Except in 'so far as they pertain to the arrest of the petitioners outside of the military district and their conveyance into it, the affidavits filed relate to conditions and circumstances relied upon as justification of the declaration of a state of war in the military district, and the argument for the most part deals with the main questions disposed of in Ex parte Nance and Mays, recently decided by this Court. Here, as in those cases, certain constitutional provisions are relied upon as authority for the position that, in the exercise of the constitutional and statutory power to suppress insurrection and repel invasion, the governor cannot declare a state of war and apply *573military rule, and that citizens arrested in the exercise of that power must be immediately turned over to the civil authorities for inquiry as to their guilt of the offenses of which they are accused and for trial by the civil courts, when there is probable cause to believe them guilty.
Nance and Mays had been tried by a military commission for offenses committéd within the military zone and sentenced to terms in the penitentiary and they sought liberation by writs of habeas corpus. To the extent of the claim of right in the governor to imprison them, pending the proceedings to suppress the insurrection, the court sustained him. The conclusion is summarized in the following terms: “Our present inquiry goes only to the legality of the custody of the respondents at the present time and under the existing conditions. The territory in which the offenses were committed is still under martial rule. It suffices here to say whether the imprisonment is, under present conditions, authorized by law, and we think it is. We are not called upon to say whether the end of the reign of martial law in the territory in question will terminate the sentences. Upon that question we express no opinion.” As a premise to this conclusion, the power of the governor to declare a state of war, to use the military forces to suppress insurrection or rebellion or repel invasion, and to establish a military commission for the punishment of offenses committed within the military zone and by its judgment impose imprisonment, notwithstanding the constitutional guaranty of subordination of the military to the civil power, the privilege of the writ of habeas corpus and the right of trial by jury in the civil courts for offenses cognizable by them, and the conclusiveness of the executive declaration of a state of war, were asserted. The power and authority of the court to interfere with the executive arm under such circumstances was denied. We also held and asserted this right and power in the executive as to a city, district or county of a state, notwithstanding the courts were open and sitting in other portions of the county.' But there was no attempt in the opinion filed in these cases to define or enumerate the offenses cognizable by the military commission or the extent of the punishments it may inflict. We were careful to say there were limits beyond which the executive could not go *574without subjecting himself or his officers and men to rights of action for damages on the restoration of peace and tranquility. We marked the distinction between executive power and the possibility of wrong doing in the exercise thereof.
A re-examination of the opinion in those cases in the light of further argument and additional authorities consulted, has developed no reason or cause for departing from the conclusions and principles there announced. On the contrary our impression as to the basic principles of that decision has been strengthened and confirmed. Considering the Constitution as a whole and endeavoring to give effect to all of its parts, we asserted power to set aside and ignore, to some extent, in the suppression of an insurrection, ordinary judicial process and remedies. The provisions of our Constitution relied upon as being inconsistent with this conclusion are perhaps no broader nor more positive in their terms than some of those of the federal Constitution, binding on the state courts as well as the federal. Power in the federal government to establish military rule and martial law over citizens as well as persons belonging to its land and naval forces and the militia engaged in its service, in enemy territory, whether in a foreign country or in sections of the Union in a state of insurrection or rebellion, is established beyond question.
During the occupation of the city of FTew Orleans by the military authorities and forces in the late war, General Dow was sued in a municipal court by one Bradish Johnson for the value of certain property, twenty-five hogsheads of sugar, a silver pitcher, half a dozen silvér knives, and Other table ware, taken by Captain Snell’s company under the command of General Dow. The defendant did not appear nor make any defense and there was a judgment against him by default. After the war, a suit was brought on this judgment in the Circuit Court of the United States for the district of Maine and the question of the validity of that judgment was certified to the Supreme Court of the United States. The court held that the state court had no jurisdiction of the cause of action, and that the judgment was void. Delivering the opinion of the -Court, Mr. Justice Field said: “This doctrine of non-liability to the tribunals of the invaded country for acts of warfare *575is as applicable to members of the confederate army, when in Pennsylvania, as to members of the national army when in the insurgent states. The officers or soldiers of neither army could be called to account civilly or criminally in these tribunals for such acts, whether those acts resulted in the destruction of property or the destruction of life; nor could they be required by those tribunals to explain or justify their conduct upon any-averment of the injured party that the acts complained of were unauthorized by the necessities of war. * * * * We fully agree with the presiding justices of the Circuit Court in the doctrine that the military should always be kept in subjection to the laws of the country to which it belongs, and that he°is no friend to the republic who advocates the contrary. The established principle of every free people is, that the law shall alone govern; and to it the military must always yield. We do not controvert the doctrine of Mitchell v. Harmony, reported in 13 Howard; on the contrary, we approve it. But it has no application to the case at bar. The trading for which the seizure was there made had been permitted by the Executive Department of our government. The question here is, What is the law which governs an army invading an enemy’s country? It is not the civil law of the invaded country; it is not the civil law of the conquering country: it is military law, — the law of war, — and its supremacy for the protection of the officers and soldiers of the army, when in service in the field in the enemy’s country, is as essential to the efficiency of the army as supremacy of the civil law at home and in time of peace, is essential to the preserva^ tion of liberty.”
In United States v. Diekelman, 92 U. S. 520, Mr. Chief Justice Waite, speaking of Diekelman, commander of a foreign vessel, suing for damages on account of detention by General Butler in the port of Hew Orleans, said: “When he entered the port, therefore, with his vessel, under the special license of the proclamation, he became entitled to all the rights and privileges that would have been accorded to a loyal citizen of the United States under the same circumstances, but no more. Such restrictions as were placed upon citizens, •operated equally upon him. Citizens were governed by m'ar-*576tial law. It was his duty to submit to the same authority. Martial law is the law of miltary necessity in the actual presence of war. It is administered by the general of the army, and is in fact his will. Of necessity it is arbitrary; but it must be obeyed. Hew Orleans was at this time the theater of the most active and important military operations. The civil authority was overthrown. General Butler, in command, was the military ruler. His will was law, and necessarily so.” Dow v. Johnson, cited, shows that then the municipal courts of New Orleans were open by permission of the commanding general. In Dooley v. United States, 182 U. S. 222, Mr. Justice Brown quoted with approval the following from Halleck in his work on International Law: “The right of one belligerent to occupy and govern the territory of the enemy while in its military possession, is one of the incidents of war, and flows directly from the right to conquer. We, therefore, do not look to the Constitution or political institutions of the conqueror, for authority to establish a government for the territory of the enemy in possession, during its military occupation, nor for the rules by which the powers of such government are regulated and limited. Such authority and such rules are derived directly from the laws of war, as established by the usage of the world, and confirmed by the writings of publicists and decisions of courts — in fine, from the law of the nations. * * * The municipal laws of a conquered territory, or the laws which, regulate private rights, continue in force during military occupation, except so far as they are suspended or changed by the acts of the conqueror. * * * He, nevertheless, has all the powers of a de facto government, and can at his pleasure either change the existing laws or make new ones.” This was said' of an American military commander operating in the Island of Porto Rico during the Spanish-American war. The same court, in New Orleans v. Steamship Co., 20 Wall. 387, declares the same law applicable in domestic territory in a state of rebellion. Of the power of the military government over the city of Hew Orleans, after this conquest, the court said the-military government had “the same power and rights in territory held by conquest as if the territory had belonged to a. foreign country and had been subjugated in a foreign war.. *577In such cases the conquering power has the right to displace the pre-existing authority, and to assume to such extent as it may deem proper the exercise by itself of all the powers and functions of government. It may appoint all the necessary officers and clothe them with designated powers, larger or smaller, according to its pleasure. It may prescribe revenues to be paid, and apply them to its own use or otherwise. It may do anything necessary to strengthen itself and weaken the enemy. There is no limit to the powers that may be exerted in such cases, save those which are found in the laws- and usages of war. These principles have the sanction of all publicists who have considered the subject.” This enunciation of principles was quoted by Mr. Justice Brown and approved by the United States Supreme Court in Dooley v. United States as late as the year 1900.
“Martial law is the temporary government and control by military authority of territory in which, by reason of war or public disturbance, the civil government is inadequate to. the preservation of order ■ and the enforcement of law.” 40 Cyc-3S7. “The proclamation of martial law establishes the will of the military commander as the rule of authority. His will, however, is not to be arbitrarily exercised, and it usually supersedes the local law only so far as necessary for the preservation of order, and, in case of invasion, the supremacy of the conqueror.” 40 Cyc. 390. The article from which these quotations are made was prepared as late as 1912 by George-Grafton Wilson, Professor of International Law in Harvard University, Lecturer on International Law in -Brown University and in the United States Uaval War College. Of the duration of martial law, he said: “The duration of martial láw is. determined by the necessity which led to its establishment, and it therefore ceases as soon as the civil authorities are able to-resume the unobstructed exercise of their ordinary functions.” 40 Cyc. 319.
In the great contests in England over the interpretation-of the unwritten constitution and to maintain its integrity and guaranties, this principle was admitted by the stoutest and' most radical of the opponents to royal aggression and encroachment. Hear the admission of Mí. St. John, counsel for John-*578Hampden, in the Ship Money Cases: “My Lords, from this Objection of sudden Danger, I come to the next, which is the third thing being offered unto your lordships, which is an admittance, that the danger may sometimes be such, that the Subject’s goods sometimes without their consent may be taken from them; for Property being both introduced and maintained by human laws, all things by the law of nature being common, there are therefore some times, like the Philistines being upon Sampson, wherein these cords are too weak to hold us. 'Necessitae enim’ (as Cicero saith) ‘magnum humanae imbecil-liatis omnem legem frangit;’ at such times all property ceaseth, and all things are again resolved into the common principles of nature.” State Trials, Yol. III., p. 903. Likewise Sir Edward Littleton for the King, p. 959: “In the next place, they say, if the king be in the field with his banners displayed; this they say was tempus belli. Cannot the courts of justice sit then, but there must be a peace? 39 Ed. 3 Rot. 10 Did not the court of justice sit then? Our ordinary printed books show what causes of law then were. And in Henry 6’s time, in all our civil wars, and in Henry the 7’s time, they sat then. But the true time, to make it tempus belli, is to make a war against the king.” Then the admission of Mr. Holborne, on behalf of Mr. Hampden, p. 975: “Now in times of necessity, there is a law that doth compel; nay, there is a stronger penalty than our laws can imagine; for our laws can make but a penalty of all that you have; but How? To the King. But when there is a danger from an enemy there is not only a danger of losing all that one hath, but of losing lives and lands, and all that we have; and all into the hands of the enemy.” Sir George Crooke, justice of the Kings Bench, delivering his opinion in favor of Hampden and against the King, said, p. 1162: “Royal power, I account, is to be used in cases of necessity, and imminent danger, when ordinary courses will not avail; for it is a rule, ‘Non occurrendum est ad extra-ordinaria, quanda fieri potest per ordinaria/ as in cases of rebellion, sudden invasion, and some other cases, where martial law may be used, and may not stay for legal proceedings. But in a time of peace, and no extreme necessity, legal courses must be used, and not royal power.” Likewise Sir Richard *579Hutton of the Court of Common Pleas, resolving against the King, p. 1198: “Por I do agree in the time of war, when there is an enemy in the field, the king may take goods from the subject; such a danger, and such a necessity, ought to be in this case, as in case of a fire like to consume all without speedy help, such a danger- as tends to the overthrow of the kingdom.” Sir Humphrey Davenport, also advising in favor of Hampden, said, pp. 1214, 1215: “I hold it real, that when any part of the kingdom is in danger, actually in danger, or in expectancy of danger, and the same expressed by his writ; I agree, the king may charge the subjects without parliament, towards the defence thereof; for ‘necessitas est lex temporis’ in vain to call for help when the enemy is landed. Clearly I hold the king to be the sole judge of the danger: And the danger being certified by his majesty, I hold it not traversable; and in such a case he may charge the subject without parliament, so that the very cause be effectually expressed upon the records, that the kingdom was in danger.”
An observation in Dicey’s Law of The Constitution, a recent work by an English author, at page 289, seems to deny such power to the British Sovereign in England only, not elsewhere in the kingdom, and cites as authority Wolfe Tone’s Case, 27 St. Tr. 614. Tone was sentenced to death in Ireland by a military commission, and committed .'suicide before arrival of the time of execution. On the day set for execution, and before Tone died, Mr. Curran, his attorney, appeared in the Kings Bench, and applied for a writ of habeas corpus, which, being granted, was ignored by the military officers. In applying for the writ, Mr. Curran said, p. 625': “In times when war was raging, when man was opposed to man in the field, courts martial might be endured; but every law authority is with me, while I stand upon this sacred and immutable principle of the constitution — that martial law and civil law are incompatible; and that the former must cease with the existence of the latter.” Tone’s Case was like that of Milligan, 4 "Wall. 2. There was then no actual war, nor proclamation thereof, in Ireland. Tone had been captured at sea in a French vessel, bound for Ireland on an expedition of invasion. By some authorities, Wall’s Case, 28 St. Tr. 51, is relied upon as being *580against the proposition laid down by the federal Supreme Court. As commander of a garrison on the Island of Goree on the African coast, Wall had caused a soldier of his garrison to be beaten to death. That man’s rights were governed by the general civil law and the British statutes, relating to discipline of the army. His rights were invaded in neither a time nor a place of war. Wall was convicted of murder on an issue as to whether he had acted in good faith under belief of the existence of a mutiny, headed by his victim, or on a mere pretext and with malice.
But Mr. Dicey does not in fact deny the proposition. On the contrary, he admits it, and cautions the student against the danger of being misled by non-observance of the different senses in which the term “martial law” is used. See page 284. He says martial law in the proper sense is unknown to the law in England. Page 283. Then he says: “Martial law is sometimes employed as a name for the common law right of the Crown and its servants to repel force by force in the case of invasion, insurrection, riot, or generally of any violent resistance to the law. This right, or power, is essential to the very existence of orderly government, and is most assuredly recognized in the most ample manner by the law of England.” Page 284. Thus we find Mr. Dicey is merely denying the right of martial or military rule over • citizens outside of the theatre of actual war and admitting its existence in the war zone, just as do Judge Advocate General Leiber, Prof. Ballan-tine and other writers on the subject, as will be hereinafter shown. He is distinguishing the war power of government from the peace power.
Ho doubt Patrick Henry and Thomas Jefferson were familiar with the British Constitution and had carefully studied Magna Charta and the Petition of Right. They were, too, aj)ostles of liberty as well as constitutional lawyers. The former ceased to be Governor of Virginia June 1, 1779, and the latter on that day, became governor, and held the office until June 12, 1781. While he was Governor and no doubt potential as to the course of legislation as in other respects, the General Assembly, in May, 1780, passed an act containing the following provision: "Be it enacted, That the governor be *581authorized, with advice of council, and he is hereby authorized and empowered, with such advice, -,to commit to close confinement, aii3r person or persons whatsoever, whom there may be just cause to suspect of disaffection to the independence of the United States, and of attachment, to their enemies; or to cause any such person to be removed to such places of security as may best guard against the effects of their influence and arts to injure this community, and benefit the common enemy. And be it further enacted, That in case of any insurrection within this commonwealth, or the same shall be invaded by the enemy, either by land or water, that all and every person or persons within the same, who shall act as guides to, or spies for them, or who shall furnish the enemy with provisions or other’ necessaries; or who shall' encourage desertion from the army, or who shall dissuade or .discourage the militia from opposing the enemy, or who shall give intelligence, aid, or comfort to the enemy, shall, and they are hereby declared to be subject to the law martial as declared by congress on the twentieth day of September one thousand seven hundred and seventy-six, in the fourth article of the sixth section, and the eighteenth and nineteenth articles of the thirteenth section cf the continental articles of war. And that for the trial of such offenders, a court-martial, to consist of not fewer than thirteen commissioned officers, one of whom shall be a field officer, shall be called by the county lieutenant or commanding officer of the militia in the county where such offence shall be committed, or in any other county of this • commonwealth, where such offender may be found.” 10 Hen.' Stat. at L. 310.
In May, 1781, while Jefferson was governor, an act was passed, containing this provision:. “The governor, with advice of the council, is also hereby empowered-to apprehend or cause to be apprehended and committed to close confinement, any person 'or persons whatsoever, whom they may have just cause to suspect of disaffection to the independence of the United States or of attachment to their enemies, and such person or persons shall not be set at liberty by bail, mainprize or habeas corpus10 ITen. Stat. at L. 414.
To say there cannot be a trial' by a military commission 'under martial rule is a contradiction of authority everywhere. *582“Military commissions are courts organized under the international law of war for the trial of offenses committed during war by persons not in the land or naval forces. In the United States their jnrisdiction is confined to enemy territory occupied by an invading army, or at least to those sections of the country which are properly subject to martial law, and their authority ceases with the end of the Avar.” 40 Cyc. 391. “By a practice dating from 1847 and renewed and firmly established during the Civil War, military commissions have become adopted as authorized tribunals in this country in time of war. They are simply criminal war courts, resorted to for the reason that the jurisdiction of courts-martial, creatures as they are of statute, is restricted by law, and can not be extended to include certain classes of offenses which in war would go unpunished in the absence of a’provisional forum for the trial of the offenders. Their authority is derived from the law of war, though in some cases their powers have been added to by statute. Their competency has been recognized not only in acts 'of Congress, but in executive proclamations, in rulings of the courts, and in the opinions'of Attorney Generals. During the Civil War they were employed in several thousand cases; more recently they were resorted to under the 'Reconstruction5 act of 1867; and still later one of these courts has been convened for the trial of Indians as offenders against the laws of war.” Digest of Opinions of the Judge-Advocate General of the Army by Howland, p. 1066. “The jurisdiction of a military commission is derived primarily and mainly from the law of war; but special authority has in some cases been devolved upon it by express legislation, as has already been noticed. Military commissions are authorized by the laws of war to exercise jurisdiction over two classes of offenses, committed, whether by civilians or miltary persons, either (1) in the enemy’s country during its occupation by our army and while it remains under military government, or (2) in the locality not within the enemy’s country or necessarily within the theater of war, in which martial laAV has been established by competent authority. The classes of offenses are (1) violation of the laws of war. (2) Civil crimes which, because the civil authority is superseded by the military, and the civil courts are closed or their *583functions suspended, cannot be taken cognizance of by the ordinary tribunal. In other words, the military commission, besides exercising under the laws of war its jurisdiction of offenses peculiar to war, may act also as a substitute for the time for the regular criminal adjudication of the state or district.” Dig. Opin. Judge-Adv. Gen. sec. 1680, McClure. “Of the ordinary crimes taken cognizance of under similar circumstances by these tribunals, the most frequent were homicides, and after these, robbery, aggravated assault and battery, larceny, receiving stolen property, rape, arson, burglary, riot, breach of the peace, attempt to bribe public officers, embezzlement and misappropriation of public money or property, defrauding or attempting to defraud the United States. -1= * * Not unfrequently the crime, as charged and found, was a combination of the two species of offenses above indicated. As in the case of the alleged killing, by shooting or unwarrantably harsh treatment, of officers or soldiers, after they had surrendered, or while they were held in confinement as prisoners of war; of which offenses persons were in several cases during the Civil War convicted by military commissions under the charge of ‘murder, in violation of the laws of war/ ” Dig. Opin. J.-Adv. Gen., Howland, p. 1701. See also McClure’s Dig. J.-Adv. Gen. Opin. secs. 1680, 1681, 1682, 1683, 1684. A military commission may sit and act in a community in which the civil courts are also acting. “Prom the jurisdiction, however, of military commissions under the circumstances above indicated, are properly excepted such offenses as are within the legal cognizance of the ordinary criminal courts, when, upon the establishing of military government or of the status of martial law, such courts have been, by express designation or in fact, left in full operation and possession of their usual powers. Thus, during the considerable periods of the war, pending which the District of Columbia was practically placed under a mild form of martial law, ordinary criminal offenses committed therein by civilians or miltary persons, of which there was not expressly vested by statute a jurisdiction in military courts concurrent with that of the civil tribunals, were in general allowed to be taken cognizance of by the latter, the same being at no time seriously interrupted in the exercise *584of their judicial functions.” McClure’s Dig. J.-Adv. Gen. Opin. sec. 1685. Though a military commission is a military court, its jurisdiction is not confined to military persons. It extends to citizens as well as soldiers. That citizens may be brought within the exercise of their power is revealed by the reason for their constitution. Courts-martial do not extend to citizens. As, in the exercise of military government, it often becomes necessary to rule, govern and punish citizens and the powers of courts-martial established by law, not by the will of the commander, do not reach such cases, a military commission to deal with citizens in the war area, is necessary. The general orders issued during the Civil War contained nearly 150 case of women who were tried by military commissions. Dig. J.-Adv. Gen. Iiowland, p. 1067, note 6. Of course they were not soldiers or in any way included in the land and naval forces of the United States or the militia.
“Although there is no express provision of the Constitution or Acts of Congress authorizing military commissions, yet such commissions are tribunals now as well known and recognized in the laws of the United States as the court-martial. ■They have been repeatedly recognized by the executive, legislative, and judicial departments of the government as tribunals for the trial of military offenses. But while military commissions are thus recognized, such a commission is not a court within the meaning of the fourteenth section of the Judiciary Act of 1789, nor is the authority exercised by it judicial in the sense in which judicial power is granted to the United States. A military commission, unlike a court-martial, is exclusively a war court; that is, it may legally be convened and assume jurisdiction only in time of war or of martial law or military government when the civil authority is suspended. Its Jurisdiction is ordinarily limited to the theatre of war or of military occupation. Its jurisdiction extends to persons connected with the army of the enemy, acting as spies or violating the rules of war; to the inhabitants of the enemy’s country held by an army of occupation; to the inhabitants of places under martial law; and to members of the army of the United ■States, or civilians serving it in the field,- who have committed offenses not within the jurisdiction of a court-martial. The *585offenses cognizable by such a tribunal comprise violations of the laws and usages of war, breaches of military orders or regulations not within the judi'sdiction of courts-martial, and ■criminal offenses cognizable by the ordinary criminal courts :and which would be tried by such courts if unobstructed in the exercise of their jurisdiction:” 20 A. & E. Ene. L. 660-■661. Military commissions are- courts organized under the -international law of war for the trial of offenses committed •during war by persons not in the land or naval forces. In the United States their jurisdiction.-is confined to enemy territory ■occupied by an invading army, ór at least to those sections of the country which are properly subject to martial law.” 40 Cyc. 391. h-
Against such judicial construction and . declarations of power, the speculations of lawyers and publicists, when in conflict with them, avail nothing; but, as we endeavored to show, in the opinion in the former cases, there is no such conflict; or, at least, very little. We repeat that General Leiber and Professor Ballantine, relied-.upon as such authority, in their-two articles referred to in the decision in the Nance and Mays eases, clearly mark the distinction between executive power in the area of military operation and in pacific territory. Of the case of Luther v. Borden, cited as authority in the Moyer case, as late as the year 19.08, for- power in the executive of a state to declare a state of war and thereby set aside judicial power, General Leiber said: “When the legislature of Rhode Island made use of it in 1842 it was probably intended to have no more definite meaning than that the militia of the State was to use its military power to suppress the enemies of the State. It was an authorization to do what was done when the military officer broke into the house of one of the enemies of the State in order to arrest him. He was a public enemy against whom the military power had been called out. It is evident that this is not the kind of martial law which we have been discussing.” The purpose of his article was to define the powers of the executive,in the use of the military forces outside of the war zone and in territory considered loyal as contradistinguished from the territory of the public enemy. Professor Ballantine, after having discussed the subject of 'such *586power, “In Time of Peace”, and endeavored to define its limits, passes to the second division of his article, executive power “In Time Of War,” and then proceeds as follows: “The question remains whether we may have federal martial law by virtue of the “War Power” during invasion or insurrection in domestic territory. In war the enemy, be he a foreign one or a rebel to whom the status of belligerent has been given, has no legal rights which the invader must respect except those which international law recognizes. When a civil contest becomes a public war, all persons living within hostile limits become ipso facto' enemies by their residence in enemy territory. An army in the enemy’s country is thus governed by the law of war, and officers and soldiers are responsible only to their own government.” Having said this he immediately returned to the status of citizens in domestic territory outside of the rebellious area, saying “But in domestic territory the status of the army is entirely different. The civil rights of citizens are not suspended but remain the same as in peace, both in districts near to and remote from the theatre of actual warfare.” Observe that he does not say “remain the same in the theatre of actual warfare.” His next observation is that “The occurrence of hostilities does not vary the position of the citizen or deprive him of the protection of the Constitution, unless the army is in the position of a foreign invader and the country is ruled from without, acquiring the status of enemy territory.” Then he cites Dow v. Johnson, 100 U. S. 158. He is still talking of the rights of citizens outside of the war zone, but Dow v. Johnson expressly decides that the rebellious territory is enemy territory and subject to military rule. Obviously he cites this only as marking the difference between executive power in the theatre of war in an instance of rebellion and executive power in the same country outside of the theatre of war. His criticism of the admission in Ex parte Milligan that, in time of war, there may be occasions when martial law can be properly applied, and of the decision of the English Privy Council, in a recent case, Ex parte D. F. Marias, is not authority against the position here taken. In this, he states what he thinlcs ought to he the law, hut admits that it is not the law. Thus he says Ex Parte Milligan declares that military authority of *587necessity supersedes the civil authority in foreign invasion or civil war on the theatre of active military operations; and also that, in the late Britisbi-Boer war, the English Privy Council rendered a decision, holding the fact that some tribunals had been permitted to pursue their ordinary course was not conclusive that war was not raging.
Por his position, in so far as it seems to conflict with the admitted authority against it, he cites Mitchell v. Harmony, 13 How. 115. That was an action for a wrong done by a military officer in the exercise of military power and authority in foreign territory, Mexico, in time of actual war. The action was brought long after the war had closed and in the courts of the United States, and the decision asserts no more than that military officers are liable for wrongs done in the exercise of military power, and that they are governed and limited in respect to the acts they may do by the usages of war as understood in international law. The .case is no authority for the position that the courts may supersede or arrest'the executive arm of the government while engaged in the conduct of a war of invasion or the suppression of an insurrection or rebellion, and here again, it would be unjust to him to read his criticism of the Milligan Case as the assertion of such a claim. He means no more than that, on-the theatre of war, power cannot be exercized beyond that allowed by the usages of civilized warfare, and that, after the return of the army from its foreign war, or the restoration of peace, an officer acting in violation thereof may be civilly or criminally liable. He neither says nor intimates, nor does his language imply, that the civil courts may give redress in any form, or exercise any power, in the enemy country, and Dow v. Johnson, cited by him, expressly denies any such power in any court of any country.
Stating in his conclusion what ihe_ law is, not what he thinks it ought to be, he says: “Where the army is not invading enemy territory of a recognized belligerent, but is in its own territory, the military authorities remain liable to be called to account either in habeas corpus or any other judicial proceeding for excess of authority toward citizens, no matter whether it occurred in propinquity to the field of actual hostilities or while *588the courts were closed, or after a proclamation of Martial Law.” Propinquity means not in the field of actual hostilities, but nearness to it or in the neighborhood of it, and his stated premise to the conclusion is “Where the army is not invading ■enemy territory of a recognized, belligerent.” In seeking his meaning, we cannot cut this out. To do so would be unjust to him. It would make him say what he neither says nor means.
In support of the denial of the existence of executive power, •admitted and asserted by the foregoing authorities, numerous inapplicable decisions are cited, some of which were analyzed •and explained in the opinion in the Nance and Mays Cases. The Milligan Case, 4 Wall. 2, involved the rights of a man residing and arrested in 'a state and county in which there was no war and had not been, and in which the courts were not only sitting, but absolutely unobstructed in the exercise of their powers. In his argument in that ease, Mr. Garfield marked the distinction between the sections, the war area and in the pacific domain. After having shown what provision Congress had made for arrest, detention and trial of disloyal people found in pacific territory, he said: “But Congress did far more than to provide for a case like this. Throughout the eleven rebellious States, it clothed the military department with supreme power and authority. • State constitutions and laws, the decrees and edicts of courts, were all superseded by the laws of war.” If the Constitution of the United States forbade supremacy of the military over the civil power, in •every part of the national dominion, no matter what its condition, and thus effectually precluded supremacy of military power as is contended, the Congress of the United States could not have done what Mr. Garfield said it did in the eleven rebellious states. Congress can no more override the Constitution than the president can. He admits that such executive power was exercised in those states and then, showing the state of Indiana to have been pacific territory, lying wholly outside of the theatre of war, he denied the existence of any act of Congress authorizing a trial, by military commission, of a •citizen, residing and arrested outside of the war area. Moreover, the entire Supreme Court, its dissenting justices as well *589as tlie others, declared that Congress had not authorized the application of martial law to ¿.state like that of Indiana, nor-attempted to do so. Chief Justice Chase, for the minority of the court, said: “We have Confined ourselves to the question of power. It was for Congress' to determine the question of expediency. And Congress did determine it. That' body did not see fit to authorize trials by military commission in Indiana, but by the strongest implication prohibited them.” Mr. Justice Davis, delivering the majority opinion, said: “It is not pretended that the commission was'a court ordained by Congress. • * * But it is said the jurisdiction is complete under the laws and usages of war. * * They can never he applied .to citizens in states which have upheld the authority of the government, and where the courts are open and their process unobstructed.” As Indiana was n.ot in a state of actual war, nor under a military government by proclamation, authorized by Congress, it is clear that the Milligan Case is no authority against the exercise of executive power in territory legally declared to be in a state of war. In re Kemp, 16 Wis. 382, is governed by exactly the, same principles. So is Ex parte Merryman, 17 Fed. Cas. No. 9487. In re Henderson, 11 Fed. Cas. No. 6349, involves the question whether a mere contractor to furnish supplies to the government for the use of the military service shall be tried by court-martial. It is not contended that any of the elements justifying substitution of the military for civil government were present. Hence the case has no possible application to the question here under consideration. The nature of the Egan Case, 5 Blatch. 319, appears from the statement found in the syllabus: “Where a. person was tried by a Military Commission, in South Carolina, in Hovember, 1865, for a murder committed in September, 1865, and was convicted and sentenced to imprisonment for life in the Penitentiary at Albany, Hew York, hostilities having terminated and the rebel army having surrendered to the-authorities of the United States some seven months before the trial: Held, on a habeas corpus that the prisoner was-entitled to be discharged on the ground that the conviction was illegal, for want of jurisdiction in the tribunal.” . In the opinion of the court, there was not, at the time of the trial and *590conviction, a state of war in the community in which it occurred. Johnson v. Jones, 44 Ill. 142, as regards the situation of the prisoner, was like that of the Milligan Case. He had been arrested and resided in pacific territory. In Johnson v. Duncan, 6 Am. Dec. 776, the validity of a proclamation of martial law was denied on the ground of lack of authority in the commanding officer to proclaim it, Congress not having conferred it. The principles of that case is the same as that of the Merrymm Case. Ela v. Smith, 5 Gray 121, did not arise in a state of war nor under a proclamation thereof. The mayor of a city merely called upon the volunteer militia to assist him in executing the civil law. Whether, in case of a rebellion or insurrection, the governor of a state may use the military power for its suppression, and, in doing so, temporarily substitutes military law or rule for the civil law, is neither discussed nor adverted to in the opinion.
It is true that, in Tucker on Constitutions, the exposition of this doctrine by the Supreme Court of the United States is criticized, but the author admits the interpretation is at variance with his views. Speaking of certain cases in which the court announced its conclusions, at page 639, he says: “It is therefore pertinent to observe in respect to them, that they overthrew existing republican forms of government in every State of the Confederacy, and that government in Virginia which Congress and the President had recognized in the act dividing the State of Virginia which resulted in the admission of West Virginia to the Union; and the government of Virginia thus recognized was put in possession of power at the city of Richmond after the war as the lawful government of Virginia. The reconstruction laws overthrew that government which Congress itself had set up, and substituted a military government with the judicial power subject to its control. Military commissions were inaugurated for the trial of citizens in other States, and conventions were called under regulations prescribed for suffrage by Congress, and new Constitutions were adopted and new forms of government established. It is hardly a question that these laws, which overthrew the form of government established by the State, and refused to restore it as the legitimate form of government, and set up a military *591despotism in its place, were not a guarantee of a republican form of government to the States, but guaranteed the overthrow of all republican forms of government and the adoption of a Constitution against the will of its people and under the dictation of military power.” This criticism necessarily admits all that is claimed in this opinion as to the construction of the federal Constitution by the Supreme Court of the United States, namely, that, in belligerent territory, Congress had the power, in effecting a restoration of the constitutional guarantees, to set up provisionally such a government as in their opinion would ultimately bring about that result. It is testimony to the existence of the law by one who challenges its soundness.
Willoughby on the Constitution, at sections 726 and 727, in speaking of the use of the military under the control and direction of civil officers in the enforcement of a civil law, citing Ela v. Smith, 5 Gray 121, denies that* such use of the military forces constitutes martial rule dr military government, and in this may be correct. At sections 728, 729, 730, 731 and 732, he discusses martial law and miltary government. Here he criticizes the opinion of Chief Justice Taney in Luther v. Borden, and adopts the views of Justice Woodbury in a dissenting opinion. His criticism of the majority opinion necessarily admits conflict between his personal view and that of the Court, in which case, of course, the opinion .of the court prevails and must be regarded as law. He also finds fault with the opinion of Mr. Justice Holmés in the case of Moyer v. Peabody, but here again the views of the court must prevail. Speaking of martial law in time of war, at section 732, he says: “It has already been learned that in war the enemy, be he a foreign one, or a rebel to whom the status of belligerent has been given, has no legal rights which those opposed to him must respect. When a civil contest becomes a public war, all persons living within limits declared to be hostile become ipso facto enemies, and subject to treatment as such. * * * Upon the actual scene of war, there is no question but that, for the time being, the military authorities are supreme, and that these may do whatever may be necessary in order that the military operations which are being pursued may succeed. Here martial law becomes indistinguishable from military government. *592* * * The necessities being great and extraordinary, the executive and administrative, that is to say, the military, action that will he justified is correspondingly extensive.” In section 733, he deals with the rights and powers of the executive and of citizens in time of war, hut outside of the war area. Here he classes the Milligan Case as we do. Under this head, he says: “Under the stress of military exigency, upon the actual theatre of war such civil guarantees as the writ of habeas corpus, immunity from search and seizure, etc., may, of course, be suspended. As to this there is no question. There is, however, a serious question whether, when war exists, these rights may, by legislative act or executive proclamation, he suspended in regions more or less remote from active hostilities. This question was raised and carefully considered in the famous Milligan Case in which the Supreme Court was called upon to pass upon the authority of a military commission, during the Civil War, to try and sentence, upon the charge of conspiracy against the United States government, one Milligan, who was not a resident of one of the rebellious states, nor a prisoner of war, nor ever in the military or naval service of the United States, but was at the time of his arrest a citizen of the State of Indiana in which state no hostile military operations were then being conducted.”
As the government of the United States is one of enumerated powers, the Tenth Amendment to the Constitution, declaring that “The powers not delegated to the United States, nor prohibited by it to the states, are reserved to the states respc-tively, or to the people,” it was perhaps more difficult to find authority in the President of the United States and in the Congress thereof to suppress a rebellion and, in the exercise thereof the power to establish military government and administer martial law, than it is to find the same power in the executive of a state, to which there is reserved all power not delegated to the national government nor prohibited to the States. The federal Constitution makes the president commander-in-chief of the army and navy and of the militia of the states, when called into service, but he is not authorized by express terms to use the army and navy or militia, at his own volition, to suppress an insurrection or repel an invasion. *593That power is conferred upon Congress, bnt\ in the most general terms. By clause 15 of section 8 of Article 1, Congress is authorized “To provid'e for; calling forth the Militia to execute the Laws of the Union, suppress Insurrections or repel Invasions”. By clause 11 of the same section, it is authorized “To declare War, grant letters of Marque and Reprisal and make Rules for captures on Land and Water.” In conferring these powers upon Congress, the imposition of restraint and limitation upon the exercise thereof was carefully avoided, to. the end that the power might be exercised efficiently. It is apparent that, in defending its life against a foreign or domestic, foe, the government must be left much in the situation of an individual in the exercise of the'right of self-defense. On this1, subject Alexander Hamilton said: “The circumstances that, endanger the safety of nations are infinite, and for this reason no constitutional shackles can wisely be imposed on the power to which the care of it is committed. * * * This is one, of those truths which to a correct and unprejudiced mindi carries its own evidence along with it, and may be obscured,, but cannot be made plainer by argument or reasoning. The means ought to be proportioned to the end, the persons from whose agency the attainment of any end is expected, ought to possess the means by which it is to be attained.” Federalist Ho. 23, Mr. Madison expressed the same idea in the following terms: “It is vain to impose constitutional barriers to the impulse of self-preservation. It is worse than in vaih, because it plants in the constitution itself necessary usurpations of power.” Id. Ho. 41. Likewise, John Adams, speaking long after the formation of the Constitution, said: “All the powers incident to war are, by necessary implication, conferred upon the-government of the United States. There are then, in the-authority of Congress and of the Executive, two classes of powers, altogether different in their nature and often incompatible with each other, the war power and the peace power. The peace power'is limited by regulations and restricted by provisions prescribed within the Constitution itself The war■ power is limited only by the laws and usages of nations. This' power is tremendous; it is strictly Constitutional, but it breaks' down every barrier so anxiously erected for the protection off *594liberty, of property and of life.” Thus, in the spirit of the framers of the Constitution, the Supreme Court of the United States, spoke, long years after those who had formed it had passed away. They died before the anticipated exigency arose, but, when it came, the administrators of government, including the judicial branch thereof, had no difficulty in finding, in the Constitution, the war power in all its might and strength, notwithstanding the express guarantees of life, liberty and property, trial by jury and others, insisted upon now as precluding the existence of such implied power. It included suspension and overthrow of the civil power in the war zone, courts or no courts, ignored the constitutional guaranties, subordinated private right to the exigencies of the occasion, justified the arrest and imprisonment of. citizens and substituted military commissions for constitutional civil courts, with power to try, convict and punish citizens for offenses of all kinds.
Since the federal Constitution has not inhibited military government on the theatre of warfare in which the military power of the federal government is engaged, such government being, by necessary implication, contemplated and authorized by the Constitution itself, under such circumstances, no reason is perceived, nor has any been advanced in the argument of this case or any other, why military government in a state, justifiable upon the same ground of necessity and by implication authorized by the state Constitution, should be regarded as a violation of the federal Constitution. On the contrary, the federal Supreme Court has itself, on more than one occasion, declared such state action not to be a violation of the national Constitution, nor of the guaranties of due process of law, trial by jury and the equal protection of the laws. Such is the effect of the decision in Moyer v. Peabody, 212 U. S. 78, saying: “Public danger warrants the substitution of executive process for judicial process.” The substitution, referred to and held good in that case, was by the executive of a state under a state constitution. In that case, Luther v. Borden, 7 How. 1, in which Chief Justice Taney asserted the power of a state to declare war, in the suppression of an insurrection and for the establishment and maintenance of its *595authority, was cited with approval. Holding the prisoner not entitled to his discharge on a writ of habeas corpus, the Supreme Court of Colorado said.: “In reaching this conclusion we are not unmindful of the argument that a great power is recognized as being .lodged with the chief executive, which might be unlawfully exercised. - That such power may be abused is no good, reason why it should be denied. The question simply is, does it exist? If so, then the governor cannor be deprived of its exercise. The prime idea of government is that power must be lodged somewhere for the protection of the commonwealth. For this purpose laws are enacted and the authority to execute them must exist, for they are of no effect unless they are enforced. Neither is power of any avail unless it is exercised. Appeals to a possible abuse of power are often made in public debate. They are addressed to popular fears and prejudices, and often given weight in the public mind to which they are not entitled. Every government necessarily includes a grant of power lodged somewhere. It would be imbecile without it.” In re Moyer, 35 Col. 159, 169. This declaration of power by a state court was sustained by the Supreme Court of the United States. . In Luther v. Borden, 7 How. 1, Chief Justice Taney said: “And, unquestionably, a state may use its military power to put down an armed insurrection too strong to be controlled by the civil authority. The power is essential to the preservation of order and free institutions, and is as necessary to the States of this Union as to any other government. The state' itself must determine what degree of force the crisis demands.” He then said, in substance, that, if the government of Rhode Island had made a declaration of martial law, there was “no ground upon which” the “court could question its authority.” Proceeding, he further observed: “It was a state of war, and the established government resorted to the rights and usages of war to maintain itself and to overcome the unlawful opposition.” This proposition, the Court approved and applied in Moyer v. Peabody, cited. Argument against so plain a declaration is necessarily futile.
In the main, state Constitutions are framed on the plan of that of the federal government, and all of them contain in *596some form the same power, right of self preservation, as that preserved by the federal Constitution. By it, the power is vested in Congress for execution by the President. In most of the state constitutions, it is vested in the governor, for some reason, possibly because the exercise thereof in a state is considered a matter of less consequence than by the federal government, for the reason that no despotic or arbitrary government can be permanently established in any state, since the federal Constitution guarantees to every state a republican form of government, and any attempt by any governor to establish himself as a dictator in a state would be promptly thwarted by the exercise of the powers of' the federal government. Hence there is less danger in entrusting such power to a state governor than there would be in entrusting it to a president. Other reasons may be found in a desire to avoid the expense incident to the convening of the legislature to confer upon the governor the power to suppress an insurrection or repel an invasion. Whatever the reason for it, this difference exists, and the power vested in the governor of this state by the terms of the Constitution is the same, regarding the maintenance of a state government, as that vested in Congress by the federal Constitution, regarding the maintenance of the national government. Indeed, it is vested by the use of the same general terms. In the Nance and Mays Gases, we said an express grant of power to use the military forces to suppress insurrection or repel invasion was a grant of power to suppress insurrection in the manner in which that has usually been done in other states, countries and times. So says the federal Supreme Court of such terms used in the Constitution of Colorado. In Moyer v. Peabody, Mr. Justice Holmes said: “That means that he shall make the ordinary use of the soldiers to that end.’’
Though harsh and obviously at variance with the spirit of our institutions, under normal conditions, this principle finds its counterpart in a general principle of the law, applicable to lesser matters than the preservation of the government or the maintenance of the laws of a state. It is, indeed, unfortunate that men’s lives should be sacrificed and inconveniences and harships imposed, in the exercise of such power, upon noncombatants, but this is not the only instance in which the *597common law recognizes the same principle. If a citizen is assailed by another with felonious intent, he may defend himself, to the extent of taking the life of the assailant and the act is justifiable. Any citizen is authorized by the common law to take upon himself, if the occasion justifies it, the vindication of the law and take the life of another to prevent him from committing a felony. Here a private citizen is authorized to exercise power the same in character and kind, to save another individual or his property, as that vested in the governor of the state. As the law admittedly authorizes any citizen, no matter what his character or station in life or the degree of his intelligence, to take life to prevent the commission of a felony, is it inconsistent to say the governor of a state, as the chief conservator of the peace, selected as such for his superior wisdom, character and intelligence, may exercise the same kind of power for the accomplishment of a higher purpose ? Officers of the law, such as constables and sheriffs, in the execution of process for arrest and imprisonment, may oppose resistance, using such force as is necessary, even to the taking of life. Whar. Crim L. (11th ed.), sec. 528, p. 718; Murphy on Sheriffs, secs. 1160 and 1129; McClain on Crim. L., sec. 298. So* in pursuing a felon or preventing an escape, an officer may kill if necessary. Whar. Crim. L., secs. 532, 533. If officers of the law, when engaged in the preservation of the peace, find it necessary to take,life, such homicide is justifiable. Id. sec. 534. In all these instances, citizens are deprived of life without a trial by jury, notwithstanding the constitutional inhibition of deprivation of life without a trial by jury. Likewise there are many instances in .which a man may be deprived of his property without a jury trial, notwithstanding a similar constitutional inhibition. Property of a citizen may be taken out of his possession by the drastic remedy of attachment. Though he may have a trial by jury as to the existence of the debt for which the attachment is issued, and as to the existence of the grounds thereof, the property is first taken out of his possession. He is deprived of the use of it and this amounts to a deprivation of property, without a trial by jury. So there are numerous instances in which jurisdiction of causes involving title to property is vested in the courts of equity, not *598bound to give a trial by jury at all. Throughout all this broad country men are arrested and committed to prison by justices, police magistrates and other authorities, daily and by thousands, on accusations of all sorts of offenses, and thus in a sense deprived of their liberties, without the intervention of juries, notwithstanding the constitutional inhibition of deprivation of liberty without a trial by jury. There is no exception pf these cases from the letter of the guaranty in terms or by name, yet everybody recognizes it. These illustrations show conclusively that the constitutional guaranties are to be read and applied in the light of their purpose, which falls far short of the letter. They prove beyond question that there are exceptions from the strict letter of those guaranties. As these undoubtedly exist, may not others also? Their existence absolutely and emphatically condemns the theory of strict adherence to the letter of these constitutional provisions. As a citizen may take into his own hands the whole power of the law, as its champion and defender, and take life, to prevent the consummation of a single threatened felony, as well as to save his own life, or merely to prevent great bodily harm, as a matter of self defense, and-a petty officer, in effecting an arrest or pursuing a felon, may take life, all single instances and matters of comparatively small moment, notwithstanding the literal guaranties of the Constitution from which they are not expressly excep'féd, does not the assertion of power in the executive of a state, its chief conservator of the peace, to use military power as a substitute for the civil power, when the whole fabric of government of the state is endangered, the laws trampled under foot, all the constitutional guaranties violated and set aside, the lives and property of thousands in jeopardy, and the civil authorities wholly unable to cope with or resist the assault, stand upon the same principle of necessity? The Constitution does not set it all out in detail, but it uses terms broad enough to include it, unless restrained by the clauses relied upon as imposing such restraint. Neither does the Constitution preserve in terms the right of self-defense or the right to kill in prevention of felonies or arrest of a felon or prevention of his escape, but it uses terms broad enough to include these rights. In both eases, the application of the settled rules of construc*599tion make the general terms so used include the means necessary to the accomplishment of the organic purpose in restraint of the letter of other clauses haying different purposes. This construction vests tremendous power in the governor, and its exer-case may produce frightful consequences, but, as in the other cases mentioned, it is the necessary means of prevention of still worse results. Thus government is not perfect. It cannot be in the nature of things.
The clause inhibiting suspension of the writ of habeas corpus is relied upon as an element differentiating our Constitution from that of the federal government and those of some other states. With this phase of the case we dealt at some length in the opinion in the Nance and Mays Gases. In addition to what was said there, we observe that the guaranty of the privilege of the writ of habeas corpus 'adds nothing to the guaranties of due process of law, trial by jury, cognizance of causes by civil courts and supremacy of the civil over the military power. This writ does not confer rights. It only vindicates such rights as are given by law. It is a remedy, not a law creating or declaring rights The courts are always open to applications for the writ and always grant it upon proper application, but it does not follow that every one who applies for it, or makes the necessary affidavit, is entitled to be discharged. It may be the duty of the governor and every military officer of the state to recognize the writ and make return thereto, but that is not conclusive of the question whether the applicant shall be discharged or accorded such -other relief as he claims. If on the return it appears that under some power vested by the Constitution or a statute, the- governor or such other officer as has the applicant under arrest or imprisoned, has power and authority to detain or imprison the applicant, he cannot be discharged. In seeking the vindication of constitutional rights on a writ of habeas corpus, the applicant is bound by such power and authority as are vested in the person by whom he is detained. He cannot be discharged unless illegally restrained of his liberty, and he is not so restrained, if the law authorizes or justifies his detention, whether the officer be a constable, a police officer, the military forces or the governor of the state. In other words, the writ adds nothing whatever *600to the guaranties or rights vested by law, nor does the guarantee of the privilege thereof in any way cut down or limit the rights ■and powers vested in officers by law, constitutional or statutory, ■either in express terms or by implication.
But it is said there can he no war in a state. It suffices to say, in response to this, that Luther v. Borden and Moyer v. Peabody expressly decide that the Constitution of the United States does not inhibit the declaration by a state of a state of war within its own borders by proper authority. State courts other than this have asserted the same proposition. In re Moyer, 35 Colo. 159; Commonwealth v. Shortall, 206 Pa. 165. In the latter case, the court said: “The effect of martial law is to put into operation the powers and methods vested in the commanding officer by military law. So far as his powers for the preservation of order and security of life and property are concerned there is no limit but the necessities and exigency of the situation. And in this respect there is no difference between a public war and domestic insurrection. What has been called the paramount law of self-defense, common to all countries, has established the rule that whatever force is necessary is also valid.” Ex parte Moore, 64 N. C. 802, also declares a governor of a state may proclaim a state of war and recognize the status of belligerency. The opinion in that ease is inconsistent with those of the Supreme Court of the United States •except in one respect. The court fell into the fallacy above noted, respecting the clause forbidding suspension of the privilege of the writ of habeas corpus, and said it denied power in the governor to detain prisoners, and required him to turn them over immediately to the civil authorities for trial. Plainly there is nothing in the law securing the privilege of the writ of habeas corpus that confers any such-right. It must he found, if at all, in some provision or principle.
As to what constitutes an insurrection or state of war or rebellion, the authorities are fairly clear. In Pennsylvania and Colorado, the occasions of the declaration, adverted to in Commonwealth v. Shortall and Moyer v. Peabody, were very similar to the one calling for the proclamation here involved. A similar situation, growing out of a different cause, was the basis of the proclamation in Forth Carolina. These authorities *601.show that it need not take the form of an attempt to set up a new government by name. “The rule of the common law is that, when the regular course of justice is interrupted by revolt, rebellion or insurrection, so that the courts of justice cannot be kept open, civil war exists, and the hostilities may be prosecuted on the same footing as if those opposing the government were foreign enemies invading the land. The converse is also regularly true; so that, when the courts of a government are open, it is ordinarily a time of peace. But though the courts be open, if they are so obstructed and overawed that the laws cannot be peaceably enforced, there might, perhaps, be cases in which this converse application of the rule would not be admitted.” 18 Reel. Cas. No. 10, 755a. “A state of actual war may exist without any formal declaration of it by either party; and this is true of both a civil aryl foreign war. A civil war exists and may be prosecuted on the same footing as if those opposing the government were foreign invaders, whenever the regular course of justice is interrupted by revolt, rebellion, or insurrection, so that the courts cannot be kept open.” . These definitions are given in prize cases and the political status ascertained and determined as the basis of settlement of property and commercial rights. They are not conclusive as to the state of affairs, when viewed from other standpoints. The question we have here is an entirely different one, insurrection or rebellion in the sense of justification of a declaration of a state of war by competent authority. War is not necessarily a rising of the people in an armed effort to establish a rival government. As to what constitutes a levying of war, under a statute against treason, a very similar one to the question we have here, Sir Matthew Hale says, Pleas of the Crown, Yol. I., p. 149: “What shall be said a levying of war is partly a question of fact, for it is not every unlawful or riotous assembly of many persons to do an unlawful act, tho da facto they commit the act they intend, that makes a levying of war, for then every riot would be treason, and all the acts against riotous and unlawful assemblies, as 13 H. 4 cap. 7; 2 H. cap. 8; 8 H. cap. 14, and many more had been vain and needless; but it must be such an assembly as carries with it spexiem belli, as if they ride or march vexillus explicatis, or if *602they be formed into companies, or furnished with military officers, or if they are armed with military weapons, as swords, guns, bills, halberds, pikes, and are so circumstanced, that it may be reasonably concluded they are in a posture of war, which circumstances are so various, that it is hard to define them all particularly.” On page 152, he says the levying of war against the king is of two kinds, express and interpretative. Of the latter he said: “Constructive or interpretative levying of war is not so much against the king’s person, as against his government: if men assemble together more guerrino to kill one of his majesty’s privy council, this hath been ruled to be levying of war against the king. P. 16 Car. 1. Cro. 583. Ben-sted’s case before cited, and accordingly was the resolution of the house of lords 17 E. 2. Talbot’s case above-mentioned. So in the case mentioned by my lord Coke in the time of H. 8 Co. P. C. p, 10. levying war against the statute of Labourers and to inhance servants wages was a levying of war against the king; and altho levying of war to demolish some particular inelosures is not a levying of war against the king, Co. P. C. p. 9, yet if it be to alter religion established by law, or to go from town to town generally to cast down enclosures, or to deliver generally out of prison persons lawfully imprisoned, this hath been held to be levying of war for those purposes treason within that clause of the act of 13 Eliz. cap. 1. as was resolved in Barton’s ease and Grant’s case above mentioned; and the like resolution was in the case of the apprentices that assembled more guerrino to pull down bawdy-houses.” That the condition of the courts is not the sole criterion seems to be very well settled, when the question is justification of a declaration of war. In Elphinstone v. Bedreechund, 1 Knapp 316, the statement of the case shows some of the civil courts were open when the transaction out of which the case grew occurred. The syllabus says: “The circumstances, that at the time of the seizure the city where it was made had been for some months previously in the undisturbed possession of the provisional government; and that Courts of Justice under the authority of that government were sitting in it for the administration of justice, do not alter the character of the transaction.” In Marais v. General Officer, *603decided in 1902, the English Privy Council, presided over by the Lord Chancellor of England, re-asserted this doctrine, saying: “The fact that for some purposes some tribunals have been permitted to pursue their ordinary course in a district in which martial law has been proclaimed is not conclusive that war is not raging.” Though’ civil courts are open, as was shown in that case, their jurisdiction is denied, when it essays to interfere with executive action. On this point, the Lord Chancellor said: “The truth is that no doubt has ever existed that where war actually prevail^ the ordinary Courts have no jurisdiction over the action of the military authorities.” Speaking of this decision in an article r.e-produced in 18 Law Quarterly Eeview, 1902, Sir Frederick Pollock, an eminent English authority, said: “The judgment involves the further position that neither an application for summary release from extraordinary arrest nor an action for anything done as an extraordinary act of necessity will be entertained by the ordinary courts during the continuance of a state of war in the jurisdiction, when the court is satisfied that a responsible officer acting in good faith is prepared to justify the act complained of. I do not know that this is seriously objected to.” In the following terms, he goes beyond the doctrine of the Milligan and Marais Cases and the position taken here: “There may be a state of war at any place where aid and comfort can be effectually given to the enemy, having regard to the modern conditions of warfare and means of communication.” The declaration in Moyer v. Peabody, cited, averred that the. courts of Colorado were open and could have tried the petitioner at the time of his detention by the governor, and the ITnited States Supreme Court held the circumstances insufficient to make a good declaration against the governor for false imprisonment. In Dow v. Johnson, 100 U. S. 158, there was involved the judgment of a civil court, open and running in New Orleans, by virtue of the permission of the military commander. Nevertheless, its judgment was declared void by the United States Supreme Court for want of jurisdiction. Of the civil courts. Mr. Justice Fields said in that case: “They are considered as continuing, unless suspended or superseded by the occupying belligerents.” This necessarily implies power to suspend them *604or supersede them. Hence it follows that, although for some purposes they are open and in some respects their service efficient, they are clearly not inconsistent with martial rule or a declaration of war. In Moyer v. Peabody, cited, the court said: “Public danger warrants the substitution of executive process for judicial process. * * * As no one would deny that there was immunity for ordering a company to fire upon a mob in insurrection, and that a state law authorizing the Governor to deprive citizens of life under such circumstances was consistent with the Fourteenth Amendment, we are of opinion that the same is true of a law authorizing by implication what was done in this case.” “Martial law is the temporary government and control by military authority of territory, iu which, by reason of war or public danger, the civil government is inadequate to the preservation of order and the enforcement of law.” 40 Cyc. 387. What is inadequacy of the civil power, exercised by courts ? Does it suffice for the purposes of government that the courts may fairly try civil cases or some classes of criminal cases, while the guns of civil conflict roar almost within their hearing, and blood flows and lives are in process of extinguishment and those engaged in it cannot be, or, at least, are not, restrained by the 'ordinary criminal processes? Is this adequate government by the civil power? Under such circumstances, are not some of the guaranties of the Constitution, which all officers are sworn to enforce, set aside in point of fact as effectually as if the courts were not sitting at all and could not sit? Must the executive arm remain at rest, because all guaranties are not set aside, as to all people or in all places? Reason and authority answer in the negative.
If insurgents or rebels must be turned over to the civil authorities as fast as seized, when the courts cannot or will not try them, though sitting and performing other functions, the courts become, by reason of their existence, agencies or instru-mentalities of resistence of the exercise of necessary executive power. Under the rights of continuance and bail, given by the civil law, or indulged by courts affected with sympathy, timidity or fear, those arrested can be released to re-engage in the conflict, and the courts themselves become passive or active, though incidental, factors in the maintenance of forcible resist-*605anee of law and order. Thus tbe construction insisted upon runs to a palpable absurdity as well as contravention of principles of sound public policy. 'A process of analysis, leading to sucb results, is condemned by rules of interpretation and construction, recognized everywhere. Hasson v. Chester, 67 W. Va. 278; In re Moyer, 35 Col. 159.
On this question, authority is meager for the obvious reason that it is a political one, not ‘subject to judicial review, the courts everywhere holding a declaration of a state of war by competent authority to be conclusive of the fact. Hence the reported cases show no instance of court interference with executive action as to that question.
Whether there was justification for the declaration of a state- of war in this instance is not an open question. By all authority, the declaration of a state of insurgency or war by competent authority is conclusive upon the Court. Luther v. Borden, cited; Moyer v. Peabody, cited; In re Moyer, 35 Col. 159. If, however, it were an open question, we would be unable to say, in view of the circumstances detailed in the returns, there was not sufficient ground for the declaration. In the territory covered by the proclamation, armed forces, have been contending with one another for nearly a year. Many persons have lost their lives and property has been destroyed, railroad trains have been interfered with, execution of the law by the civil officers has been resisted and prevented by force of arms, and much worse results have been threatened. Though the courts of Kanawha county have been sitting outside of the district, nobody has been brought to trial, arrested ' or indicted for any of these offenses. If the courts could have-acted, they have not done so. What efforts have been made to enforce the law and punish offenders are not fully disclosed, but the fact is, nothing has been done. Why this state of affairs has been permitted to exist by those who ought to have suppressed it, if it was within their power to do so, is rather a collateral question. The interest of the state and of the general public imperiously demand termination of it, no matter what the cause.
The declaration of a state of war Avas in law and fact a. recognition or establishment of belligerency and made the *606inhabitants oí the military district technically enemies of the state, even though another executive might not have regarded the facts sufficient to warrant the action. Errors in decision do not destroy or establish lack of jurisdiction. This is a principle universally recognized.
Though Moyer v. Peabody, cited, Luther v. Borden, cited, and Commonwealth v. Shortall, cited, do not assert power or authority in the executive óf a state, under an executive declaration of military government in a portion thereof, to try citizens by a military commission, the general principles asserted by all of these decisions fairly include it. In no way do they distinguish the exercise of this power in a state from that of similar power in the federal government executed by the president under authority conferred by congress. In the Shortall Case, the court said: “What has been called the paramount law of self-defense, common to all countries, has established the rule that whatever force is necessary is also lawful. While the military are in active service in the suppression of disorder and violence, their rights and obligations as soldiers must be judged by the standard of actual war.” In Luther v. Borden the Court said: “And, unquestionably, a state may use its military powers to put down an armed insurrection too strong to be controlled by the civil authorities. The power is essential to the preservation of order and free institutions, and is as necessary to the states of this Union as to any other government.” That case denies the right of a state to set up a permanent military government, but it admits the right of a state to exercise military power for self preservation on exactly the same principle as that on which the same power has been shown to exist in the national government. Only one of the cases, Moyer v. Peabody, involves right of detention of a citizen under arrest and denial of his claim of right to immediate surrender for trial by the civil courts, and the Supreme Court of the United States justified his detention upon the same principles upon which military government and administration of martial law, as applied to citizens, is justified in the national government. All of these cases assert the principle and none of them qualify or limit it. Hence none of them is authority against power in the executive of a state, in the *607suppression of an insurrection or rebellion, to cause persons to be tried by a military commission for offenses committed within the territory declared to be in a state of war, and we have found no authority of that kind except the Moore Case in 64 N. C. 802, in which the court, after having decided that the governor was bound to make immediate surrender of prisoners to the civil -tribunals, admitted’ its inability to enforce the declaration and denied that its writs had any virtue or effect inside the military district. '*
As a result of these principles, views and conclusions we have two areas or sections in the state, by virtue óf a declaration of a state of war in the district, in which the powers of government and the rights.of citizens differ most radically. The tremendous power of the governor in the military district does not extend beyond the limits thereof. Nevertheless, ■ he is the governor of the peacable territory of the state and has such powers as are normally vested in him by the Constitution and the laws, and any additional authority the legislature may have conferred upon him in pacific territory in the event of such exigencies, not violative of constitutional provisions. In the language of John Adams, the state has a peace power and a war power, both of which are now active. We construe the returns of the respondents as asserting, for the purposes of this case, the power of detention of the petitioners, not a right to try them by a military commission. Having shown the existence of a state of war in the area covered by the governor’s proclamation, and the steps taken to suppress the insurrection and lawlessness in that territory, the returns say the petitioners have been largely instrumental in causing and encouraging the lawlessness, riot and insurrection, and that their detention, is, in the judgment of the executive, necessary in order to effectually suppress the same. This sufficiently charges them with having wilfully given aid, support and information to the insurgents, the enemy, in a time of war, insurrection, and public danger, and section 6 of chapter 14 of the Code confers upon the governor power to apprehend and imprison all such persons. Such acts may be done either inside or outside of the military district. Nothing in the terms of the statute limits the exercise of this executive power of apprehension and *608imprisonment to persons within the military district, and it is; obvious that persons outside of such district may do as much or more than persons inside of it to defeat executive action,, looking to the suppression of the insurrection or -rebellion. Hence there is no reason for such a limitation. On the contrary, there is good reason against it, wherefore we must say the legislature intended no such a limitation, and the statute contemplates such arrests and imprisonment of persons, committing these acts outside of the military district.
We have just seen that this power of detention, as exercised by the governor of the state of Colorado was sustained by the Supreme Court of the United States in Moyer v. Peabody. Moreover, we see no reason for saying it violates, in any respect, any of the constitutional guaranties. It is statutory authority in the governor, and if not in violation of the Constitution, it amounts to due process of law, within the meaning of tire Fourteenth Amendment to the Constitution of the 'United States. It contemplates imprisonment without trial by jury, but not by judgment of conviction of a crime. The exercise of this power involves no change or status from citizens to convicts. It is, therefore, not a deprivation of liberty without a trial by jury, within the meaning of the constitutional guarantees. Such apprehension and imprisonment are the-same in principle as those of persons accused of crime. On all sorts of charges, from assault and battery to first degree murder, citizens are daily arrested and imprisoned to await examination,, indictment and trial. There may be imprisonment without a jury trial, for contempt of court. State v. Gibson, 33 W. Va. 97; Cooley Cons. Lim. 453. Persons offending against city by7laws may be imprisoned, without a trial by jury, if the offense is not made a crime. McGear v. Woodruff, 33 N. J. L. 213. It was not the purpose of the framers of the Constitution to interfere with the course of the common law, by the incorporation of this guarantee, and, by that law, persons guilty of' petty offenses and contempt of court and accused of crime could always be imprisoned without a jury trial. McGear v. Woodruff, cited; In re Rolfs, 30 Kan. 758.
As this statute is a law, conferring power upon the governor, action under which constitutes due process of law, provided the-*609statute itself is constitutional, a question about which we have no doubt, and, as the returns show the existence of a state of war, an insurrection and certainly a time of public danger, any of which seems to have been made a condition precedent to the exercise of the power, the detention of these prisoners, although arrested outside of the military district, is, in our opinion, entirely valid and legal.
Hence discharges were refused and they were remanded to the custody of the military authorities acting, under the control and'direction of the governor.
Petitioners Remanded.