40 F. 824 | U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Eastern Tennessee | 1889
The petitioner has presented his application for a writ of habeas corpus. He alleges that he was arrested under a warrant issued-by a commissioner of this court in which he is charged with counterfeiting the coin of the United States; that he was tried before the commissioner, and found guilty; and, failing to give bond, was committed to jail to await trial at the next term of the court. It is not insisted that the offense charged is not a crime against the United States, or that the commissioner had no authority to hear the case. The petition alleges that the proof heard by the commissioner was insufficient to justify the judgment rendered; that it fails to show probable cause of the petitioner’s guilt. The case is of considerable importance, not only to the petitioner and those similarly situated, but to the government. There are several hundred criminal offenses tried in the federal courts of the eastern and middle districts of Tennessee in every year, and'four-fifths of them, I presume, are commenced before commissioners of the courts. If it be the duty of the court or judge to grant and hear applications for writs of ha-, beas corpus upon the ground of the character or weight of tho proof upon which the commissioners act in these cases, there will be scope and opportunity for an extensive business and great expenditure of the public money in this field of operations. But if the law imposes such a duty, or gives such a right, it must be met and enforced. Proceedings on 'ha-beas corpus in the federal courts are not governed b)? state legislation, but must conform to common-law rules. Ex parte Kaine, 3 Blatchf. 1. We must look to the common law, to the legislation of congress, and the decisions of the federal courts for the principles which should control the determination of this case. There is not absolute uniformity in the decisions of the circuit and district courts in regard to these principles, as applicable to the case under consideration. In Re Stupp, 12 Blatchf. 507, it was held that the court issuing the writ will not retry the case, but will inquire into the jurisdiction and the regularity of the proceedings. In Ex parte Parks, 14 Alb. Law J. 339, it was said that it is only when the proceedings below are entirely void that the prisoner is entitled
In Re Cisson the same result is reached and the same order made.