PUNISHMENT FOR CRIME

Amendment 8

Excessive bail shall not be required, nor excessive fines imposed, nor cruel and unusual punishments inflicted.

When the Bill of Rights was being debated in Congress, two members took exception to this proposal. One "objected to the words 'nor cruel and unusual punishment,' the import of them being too indefinite."[1] Another leveled a similar criticism at the entire amendment; "What is meant by the terms excessive bail? Who are to be the judges? What is understood by excessive fines? It lies with the court to determine. No cruel and unusual punishment is to be inflicted; it is sometimes necessary to hang a man, villains often deserve whipping, and perhaps having their ears cut off; but are we in future to be prevented from inflicting these punishments because they are cruel? If a more lenient mode of correcting vice and deterring others from the commission of it could be invented, it would be very prudent in the Legislature to adopt it; but until we have some security that this will be done, we ought not to be restrained from making necessary laws by any declaration of this kind."[2]

Excessive Bail

A United States District Court fixed the bail of twelve persons who were arrested on charge of conspiring to violate the Smith Act[3] at $50,000 each. This was on the theory advanced by the Government that each petitioner was a pawn in a conspiracy and in obedience to a superior would flee the jurisdiction, a theory to support which no evidence was introduced. The Court held that bail set before trial at a figure higher than reasonably calculated to assure the presence of defendant at his trial is "excessive" in the sense of the Eighth Amendment, and that the case of each defendant must be determined on its merits. Bail of larger amount than that usually fixed for serious crimes must be justified by evidence to the point.[4] But the power of the Attorney General, under § 23 of the Internal Security Act of 1950,[5] to hold in custody without bail, at his discretion, pending determination as to their deportability, aliens who are members of the Communist Party of the United States, is not unconstitutional.[6]

Excessive Fines

The Supreme Court has had little to say with reference to excessive fines or bail. In an early case it held that it had no appellate jurisdiction to revise the sentence of an inferior court, even though the excessiveness of the fine was apparent on the face of the record.[7] In a dissenting opinion in United States ex rel. Milwaukee Publishing Co. v. Burleson,[8] Justice Brandeis intimated that the additional mailing costs incurred by a newspaper to which the second-class mailing privilege had been denied constituted, in effect, a fine for a past offense which, since it was made to grow indefinitely each day, was an unusual punishment interdicted by the Constitution.[9]

Cruel and Unusual Punishments

The ban against "cruel and unusual punishment" has received somewhat greater attention. In Wilkerson v. Utah[10] the Court observed that: "Difficulty would attend the effort to define with exactness the extent of the constitutional provision which provides that cruel and unusual punishments shall not be inflicted, but it is safe to affirm that punishments of torture, ... and all others in the same line of unnecessary cruelty, are forbidden by that Amendment to the Constitution."[11] Shooting as a mode of executing the death penalty was sustained over the objection that it was cruel and unusual.

A partially successful effort has been made to enlarge the concept of unusual punishment to cover penalties which shock the sense of justice by their absolute or relative severity. Justice Field pointed the way for this development in his dissenting opinion in O'Neil v. Vermont,[12] wherein the majority refused to apply the Eighth Amendment to a State. With the concurrence of two other Justices he wrote that the amendment was directed "against all punishments which by their excessive length or severity are greatly disproportioned to the offenses charged."[13] Eighteen years later a divided Court condemned a Philippine statute prescribing fine and imprisonment of from twelve to twenty years for entry of a known false statement in a public record, on the ground that the gross disparity between this punishment and that imposed for other more serious fines made it cruel and unusual, and as such, repugnant to the Bill of Rights.[14] No constitutional infirmity was discovered in a measure punishing as a separate offense each act of placing a letter in the mails in pursuance of a single scheme to defraud.[15]

Notes

[1] 1 Annals of Congress 754 (1791).

[2] Ibid.

[3] 18 U.S.C. §§ 371, 2385.

[4] Stack v. Boyle, 342 U.S. 1 (1951).

[5] 8 U.S.C.A. § 156 (a) (1); 64 Stat. 1011.

[6] Carlson v. Landon, 342 U.S. 524 (1952).

[7] Ex parte Watkins, 7 Pet. 568, 574 (1833).

[8] 255 U.S. 407 (1921).

[9] Ibid. 435.

[10] 99 U.S. 130 (1879).

[11] Ibid. 135.

[12] 144 U.S. 323 (1892).

[13] Ibid. 339, 340.

[14] Weems v. United States, 217 U.S. 349, 371, 382 (1910).

[15] Badders v. United States, 240 U.S. 391 (1916). Cf. Donaldson v. Read Magazine, 333 U.S. 178, 191 (1948).