170 S.W. 1098 | Tex. Crim. App. | 1914
Lead Opinion
This is a habeas corpus proceeding arising out of the arrest of relator on extradition warrant issued by the Governor of Texas on the request of the Governor of Louisiana. *321
Without going into a detailed statement of the evidence adduced on the trial under the writ of habeas corpus, the substance of it is, that relator was convicted of a misdemeanor in Lake Charles, Louisiana, and came to Texas. An extradition requisition was honored by the Governor of Texas and relator was taken in custody. Accompanying these papers was a certified copy of the information filed in Lake Charles, but there is no certified copy of an affidavit or indictment accompanying the papers, at least none in the record. In this attitude relator's contention is that the trial court erred in remanding him to custody to be extradited to Louisiana. The Act of Congress provides that where a party has fled from the demanding State to the asylum State, in order to secure his extradition there must accompany the requisition a certified copy of an affidavit or indictment, as the case may be, charging him with a violation of law. This has been decided in numerous cases to be a sine qua non for his arrest and return to the demanding State. So far as we are aware all the decisions so hold, unless it be Ex parte Bergman,
We believe the rule laid down in Cheatham case, supra, in Roberts v. Riley, supra, in Ex parte Hart, supra, and all the other cases referred *322
to, lays down the correct rule, and that the Bergman case in
The judgment is reversed and the relator is ordered discharged.
Relator discharged.
Addendum
I am somewhat in doubt on the question raised and for the present express no opinion.