143 Iowa 502 | Iowa | 1909
Requisitions of the Governor of Nebraska for the surrender of the petitioners were presented to the Governor of Iowa, and, after a hearing by the latter, of which no complaint is made, except with reference to the sufficiency of the requisition papers, warrants were issued for their surrender to the agent of the state of Nebraska. To prevent such surrender these proceedings were instituted. The refusal of the lower court to grant a writ of habeas corpus is assailed in this court on three grounds: First, the insufficiency of the complaints filed before the county judge in Nebraska, in which each of the petitioners was charged with the commission of a crime in that state; second, the insufficiency of the certification
1. Extraditionsinformation: sufficiency. I. The complaint charging petitioners with the commission of a crime in Nebraska was sworn to by the county attorney of the proper county, and it was made to appear that this was the proper method in that state of charging persons with the crime of which .... t a * , . . petitioners were accused. A complaint or information, duly sworn to, is such affidavit as is required as the basis of an extradition proceeding, if it is a proper method of charging the commission of the crime in the state where committed. In re Hooper, 52 Wis. 699 (58 N. W. 741); State v. Richardson, 34 Minn. 115 (24 N. W. 354); State v. Bates, 101 Minn. 303 (112 N. W. 261).
Finding no error in the rulings of the lower court complained of, the action of the court in each case denying plaintiff’s petition for writ of habeas corpus is affirmed.