delivered the opinion of the Court.
Appellants, under indictment in the District of Columbia, while passing through New York on February 6,192c, on their way to Washington for trial, were arrested and taken from the train by a United States marshal upon bench warrants issued on federal indictments found, in New York charging them with fraudulent uses of the mails. Previously, their removal to New York from Connecticut and Massachusetts, respectively, for trial under these indictments had been sought under § 1014 Rev. Stats. The removal of Harry F. Morse from Connecticut had been granted by the commissioner, but, upon
habeas corpus
proceedings, he had been discharged from custody, by the Connecticut federal district court for want of probable cause, principally .on the ground that the New York, indictment was insufficient to charge a criminal offence,
First.
It is contended that the arrest of appellants in 'New York, while en route to Washington for trial, under the circumstances stated, was arbitrary, unauthorized and
*82
illegal, and constituted a violation of the due process of law clause of the Fifth Amendment. The contention is plainly without merit. The principle that when the jurisdiction of a court has attached, it must be respected as exclusive until exhausted, is a rule of comity, havihg a wide application in civil cases but a limited one in criminal cases.
Peckham
v.
Henkel,
Second.
It is urged that the decision of the federal district court in Connecticut discharging Harry F. Morse was
res judicata
and conclusively determined (1) that the New York bench warrant was illegally issued and therefore could/not be made the basis for the subsequent arrest in New York; and (2) that the indictment was fatally defective. In respect of the. first contention, it is enough to say that the warrant upon which the Connecticut arrest was made was that issued by the commissioner and not the New York bench warrant upon which the present arrest was made. The discharge of the prisoner determined that he could not be held upon: the process issued by the .commissioner. It had nothing to do with the question whether he could be arrested and held in New York
*83
upon the process issued by the trial court. See
Ex parte Milburn,
The second contention proceeds upon a complete misconception of the purpose for which the indictment is produced and considered in removal proceedings, and the authoritative effect of the ruling of the commissioner and the court on
habeas corpus
in respect thereof. The inquiry in such proceedings is whether there is probable cause to believe the prisoner guilty and justify his removal for trial. That inquiry may be made and the prisoner removed to the trial district in advance of indictment or without the production of the indictment if one has been found.
Greene
v.
Henkel,
“ While wé have no desire to minimize what we have already said with regard to the indictment setting out the substance of the offense in language sufficient to apprise *84 the accused of the nature of the charge against him, still it must be borne in mind that the indictment is merely offered as proof of the charge originally contained in the complaint, and not as a complaint in itself or foundation of the charge, which may be supported by oral testimony as well as by the indictment. When the accused is arraigned in the trial court he may take advantage of every insufficiency in the indictment, since it is there the very foundation of the charge, but to hold it to be the duty of the Commissioner to determine the validity of every indictment as a pleading, when offered only as evidence, is' to put in his hands a dangerous power, which might be subject to serious abuse. If, for instance, he were moved by personal considerations, popular clamor or insufficient knowledge of the law to discharge the accused by reason of. the insufficiency of the indictment, it might turn out that the indictment was perfectly valid and that the accused should have- been held. But the evil once done is, or may be, irremediable, and the Commissioner, in setting ’himself up as a court of last resort to determine the validity of the indictment, is liable to do a gross injustice.”
See also
Benson
v.
Palmer, supra; United States
v.
Reddin,
Judgment affirmed.
Mandate to issue forthwith.
