delivered the opinion of the Court. -
Thе appellant is .charged with embezzlement of' public funds while a public officer of the United States of Mex
*312
iсo. He was held for surrender to that Government after a hearing before a District Judge who found that there was probable cause to believe that he was guilty and that he was a fugitive from justice. Writs of
habeas corpus
and certiorari werе issued by another District Judge who came to the same conclusion and remanded the appellant. The сase is brought here directly upon the somewhat strained assumption that the construction of our treaty with Mexiсo is involved. Being here, out of a .natural anxiety to save the appellant if possible from being sent from New Hampshire to Mexico for trial, it has been presented as if this were the final stage and every technical detail were to be proved beyond a reasonable doubt. This is not the law. Form is not to be insisted upon beyond the requirements of safety and justice.
Glucksman
v.
Henkel,
The foregoing are general princiрles relating Ip extradition, but there are further limits to
habeas corpus.
That writ as Has been said very often cannot take the plаce of a writ of error. It is not a means for rehearing what the magistrate already has decided. The allеged fugitive from justice has had his hearing and
habeas corpus
is available only to inquire whether the magistrate had jurisdiction, whether the offence charged is within the treaty and, by a somewhat liberal extension, whether there was any evidence warranting the finding that there was reasonable ground to believe the accused guilty.
Benson
v.
McMahon,
It is objected in the first place that the complaint and warrant are defective. The complaint was filed by an As
*313
sistant District Attorney of the United States for the District of New Hamрshire. It alleged that the complainant was informed
‘
through diplomatic channel ’ that the appellant wаs duly and legally charged by the United States of Mexico with the crime,- and on behalf of that government prayed thе árrest. Of course whatever form of words was used, the complaint necessarily was upon information, but as aрpeared at the hearing it was filed by order of the Attorney General, upon request of the Secretary of State, enclosing a request for the extradition from the Mexican Government and a copy of proсeedings in a Mexican Court finding that the crime was duly proved against the appellant and ordering his arrest, many рages of evidence being appended.’ This was enough.
Yordi
v.
Nolte,
The final objection is that there is no evidence that the defendant is guilty of the crime charged. This is rathеr a bold contention seeing that upon the evidence the appellant was Cashier in the Departmеnt of.Special Taxes, had sole charge of the money, kept the books in his-own handwriting, that those books disсlose a considerable deficit in the cash, and that he fled the country. He is said to have gambled. On his books the appellant mingled two classes of.accounts and by so doing made detection difficult if he was guilty. First there аre the items *314 of cash actus j received and paid out. entered respectively under the heads ingress and egress. But besides these were other transactions called virtual in which he did not receive the cash but was to enter a seriеs,of debits and credits. These concerned the petr^eum tax which was a stamp tax.. The taxpayers handеd to the national treasurer .their tax returns, called manifestations, paid their tax. and received from him a mеmorandum .receipt. The manifestation and’receipt then were handed/to the appellant. He forwarded the receipt to the comptroller and entered the amount in his egress column. He should then send thе manifestation to the stamp department, which put on the proper stamps and returned it to appellant, the amount being entered as ingress. In the interval between the egress and the ingress, he appeared аs having paid out so much money and could use that amount until it was necessary to enter the cross item. As the taxрayers were not very prompt in calling for their papers it was possible for him to keep their manifestations for a time without charging himself, withdraw the amount with which he should eharge himself for them and present an accоunt that was correct upon its face. By repeating the process it was possible to disguise an-embezzlеment for a considerable time. This is what from his books he seems to have done. . It is unnecessary to go into greater detail. We are of opinion that probable cause to believe the defendant guilty was,shown by cоmpetent evidence and that the judgment remanding the appellant must be. affirmed.
Judgment affirmed.'
