delivered the opinion of the court.
These are appeals from a single judgment entered by the District Court of the United States for the Eastern District of Louisiana on a petition for writs of
habeas corpus
and
certiorari.
The relator had been arrested on extradition proceedings.. Each party asks to have reviewed the construction given below to provisions of our treaty with Great Britain, proclaimed August 9, 1842 (8 Stat. 572, 576), and of the supplementary treaty proclaimed April 22, 1901 (32 Stat. 1864). The questions presented are, therefore, of a character which may be reviewed upon direct appeal under § 238 of the Judicial Code.
Charlton
v.
Kelly,
In October and November, 1918, the British Consul General at New Orleans filed with the Honorable Rufus E. Foster, District Judge of the United States for the Eastern District of Louisiana, three separate affidavits each charging that Charles Glen Collins, who was then within the jurisdiction of that court, had committed at Bombay, India, the crime therein described as obtaining property under false pretences, and that he stood charged therewith in the Chief Presidency Magistrate’s Court at Bombay; and asking that he be committed as a fugitive from justice for the purpose of having him returned to India for trial. Warrants of arrest issued and Collins moved, as to each affidavit, to dismiss for want of jurisdiction, contending that the transactions in question were commercial dealings in which he had merely failed to pay debts incurred. Hearings, entitled "In the Matter of Extradition Proceedings of Charles Glen Collins,” were had before Judge Foster, at which the Consul General and Collins appeared by counsel. Evidence in support of each of the three affidavits was introduced by the Consul General. Then Collins, who was sworn at his request, admitted his identity and that he had been present in India at the times the alleged crimes were committed. As to one of the charges, that of obtaining a pearl button from Mohamed Alii Zamiel ali Raza, he was allowed to testify further. But he was not permitted to testify as to matters concerning the other two which had been consolidated. And he was not permitted to introduce other witnesses in defense of any of the three *367 affidavits. After the hearings were concluded Judge Foster made two orders or judgments signed by him as Judge of said United' States District Court and entitled in said court. In these orders he found, as to each of the affidavits, that he deemed the evidence sufficient to sustain the charge under the law and the treaty; and as to each he ordered Collins recommitted to the House of Detention in the custody of the United States marshal for that district to await the order of the President of the United States. The two proceedings (which included the three affidavits) were then consolidated. Under date of November 27, 1918, a certificate setting forth his findings together with a copy of the record in all the proceedings was transmitted to the Secretary of State.
This petition for writs of habeas corpus and certiorari was filed by Collins, in said District Court, on January 8, 1919. It set forth the proceedings before Judge Foster on the three affidavits, and alleged that his detention was illegal and in violation of rights secured to him by the treaty; among other reasons because he was refused permission to introduce evidence as above mentioned. District Judge Grubb ordered that the writs issue; and the marshal made return setting forth in substance the facts above recited. The case was heard before Judge Grubb on February 21, 1919, the record before Judge Foster being introduced. On the same day Judge Grubb, without delivering an opinion, entered an order which declared that “relator’s application for habeas corpus is denied ” so far as concerned the charge of. obtaining the pearl button from Mohamed Alii Zaimel ah Raza, and that “the writs of habeas corpus are granted ” so far as the detention was based on the . other two charges, but that the relator be remanded to the House of Detention to await further proceedings in said last two named affidavits.
“And it is further ordered that, as to the'said two affidavits last mentioned, this cause be and is hereby re *368 manded to the Honorable Rufus E. Foster, Judge, to the end that relator be given the opportunity of introducing such evidence as he might offer at a preliminary examination under the law of Louisiana.”
Neither party took any action in respect to such further proceedings before Judge Foster. On March 3, 1919, Collins petitioned for leave to appeal, contending that he should have been discharged on all three affidavits and his appeal was allowed. This is case No. 350 on the docket of this court. Later, the British Consul General petitioned for leave to appeal on the ground that Collins’ application should have been definitely denied also as to the commitment on the other two affidavits. His appeal, being No. 351 on the docket of this court, was allowed March 28, 1919.
First:
Was the judgment appealed from a final one? A single petition for a writ of
habeas corpus
thus sets forth detention of the relator on three separate affidavits. As to the commitment on one of these the judgment entered by Judge Grubb directed that the writ be “denied.” Such denial, or more appropriately dismissal, of the writ would obviously have been a final judgment, if it had stood alone.
McNamara
v.
Henkel,
What was thus called granting the writ was not a discharge of the prisoner, deferred as in
In re Medley,
Second:
A case may not be brought here by appeal or writ of error in fragments. To be appealable the judgment must be not only final, but complete.
United States
v.
Girault,
Third: In what has been said we must not be understood as recognizing the British Consul General as the party entitled to appeal from a decision in Collins’ favor. For the writ of habeas corpus was directed to the United States marshal who held Collins in custody and the marshal was the party in whom rested the right to appeal, if Collins prevailed on final judgment. See Charlton v. Kelly, supra.
Both appeals are
Dismissed for want of jurisdiction.
