DocketNumber: 27
Citation Numbers: 94 P. 943, 20 Okla. 831
Judges: WilliaMS
Filed Date: 4/15/1908
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 10/19/2024
We have decided at this term of the court in the case ofEx parte Bailey, reported in this volume,
"That all causes, proceedings, and matters, civil or criminal, pending in the district courts of Oklahoma Territory, or in the United States Courts in the Indian Territory, at the time said territories become a state, not transferred to the United States Circuit or District Courts in the state of Oklahoma, shall be proceeded with, held, and determined by the courts of said state, the successors of said district courts of the territory of Oklahoma, and the United States Courts in the Indian Territory; with the right to prosecute appeals or writs of error to the supreme or appellate court of said state, and also with the same right to prosecute appeals or writs of error from the final determination in such cases made by the supreme or appellate court of such state to the Supreme Court of the United States, as is provided by law for appeals and writs of error from the supreme or final appellate court of a state to the Supreme Court of the United States. All criminal casespending in the United States Courts in the Indian Territory,not transferred to the United States Circuit or District *Page 833 Courts in the state of Oklahoma, shall be prosecuted to a finaldetermination in the state courts of Oklahoma under the lawsnow in force in that territory."
In the decision of this court in the case of Higgins v. Brown
(decided at this term of court and reported in this volume),
Section 1 of the Schedule to the Constitution provides:
"No existing rights, actions, suits, proceedings, contracts, or claims shall be affected by the change in the forms of the government, but all shall continue as if no change in the form of government had taken place. And all process which may have been *Page 834 issued previous to the admission of the state into the Union under the authority of the territory of Oklahoma, or under authority of the laws in force in the Indian Territory, shall be as valid as if issued in the name of the state."
When this provision is construed in the light of the provisions of section 20 of the enabling act, as amended by the act of March 4, 1907, we are aided in reaching an interpretation as to what was intended by said section 1,supra; and we conclude that said provision has the same effect as that contained in said section 20, supra, where it is stipulated that certain cases "shall be prosecuted to final determination in the state district courts of Oklahoma under the laws now in force in that territory." In the case of Moorev. United States, 85 Fed. 468, 29 C. C. A. 272, supra, the court says:
"Its civil and political powers were transferred to other officers; those of peculiarly internal character to officers of the new state; those which bore any relation of the national system of government, of which the state formed a part, to officers holding commissions under that system, and possessing only the powers derived from their commission. As one of the states of the Union, and in virtue of that character forming one of the districts of the United States, the district of Utah, and the Circuit Courts sitting in that district, would possess no peculiar jurisdiction or authority; one which did not appertain to other districts and the Circuit Courts having cognizance of matters within those districts."
In the case of Shively v. Bowlby,
"By the Constitution, as is now well settled, the United States having rightfully acquired the territories, and being the only government which can impose laws on them, having the entire dominion and sovereignty, national and municipal, federal and state, over all the territories so long as they remain in the territorial condition," etc. (See, also,Higgins v. Brown, ante, this volume, and authorities therein cited.)
It may be contended, however, that the people of the state, through their constitutional convention, could not provide for the continuance of laws enacted by Congress for the government of the Indian Territory for the purpose of prosecuting to final *Page 835
judgment existing rights and actions, etc., having arisen thereunder prior to the admission into the Union. In theBailey Case, supra, it was held that the only limitation upon the action of the convention was that the state government should be republican in form and the provisions of the enabling act complied with; everything else, which the convention had the power and the right to insert by reasonable implication, being permitted, and afterwards concurred in through the action of the President in issuing the proclamation admitting the state into the Union. In the case of Ex parte Larkin,
Whilst we do not readily reach these conclusions, yet we are clear that it was the intention of Congress, as well as the constitutional convention, that malefactors, who had committed serious *Page 836
and grave offenses against society prior to the admission of the state into the Union, when there had been no opportunity to lodge indictments against them ought not to go unwhipped of justice, and thereby the law could not be vindicated after such infractions. Further, it is not clear in our minds that, if we are in error in our conclusions that the state district court has jurisdiction in such offense, that Congress can hereafter make provision for the final prosecution of such cases, still, in any event, such accused persons have the highest judicial tribunal of our Republic open to them in which to have determined whether or not they are unlawfully deprived of their liberty, and in the event it were determined in that forum that this court has erred, the decision of such court would certainly be very persuasive with the Congress of the United States to cause it to take any possible action for the final prosecution of such offenses. And especially are we moved to take this course as it is a matter of record that the United States judge for the Eastern District of Oklahoma has ordered and directed that all prisoners in the custody of United States marshals for the several districts in the Indian Territory at the time of the admission of the state into the Union, charged with offenses not of a federal character, whether or not they were held by indictments or complaints filed with United States commissioners, be delivered over to the custody of the state authorities. It certainly will not be seriously contended that where a prisoner was being held by virtue of a commitment from the United States commissioner, he being apprehended by virtue of a warrant issued by such commissioner on a complaint filed before him, that such cause was pending at the time of the admission of the state into the Union in the United States court of the district in which said commissioner was located.Virgina v. Paul,
Writ of habeas corpus denied.
All the Justices concur.