13 Ga. 97 | Ga. | 1853
By the Court.
delivering the opinion.
The Court below instructed the Jury, “that if a clemand was made by the Governor of Pennsylvania, upon the Govern- or of Georgia, for Robert J. Williams, it was illegal for the Governor of Georgia to add the alias, and every person who acted under him was a trespasser, and that they were bound to find for the plaintiff, but what amount they must determine.”
It appears from the transcript of the record now before us,
On the 25th day of June of that year, the Governor of the State of Pennsylvania made a requisition upon the Governor of the State of Georgia for the said Robert J. Williams, as a fugitive from justice, who, it was alleged, had taken refuge within the latter State, and appointed Robert Johnston as the agent to secure the said Williams, and convey him to the State of Pennsylvania to be dealt with according to law. On the first day of July, 1850, the Governor of Georgia issued his mandate, directed to all the Sheriffs and Constables of the State, commanding them to arrest said fugitive from justice, and deliver him over to the agent appointed by the Governor of Pennsylvania to receive him, as requested, in order that the said fugitive from justice might be carried back to the State in which the offence was alleged to have been committed. With a sincere desire to afford the authorities of Pennsylvania every means within his power to obtain the possession of the fugitive from justice, the Governor of Georgia (for reasons which appear from the testimony contained in the record) inserted in the mandate issued by him for the arrest of Robert J. Williams, the words, “alias Spencer Riley.” On the 2d day of July, 1850, the Sheriff of Bibb County arrested Spencer Riley, a citizen of that County, by virtue of the warrant so issued by the Governor for the arrest of Robert J. Williams, alias Spencer Riley, as a fugitive from justice. The return of the Sheriff on the warrant states, that he had “arrested the body of the within named Spencer Riley, as directed and required by the within named Robert Johnston; having tendered him to the said Robert Johnston, who requested me to hold him until he was ready to leave, and have him in my custody.” For reasons which appear in the record of the testimony, the agent, Johnston, did not take Riley to
The Governor of Georgia, as is quite apparent from the record, did not attempt to shelter himself under any mere technical quibble, from the discharge of his constitutional duty to the State of Pennsylvania in delivering up the alleged fugitive ; but manifested that generous confidence in the properly constituted legal tribunals of that State, in relation to his trial and punishment there, which ought always to obtain between the Executive officers of each State, towards their sister States, whenever called on to perform their respective duties in regard to the surrender of fugitives, under the express provisions of the laws and Constitiution of the United States.
But it is said, that the Governor of Georgia had no legal right, on the requisition of the Governor of Pennsylvania for the delivery of Robert J. Williams, to issuo a warrant for the arrest of another individual (to wit) Spencer Riley.
As a distinct legal proposition, it is undoubtably true, that the Governor of Georgia had no such right: but the error was committed by him in doing that which he believed to be a faithful discharge of his constitutional duty towards the State of Pennsylvania. The insertion of the alias was not necessary, in our judgment, to have authorized the arrest of Riley, if, indeed, he was the same individual who committed the forgery, under the assumed name of Robert J. Williams. Had Riley been arrested under the warrant issued for the arrest of Williams, without the insertion of the alias, and been carried to the State of Pennsylvania, and put upon his trial in the Court in which the indictment was found, as the defendant named therein, and had pleaded in abatement that his name was not Robert J. Williams, the person named in the indictment, but that his name was Spencer Riley, a different person, it would have been competent for the prosecutor to have replied, that he was the identical person who committed the
Upon such plea having been filed, it would have been competent for the defendant to have requested the Court, to have instructed the Jury, at the trial, that if they believed, from the evidence, that the plaintiff was the same person, who, under the assumed name of Robert J. Williams, committed the forgery in Philadelphia, they should find a verdict for the defendant; for there is certainly evidence in the record which would authorize the Court to have given such instruction to the Jury. But there being no such plea filed, and as the case stood before the Court upon the pleadings, there was no error in the Court below, in charging the Jury, that they were bound to find a, verdict for the plaintiff. While we should have been much better satisfied if the Jury had found a verdict for the plaintiff for merely nominal damages, yet, it was a matter exclusively within their province, to judge of the credibility and effect of the evidence submitted to them; and not being able to find any legal ground on which to reverse the judgment, it must, • therefore, stand affirmed. Let the judgment of the Court below stand affirmed.