185 Ind. 505 | Ind. | 1916
— This is an appeal from a final order of the judge of the Knox Circuit Court ordering that appellant be turned over to appellee Davis, as the agent of the state of Georgia, to be returned to- that state under a requisition issued by the Governor of Georgia on the Governor of Indiana. Appellant was arrested by appellee Wolf, as sheriff
The errors assigned and presented are based upon the rulings of the court referred to, and as the same facts are before the court and the same questions of law raised by each of the errors presented, the court will, for convenience, consider only the action of the trial court in sustaining the motion of appellees Davis and Wolf to strike out the second paragraph of objections of appellant. Omitting the the formal parts, this paragraph is as follows: “Comes now the said Morgan W. Cozart and for a second and further paragraph of objections to the application of John Wolf and W. M. Davis to have said Cozart ordered delivered over to the said W. M. Davis to be taken to the State of Georgia to answer an indictment for misdemeanor, and says that heretofore, to wit, on the-day of October, 1914, he was apprehended while in the state of Indiana, the place of his domicile, and arrested by an United States Marshal for the Eastern Division of the United States District Court in the State of Mississippi upon a capias issued out of said court upon an indictment theretofore returned by the Grand Jury in said District Court of the United States for said Eastern Division of the state of
“That said Marshal took this defendant to said state of Mississippi and delivered him in said court and into the custody thereof. That said court required the defendant to execute his bond in the penal sum of five thousand dollars conditioned for his appearance in said court to answer said charge on the 5th day of April, 1915, and thereupon he executed said bond with LeRoy M. Wade as surety thereon and said court thereupon turned over the custody of said defendant to the said Wade to have and to hold until said 5th day of April, 1915, when he was required by the' terms of his said recognizance to deliver said Cozart to said court for trial. That ever since said-day of October, 1914, he has been in the custody of the said District Court of the United States upon said process and that his trial is set for said 5th day of April, 1915, in said court and that it will be necessary for him to start for the city of Aberdeen in said state of Mississippi where said court will sit to hear said cause within the next two days and that on the 28th day of March, 1915, while he was in the custody of said bondsman and of said District Court and making preparations for his said trial and his return to said court he was arrested by the said W. M. Davis and John Wolf who have unlawfully and without right held him in custody ever since and by this proceeding are attempting to take him to the state of Georgia to a point more than four hundred miles from said city of Aberdeen and there to cast him in prison and thereby prevent his appearance in said United States District Court at said time and place. That said defendant is a stranger in said state of Georgia and at the place where it is proposed to take him and that it will be
“Defendant further says that he will be in the custody of said District Court until his cause is disposed of and that, as soon as the proceedings are ended against him in said District Court, the state of Georgia can without inconvenience or delay obtain the arrest of this defendant. Defendant says that the proceedings herein are interfering with his lawful rights as a prisoner of the United States of America. .Wherefore he asks that the petition be not granted.”
In the case of Taylor v. Taintor (1872), 16 Wall. 366-370, 21 L. Ed. 287, the Supreme Court of the United States declared the doctrine that: “Where a State court and a court of the United States may each take jurisdiction, the tribunal which first gets it holds it to the exclusion of the other, until its duty is fully performed, and the jurisdiction invoked is exhausted; and this rule applies alike in both civil and criminal cases. It is indeed a principle of universal jurisprudence that where jurisdiction has attached to person or thing, it is — unless there is some provision to the contrary — exclusive in effect until it has wrought its function.”
The trial court did not err in its rulings and its judgment is affirmed.
Note. — -Reported in 112 N. E. 241. Extradition of a person who is under confinement in asylum state, note 24 L.R. A. (N. S.) 799, 800; 112 Am. St. 115. General discussion as to extradition and fugitives subject thereto, 28 L. R. A. 289; 51 L. R. A. (N. S.) 668; 112 Am. St. 103. See under (1) 19 Cyc 95; (5) 6 O. J.' 1042; 5 Cyo 126.