Luty v. Purdy and Sevier

The record shows that this is an action of trespass, assault and battery, and false imprisonment; that the declaration is in the usual form; that the defendants pleaded not guilty, and that the plaintiff agreed that under that plea the *Page 164 defendants might give in evidence any facts which would show they were justified; that, upon the trial, it appeared in proof that in the month of October, 1809, the plaintiff descended the river Tennessee in a boat; that he landed his boat at the landing, near High-Wassee garrison; that while at said landing, he was arrested by the defendant Sevier, under an order of the defendant Purdy; that he was taken to said garrison, and there confined three days by order of said Purdy, within which time a court of inquiry was held by said Purdy's order, which court convicted said plaintiff of having sold spirituous liquors to the soldiers and to Indian countrymen; that the plaintiff was then set at liberty; that the defendants gave in evidence, that the landing was within the tract of country reserved by the United States, in their treaty with the Cherokee Indians, for the purpose of a garrison; that Purdy was a colonel, commanding at that garrison; that the plaintiff had applied to said Purdy for permission to sell goods to the soldiers, and obtained it; that Purdy had issued an order prohibiting him from selling spirits to soldiers or Indian countrymen, that the plaintiff violated this order, for which violation the defendants committed the acts complained of, c. That the counsel of the defendants insisted these facts amounted to a justification of their conduct, and applied to the Circuit Court so to instruct the jury, which the counsel for the plaintiff objected to, and the Court did instruct the jury that, if they believed the facts, they did in law amount to a justification; to which opinion the plaintiff's counsel filed a bill of exceptions; the jury found the defendants not guilty, and from the judgment rendered upon that verdict the writ of error was taken, and the cause removed into this court. Errors had been assigned, and innullo est erratum pleaded. The error relied upon is, that the opinion of the Circuit Court was incorrect.

The defendants' counsel have argued that this is in the nature of an application for a new trial, which cannot be moved for in this court, but ought to have been applied for in the circuit; and that, until the application was made to and refused by that court, the plaintiff cannot complain here. It seems to us that if the Circuit Court, upon the trial of a cause, states the law erroneously to the jury upon a point material, and that, in consequence of such erroneous charge, the party has in all probability been injured, he may except to such opinion, and have it reversed in this court, and that *Page 165 this is not viewed in the light of an application for a new trial, which is always rested upon matters dehors the record, and is made to the sound discretion of the Court under all the circumstances of the case. But it is peculiarly the province of this court to reverse the decisions of the circuit on questions of law that were material; and that we have nothing to do in reviewing the verdicts of juries founded upon matters of fact. It may so happen, if this judgment is reversed, that the cause must be retried; and exactly the same consequence might follow from reversing a judgment because improper evidence had been received; yet the counsel have admitted, and correctly too, that in such case this court could reverse. 4 Cranch, 72, and 2 Cranch, 239, seem to sanction the course which we believe to be correct in this case.

Many cases have been read by the counsel for the defendants designed to prove that the Circuit Court ought not to have granted a new trial, if applied to, although satisfied that they had misdirected the jury. Entertaining the opinion that we do, that the party who thinks himself aggrieved had a right to except to the charge delivered, and that we are bound to review that point, it will be readily perceived that all these authorities are beside the question, and that it will be useless to notice them. The counsel who last argued for the defendants insisted, with earnestness and considerable ingenuity, that the point decided by the circuit judge was proved to be immaterial by the finding of the jury "that the defendants are not guilty," and saying nothing as to the justification. There would have been great strength in this argument if justification had been pleaded as well as not guilty. But when we recur to the record, and find that the question which alone the jury were sworn to try was guilty or not guilty; and see further that there was no contest, except as to the justification, the benefit of which the party was entitled to, under the plea not guilty, the argument loses its whole force.

This conducts us to the merits of the case. Were the defedants justified? is the question. The Circuit Court decided they were; and the counsel for the defendants have argued that this decision is correct. First, because the plaintiff sold whiskey to Indians and Indian countrymen, which laid him liable to the penalty of the trade and intercourse law, and authorized the military to arrest and *Page 166 confine him for five days; and to prove this we have been referred to the acts of Congress, 1802, p. 40, §§ 3, 4, 9, 16.

It seems very clear that the penalty imposed by that act is only incurred when a person, without a permit, goes into the country, the possession and enjoyment of which is secured to the Indians, and there trades with them. But the possession and enjoyment of the tract where this traffic was carried on are secured to the United States, and of course this penalty is no more incurred than if the trading had been in this place. No justification can then be derived from this source.

Again, it is insisted that, as this transaction happened in the military reservation and near the garrison, the defendants are justified under the military law. This is a question of some novelty and delicacy, but perhaps of not very much difficulty.

On the one hand, we wish not to establish a principle that will subject a citizen, as such, to martial law; and on the other should be sorry to restrain an officer from the exercise of powers essential to the very existence of a useful army. Without disciplined subordination, it has been well said an army is harmless to the enemy, and dangerous to its own country.

It has been argued for the defendants that the plaintiff, by asking permission to vend goods, placed himself in such a situation that he was bound to obey the orders of the commandant while he was on the garrison tract; that the officer is bound to see that good order is kept, which he cannot do without a power over all those who come upon the military reservation. It seems to us that every citizen who is permitted to enter a garrison, or a tract of country possessed by the soldiery, ought, while there, to conduct himself orderly, and according to the reasonable rules prescribed for him; but if he does not choose to do so, what power have the officers over him? To put him into the guard-house? No; tell him to go away; if he does not obey, use as much force as is necessary to put him away; and when he is out of the line of sentinels, he can neither get back to do mischief, nor can the soldiers get to him, if the sentinels do their duty. This is a very natural course, and we think will answer every reasonable purpose. We do not understand *Page 167 that the soldiers can at will depart from the garrison; they are within the line of sentinels, and the citizens without, and all is well. If soldiers come out of their garrison, buy whiskey and get drunk, is the citizen to be taken up and subjected to such punishment as the military choose? Such a power is too extravagant to be claimed. Suppose they have a right to imprison; how long is it to continue? There are no limits to the plea of necessity for the sake of order; it might be continued for a month, a year, or a lifetime; there are no bounds except the direction of the officer. Citizens hold their liberties upon no such tenure.

Counsel say the permission applied for and obtained took from the plaintiff the character of citizen, and attached him to the army. In what capacity? He is no officer, no soldier; what will you call him? The gentlemen say he is either a military store-keeper, a sutler, or retainer to the camp. We feel satisfied there is no pretence for calling him a military store-keeper; the articles of war contemplate that sutlers sell spirits; as he was prohibited from selling spirits, he cannot be a sutler within the meaning of those articles. A retainer, we are told, is a dependent or hanger-on. It is strange that we can get no definite idea attached to the term retainer to the camp.

It would seem that a retainer to the camp must be a person who, from his situation and the nature of his employment, has a right to be at the camp, and within the line of sentinels as well as the soldiers, and whenever a person is in any capacity attached to the camp, and from the nature of his employment is to be within the chain of sentinels, then he is a retainer, unless he sustains some other definite character pointed out in the articles of war; no matter whether he be a baker, a cook, a person to wash, or any thing else you please. The best boundary that we can fix, between citizens and soldiers, is the chain of sentinels; and he who has a right, from the nature of his employment, to be within them, is subject to the rules and articles of war; and he who is a citizen without is a citizen, not subject to them, but is to have his conduct judged of by the general laws of the country.

How is it in this case? Had Luty a right to be in the camp, within the lines? No pretence for it from this record. But suppose him a sutler or retainer, and subject *Page 168 to the articles of war; would those articles justify this proceeding? We incline to think not. Let the officer dismiss him, and deny any entrance to the this, it seems to us, would have been the punishment. We feel convinced the Circuit Court erred in considering the defendants justified; that the facts disclosed do not form a justification, whatever effect they may have to lessen the damages that are to be recovered.

Our opinion is that the judgment ought to be reversed.