This is an appeal from an order of the United States District Court for the District of Connecticut, Clarie, C. J., adjudging Thomas A. Liberatore to be in civil contempt of court for his refusal to comply with a court order directing him to provide a grand jury in the District of Connecticut with handwriting exemplars and so-called “major case” prints. The adjudication of contempt of court from which Liberatore appeals contained two operative provisions. The first such provision commanded that Liberatore be held in federal confinement until the expiration of the federal grand jury’s term in April of 1978, 1 unless prior to that time the contemnor were to purge himself of his contempt by providing the material requested by the grand jury. Lib-eratore was serving a Connecticut state sentence of imprisonment at the time of his contempt of the federal court, and the second operative provision required that the state sentence of imprisonment be suspended during the period of his federal confinement. Challenging the order of contempt in its entirety, Liberatore presents three contentions on appeal. Two of these points assail the propriety of the procedures by which Liberatore was adjudged to be in *80 civil contempt of the federal court. His first contention is that he was not afforded adequate notice of or opportunity to defend against the charge of civil contempt; the second is that the government failed to demonstrate the relevance and necessity of the prints and handwriting exemplars sought by the grand jury. We conclude that each of these contentions is easily refuted, either on its merits or because it was not presented, as it should have been, to the district court below. However, while we are not persuaded that there is any basis for reversing the district court order which adjudged Liberatore to be in civil contempt of court and mandated his conditional confinement, we do agree with appellant’s principal argument on appeal, namely, that the federal district court lacked authority to interrupt the service of the state sentence Liberatore was already serving for his prior convictions on various state charges. Accordingly, we reverse the district court’s order insofar as that order purported to mandate the interruption of Liberatore’s preexisting state sentence.
The salient facts are simply recited. On September 15, 1976, Liberatore, following his conviction in the Connecticut state courts on charges of six violations of state law, was sentenced to two consecutive one-year sentences. Liberatore began to serve his state sentences immediately and, if during his term in state prison he were to earn the maximum amount of “good conduct time” to which he would be entitled under Connecticut law, the earliest date he could expect to be released from state custody would be January 19, 1978. 2
Meanwhile, on June 14,1977, when Liber-atore was exclusively in state custody at the Connecticut Correctional Institution in Somers, the federal prosecutors in the District of Connecticut obtained a writ of ha-beas corpus ad testificandum for the purpose of having Liberatore appear on June 29, 1977 before a federal grand jury in the District of Connecticut which was then investigating possible violations of the federal criminal statutes prohibiting forgery and uttering, 18 U.S.C. § 495, and possession of stolen mail, 18 U.S.C. § 1708. Upon appearing before the grand jury, Liberatore was asked to provide handwriting exemplars and “major case fingerprints.” Liberatore refused on fifth amendment grounds, and the federal prosecutors thereupon requested and were granted a hearing at which they sought an order from the district court directing Liberatore to provide the handwriting sample and prints.
The hearing was conducted later that same day. In support of its application for an order compelling compliance with the grand jury’s request, the government submitted an affidavit of the Assistant United States Attorney in charge of the proceedings before the grand jury and offered the testimony of the grand jury foreman. While persisting in his refusal to supply the materials requested, Liberatore now advanced as a justification for his refusal a ground different from the fifth amendment ground he had earlier asserted before the grand jury. Liberatore now predicated his refusal to provide the exemplars and the prints upon the ground of “lack of necessity,” that is, that there was no need for him to provide the materials requested inasmuch as each type of evidence was supposedly already on file elsewhere in some law enforcement records to which the federal government had ready access. The government responded that the prints and the handwriting sample were, in fact, necessary. More particularly, the federal prosecutor argued that the accuracy of handwriting analysis is substantially enhanced by having the handwriting written on a standard analysis form and, although the federal prosecutor did not dispute that the government may well have had access to samples of Liberatore’s handwriting, the government did not at that point have available to it Liberatore’s handwriting on *81 a standard government handwriting analysis form. As to the need for the major case prints, the government stated it needed these because it did not have available to it any of Liberatore’s prints which depicted not only the tips of Liberatore’s fingers but the print of the lobe of his thumb and of his palm as well.
Satisfied with the government’s presentation, the district court orally granted the government’s motion for an order compelling Liberatore to provide the handwriting sample and the prints. After ascertaining that Liberatore had been fully and accurately advised by his counsel concerning the consequences of his refusal to comply with a court order compelling production of the materials the grand jury was seeking and after assiduously warning Liberatore that, were he to persist in his contumacious conduct, he would be held in civil contempt of court, would be incarcerated until he decided to comply with the court’s order compelling him to provide the materials or until the expiration of the grand jury’s term, whichever occurred first, and would have the running of the state sentence he was then serving tolled while he remained in federal confinement for civil contempt, Judge Clarie offered Liberatore one final opportunity to agree to cooperate. Notwithstanding the consequences which had been carefully explained to him by his attorney and the judge, Liberatore reasserted his absolute refusal to comply with the court order compelling production. Thereupon the judge, as he had indicated he would, held Liberatore in contempt. The substance of this oral ruling was incorporated into a written order Judge Clarie issued later that afternoon. It directed that Lib-eratore be held in federal custody 3 until the expiration of the grand jury’s term in April of 1978, unless prior to that time the con-temnor decided to supply the prints and the handwriting sample which had been requested by the grand jury. At this point the court’s written order directing confinement did not, however, direct that the running of Liberatore’s preexisting state sentence be suspended during the period of his federal confinement. At no point either before or at the time the order adjudging him in contempt of court was issued did Liberatore raise any objection that he had not been afforded adequate notice of or opportunity to defend against the charge of civil contempt.
Approximately one month later, on July 29, 1977, Liberatore filed a memorandum with the court, raising for the first time the argument that he had not been given sufficient notice of the contempt charge or ample opportunity to prepare a defense to it. Liberatore also contended in this memorandum that the district court ought not direct that the service of his state sentence be interrupted during the period of his confinement for civil contempt of the federal district court. The district court rejected Liberatore’s entreaties and, by virtue of a “substitute order” entered on August 2, 1977, formalized its previously expressed intention that the running of Liberatore’s state sentence be suspended while he remained in federal confinement.
Liberatore presently remains confined at the Connecticut Correctional Institution in Somers, the facility at which he was serving his preexisting state sentence and to which he was committed pursuant to Judge Clar-ie’s order of confinement.
I
Liberatore’s arguments directed to the validity of the contempt order as a whole need not detain us long. First, inasmuch as the point was not properly preserved before the district court, we need not, and do not, reach the merits of Liberatore’s argument that he did not receive adequate notice of the application for contempt to allow him to prepare a defense to it. We have reviewed the transcript of the hearing held to consider the government’s joint applications for orders compelling compliance with the grand jury’s demands and adjudging Liberatore in contempt, and we find that, in the words of Liberatore’s
*82
own counsel, Liberatore’s “only objection, for the record” was that, inasmuch as the material was available to the government elsewhere, he should not be required to produce the material now being requested because the government had no “need” for the handwriting sample or prints it was endeavoring to have Liberatore provide to the grand jury. However, in no manner whatever did Liberatore contend, or even intimate, that the notice he had received was inadequate to comply with the requirements of Rule 42(b) of the Federal Rules of Criminal Procedure, applicable here under our decision in
In re Sadin,
We also quickly dispose of Liberatore’s arguments that the order adjudging him in contempt was erroneously entered because the government failed to make preliminary showings of the relevance and necessity of the fingerprints and handwriting exemplars sought by the grand jury. As to the purported requirement that the government make a preliminary showing of the relevance of the prints and the exemplars, we find that, first of all, at the hearing held to consider whether Liberatore should be adjudged in contempt of court, Liberatore did not raise his contention that the government must bear the burden of making a preliminary showing of the relevance of the prints and the handwriting exemplars sought by the grand jury, and the point has therefore not been properly preserved for presentation on appeal here.
E. g., In re Grand Jury Investigation (Appeal of Hartzell), supra,
Turning now to Liberatore’s contention that the order adjudging him in contempt must be reversed because the government failed to make a preliminary showing that it was “necessary” that the materials sought be obtained by compulsion of a grand jury subpoena, we conclude that this contention too is foreclosed by the Supreme Court’s decisions in
United States v. Dionisio, supra,
and
United States
v.
Mara, supra.
By urging that we hold that “necessity” be shown, Liberatore would have us rule that the grand jury here was not entitled to demand production of the prints and the handwriting exemplars unless the government could demonstrate that that evidence was not already in the government’s possession and, further, that the evidence demanded could not be obtained by the government through the use of some other, less coercive, means. In addition to the Supreme Court’s generalized refusal to “saddle [the] grand jury with minitrials and preliminary showings,”
United States v. Dionisio, supra,
II
Raising an issue not previously considered by us or by any other court, Liberatore’s primary argument on appeal is that the district court below lacked authority to interrupt the
state
sentence Liberatore was serving at the time he was adjudged to be in civil contempt of the federal court.
5
Despite the fact that six courts of appeals have already ruled that a federal court has the power to interrupt a
federal
criminal sentence during the time the contemnor is incarcerated for civil contempt of the federal court,
see In re Grand Jury Investigation (Appeal of Hartzell), supra,
We start with the rudimentary proposition, for which no authority need be cited, that a federal court can act only upon the basis of some statutory or constitutional authority or, alternatively, upon the basis of some inherent power of the federal judiciary. We have not discovered, nor have we been directed to, any such express or inherent power which might justifiably predicate Judge Clarie’s order interrupting Liberatore’s state sentence, and the only conceivable statutory basis for the order of suspension is the one urged upon us by the government here, 28 U.S.C. § 1826(a), which provides as follows:
(a) Whenever a witness in any proceeding before or ancillary to any court or grand jury of the United States refuses without just cause shown to comply with an order of the court to testify or provide other information, including any book, paper, document, record, recording or other material, the court, upon such refusal, or when such refusal is duly brought to its attention, may summarily order his confinement at a suitable place until such time as the witness is willing to give such testimony or provide such information. No period of such confinement shall exceed the life of—
(1) the court proceeding, or
(2) the term of the grand jury, *85 including extensions, before which such refusal to comply with the court order occurred, but in no event shall such confinement exceed eighteen months.
In determining whether this statute expressly or by necessary implication provides the authority which a federal court would need to interrupt the service of a state sentence, there are significant reasons why we believe the provision must be strictly construed. First, while we certainly should not be understood as expressing any opinion on the existence of any constitutional infirmities, it has been suggested that such infirmities may inhere in the interruption of a preexisting criminal sentence,
see In re Grand Jury Investigation (Appeal of Hart-zell), supra,
Keeping in mind these significant factors which militate in favor of a strict construction of § 1826, we conclude that under the circumstances here that statute cannot provide a basis for interrupting Liberatore’s state criminal sentence. It is important to note, first of all, that the provision itself says absolutely nothing about the power of a federal court to interrupt an existing criminal sentence, and, furthermore, during the congressional debates preceding the
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statute’s adoption there was no discussion of or allusion to the problem of the contemnor who is already incarcerated on other charges. Liberatore argues that § 1826 was not designed to cope with this problem. We tend to agree that the statute does not appear to have been designed to deal with a contemnor who is already incarcerated.
United States v. Wilson,
Despite the absence of any express language authorizing interruption of a preexisting sentence and notwithstanding the expressed, and modest, Congressional intent merely to codify existing practice, the government nonetheless asserts that § 1826
does
provide a basis for Judge Clarie’s order
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interrupting the service of Liberatore’s state sentence. In support of its position the government relies upon those cases which have held that a federal court can suspend the service of a federal criminal sentence for the purpose of “sandwiching” within that sentence a federal sentence for civil contempt. See, e.
g., In re Grand Jury Investigation (Appeal of Hartzell), supra; Martin
v.
United States, supra; United States v. Liddy, supra; Anglin
v.
Johnston, supra.
These cases proceed on various disparate theories. Insofar as they are grounded upon a “fault of the prisoner” theory,
see, e. g., United States
v.
Liddy, supra,
We note also that, although we do not rest our decision on the distinction, leaving for another day any comprehensive analysis of it, Liberatore’s case may well differ from the situation in
Liddy
and
Martin
inasmuch as in each of those cases “[h]ad the District Court ordered that [the contemnor’s] contempt confinement be concurrent with his sentence for [criminal offenses, the con-temnor] would have no incentive to comply with the District Court’s order since his doing so would not reduce his total period of confinement.”
United States v. Liddy, supra,
The truly compelling and pivotal distinction between the situation here and that present in the cases which have upheld a federal district court’s right to interrupt an existing federally-imposed criminal sentence is, of course, the fact that here Judge Clarie did not order the interruption of a federal sentence but the interruption of a state sentence of unquestioned legality. In view of what we find to be time-honored precedent barring a federal court from engaging in such an intrusion upon the legitimate jurisdiction of the courts of a different sovereignty, we hold that, irrespective of whether in some circumstances the “recalcitrant witness statute” might empower a federal district court to interrupt the running of a preexisting federally-imposed *88 criminal sentence, § 1826 cannot serve to justify a federal court’s interruption of a preexisting state-imposed criminal sentence. 9 Moreover, the well-established principles of comity require that we hold also that the district court had no inherent authority to interrupt Liberatore’s state sentence.
The fundamental principles of comity upon which we reach our holding here are not of recent origin. Being rules of practical necessity, without which our political system of independent sovereignties could not function, they were formulated early in the nation’s history, having been articulated and followed in a series of United States Supreme Court cases extending back into the early nineteenth century.
E. g., Ponzi v. Fessenden,
Where a State court and a court of the United States may each take jurisdiction, the tribunal which first gets it holds it to the exclusion of the other, until its duty is fully performed and the jurisdiction invoked is exhausted: and this rule applies alike in both civil and criminal cases. It is indeed a principle of universal jurisprudence that where jurisdiction has attached to person or thing, it is — unless there is some provision to the contrary — • exclusive in effect until it has wrought its function.
Nearly 50 years later, in
Ponzi v. Fessenden, supra,
The forbearance which courts of co-ordinate jurisdiction, administered under a single system, exercise towards each other, whereby conflicts are avoided, by avoiding interference with the process of each other, is a principle of comity, with perhaps no higher sanction than the utility which comes from concord; but between State courts and those of the United States, it is something more. It is a principle of right and of law, and therefore, of necessity. It leaves nothing to discretion or mere convenience. These courts do not belong to the same system, so far as their jurisdiction is concurrent; and although they co-exist in the same space, they are independent, and have no common superior. They exercise jurisdiction, it is true, within the same territory, but not in the same plane; and when one takes into its jurisdiction a specific thing, that res is as much withdrawn from the *89 judicial power of the other, as if it had been carried physically into a different territorial sovereignty. To attempt to seize it by a foreign process is futile and void. The regulation of process, and the decision of questions relating to it, are part of the jurisdiction of the court from which it issues. ‘The jurisdiction of a court,’ said Chief Justice Marshall, ‘is not exhausted by the rendition of its judgment, but continues until that judgment shall be satisfied.’ ”
In the context of successive criminal prosecutions by different sovereignties this “chief rule which preserves our two systems of courts from actual conflict of jurisdiction” means that the sovereignty which first arrests the individual acquires the right to prior and exclusive jurisdiction over him, see, e.
g., Ponzi
v.
Fessenden, supra,
Inasmuch as Connecticut had the right of prior jurisdiction over Liberatore and had availed itself of this right by seeking and obtaining his conviction in the courts of that state, Judge Clarie had no authority to take any action against Liberatore which would interfere with the execution of that valid preexisting Connecticut judgment of conviction. Judge Clarie’s order purporting to interrupt the service of Liberatore’s state sentence was certainly an
*90
attempted modification of the precise terms of a valid final judgment entered by the state court, for, in the absence of statutory or constitutional authority to the contrary, a sentence runs continuously from its date of imposition. See, e.
g., United States v. Croft,
In summary, we affirm the order of the district court except insofar as that order purported to suspend the service of Libera-tore’s state sentence during the period of confinement imposed for civil contempt of the federal district court; but to the extent that the district court’s order purports to interrupt the serving of Liberatore’s state sentence, we reverse.
The order of the district court is affirmed in part and reversed in part.
Notes
. The order adjudging Liberatore in contempt committed him to the custody of the Attorney General of the United States, but recommended that his federal sentence on the contempt charge be served, subject to the approval of the Attorney General of the United States, at a state penal institution. Liberatore was, in fact, returned to and has continued to be confined at the same correctional facility, the Connecticut Correctional Institution in Somers, where at the time of his contempt of the federal court he was serving his preexisting sentence imposed as a result of his conviction on various charges of violations of Connecticut law.
. January 19, 1978 is the date which the government asserts in its brief is the earliest date on which Liberatore might be released from state custody. However, during the hearing held to consider whether he should be held in contempt of court, Liberatore represented to Judge Clarie that his earliest possible release date would be January 24, 1978.
. See note 1 supra.
. In
United States v. Mara,
the “preliminary showing of ‘reasonableness,’ ”
. Although as already discussed, Liberatore does believe that there were certain procedural deficiencies in the proceedings which culminated in his being adjudged to be in contempt of court, he does not claim that the district court lacked authority to order his confinement solely because of his status as a state prisoner. Liberatore’s view of § 1826 is that the statute
simply allows the Court to order that a recalcitrant witness be “confined” — i. e., imprisoned during the prescribed period of time. If that witness is already incarcerated, the statute gives the Court authority to see that his confinement continues uninterrupted — ensuring, for example, that he remains imprisoned if his pre-existing conviction should be reversed on appeal (Appellant’s brief at 9).
There is thus no issue in this case as to Judge Clarie’s authority to impose a civil contempt sentence that will run concurrently with the contemnor’s preexisting state criminal sentence. Moreover, under the circumstances we need not consider any issues pertaining to which sovereignty had what sort of custody over Liberatore.
. 116 Cong.Rec. 588 (1970) (remarks of Senator McLellan); id. 35196 (remarks of Representative Cellar); id. 35200 (remarks of Representative Poff); id. 35291 (remarks of Representative Poff); see id. 35304 (remarks of Representative Railsback).
. The court in
In re Grand Jury Investigation (Appeal of Hartzeli), supra,
[It] is our belief that whatever jurisdictional limitations originally existed on a contempt court’s power to toll the running of a criminal sentence pending service of a civil contempt sentence, such limitation did not survive the enactment of § 1826.
In view of the express congressional desire merely to “codify” existing practices, the Third Circuit’s statement is puzzling at best.
. Judge MacKinnon, dissenting in
United States v. Liddy, supra,
The majority reasons that appellant’s “intentional acts” place him in a position similar to that of an escapee or a parolee who commits offenses which lead to revocation of his parole. Even those do not authorize a sentencing court to change the sentence originally imposed on the initial offense. But appellant’s fault is of a different order from an escape or parole violation. His refusal to testify before the grand jury does not come within the McDonald v. Lee exception because it is not the fault of a prisoner qua prisoner; rather, it is an act totally extraneous to his imprisonment. In contrast to the other transgressions cited by the majority, appellant’s refusal to testify does not evince any intent to avoid or terminate service of his sentence. Moreover, his silence before the grand jury is an “intentional act” only in an oblique and technical sense. Appellant displayed every intention of serving his term promptly and continuously; any argument that he willfully interrupted his sentence is sophistical.
See Martin v. United States, supra,
. We should note also that there appear to have been feasible alternative methods for achieving the desired result of coercing Libera-tore’s testimony. Specifically, the district court could have imposed a criminal contempt sentence of definite duration and coupled the imposition of such a sentence with “[a] promise to consider subsequent compliance in ruling on any Rule 35 motion for reduction of sentence.”
Martin v. United States, supra,
. We have recently noted that “ ‘[w]hile a writ of
habeas corpus ad prosequendum
may use mandatory language, the jurisdiction to which such a writ is addressed is relied upon to cooperate in turning over the defendant to the other sovereignty.’ ”
United States v. Mauro,
