58 A.2d 366 | Pa. Super. Ct. | 1948
Argued March 23, 1948. The Governor of the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania, on January 21, 1948, issued a warrant for the extradition of relator pursuant to a written demand by the Governor of the State of New York requesting the return of relator to answer a charge of grand larceny in the first degree with which he had been charged in the latter State. Relator was held in custody in the County of *460 Philadelphia, and counsel filed on his behalf a petition for a writ of habeas corpus in the court of quarter sessions of that county. It contained no specific averments of fact, but merely a general allegation that relator was unjustly deprived of his liberty. Writ was issued. At the hearing thereon, copy of the indictment was produced in the court below. Counsel for relator seemed to have proceeded on the theory that the extradition proceedings were invalid for two reasons: (1) that there was fraud by the complaining witness, and (2) that the extradition papers were defective as a matter of law. The court below dismissed the writ, whereupon relator appealed to this court.
The executive warrant showed on its face all the facts essential to its validity; it was prima facie evidence of the existence of every fact which the executive was obliged to determine before issuing it. See Com. ex rel. Flower v.Superintendent of Philadelphia County Prison,
The order of the court below is affirmed, and the record is remitted to the court below with direction that relator forthwith surrender himself into the custody to which he was remanded, and that the Governor's warrant be fully carried into effect.