Thе appellant has appealed from the discharge of the writ of habeas corpus he had applied for below and his remand to the custody of the respondents, the sheriff and jailer of Randolph county, W. Va. He will be referred to as the petitioner. His original petition was sworn to on August 20th last, and was filed on the next day. In it he alleged that he was arrested on the 19th upon a telegram from the chief of police of Cleveland, Ohio, asking that he be arrested and held because he had in Cleveland given a cheek for $15 to a hotel when he' had no funds in the bank on which he had drawn it. When arrested he was asked whether he was willing to go to Ohio to answer the charge, and at first he said, "Yes,” but aftеr having obtained the advice of counsel he said he would not go unless he was properly extradited. Nevertheless he averred that sоme Ohio officer was then on his way to get and take him to Ohio without any extradition warrant from the Governor of West Virginia. The writ duly issued. The return of the respondents was filed on the 23d and set up that the petitioner was held by them in virtue of a committment directed to the respondents by a justice'оf the county, committing him for further hearing upon the charge of having on June 13, 1924, unlawfully, knowingly, and falsely delivered to the Hotel Cleveland, Cleveland, Ohiо, a cheek signed by him and drawn upon the Davis Trust Company, of Elkins, W. Va. After a hearing, the learned judge below declined to discharge the petitiоner, dismissed his petition, and remanded him to the custody of the respondents. Thereupon the petitioner took this, appeal and was аdmitted to bail pending the action of this court.
The contention of the petitioner that he could not lawfully be arrested without a warrant by а peace officer of West Virginia for detention for the reasonable time necessary to enable a requisition for him to be regularly made cannot be sustained. Burton v. New York Central & Hudson River Railroad Co.,
One who is held in custody contrary to the provisions of that statute is therefore detained in violation of the Constitution and laws of the United States, and the District Court has jurisdiction to inquire into the cause of his detention and, if it be found insufficient, to discharge him. The proceedings for extraditiоn are executive functions. In re Leary,
To give as much as the names of the literally scores of cases in whieh the same jurisdiction has been since exercised would be to waste time and space. It may, however, be worth while to call attention to the fact that while a pеrson held in custody for extradition is in a sense detained under or by color of the authority of the United States, he is not in the custody of federal оfficials or held under a warrant of its courts. Ableman v. Booth,
As a corоllary it follows that if the accused has first invoked the aid of the state tribunals, the courts of the United States under ordinary circumstances require him tо exhaust his remedies in them before seeking the interposition of the Federal power. Appleyard v. Massachusetts,
The law being settled as stated above, we think that the petitioner was entitled to ask the court below to retain jurisdiction of his ’application so long as wаs necessary to insure that he should not against his will be removed into Ohio by state officials in violation of his constitutional rights, as ho alleges they threatened to do. On the other hand, he should not have been summarily discharged from custody. His petition for habeas corpus was filed beforе the Governor of West Virginia had any hearing upon the extradition proceedings or indeed before there had been time for any aрplication to the Governor for an extradition warrant. In such ease the proper course would have been to suspend the hearing of the writ for such reasonable time as might be required to enable the Governor to hear, consider, and act upon any application for one. Ex parte Thaw (D. C.)
Reversed.
