70 N.Y.S. 377 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1901
This is a proceeding under a writ of habeas corpus, in conjunction with a writ of certiorari, by virtue of which the release of the relator is sought, he having been arrested under a warrant issued by the respondent William Travers Jerome, one of the justices of the Court of Special Sessions. During the time intervening between the service of the writs and the argument upon the return made .thereto, an examination of the relator was had before the magistrate, and he was held to bail to await the action of the grand jury. The relator attacks the validity of the warrant and the proceedings taken before the justice issuing it prior thereto, but makes no claim that the subsequent commitment is illegal, except it was claimed upon the argument that if the warrant was illegal and A^oid the subsequent action by the
These facts he stated to the officer at the time he was arrested and offered to prove the truth of such statements. The warrant called for the arrest of one James West, who was the guilty man, and no other description of West was given either in the information laid before the magistrate who issued the warrant or in the warrant itself, and the trial court very properly held that the warrant was no justification to the officer and gave him no authority to apprehend the plaintiff. In the case at bar the informant not only described the alleged criminal as the dealer and gambler, but he further swore that, although he did not know his real name, he could identify him, which was evidently done at the time the arrest was made, for no claim is made that the relator herein is not the person named in the deposition and designated in the warrant as “ John Black No. 1 ”, although his real name now appears to be Max Joseph. Under our present system of criminal jurisprudence the methods by which a criminal is brought before a committing magistrate and charged with the commission of a crime are not very material if such methods substantially conform to law and the defendant is not prejudiced in some substantial right thereby.
The writs are, therefore, dismissed, and the prisoner remanded to the custody of the warden.
Writs dismissed and prisoner remanded.