167 P. 404 | Cal. Ct. App. | 1917
Petitioner herein claims to be illegally restrained of his liberty and prosecutes this writ for the purpose of securing discharge from custody of the police authorities of the city of Los Angeles and from the custody of the sheriff of Tarrant County, state of Texas. The latter officer *345
claims the right to the custody of the petitioner under the authority of a warrant of rendition issued by the Governor of California upon a requisition made by the Governor of Texas. The facts shown are these: Petitioner was heretofore arrested in the state of Texas for a crime alleged to have been there committed, and was taken into custody by the peace officers at Fort Worth. While there held in custody a requisition issued by the Governor of California was honored by the Governor of the state of Texas. This requisition upon the Governor of Texas was made upon a showing that petitioner here had theretofore committed the crime of murder in the state of California. The police authorities at Forth Worth, upon having presented to them the Governor's warrant of that state then in the hands of the agent of the state of California, relinquished control and custody of the petitioner and he was immediately taken under the warrant mentioned to the state of California to answer to the charge of murder. The latter charge was not pressed to trial in California. It was dismissed or otherwise disposed of; whereupon the Governor of Texas made requisition upon the Governor of California to have petitioner returned to Texas to answer to the same offense for the alleged commission of which he was held under arrest at the time the police authorities of Fort Worth relinquished him into the hands of the state agent to be returned to California. Petitioner has never been released from custody since he was first arrested in the state of Texas for the crime there alleged to have been committed by him. It is his contention now that under these facts he cannot be considered as being a fugitive from justice within the meaning of that term as it is included in section 2 of article IV of the Constitution of the United States. That provision is, in part, as follows: "A person charged in any state with treason, felony, or other crime, who shall flee from justice, and be found in another state, shall, on demand of the executive authority of the state from which he fled, be delivered up to be removed to the state having jurisdiction of the crime." No serious contention is urged as to the right of the court upon habeas corpus to go behind the warrant of rendition and inquire as to the matter here put in issue. It is the contention, however, of respondents that whenever, upon examination of the question, it appears that the person sought to be extradited has committed a crime in a sister state and is found *346
within the state issuing the warrant of rendition, it must be at once concluded that such person is a fugitive from justice and that the inquiry there ends. We are cited toPeople v. Pinkerton, 17 Hun (N.Y.), 199; Roberts v. Reilly,
The prayer of the petition is granted and petitioner is ordered to be discharged from the custody of respondents.
Conrey, P. J., and Works, J., pro tem., concurred. *348