1 Park. Cr. 429 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1853
delivered the following opinion:
The prisoner is brought up on a habeas corpus issued by Mr. Nelson as commissioner, appointed by the. United States circuit court for this district, under the act of congress for the extradition of fugitives from other countries, pursuant to treaties with those countries, and issued also to the United States marshal for this district. Those officers return, that the prisoner is in the custody of the marshal on a warrant issued by the commissioner, charging the prisoner with having committed in England the crime of forgery, upon the back of a bill of exchange; the warrant orders his arrest, and that he be brought before the commissioner that the evidence of his criminality might be
Leigh says that the endorsement, “ Chas. Macintosh & Co.,” is an imitation of the handwriting of Mr. Hugh Birley, a partner in the firm, but that it is not his handwriting, or that of any member of the firm; and that the words “ received for ” and “Alex Heilbonn,” are in the undisguised handwriting of the said Alex. Heilbonn. He also says that the bill of exchange came to Macintosh & Co., by letter, and that it and the letter “ were surreptitiously taken possession of by the prisoner, and that the prisoner had no authority to write such an endorsement. That after the prisoner fled from England Leigh opened the desk he had used and there found a memorandum in Heilbonn’s handwriting, headed “ accounts not aeounted for,” and among the items in that account this bill of exchange was entered as for £42, 7s. 6d. He also states that Heilbonn had been a clerk of Macintosh & Co., for two years, and that his duty was to collect outstanding book debts only, and he had no authority to endorse bills of exchange, or to receive the amounts thereof; and all such securities were paid to the bankers of the firm. The question now presented is whether these facts, if admitted to be true, show that the prisoner committed forgery. Two cases precisely similar in principle have been twice decided in England, and in each it was held that the offence was not forgery. In Rex v. Arscott, (6 Carr. & Payne, 408,) the prisoner had endorsed on a bill of exchange, payable to the order of R. Aickman, these words: — “ Received for R. Aickman; G. Arscott.” On the trial the court held this was not forgery. Littledale, J., said — “I take it that to forge a receipt for money is uniting the name of the person for whom it is received. But in this case the acts done by the prisoner were receiving for another person and signing his own name. Under these circumstances the prisoner must be acquitted upon the indictment.” Vaughan, J., said: — “I am of the same opinion and I think it is much better that the most guilty offender should oscape than that the law should be strained to meet any particular case. In Regina v. White, (2 Carr. and
It was argued that on habeas corpus the judge should not go beyond the warrant, and if thatw'ere regular he should remand the prisoner. The answer to this is that the commissioner has no power to issue the warrant, and no jurisdiction under the act of congress until a complaint on oath be made before him. Those, therefore, who oppose the discharge of the prisoner in order to show that there is a valid warrant, are bound to show that it was issued on such complaint on oath, and to show this they must produce the complaint. If when produced it shows •its original invalidity, it must fall to the ground and the warrant with it. In the case of Metzger, before the present presiding judge of the Supreme Court in this district, and in the case of Haynard before the late Justice Sandford, both of these distinguished justices went behind the warrant and discharged the prisoners. In the case of Metzger, which was under the extraditional treaty with France, Mr. Butler, the United States district attorney, appeared against the prisoner, and among his printed points, while he said that “ the validity” of the mandate was the only question then to be decided, he added that in order to its decision it was proper to look into the provisions of the treaty, the orders of Judge Betts, contained in the return, and the evidence presented to and taken before him, (1 Barb. S. C. R. 251,) and he did not rely on the mandate of the president merely, but on it as fully warranted by “ the facts of the case.” In his view, it was essential on habeas corpus to go behind even the mandate of the president of the United States, and, to see what the facts of the case were, and what the evi-
Prisons discharged.