprisoned. If he submits to answer, he is liable to
be indicted for perjury by either or both of the parties to the controversy.
His position in this respect is not that of ordinary witnesses testifying under
the compulsion of a subpoena. His case is that of a person who is exempted by
the constitution from testifying at all in the
matter. He is told, by the act of congress, that he must, nevertheless,
testify, but that he shall be protected from any prosecution, penalty, or
forfeiture by reason of so testifying. But he is subjected to the hazard of a
charge of perjury, whether such charge be rightfully or wrongfully made. It
does not do to say that other witnesses may be so charged, because if the
privilege of silence, under the constitutional immunity, had not been taken
away, this witness would not have testified, and could not have been subjected
to a charge of perjury.
Another danger to which the
witness is subjected by the withdrawal of the constitutional safeguard is that
of a prosecution in the state courts. The same act or transaction which may be
a violation of the interstate commerce act may also be an offense against a
state law. Thus, in the present case, the inquiry was as to supposed rebates on
freight charges. Such payments would have been in disregard of the federal
statute, but a full disclosure of all the attendant facts (and, if he testify
at all, he must answer fully) might disclose that the witness had been guilty
of embezzling the moneys intrusted to him for that purpose, or it might have
been disclosed that he had made false entries in the books of the state
corporation in whose employ he was acting. These acts would be crimes against
the state, for which he might be indicted and punished, and he may have
furnished, by his testimony in the federal court or before the commission, the
very facts, or, at least, clues thereto, which led to his prosecution.
It is, indeed, claimed that the
provisions under consideration would extend to the state courts, and might be
relied on therein as an answer to such an indictment. We are unable to accede
to such a suggestion. As congress cannot create state courts, nor establish the
ordinary rules of property and of contracts, nor denounce penalties for crimes
and offenses against the states, so it cannot prescribe rules of proceeding for
the state courts. The cases of Stewart v. Kahn, [1870]
USSC 132; 11 Wall. 493, U. S. v. Wylie, [1870] USSC 151; 11 Wall. 508,
and Mayfield v. Richards, [1885] USSC 169; 115 U. S. 137, 5 Sup. Ct. 1187,
are referred to as sustaining the proposition. Those were cases defining the
scope and effect of the act of congress of June 11, 1864, providing that as to
actions which should accrue, during the existence of the Rebellion, against
persons who could not be served with process by reason of the war, the time
when such persons were beyond the reach of process should not be taken or
deemed to be any part of the time limited by law for the commencement of such
actions. And it was held that it was the evident intention of congress that the
act was to apply to cases in state as well as in federal courts, and as to the
objection that congress had no power to lay down rules of action for the state
courts, it was held that the act in question was within the war power as an act
to remedy an evil which was one of the consequences of the war, Mr. Justice
Swayne saying:
'The war power is not limited to
victories in the field and the dispersion of the insurgent forces. It carries
with it inherently the power to guard against the immediate renewal of the
conflict, and to remedy the evils which have arisen from its rise or progress.
This act falls within the latter category. The power to pass it is necessarily
implied from the power to make war and suppress insurrections. It is a
beneficent exercise of this authority. It only applies coercively the principle
of the law of nations, which ought to work the same results in the courts of
all the rebellious states without the intervention of this enactment.'
74
Whatever may be thought of these
cases, and of the reasoning on which they proceed, it is plain that they are
not applicable to the present statute. The latter does not in express terms, nor
by necessary implication, extend to the state courts; and, if it did, it could
not be sustained as an exercise of the war power. On this part of the subject
it will be sufficient to cite the language of Chief Justice Marshall in giving
the opinion of the court in the case of Barron v. Mayor, etc., 7 Pet. 247:
'The judgment brought up by this
writ of error having been rendered by the court of a state, this tribunal can
exercise no jurisdiction over it, unless it be shown to come within the
provisions of the twenty-fifth section of the judiciary act.
'The plaintiff in error contends
that it comes within the clause in the fifth amendment
to the constitution, which inhibits the taking of private property for public
use without just compensation. He insists that this amendment, being in favor
of the liberty of the citizen, ought to be so construed as to restrain the
legislative power of a state, as well as that of the United States. If this
proposition be untrue, the court can take no jurisdiction of the cause. The
question thus presented is, we think, of great importance, but not of much
difficulty.
'The constitution
was ordained and established by the people of the United States for themselves,
for their own government, and not for the government of the individual states.
Each state established a constitution for itself, and, in that constitution,
provided such limitations and restrictions on the powers of its particular
government as its judgment dictated. The people of the United States framed
such a government for the United States as they supposed best adapted to their
situation and best calculated to promote their interests. The powers they
conferred on this government were to be exercised by itself; and the
limitations on power, if expressed in general terms, are naturally, and, we
think, necessarily, applicable to the government created by the instrument.
They are limitations of power granted in the instrument itself; not of distinct
governments framed by different persons and for different purposes.
'If these propositions be
correct, the fifth amendment must be understood
as restraining the power of the general government, not as applicable to the
states. In their several constitutions, they have imposed such restriction on
their respective governments as their own wisdom suggested; such as they deemed
most proper for themselves. It is a subject on which they judge exclusively,
and with which others interfere no further than they are supposed to have a
common interest. * * * We are of opinion that the provision in the fifth
amendment to the constitution, declaring that private property shall not be
taken for public use without just compensation, is intended solely as a
limitation on the exercise of power by the government of the United States, and
is not applicable to the legislation of the states.'
This result has never since been
questioned. As, then, the provision of the constitution
of the United States which protects witnesses from self-incrimination cannot be
invoked in a state court, so neither can the congressional substitute therefor.
It is urged that even if the
state courts would not be compelled to respect the saving clause of the federal
statute, in respect to crimes against the state, yet that such a jeopardy is
too remote to be considered. The force of this contention is not perceived. On
the contrary, such is the nature of the commerce which is controlled by the
interstate commerce law, so intimately involved are the movements of trade and
transportation, as well within as between the states, that just such questions
as those which are now considered may be naturally expected to frequently
arise.
It is said that the
constitutional protection is solely against prosecut ons of the government that
grants it, and that, in this case, the questions asked the witness related
exclusively to matters of interstate commerce, in respect of which there can be
but one sovereign: that his refusal to answer related to his fear of punishment
by that sovereign, and to nothing else; and that no answer the witness could make
could possibly tend to criminate him under the laws of any other government, be
it foreign or state.
But, as we have seen, it is
entirely within the range of probable events that the very same act or
transaction may constitute a crime or offense against both governments, state
and federal. This was manifested in the case of Ex parte Fonda, [1886] USSC 119; 117 U. S. 516,
6 Sup. Ct. 848. That was an original application
to this court for a writ of habeas corpus by one who was a clerk in a national
bank, and who alleged in his petition that he had been convicted in one of the
courts of Michigan under a statute of that state, and sentenced to imprisonment
for having embezzled the funds of that banking institution. The principal
ground upon which he asked for a writ of habeas corpus and for his discharge
from custody was that the offense for which he was tried was covered by the
statutes of the United States, and was therefore exclusively cognizable by the
federal courts. But this court refused the application, without, however,
deciding whether the same act was or was not an offense against both
governments. A similar question was presented in New York v. Eno, [1894] USSC 219; 155 U. S. 98, 15
Sup. Ct. 30, and these observations were made by Mr. Justice Harlan, who
delivered the opinion of the court: 'Whether the offenses described in the
indictment against Eno are offenses against the state of New York, and
punishable under its laws, or are made by existing statutes offenses also
against the United States, and are exclusively cognizable by courts of the
United States, and whether the same acts on the part of the accused may be
offenses against both the national and state governments, and punishable in the
judicial tribunals of each government, without infringing upon the
constitutional guaranty against being put twice in jeopardy for the same
offense, these are questions which the state court of original jurisdiction is
competent to decide in the first instance;' and, accordingly, the writ of
habeas corpus was dismissed, and the accused was remanded to the custody of the
state authorities. But, as already observed, not only may the same act be a
common offense to both governments, but the disclosures compulsively made in
one proceeding may give clues and hints which may be subsequently used against
the witness in another, to the loss of his liberty and property.
Much stress was laid in the argument
on the supposed importance of this provision in enabling the commission and the
courts to enforce the salutary provisions of the interstate commerce act. This,
at the best, is a dangerous argument, and should not be listened to by a court,
to the detriment of the constitutional rights of the citizen. If, indeed,
experience has shown, or shall show, that one or more of the provisions of the constitution has become unsuited to affairs as they now
exist, and unduly fetters the courts in the enforcement of useful laws, the
remedy must be found in the right of the nation to amend the fundamental law,
and not in appeals to the courts to substitute for a constitutional guaranty
the doubtful and uncertain provisions of an experimental statute.
It is certainly speaking within
bounds to say that the effect of the provision in question, as a protection to
the witness, is purely conjectural. No court can foresee all the results and consequences
that may follow from enforcing this law in any given case. It is quite certain
that the witness is compelled to testify against himself. Can any court be
certain that a sure and sufficient substitute for the constitutional immunity
has been supplied by this act, and, if there be room for reasonable doubt, is
not the conclusion an obvious and necessary one?
It is worthy o observation that
opposite views of the validity of this provision have been expressed in the
only two cases in which the question has arisen in the circuit court,—one, in
the case of U. S. v. James, 60 Fed. 257, where
the act was held void; the other, the present case. In most of the cases cited,
wherein state courts have passed upon analogous questions, and have upheld the
sufficiency of a statute dispensing with the constitutional immunity, there
have been dissenting judges.
A final observation, which ought
not to be necessary, but which seems to be called for by the tenor of some of
the arguments that have been pressed on the court, is that the constitutional
privilege was intended as a shield for the innocent as well as for the guilty.
A moment's thought will show that a perfectly innocent person may expose
himself to accusation, and even condemnation, by being compelled to disclose
facts and circumstances known only to himself, but which, when once disclosed,
he may be entirely unable to explain as consistent with innocence.
But surely no apology for the constitution, as it exists, is called for. The task of
the courts is performed if the constitution is sustained in its entirety, in
its letter and spirit.
The judgment of the circuit court
should be reversed, and the cause remanded, with directions to discharge the
accused from custody.
I am authorized to state that Mr.
Justice GRAY and Mr. Justice WHITE concur in this dissent.
Mr. Justice FIELD, dissenting.
I am unable to concur with my
associates in the affirmance of the judgment of the circuit court of the United
States for the Western district of Pennsylvania.
The appellant and petitioner had
been subpoenaed as a witness before the grand jury, called at a term of the
district court of the same district, to testify with reference to a charge,
under investigation by that body, against certain officers and agents of the
Alleghany Valley Railroad Company, of having violated certain provisions of the
interstate commerce act. Several interrogatories were addressed by the grand
jury to the witness, which he refused to answer, on the ground that his answers
might tend to criminate him. On a rule to show cause why he should not be
punished for a contempt, and be compelled to answer, he invoked his
constitutional privilege of silence.
It is stated in the brief of
counsel that no question was raised as to the good faith of the appellant, the
petitioner, in invoking this privilege, but the ground was taken, and held to
be sufficient, that under the statute of congress of February 11, 1893, he was
bound to answer the questions. On his still persisting in his refusal, he was
adjudged guilty of contempt, and committed. He then sued out a writ of habeas
corpus from the circuit court; and, on the production of his body before that
court and the return of the marshal, the same position was taken, and the
statute was held valid and sufficient to require him to answer, and he was
accordingly remanded. From the order remanding him, and thus adjudging the
statute to be valid and constitutional in requiring the witness to answer the
inquiries propounded to him, notwithstanding his invoking the privilege of
exemption from answering when, upon his statement, his answer would tend to
criminate himself, the petitioner appealed to this court.
The fifth
amendment of the constitution of the United States declares that no
person shall be compelled, in any criminal case, to be a witness against
himself. The act of congress of February 11, 1893, entitled 'An act in relation
to testimony before the interstate commerce commission, and in cases or
proceedings under or connected with an act entitled 'An act to regulate
commerce,' approved February 4, 1887, and amendments thereto,' provides as
follows: 'That no person shall be excused from attending and testifying or from
producing books, papers, tariffs, contracts, agreements and documents before
the interstate commerce commission, or in obedience to the subpoena of the
commission, whether such subpoena be signed or issued by one or more
commissioners, or in any cause or proceeding, criminal or otherwise, based upon
or growing out of any alleged violation of the act of congress, entitled 'An
act to regulate commerce,' approved February 4, 1887, or of any amendment
thereof on the ground or for the reason that the testimony or evidence,
documentary or otherwise, required of him, may tend to criminate him or subject
him to a penalty or forfeiture. But no person shall be prosecuted or subjected
to any penalty or forfeiture for or on account of any transaction, matter or
thing, concerning which he may testify, or produce evidence, documentary or
otherwise, before said commission, or in obedience to its subpoena, or the
subpoena of either of them, or in any such case or proceeding: provided, that
no person so testifying shall be exempt from prosecution and punishment for
perjury committed in so testifying. Any person who shall neglect or refuse to
attend and testify, or to answer any lawful inquiry, or to produce books,
papers, tariffs, contracts, agreements and documents required if in his power
to do so, in obedience to the subpoena or lawful requirement of the commission,
shall be guilty of an offense, and upon conviction thereof by a court of
competent jurisdiction shall be punished by fine not less than one hundred
dollars nor more than five thousand dollars, or by imprisonment for not more
than one year, or, by both such fine and imprisonment.'
The fifth
amendment of the constitution of the United, States gives absolute
protection to a person called as a witness in a criminal case against the
compulsory enforcement of any criminating testimony against himself. He is not
only protected from any criminating testimony against himself relating to the
offense under investigation, but also relating to any act which may lead to a
criminal prosecution therefor.
No substitute for the protection
contemplated by the amendment would be sufficient were its operation less
extensive and efficient.
The constitutional amendment
contemplates that the witness shall be shielded from prosecutio by reason of
any expressions forced from him while he was a witness in a criminal case. It
was intended that, against such attempted enforcement, he might invoke, if
desired, and obtain, the shield of absolute silence. No different protection
from that afforded by the amendment can be substituted in place of it. The
force and extent of the constitutional guaranty are in no respect to be
weakened or modified, and the like consideration may be urged with reference to
all the clauses and provisions of the constitution
designed for the peace and security of the citizen in the enjoyment of rights
or privileges which the constitution intended to grant and protect. No phrases
or words of any provision, securing such rights or privileges to the citizen,
in the constitution, are to be qualified, limited, or frittered away. All are
to be construed liberally that they may have the widest and most ample effect.
No compromise of phrases can be
made by which one of less sweeping character and less protective force in its
influences can be substituted for any of them. The citizen cannot be denied the
protection of absolute silence which he may invoke, not only with reference to
the offense charged, but with respect to any act of criminality which may be
suggested.
The constitutional guaranty is
not fully secured by simply exempting the witness from prosecution for the designated
offense involved in his answer as a witness. It extends to exemption from not
only prosecution for the offense under consideration, but from prosecution for
any offense to which the testimony produced may lead.
The witness is entitled to the
shield of absolute silence respecting either. It thus exempts him from
prosecution beyond the protection conferred by the act of congress. It exempts
him where the statute might subject him to self-incrimination.
The amendment also protects him
from all compulsory testimony which would expose him to infamy and disgrace,
though the facts disclosed might not lead to a criminal prosecution. It is
contended, indeed, that it was not the object of the constitutional safeguard
to protect the witness against infamy and disgrace. It is urged that its sole
purpose was to protect him against incriminating testimony with reference to
the offense under prosecution. But we do not agree that such limited protection
was all that was secured. As stated by counsel of the appellant, 'it is
entirely possible, and certainly not impossible, that the framers of the constitution reasoned that, in bestowing upon witnesses
in criminal cases the privilege of silence when in danger of
self-incrimination, they would at the same time save him in all such cases from
the shame and infamy of confessing disgraceful crimes, and thus preserve to him
some measure of self-respect. * * * It is true, as counsel observes, that both
the safeguard of the constitution and the common-law rule spring alike from that
sentiment of personal self-respect, liberty, independence, and dignity which
has inhabited the breasts of English-speaking peoples for centuries, and to
save which they have always been ready to sacrifice many governmental
facilities and conveniences. In scarcely anything has that sentiment been more
manifest than in the abhorrence felt at the legal compulsion upon witnesses to
make concessions which must cover the witness with lasting shame, and leave him
degraded both in his own eyes and those of others. What can be more abhorrent *
* * than to compel a man who has fought his way from obscurity to dignity and
honor to reveal crimes of which he had repented, and of which the world was
ignorant?'
This court has declared, as
stated, that 'no attempted substitute for the constitutional safeguard is
sufficient unless it is a complete substitute. Such is not the nature and
effect of this statute of congress under consideration. A witness, as observed
by counsel, called upon to testify to something which will incriminate him,
claims the benefit of the safeguard. He is told that the statute fully protects
him against prosecution for his crime. 'But,' he says, 'it leaves me covered
with infamy, and unable to associate with my fellows.' He is then told that
under the rule of the common law, he would not have been protected against mere
infamy, and that the constitutional provision does not assume to protect
against infamy alone, and that it should not be supposed that its object was to
protect against infamy even when associated with crime But he answers: 'I am
not claiming any common-law privilege, but this particular constitutional
safeguard. What its purpose was does not matter. It saves me from infamy, and
you furnish me with no equivalent, unless by such equivalent I am equally saved
from infamy." And it is very justly urged that 'a statute is not a full
equivalent under which a witness may be compelled to cover himself with the
infamy of a crime, even though he may be armed with a protection against its
merely penal consequences.'
In Respublica v. Gibbs, 3 Yeates, 429, in the supreme court of Pennsylvania, an
indictment was found against the defendant for violation of the law passed in
1799 to regulate the general elections within the commonwealth. One Benjamin
Gibbs, the father of the defendant, a blind and aged man, entitled as an
elector, being both a native and an elector above 30 years, who had paid taxes
for many years, was led to the election ground by his son, and offered his vote.
He was told that, previous to his vote being received, he must answer, upon
oath or affirmation, the following questions, to wit: 'Did you at all times
during the late Revolution continue in allegiance to this state or some one of
the United States, or did you join the British forces, or take the oath of
allegiance to the king of Great Britain, and, if so, at what period? Have you
ever been attainted of high treason against this commonwealth, and, if you
have, has the attainder been reversed, or have you received a pardon?'
In the litigation which followed
these proceedings, counsel stated that the constitution
of Pennsylvania, formed on the 28th of September, 1776, directs that 'no man
can be compelled to give evidence against himself,' and that the same words
were repeated in the constitution of 1790; and it was contended that the true
meaning of the constitution and law was that no question should be asked a
person, the answer to which may tend to charge him either with a crime, or
bring him into disgrace or infamy.
The chief justice, Shippen, in
his charge of the court, among other things, said: 'It has been objected that
the questions propounded to the electors contravene an established principle of
law. The maxim is, 'Nemo tenetur seipsum accusare (sen prodere).' It [the
maxim] is founded on the best policy, and runs throughout our whole system of
jurisprudence. It is the uniform practice of courts of justice as to witnesses
and jurors. It is considered cruel and unjust to propose questions which may
tend to criminate the party. And so jealous have the legislature of this
commonwealth been of this mode of discovery of facts that they have refused
their assent to a bill brought in to compel persons to disclose on oath papers
as well as facts relating to questions of mere property. And may we not justly
suppose, that they would not be less jealous of securing our citizens against this
mode of self-accusation? The words 'accusare' and 'prodere' are general terms,
and their sense is not confined to cases where the answers to the questions
proposed would induce to the punishment of the party. If they would involve him
in shame or reproach, he is under no obligation to answer them. The avowed
object of putting them is to show that the party is under a legal disability to
elect or be elected; and they might create an incapacity to take either by
purchase or descent, to be a witness or juror, etc. We are all clear on this
point that the inspectors were not justified in proposing the question objected
to, though it is probable they did not wrong intentionally. Nevertheless, if,
by exacting a illegal oath, the election was obstructed or interrupted, it
seems most reasonable to attribute it to them.'
And in Galbreath v. Eichelberger,
reported in that volume (3 Yeates, 515), it was
held by the same court that 'no one will be compelled to be sworn as a witness
whose testimony tends to accuse himself of an immoral act.'
It is conceded as an established
doctrine, universally assented to, that a witness claiming his constitutional
privilege cannot be questioned concerning the way in which he fears he may
incriminate himself, or, at least, only so far as may be needed to satisfy the
court that he is making his claim in good faith, and not as a pretext. Fisher
v. Ronalds, [1852] EngR 1047; 12 C. B. 762; Adams v. Lloyd, 3 Hurl. & No. 351;
Reg. v. Boyes, 7 Jur. (N. S.) pt. 1, p. 1158; Ex parte Reynolds, 22 Am. Law
Reg. pp. 21, 28, note; Temple v. Com., 2 Cr. Law Mag. 645, note, 654.
To establish such good faith on
the part of the witness in claiming his constitutional privilege of exemption
from self-incrimination, where he is examined as a witness in a criminal case,
he may be questioned as to his apprehension of criminating himself by his answer,
but no further.
The position that if witnesses
are allowed to assert an exemption from answering questions when, in their
opinion, such answers may tend to incriminate them, the proof of offenses like
those prescribed by the interstate commerce act will be difficult and probably
impossible, ought not to have a feather's weight against the abuses which would
follow necessarily the enforcement of criminating testimony. The abuses and
perversions of sound principles which would creep into the law by yielding to
arguments like these—to what is supposed to be necessary for the public good
cannot be better stated than it was by the late Justice Bradley in Boyd v. U.
S., [1886] USSC 48; 116 U.
S. 616, 635[1886] USSC 48; , 6 Sup. Ct. 524. Said the learned justice:
'Illegitimate and
unconstitutional practices get their first footing in that way, namely, by
silent approaches and slight deviations from legal modes of procedure. This can
only be obviated by adhering to the rule that constitutional provisions for the
security of person and property should be liberally construed. A close and
literal construction deprives them of half their efficacy, and leads to gradual
depreciation of the right, as if it consisted more in sound than substance. It
is the duty of courts to be watchful for the constitutional rights of the
citizens, and against any stealthy encroachments thereon. Their motto should be,
'Obsta principiis."
As said by counsel for the
appellant:
'The freedom of thought, of
speech, and of the press; the right to bear arms; exemption from military
dictation; security of the person and of the home; the right to speedy and
public trial by jury; protection against oppressive bail and cruel punishment,
are, together with exemption from self-crimination, the essential and inseparable
features of English liberty. Each one of these features had been involved in
the struggle above referred to in England within the century and a half
immediately preceding the adoption of the constitution,
and the contests were fresh in the memories and traditions of the people at
that time.' The act of congress of February 11, 1893, very materially qualifies
the constitutional privilege of exemption of a witness, in a criminal case,
from testifying, and removes the security against unreasonable searches and
seizures which is also provided by the constitution against the exposure of
one's private books and papers.
The fourth
amendment of the constitution, which declares that 'the right of the
people to be secure in their persons, houses, papers and effects against
unreasonable searches and seizures, shall not be violated,' is equally
encroached upon by the law in question.
The position of the respondent
that the witness can lawfully be compelled to answer on the ground that the act
of congress, in effect, abrogates the constitutional privilege, in providing that
the punishment of the lleged offense in relation to which the witness was
sought to be examined shall not be imposed in case he answers the
interrogatories propounded, is not sound, on two grounds: First, because the
statute could not abrogate or in any respect diminish the protection conferred
by the constitutional amendment; and, secondly, because the statute does not
purport to abrogate the offense, but only provides protection against any
proceeding to punish it. The constitutional safeguards for security and liberty
cannot be thus dealt with. They must stand as the constitution
has devised them. They cannot be set aside and replaced by something else, on
the ground that the substitute will probably answer the same purpose. The
citizen, as observed by counsel, is entitled to the very thing which the
language of the constitution assures to him.
Every one is protected by the common
law from compulsory incrimination of himself. This protection is a part of that
general security which the common law affords against defamation, that is,
against malicious and false imputations upon one's character,—as it defends
against injurious assaults upon one's person, even though the defamation is
created by publication made by himself under compulsion. The defamation arising
from self-incrimination may be equally injurious, as if originating purely from
the maliciousness of others. The reprobation of compulsory self-incrimination
is an established doctrine of our civilized society. As stated by appellant's
counsel, it is the 'result of the long struggle between the opposing forces of
the spirit of individual liberty, on the one hand, and the collective power of
the state, on the other.' As such, it should be condemned with great
earnestness.
The essential and inherent
cruelty of compelling a man to expose his own guilt is obvious to every one,
and needs no illustration. It is plain to every person who gives the subject a
moment's thought.
A sense of personal degradation
in being compelled to incriminate one's self must create a feeling of
abhorrence in the community at its attempted enforcement.
The counsel of the appellant
justly observes on this subject, as on many of the proceedings taken to escape
from the enforcement of the constitutional and legal protection established to
guard a citizen from any unnecessary restraints upon his person, action, or
speech, that 'the proud sense of personal independence which is the basis of
the most valued qualities of a free citizen is sustained and cultivated by the
consciousness that there are limits which even the state cannot pass in tearing
open the secrets of his bosom. The limit which the law carefully assigns to the
power to make searches and seizures proceeds from the same source.'
The doctrine condemning attempts
at self-incrimination is declared in numerous cases. Starkie, in his treatise
on Evidence, observes that the rule forbidding such incrimination is based upon
two grounds,—one of policy and one of humanity; 'of policy because it would
force a witness under a strong temptation to commit perjury, and of humanity
because it would be to extort a confession by duress, every species and
description of which the law abhors.' Am. Ed., pp. 40, 41.
In U. S. v. Collins, 1 Woods, 511, Fed. Cas. No. 14,837, Mr. Justice Bradley
said: 'The immunity was founded upon principles of public policy and a just
regard to the liberties of every citizen.' And we have no sympathy for the
efforts of any individual or tribunal to weaken or fritter away any of the
provisions of the constitution, even the least,
intended for the protection of the private rights of the citizen. Those
provisions should receive the construction which would give them the widest and
most beneficent effect intended.
But there is another and conclusive
reason against the statute of congress. It undertakes, in effect, to grant a
pardon in certain cases to offenders against the law; that is, on condition
that they will give full answers to certain interrogatories propounded. It
declares that the alleged of ender shall not be punished for his offense upon
his compliance with a certain condition. The legal exemption of an individual
from the punishment which the law prescribes for the crime he has committed is
a pardon, by whatever name the act may be termed. And a pardon is an act of
grace which is, so far as relates to offenders against the United States, the
sole prerogative of the president to grant.
In Ex parte Garland, 4 Wall. 380,
this court, after stating that the constitution
provides that the president shall have power to grant reprieves and pardons for
offenses against the United States except in cases of impeachment, says: 'The
power thus conferred is unlimited, with the exception stated. It extends to
every offense known to the law, and may be exercised at any time after its
commission, either before legal proceedings are taken or during their pendency,
or after conviction and judgment. This power of the president is not subject to
legislative control. Congress can neither limit the effect of his pardon, nor
exclude from its exercise any class of offenders. The benign prerogative of
mercy reposed in him cannot be affected by any legislative restrictions.'
Congress cannot grant a pardon.
That is an act of grace which can only be performed by the president. The
constitutional privilege invoked by the appellant should have had full effect,
and its influence should not have been weakened in any respect by the statute
which attempted to exercise a prerogative solely possessed by the president.
The order remanding the appellant
should therefore, in our judgment, be reversed, and an order entered that he be
discharged from custody, and be set at liberty.