265 F. 959 | W.D. Wash. | 1920
The petitioner, held under a warrant of arrest regularly issued out of the state court, applies to this court for release on habeas corpus, charging that he is unlawfully restrained of his liberty. It is urged before this court that the petitioner was discharged by the state court upon hearing under habeas corpus, and thereafter arrested upon a warrant issued upon an information based upon the original facts presented to the court in the habeas corpus proceedings, and that the decree of discharge is res
“It is the settled doctrine of this court that, although the Circuit Courts of the United States and the several justices and judges thereof have authority, under existing statutes, to discharge, upon habeas corpus, one held in custody by state authority in violation of the Constitution, or of any treaty or law of the United States, the court, justice, or judge has a discretion as to the time and mode in which the power so conferred shall be exerted, and that in view of the relations existing, under our system of government, between the judicial tribunals of the Union and of the several states, a federal court or a federal judge will not ordinarily interfere by habeas eorpus with the regular course of procedure under state authority, but will leave the applicant for the writ of habeas corpus to exhaust the remedies afforded by the state for determining whether he is illegally restrained of his liberty. After the highest court of the state, competent under the state law to dispose of the matter, has finally acted, the case can be brought to this court for reexamination. The exceptional eases in which a federal court or judge may sometimes appropriately interfere by habeas corpus in advance of final action by the authorities of the state are those of great urgency that require to be promptly disposed of, such, for instance, as cases ‘involving the authority and operations of the general government, or the obligations of this country to, or its relations with, foreign nations.’ ”
In Reid v. Jones, 187 U. S. 153, 23 Sup. Ct 89, 47 L. Ed. 116, the court said that a party in custody for alleged violation of criminal state statutes, contending deprivation of constitutional rights, must “ordinarily first take his case to the highest court in the state in which the judgment could be reviewed,” and thence _b,ring it, if unsuccessful there, to the Supreme Court by writ of error, and only in exceptional cases would the federal court intervene by writ of habeas 'corpus in advance of final action of the highest court of the state. In