Conduct of Judge Kenesaw Mountain Landis: Hearings Before the Committee on the Judiciary. Feb 21, 1921. Statement of Hon. Benjamin F. Welty, M.C.1921 - 43 pages |
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Page 4
... impeach Kenesaw M. Landis as district judge of the United States for the Northern District of Illinois , and in support of same I submit the following facts : That the Supreme Court of the District of Columbia on the 16th day of May ...
... impeach Kenesaw M. Landis as district judge of the United States for the Northern District of Illinois , and in support of same I submit the following facts : That the Supreme Court of the District of Columbia on the 16th day of May ...
Page 5
... impeach said Kenesaw M. Landis for high crimes and misde- meanors and charge said Kenesaw M. Landis as follows : First . For neglecting his official duties for another gainful occupation not connected therewith . Second . For using his ...
... impeach said Kenesaw M. Landis for high crimes and misde- meanors and charge said Kenesaw M. Landis as follows : First . For neglecting his official duties for another gainful occupation not connected therewith . Second . For using his ...
Page 10
... impeachment ? Mr. WELTY . I am trying to lay the foundation and give you the facts and then I will come to that . If the committee will permit me , if they want to hear that , I can give them that now . Here is an opinion of the ...
... impeachment ? Mr. WELTY . I am trying to lay the foundation and give you the facts and then I will come to that . If the committee will permit me , if they want to hear that , I can give them that now . Here is an opinion of the ...
Page 16
... impeachment and makes a study of that question and gathers these facts he will find out it takes some time to do it . I could have procured that , and I suppose I should have , but I could not think of everything . The CHAIRMAN . There ...
... impeachment and makes a study of that question and gathers these facts he will find out it takes some time to do it . I could have procured that , and I suppose I should have , but I could not think of everything . The CHAIRMAN . There ...
Page 17
... impeach the gentleman , if they can , in my opinion . Mr. WELTY . I want to give you the law , if you care for it ... impeachment . Mr. WELTY . Yes . Mr. WALSH . And you say you have a deep conviction upon the matter . That conviction ...
... impeach the gentleman , if they can , in my opinion . Mr. WELTY . I want to give you the law , if you care for it ... impeachment . Mr. WELTY . Yes . Mr. WALSH . And you say you have a deep conviction upon the matter . That conviction ...
Common terms and phrases
Abe Attel advisory council American League appointed Archbald attorney August Herrmann Ban Johnson baseball associations baseball magnates baseball players behavior bench BOIES CHAIRMAN charge Chicago chief arbiter civil officers commissioner committee common law Congress contract conviction Cook County Court of Appeals crimes and misdemeanors criminal disqualified district court district judge District of Columbia District of Illinois facts Federal court Federal judge GARD Government grand jury guilty hear House HUSTED IGOE illegal combination impeachable offenses impeachment proceedings interposing Judge KENESAW Judge Landis judgment judicial judiciary jurisdiction KENESAW MOUNTAIN LANDIS Landis's major leagues matter ment misbehavior misconduct National League Northern District official duties official or employee Parliament pending power of impeachment President provides punishment removed from office salary Samuel Chase Senate Sherman antitrust law simply statement statute submit Supreme Court tion treason and bribery violation vote WALSH Warren Hastings WELTY YATES
Popular passages
Page 25 - ... appeal from the Court of Appeals to the Supreme Court of the United States.
Page 40 - Uzzah put forth his hand to the ark of God, and took hold of it; for the oxen shook it. And the anger of the Lord was kindled against Uzzah; and God smote him there for his error; and there he died by the ark of God.
Page 36 - Congress have unhesitatingly adopted the conclusion, that no previous statute is necessary to authorize an impeachment for any official misconduct ; and thtt rules of proceeding, and the rules of evidence, as well as the principles of decision, have been uniformly regulated by the known doctrines of the common law, and parliamentary usage. In the few cases of impeachment, which have hitherto been tried, no one of the charges has rested upon any statutable...
Page 31 - The President * * * shall have power to grant reprieves and pardons for offenses against the United States, except in cases of impeachment.
Page 36 - An examination of the English precedents will show that, although private citizens as well as public officers have been impeached, no article has been presented or sustained which did not charge either misconduct in office or some offense which was injurious to the welfare of the State at large.
Page 32 - So where a lord chancellor has been thought to have put the great seal to an ignominious treaty, a lord admiral to have neglected the safeguard of the sea, an ambassador to have betrayed his trust, a privy...
Page 5 - July first, nineteen hundred and nineteen, no Government official or employee shall receive any salary in connection with his services as such an official or employee from any source other than the Government of the United States...
Page 32 - Parliament, purchasing offices, giving medicine to the king without advice of physicians, preventing other persons from giving counsel to the king except in their presence, and procuring exorbitant personal grants from the king. But others, again, were founded in the most salutary public justice, such as impeachments for malversations and neglect in office, for encouraging pirates, for official oppression, extortions, and deceits, and especially for putting good magistrates out of office and advancing...
Page 29 - I have but one observation more to make on this point, which is, that impeachment is a proceeding purely of a political nature. It is not so much designed to punish an offender as to secure the State. It touches neither his person nor his property; but simply divests him of his political capacity.
Page 36 - The impeachability of the offenses charged in the articles was in most of the cases not denied. In one case, however, counsel for the defendant insisted that impeachment would not lie for any but an indictable offense; but after exhaustive argument on both sides this defense was practically abandoned.