аfter stating the cáse as above reported, delivered the opinion of the court.
Petitioner claims his discharge upon the ground that he is accused of having illegally received a deposit in his bank at' Juneau, when in fact he had not been in Juneau within three weeks before the deposit was received, and that, at the time it was received; which was about
4
o’clock in the afternoon of June 20, 1890, he was in Illinois, and had been in that State for. more than two hours before the deposit was received. He had in fact left Beaver Dam, Wisconsin, at an early hour that day, and travelled continuously to Chicago, not stopping tat Juneau, and having no actual knowledge of the illegal depoájt charged. Upon this, state of facts petitioner insists that his journey from Wisconsin to Illinois was not a “fleeing from justice” within the -meaning of Article
4,
section 2, of the Constitution; that it is еssential to the jurisdiction of the trial court that he should have been a fugitive from justice; and hence that the Circuit Court of Dodge County was without authority to try him for the offence, charged, and he should,
¥e regard this case as controlled in all its-essential features by those of
Ker
v. Illinois,
The case of
Mahon
v. Justice,
There was a vacancy in the office of Chief Justice at the time, and two members of the court (Mr. Justice Bradley аnd Mr. Justice Iiarlan) dissented upon the ground that the Constitution had provided a peaceful remedy for the surrender of persons charged with crime; that this' clearly implied that there should be no resort to force for this purpose; that the cases upon which the court relied had arisеn where a criminal had been seized in one country and forcibly taken to another for trial, in' the absence of any international treaty of extradition ; and that as the application in that case was made by the governor of the State whose territory had been lawlessly invadеd, he was entitled to a redelivery of the person charged.
These cases may be considered as establishing two propositions : 1. That this court will not interfere to relieve persons who have been arrested and taken by violence from the territory of one State to that оf another, where they are held under process legally issued from the .courts of the latter State. 2. That the question of the. applicability of this doctrine to a particular case is as much within the province of a State court, as a question of common law or of the law оf nations, as it is of the courts of the United States.
An attempt is made to distinguish the case under consideration from the two above cited, in the fact that' those were cases of kidnapping by third parties, by means of which the accused were brought within the jurisdiction of the trial State,
•It is proper to observe in this connection that, assuming the question of flight tó be jurisdictional, if that question be raised" before the. executive or the courts of the'surrendering State, it is presented in a somewhat different aspect after .t'he accused
As the defence in this case is claimed to be jiirisdictional, and, in any aspect, is equally available in the State as in the Federal courts, we do not feel called upon at this time to con-, sider it or to review the propriety of thе decision of the court below. Ve adhere to the views expressed in
Ex parte Royall,
The judgment of the court below refusing the discharge, is therefore,
Affirmed.
