12 N.Y.S. 943 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1891
Article 3 in the Code of Civil Procedure prescribes the practice in regard to writs of habeas corpus. Section 2015 provides that a person imprisoned or restrained in his liberty is entitled to a writ of habeas corpus. Section 2017 provides that the application for the writ must be made by a written petition, and mentions the courts and officers who may allow the same. Section 2031 provides that the court or judge before whom the prisoner is brought “must, immediately after the return of the writ, examine into the facts alleged in the return, and into the cause of the imprisonment or restraint of the prisoner, and must make a final order to discharge him therefrom, if no lawful cause for the imprisonment or restraint, or for the continuance thereof, is shown.” Section 2058 provides, viz.: “An appeal maybe taken from an order refusing to grant a writ of habeas corpus, * * * or from a final order, made upon the return of such a writ, to discharge or remand a prisoner, or to dismiss the proceedings.” Section 2059 provides, viz.: “An appeal from a final order, discharging a prisoner committed upon a criminal accusation, or from the affirmance of such an order, may be taken, in the name
'2. If, upon the warrant before the judge upon the return of the habeas corpus, the copy of an indictment against the defendant, or the affidavits which were presented to the governor, being the papers upon which he issued the rendition warrant, had been produced, the same might have been examined by the judge, and an application made by the defendant that they “were defective, in not showing the nature, facts,'and circumstances of the transaction therein alleged, and not disclosing the grounds on which are based the application of illegality, ” might have been considered. In the case of People v. Brady, 56 N. Y. 184, it appears: “The relator traversed this warrant, setting forth in his answer the affidavits which accompanied the requisition; and alleging, among other things, that the affidavits were defective, etc.” The court therefore, in that ease, looked into the affidavits which were used before the governor, and held they were insufficient. In the ease before us, the affidavits or papers presented to the governor were not produced before the judge on the return of the writ of habeas corpus, and he derived no knowledge or information of their contents, and hence could not pass an adjudication thereon; nor are the affidavits, papers, or copy of indictment used before the governor returned to us, and we are not in a situation to consider their contents, and to determine from an inspection of the same whether they presented a proper case for the issuing of a rendition warrant or not. It is a familiar principle that a presumption obtains that a public officer has discharged his duty until the contrary appears. In People v. Pinkerton, 17 Hun, 199, it was held, viz.: “Where a warrant is issued by the governor for the rendition of a fugitive from j ustice, the court cannot go behind the warrant and inquire into the truth of the facts recited in it. The governor, in determining that the act of congress has been complied with, has no jurisdiction to inquire into the truth of the charges made, or to look outside of the papers presented to determine whether or not the person demanded is a fugitive from justice. The fact that the person has committed a crime in another state established conclusively that he is a fugitive from justice.” It was also said in that case that where “the rendition warrant is accompanied by the papers on which it issued, the question as to the sufficiency of those papers, as a compliance with the act of congress, is before the court.” That case was approved by the court of appeals in People v. Pinkerton, 77 N. Y. 245, and it was held that the “recitals in a warrant of the governor of this state for the arrest of a fugitive from the justice of another state are to be taken, at least pnma/ame, as true.” And it was further held in that case that where a return to a writ of habeas corpus sets forth such a warrant, “which contains recitals of facts necessary to confer authority, under the constitution and laws of the United States, to issue it, is a sufficient justification for holding the prisoner without producing the papers or evidence on which the governor acted. ” It was made an inquiry in that case whether the warrant is conclusive, and whether the defendant may not, by evidence, show that the papers presented to the governor were in fact defective. If it be assumed in this case that the defendant
3. We see no force in the suggestion made that there was amisnomer. The defendant claimed, on the hearing, that he spelled his name with an “a”, and that in the governor’s warrant “o” was substituted in place thereof. Upon
Martin, J., concurs. Merwin, J., not voting.