102 F. 878 | 7th Cir. | 1900
Under the designation of Count Toulouse de Lautrec, alias Castaño, the petitioner is imprisoned for the purpose of extradition, pursuant to section 5370 of the Revised Statutes of the United States, under a mittimus issued by a United States commissioner for the Northern district of Illinois; and this appeal is from an order of the district court for such district whereby his petition thereupon for writs of habeas corpus and certiorari was dismissed for insufficiency, and the petitioner was remanded to the custody of the marshal. The petition is voluminous in the recital of proceedings and matters which are wholly irrelevant to the jurisdictional issue involved, but singularly deficient in allegations of fact respecting that issue. It shows the fact of the hearing of testimony before the commissioner, presumably material for his decision, but does not purport to state even its substance; and in respect of the portion of the evidence which appears in the petition, and is made the basis of the argument for setting aside the action of the commissioner, the reference purports to be a mere summary or interpretation by
The contention on behalf of the appellant, briefly stated, is this: That the facts recited in the petition show that the coupons in question were genuine in their origin, because printed under the direction and authority of the corporations respectively purporting to issue them, and in the exact form in which they were uttered by the accused; that the innocence of the printers in retaining the printed copies for samples or like legitimate purpose, and in giving them to the accused for such purpose, saves them from characterization as forgeries, and their subsequent utterance by the accused without alteration is not the utterance of a forged instrument, however fraudulent the transaction may otherwise appear; that fraudulent use in uttering is not legal evidence of the primary fact of forgery. These propositions rest in the first place on the erroneous assumption that the printed copies of the coupons so retained in the hands of the printers were authorised by the corporation, and therefore genuine in fact. The authority for the printing extended only to the impressions of which delivery was to be made, and was in fact made, to the corporation ordering them. Until their acceptance, adoption, and issue by the corporate authorities, it is obvious that even the copies so delivered were not corporate obligations, and were not genuine in fact. It is true that the making by the printers of the lithographic form of the instruments, including the lithographic facsimile of the signature on the coupon form, was authorized; and it is alike true that the impressions or copies made by the printers in excess of those delivered upon the orders, retained for innocent purposes, were not within the legal definition of forgery, while so retained either in their
We are of opinion that the facts stated in the petition are competent evidence to establish the fact that the coupons were forged obligations, both at common law and within the statute of Illinois, — namely, the law of the forum as fixed by the treaty, — and that the petition fails to state grounds for the issue of the writs. The order of the •district court is therefore affirmed.