Ex parte Law

56 So. 79 | Ala. Ct. App. | 1911

de GBAFFENEIED, J.

On the 17th day of June, 1910, the Governor of Florida made a requisition upon the Governor of Alabama for the arrest of appellant and for his extradition from the state of Alabama to the state of Florida upon the ground that appellant was charged in the state of Florida with the crime of embezzlement, and-was a fugitive from justice, and had taken refuge in the state of Alabama. Attached to the requisition were what purported to be an affidavit made by one Hickman before one Hatheway, in which he states that appellant ‘'is charged by affidavit, a certified copy of which is attached, with the crime of embezzlement committed on or about July 28, 1908, in the county of Holmes, state of Florida, and is a fugitive from justice and is in the state of Alabama,” and a copy of an indictment which purported to have been found by the grand jury of Holmes county, Fla., against appellant for the embezzlement of $40, on the 28th day of July, 1908. The requisition of the Governor of Florida contains a certificate that the documents attached to it were authentic. The affidavit of Hickman, above referred to, does not, in its body or elsewhere, describe Hatheway, and there is nothing in the papers indicating what, if any, office Hatheway held under the laws of Florida. The above were all of the documents attached to the requisition of the Governor of Florida upon the Governor of Alabama, and, to be specific, there was not attached to it any paper purporting to be an affidavit charging appellant with embezzlement on or about the 28th day of July, 1908, or at any other time.

For the purposes of this opinion, we discard the alleged affidavit of Hickman from our consideration. It is not necessary for us to consider it for any purpose, nor do we do so. We have,’ however, unquestionably, before us the requisition of the Governor-of Florida *260upon the Governor of Alabama for the arrest and extradition of defendant, with a copy of an indictment certified by the Governor of Florida as authentic, and this -was all that was necessary for the consideration of the Governor of Alabama in honoring the requisition and issuing the warrant authorizing the arrest of appellant. “It is the settled law of this state that a prima, facie case is made when the return shows: A demand or requisition for the prisoner made by the executive of another state, from which he is alleged to have fled; a copy of the indictment found, or affidavit made before a magistrate charging the alleged fugitive with the commission of the crime, certified as authentic by the executive of the state making the demand; and the. warrant of the Governor of Alabama authorizing the arrest.”—Young v. State, 155 Ala. 145, 46 South. 580.

When the executive authority of a state whose laws have been violated makes a demand upon the executive of another state, producing at the time of the demand a copy of the indictment or affidavit certified as authentic, and made before a magistrate, charging the person demanded with a crime against the demanding-state, and the executive upon whom the demand is made becomes satisfied, in any manner that he may deem, satisfactory, that the alleged criminal has taken refuge in the state of which he is the chief executive, it becomes his duty to issue his warrant for the arrest of such alleged criminal, and authorize his extradition to the demanding state.—McNichols v. Pease, 207 U. S. 100, 28 Sup. Ct. 58, 52 L. Ed. 121.

The Governor upon whom such demand is made is without authority to issue his warrant of arrest, in the absence of a duly authenticated copy of the indictment or affidavit certified as authentic, as required *261under section 5278 of the Revised Statutes of the United States (U. S. Comp. St. 1909, p. 3597), charging the alleged criminal with the violation of a criminal law of the demanding state.—McNichols v. Pease, supra.

The Governor upon whom such demand is made is not required to demand proof of the demanding state that the alleged criminal is a fugitive from justice, or that he is within the borders of his state. These matters he may* determine for himself, either from the papers accompanying the requisition or from independent inquiries.—McNichols v. Pease, supra.

A person arrested in such proceeding is entitled, before his extradition, upon petition for writ of habeas corpus, to question the lawfulness of his arrest, and may show, if he can by legal evidence, that he is not, in fact, a fugitive from justice of the demanding state, within the meaning of the Constitution and laws of the United States.—McNichols v. Pease, supra.

On the 21st day of June, 1910, the Governor of Alabama honored the requisition, and issued a warrant authorizing the arrest of appellant and his delivery to H. E. Hickman, the duly authorized agent of Florida, for extradition. Appellant was arrested under said warrant and delivered to said Hickman, but, before he had reached the state of Florida with appellant, the appellant filed his petition for a writ of habeas corpus with the probate judge of Houston county, alleging that he was illegally restrained of his liberty, because the process under which he was arrested was void, and the appellant had not committed any crime against the laws of Florida, and was not a fugitive from justice.

Upon the hearing of the petition, the court, against the objection of the appellant, received in' evidence *262the saicl warrant of the Governor of Alabama and certified copies, pnade by the Secretary of State of Alabama under the seal of the state, of the above-described requisition of the Governor of Florida, of the alleged affidavit of Hickman and the indictment against appellant, and also, against the objection of appellant, certain alleged statutes of the state of Florida defining the crime of and providing for the punishment of embezzlement.

Section 3983 of the Cod provides that all transcripts or papers or books, or parts thereof, required by la,w to be kept in the office of a public officer, when certified by the proper custodian thereof, must be received in evidence in all courts; and section 3988 of the Gode provides that public or private statutes, when printed in a book purporting on the face thereof to have been printed by the authority of any state or territory, are evidence without further proof. The requisition of the Governor of Florida, with the copy of the‘indictment duly authenticated attached, are, under our law, required to be kept in the office of the Secretary of State, and the Secretary of State is the proper custodian thereof. The certified copies of said requisition and its attached indictment, signed by the Secretary of State and certified by him in his official capacity, under the seal of the state, were therefore properly receivable in evidence on the hearing of this case.

The statutes of the state of Florida defining the crime of embezzlement and providing punishment therefor were also properly admitted in evidence. They were printed in a book which purported on its face to have been printed under the authority of the state of Florida, and, under the above section of the Code, were admissible in evidence without other proof as to their authenticity.

*263In the case of State of Alabama v. W. M. Currie, Infra, 56 South. 736, the petitioner for the writ of habeas corpus was arrested upon a warrant of arrest issued by the Governor of Alabama upon the requisition of the Governor of Oklahoma, demanding the arrest and extradition of the petitioner for the crime of embezzlement against the laws of Oklahoma, to which requisition there' was attached, not an indictment, bulan affidavit charging the petitioner with the crime of embezzlement in the state of Oklahoma. In that case as in this, the petitioner alleged that he had committed no crime against the laws of Oklahoma, and wa-s not a fugitive from justice. The defendant was, on the hearing of the petition by the trial court, granted his discharge, because the only evidence introduced' showing authority for his arrest was the warrant of arrest of the Governor of Alabama and a certified copy, properly certified under the seal of the state by the Secretary of State, of said requisition of the Governor of Oklahoma and said attached affidavit.

On appeal by the state from the order of the trial court discharging said petitioner, there was, among the members of this court, a division of opinion as to whether the petitioner was entitled to his discharge, embezzlement not being a crime at common law, and this court, being unable to take judicial cognizance of the statutes of Oklahoma, was in doubt as to whether any evidence had been introduced showing that the petitioner was, in fact, charged with any crime against the laws of Oklahoma. The fact of this division of opinion was by this court certified to the Supreme Court, and the Supreme Court-, in an opinion to this court, held that the warrant of arrest of the Governor of Alabama and the certified copy of the requisition of the Governor of Oklahoma, stating that petitioner was *264charged with the crime of embezzlement, and that information had been received that he was a fugitive from justice and had taken refuge in Alabama, with the attached copy of the affidavit charging the petitioner with the offense of embezzlement against the laws of Oklahoma, constituted prima facie evidence that embezzlement is a crime against the laws of Oklahoma, and authorized the arrest and extradition of the petitioner, in the absence of any evidence, on behalf of the petitioner, that embezzlement was not a crime against the laws of Oklahoma, or that he was not a fugitive from justice under a charge of embezzlement in the state of Oklahoma.. In that case,' as in the present case, the petitioner offered no evidence that embezzlement was not a crime against- the laws of the demanding state and, pursuant to the opinion of the Supreme Court to this court, the judgment of the trial court discharging the petitioner was reversed and the cause remanded for further proceedings in accordance with that opinion.—State of Alabama v. Currie, Infra, 56 South. 736.

In this case, therefore, when the state introduced in evidence the warrant of arrest issued by the Governor of Alabama, the copy of the requisition of the Governor of Florida, and its attached copy of the indictment preferred by the grand jury of I-Iolmes county, Fla., charging the petitioner with the crime of embezzlement and also introduced the statutes of Florida defining the crime, of embezzlement and punishment therefor, it made out prima facie a legal cause for the detention of the petitioner and.his extradition to the state of Florida. While, under our decisions, it was unnecessary for the state to have introduced in evidence the statutes of Florida defining embezzlement, that erl*265deuce was cumulative evidence on the subject, and was properly receivable as 'such.

The requirements of the federal extradition statutes, as to the certificate by the demanding Governor of the requisition, were in this case complied with, and, in the absence of any evidence of the petitioner that he was not in fact a fugitive from justice of the state of Florida, the court properly refused to grant the petitioner his discharge.—State of Alabama v. Currie, supra; U. S. Rev. St. § 5278; 19 Cyc. 91.

The judgment of the court below is affirmed.

Affirmed.

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