10 Abb. Pr. 282 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1860
—James M. Górsline is brought before me on habeas corpus, with a return, showing that he had been arrested and is detained under a bench-warrant, dated 24th March, 1860, issued by the county judge of Fulton county, by which the officer is commanded to take this party, indicted in Fulton county Court of Sessions, for obtaining goods under false pretences, and bring him before said court, at the court-house in said county, if in session; and if not in session, to deliver him to the keeper of Fulton county jail, to be kept until discharged by due course of law. The warrant is duly indorsed by one of the police-justices of the city of New York.
It is conceded that this warrant is in due form and regularly issued; but the counsel for the prisoner moves that he be discharged on bail, which he proposes to give in such amount as shall be required; and I am called upon to decide as to the power of a justice of the Supreme Court, in this city, to let this party to bail, after his arrest under said bench-warrant, and before he has been taken to Fulton county.
The Revised Statutes, in relation to this question, provide as follows (2 Rev. Stat., 677, § 63; Laws of 1851, ch. 144; same statutes, 3 Rev. Stat., 5th ed., 956, § 55): That the punishment for the offence of obtaining goods by false pretences shall be imprisonment in a state-prison not exceeding three years, or in a county jail not exceeding one year, or fine, or both such fine and imprisonment. (2 Rev. Stat., 728, § 55; Laws of 1847, ch. 338;
By these statutes, the officer who arrested Gorsline is clearly authorized and required to take him to Fulton county; and no justice of the Supreme Court, or other magistrate or officer out of that county, has authority, in my opinion, to take bail for his appearance, and discharge him from custody. The case of Clark a. Cleveland (6 Hill, 344), is authority for this decision.
It is urged, however, that under the habeas corpus act (2 Rev. Stat., 568, § 43; same statute, 5th ed., Vol. III., 883, § 58), this prisoner should now be let to bail. That section provides for a
The writ of habeas corpus is discharged, and the prisoner remanded to the custody of the officer holding the bench-warrant.