43 F. 517 | E.D.N.C. | 1890
Charles E. Cross and Samuel C. White file their petition for a writ of habeas corpus. It thereby appears that they are confined in the county work-house of Wake county under a judgment pronounced by the superior court of that county upon an indictment charging them with forgery. From the original judgment in their case an appeal
“Toronto, Ontario, April 3, 1888.
“In the Matter of the Extradition of Chas. E. Cross and 8am C. White. Representing the state of North Carolina in the matter of adjustment pending against Chas. E. Cross and Sam C. White in the superior court of the county of Wake, and as United States attorney for the eastern district of North Carolina, charged with the prosecution of all offenses against the United States in said district, I stipulate and covenant to and with said Cross and White that, if they shall surrender themselves to Charles D. Heartt, the person designated by the president of the United States to receive them under the extradition laws, without any proceeding under the extradition act, and shall, so far as they may be able, aid in the delivery to.the special receiver of the State National Bank (E. H. Busbee) of the money brought by them to Canada, and shall return with said Heartt and posse to the state of North Carolina, there to be dealt with according to law, I will not institute, or permit to be instituted, in the courts of. the United States, any indictment or prosecution for any offense under the national banking laws; and that in behalf of the state there shall be no prosecution instituted against them, or either of them, other than those for which extradition is or was about to be sought, to-wit: (1) An indictment for forging a promissory note for $6,250, (describing it;) (2) an indictment for forging a promissory note for $7,500, (describing it;) (3) an indictment for forging a promissory note for $5,800, (describingit.) That said Cross and White shall be received upon like conditions as if they had been extradited upon these prosecutions, and none other.
“C. E. Cross.
“Saji C. White.
“E. H. Busbee.
“In all capacities.”
• In pursuance of this agreement defendants returned to the United State's, and were tried for forgery, and convicted. The indictment upon which they were tried is annexed to this petition. It was found, at March term, 1888, before extradition proceedings were begun, or the
1. The matter is res adjudicata. If Cross and White were put upon trial in violation of an agreement between the state’s agent and themselves, they should have taken the objection in the superior court of Wake in such a way as to have enabled them to take it to the supremo court, when the record was carried there by the writ of certiorari. They cannot be allowed to take their case to the court of last resort in this way.
2. Petitioners were fried in strict conformity to the agreement they produce, upon an indictment pending when the extradition papers were taken out, founded on one of the notes set out in their agreement with Mr, Bnsbeo. If the indictment does not charge an extraditable offense, that objection was open to them in Canada. They consented to come to North Carolina to be tried on this very indictment.
8». The indictment sets forth facts which constitute forgery at common law; but it is not conceived that that is material. Since the recent case of U. S. v. Rauscher, 119 U. S. 407, 7 Sup. Ct. Rep. 284, it is settled that a defendant who has been extradited has a right to exemption from trial for any other offense than that for which he has been surrendered until he shall have had an opportunity to return to the country from which he had been taken. The treaty of 1842 provides for the delivery, mutually, to and by the respective governments of the United States and Great Britain of all persons charged with the crimes of murder, assault with intent to murder, piracy, arson, robbery, or forgery. Without doubt the treaty contemplated only such acts as were, in 1842, held in the two countries to constitute the offense specified. Forgery is not to be confined to forgery at common law, but includes all acts that wore forgery
4. No question arises under the constitution, treaties, or laws of the United States, and therefore the federal courts have no jurisdiction. The defendants were not extradited, and therefore could not have been tried in violation of the treaty of 1842. The case of Ker v. Illinois, 119 U. S. 436, 7 Sup. Ct. Rep. 225, was a stronger one than this, for Ker, who had taken refuge in Peru, had, pending extradition proceedings, been kidnapped in that country, and carried to Illinois for trial. Nevertheless the supreme court held that no case arose under the treaties, laws, or constitution of the United States. Conceding, contrary to the fact, that the state authorities violated the contract between their agent and defendants, there would at most arise either a defense to be interposed by a plea of abatement to the prosecution in Wake county or an action for damages, neither of which matters are relevant to this proceeding.
The conclusion reached, then, is that the defendants have nothing whatever to complain of, since they have been tried in strict conformity to their own agreement; that, if they had ever any cause of objection to the trial in Wake, they lost it by failing to interpose in apt time a plea to the jurisdiction of the case; that no federal question exists, because the defendants were never extradited, but came to North Carolina voluntarily; and, finally, that had the prisoners been extradited, and had they in proper time interposed a plea in abatement on the grounds stated in their petition, the federal courts, although in such case they would have had jurisdiction of the question raised, would yet have been compelled to deny the writ of habeas corpus, because it would still have appeared in the petition and accompanying papers that defendants .were tried for an offense coming within the terms of the treaty of 1842, and for the very offense set forth in the extradition papers. The motion for a writ of habeas corpus, and also the motion for an order to show cause, denied.