85 P. 190 | Idaho | 1906
The prisoner, Charles H. Moyer, applied to this court, through his counsel, for a writ of habeas corpus, requiring E. L. Whitney, warden of the state penitentiary, to produce the body of the prisoner at a time and place to be designated by the court, and to make true return of the cause or causes of his detention. A writ was thereupon issued, and the warden, at the time designated, produced the body of the prisoner in court, and made return that he was detaining him under order of the probate judge of Canyon county, and for that purpose as the agent of the sheriff of Canyon county. The return contains a certified copy of the order made by the probate judge, wherein it recites that the Canyon county jail is an unfit place for the detention of the prisoner, and orders and directs that he be temporarily detained in the state penitentiary at Boise City. The return further shows that on the twelfth day of February, 1906, a complaint, duly verified, by Owen M. Van Duyn, prosecuting attorney in and for Can
■It is proper to first observe that the extradition proceedings and process by and under which the prisoner was brought into this state appear in all respects regular and in due form.
With the foregoing statement of the ease, we will pass at once to a consideration of the questions of law involved.
We are of the opinion that after the prisoner is within the jurisdiction of the demanding state, and is there applying to its courts for relief, he cannot raise the question as to whether or not he has been, as a matter of fact, a fugitive from the justice of the state within the meaning of the federal eonstitu
e prisoner was regularly charged with the commission of a crime in Idaho, and against her laws. The governor of Colorado honored the requisition from the governor oí Idaho, and
One who commits a crime against the laws of a state, whether committed by him while in person on its soil or absent in a foreign jurisdiction, and acting through some other agency or medium, has no vested right of asylum in a sister state (Mahon v. Justice, supra; Lascelles v. Georgia, 148 U. S. 543, 37 L. ed. 551, 13 Sup. Ct. Rep. 687; Ker v. Illinois, 119 U. S. 436, 30 L. ed. 421, 17 Sup. Ct. Rep. 225; In re Moore, 75 Fed. 824), and the fact that a wrong is committed against him in the manner or method pursued in subjecting his person to the jurisdiction of the complaining state, and that-such wrong is redressible either in the civil or criminal courts, can constitute no legal or just reason why he himself should not an
No case has been called to our attention, and, in fact, we have been unable to find any instance where the prisoner has alleged as a ground for his discharge a like state of facts to those set up in the answer in this case, and to which the motion is here directed. We have, however, examined several authorities'in which the same course of reasoning adopted by the courts, in holding that the prisoner should not be discharged, is equally, and as logically, applicable to the facts of this case.
Professor Peabody, sometime lecturer on Criminal Law, before the Harvard Law School, in his text on Interstate Extradition, at page 99, 19 Cyclopedia, states the general principle touching the rights of prisoners illegally brought into a jurisdiction as follows: “It is not a cause for exemption from prosecution for a crime that the accused was illegally arrested in another state and unlawfully brought within the jurisdiction of the state against which he offended; he is not protected from prosecution even if he is kidnaped in the other state and brought into the state without a semblance of right. It follows, therefore, that he is not wronged by being subjected to its jurisdiction, although the requisition proceedings were not strictly legal. As the state to which a person has been illegally brought may hold him to answer for his offenses against it, it may arrest and surrender him on extradition proceedings to answer for his offenses against another state. The state from which he was wrongfully taken has no redress except to demand the extradition of the abductors that they in turn may be prosecuted by it. ’ ’
In Mahon v. Justice, supra, a case in which a controversy arose between the states of West Virginia and Kentucky, over
In Re Cook, supra, the United States circuit court had under consideration the validity of an extradition granted by the governor where the party in fact had not been in the demanding state at the time the offense was committed, and the court, speaking of the validity of the executive warrant, said: ‘ ‘ His warrant, unassailed by competent authority, is complete
Counsel for petitioner lay much stress on the proposition that neither an individual nor the state can be allowed to gain an advantage by means of an unlawful or wrongful act. That proposition is true, but to gain an advantage means to obtain a superiority of position or opportunity which would not appear to have been done in such a case as this, admitting all the facts charged to be true. Where the state accuses a person of the commission of an offense against its laws, the mere apprehension of the accused, although in an unlawful manner, and subjecting him to the jurisdiction of the courts to answer the charge cannot amount to a legal advantage any more than if the accused had voluntarily surrendered himself to the authorities. The wrongful or unlawful means employed in making an arrest, however criminal they might be, could not be chargeable to the sovereignty, which can commit no crime, but would be the crime of the individual who committed the act and would furnish no reason or justification for discharging the prisoner when brought before the court. If, therefore, a crime should be committed by any person in abducting, apprehending or arresting the accused, such person may be held to answer in the proper jurisdiction for the commission of the
Numerous authorities are cited on behalf of petitioner to the effect that a lawful rendition cannot be had of one who was not in fact within the demanding state when the offense is charged to have been committed. The latest and highest authority that has been brought to our attention on this phase of the case is Hyatt v. New York, 188 U. S. 691, 47 L. ed. 657, 33 Sup. Ct. Rep. 456; S. C., 172 N. Y. 176, 92 Am. St. Rep. 706, 64 N. E. 825, 60 L. R. A. 774. As we have heretofore said, the question as to whether or not the prisoner was in fact a refugee from justice cannot arise at this time in the case at bar. Except for the construction placed on the second clause of section 2 of the fourth article of the constitution of the United States, and section 5278 of the United States Revised Statutes, by the highest court of the land, we should undoubtedly incline to the belief that they were designed and intended to authorize the extradition of any person who has offended against the laws of one state and is thereafter found in another state. It would seem that by the language: “Who shall flee from justice,” is rather meant a flight'from a punishment — a penalty or condition which would follow capture and conviction— than a flight from a place or the territorial limits of the outraged commonwealth. The pursuing hand of justice demanding vindication and vengeance is a much stronger inducement to flight than the mere discomforts of place or the horrors or dislike of state lines. While the belief just expressed is the unanimous view of this court as to the real purpose and intent of the extradition clause of the federal constitution, it amounts to the merest observation in this case and in no respect influences its decision. We are not unmindful of the fact that the almost uniform current of authority, both federal and state, is to the effect that the flight must be from a place, namely, from the territorial limits of the state demanding the* prisoner. It is worthy of note, however, that under ■ that line of authority, as was suggested on the argument of Uis ease, an assassin on the Oregon bank of the great waterway that marks our western boundary might, by firing across
Counsel place considerable stress on In re Robinson, 29 Neb. 135, 26 Am. St. Rep. 378, 45 N. W. 267, 8 L. R. A. 398, a case where the supreme court of Nebraska ordered a prisoner discharged because he had been forcibly brought into the state without requisition process. That case does not meet the facts of the case at bar; besides, it seems to rest on the rule adopted in civil cases rather than that applied to criminal cases. The statement there made as to the current of authority on the question of interstate extradition leaves it open to the criticism that it is not a sound or carefully considered case. In fact, the weight of authority is entirely the other way, as will be seen from an examination of Lascelles v. State, 148 U. S. 537, 37 L. ed. 552, 13 Sup. Ct. Rep. 687; Lascelles v. State, 90 Ga. 347, 35 Am. St. Rep. 216, 220, 16 S. E. 945, 946. See 11 Rose’s Notes on U. S. Rep., p. 239.
The motion having been sustained, the case remains here on the answer of the warden which is admitted to be true. The prisoner has been indicted on the charge of murder; and for the purposes of this case, whether as a principal or accessory, is immaterial under our statute (Rev. Stats., secs. 7679, 7698; Territory v. Guthrie, 2 Idaho, 432, 17 Pac. 39); as is also the question as to whether he was within or without the state at the time of the alleged commission of the offense. (Rev. Stats., secs. 6331, 7481.) The proceedings appear regular on the face of the returns, and in conformity with the laws of the state, and since the prisoner is being held under process duly and regularly issued by a court of competent criminal jurisdiction, we are commanded by statute to remand him to custody. The writ is quashed, and the prisoner is remanded to the custody of the officer.