In re Galbreath

139 N.W. 1050 | N.D. | 1913

Bruce, J.

(after stating tbe facts as above). Tbe petitioner contends in this case that be is not a fugitive from justice within tbe terms and meaning of § 2, art 4, of tbe Federal Constitution, and of §§ 5278 and 5279 of tbe Revised Statutes of tbe United States, and of § 10293, Rev. Codes 1905, of North Dakota. Upon tbe examination be sought 'to prove that, after tbe check in question went to protest, be bad several conversations on different days with tbe complaining witness, during the last of which be told tbe latter that tbe quickest and best way to raise tbe money was for him, tbe petitioner, to go to Enderlin, North Dakota, where be was positive be could obtain it, and that tbe complaining witness said “All right;” that be left Minnesota at 11 o’clock that night and came to North Dakota; that be left Minnesota on tbe 24th of January, and arrived at Enderlin, North Dakota, on tbe 25th; that bis brother, from whom be hoped to get tbe money, lived 7 miles out of Enderlin, and that upon bis arrival be called him up .by telephone, but was informed that be was not at home; that be *584did not make any further inquiry until about two weeks afterwards, when be was informed by the constable at Enderlin that be was wanted in Minneapolis, and on the following morning a deputy sheriff from Minneapolis came to take him back to- Minnesota. He says that up to that time he made no effort to return the money, but that after his arrest by the deputy he had a conversation with the county attorney, and offered to pay the money, and that at the time of the application, he had the money with which to pay the demand, having raised it after his arrest, and four or five days before the hearing. He also testified that prior thereto, and on the next day after his arrival in North Dakota, he wrote to the complaining witness and told him that his brother was not at home; and that he was waiting and would see him as soon as possible and raise the money; that his brother did not get back to Enderlin until Saturday, a week before the hearing, and that during this time he received no word from the complaining witness in Minnesota. He claims, in short, that he came to North Dakota with the consent of the complaining witness, and in order to raise the money, and not for the purpose of fleeing from justice, and that in order to come within the statutes he must be proved to have actually fled from the state of Minnesota for the purpose of avoiding arrest and punishment.

We are fully satisfied that the petitioner is mistaken in'his view of the law,'and that a careful perusal of the authorities and of the history of the adoption and construction of the constitutional provision, and of the act of Congress, will show that to be a fugitive from justice within the meaning of the act of Congress, it is not necessary that the person charged should have left the state in which the crime is alleged to have been committed, after an indictment found, or for the purpose of avoiding prosecution, anticipated or begun, but simply that within another state he committed that which, by its laws, constitutes a crime, and when he is sought to be subjected to its criminal process for his offense he has left its jurisdiction and is found within the territory of another state. Roberts v. Reilly, 116 U. S. 97, 29 L. ed. 549, 6 Sup. Ct. Rep. 291; Ex parte Brown, 28 Fed. 653; Re Keller, 36 Fed. 681; Re White, 5 C. C. A. 29, 14 U. S. App. 87, 55 Fed. 54; State ex rel. Burner v. Richter, 37 Minn. 436, 35 N. W. 9.

A perusal of the cases, indeed, and of Mr. Moore’s admirable dis-*585eussion of the subject in cbap. 4, of bis work on Extradition, will show that this has been the practically uniform construction of the statute and of the constitutional provision from the earliest times. It is the theory followed in practically all of the treaties of the United States, and is the theory of practically all of the decisions. Counsel for petitioner, it is true, cites us to § 569 of Moore on Extradition, in which reference is made to a case where the governor of South Carolina demanded the surrender, from the District of Columbia, of John J. Patterson, a United States Senator from the former state, and in which Senator Patterson was released on a writ of habeas corpus. That case, however, if authority at all, is not authority in the case at bar. The Senator had been sent to Washington, not by the complaining witness or by any private individual, but by the sovereign state of South Carolina, itself, as its representative in Congress. We must remember that a criminal offense is an offense against the sovereign state, and not against an individual; and that no individual, not even the complaining witness, has the power or authority to control the action of his Sovereign, whose dignity alone is sought to be vindicated. It may be that when the sovereign state sends an alleged criminal out of its borders, it is precluded from treating him as a fugitive from justice, but the reasoning does not apply where a private individual is the only one whose consent is pretended to have been obtained. We realize that our holding may be opposed in principle to that of our sister state in the case of Re Todd, 12 S. D. 386, 47 L.R.A. 566, 76 Am. St. Rep. 616, 81 N. W. 637, 12 Am. Crim. Rep. 303, and with Spear on Extradition, 3d ed. 381, but we are satisfied that it is sustained by the overwhelming weight of authority.

The writ is denied.

Bubke, J., being disqualified did not participate.
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