20 N.E.2d 782 | Ill. | 1939
C.B. Mortensen was arrested on a warrant issued under a requisition of the Governor of the State of Iowa. He filed a petition in the criminal court of Cook county for a writ ofhabeas corpus. A return was made by the sheriff and, upon a hearing, the petition was dismissed and Mortensen was remanded to the custody of the sheriff. He has prosecuted a writ of error to review the proceedings.
The warrant charges that Mortensen committed a crime in Scott county, Iowa, on May 25, 1938, by issuing a false check. The check in controversy is for $20.71, on the First National Bank and Trust Company of Minneapolis, Minnesota, payable to the order of the St. James Hotel, which is located in the city of Davenport, Scott county, Iowa. The grounds claimed for reversal are that the affidavit in support of the Governor's warrant does not charge a crime and is insufficient to support the warrant; that Mortensen was not in the State of Iowa on May 25, 1938; that his undisputed testimony on that question overcomes the primafacie case made by the Governor's warrant; that respondents failed to show relator was in the State of Iowa on the date alleged and that he is the identical person named in the warrant, and that there is no evidence to show he committed the crime charged, that he signed the check, or that the check was fraudulent.
On the hearing, relator identified a Western Union Telegraph Company receipt to him for money, dated Port Huron, Michigan, "5/25/1938," and testified he received it there on wiring money to a certain point, and that he was not in the city of Davenport or in the State of Iowa on May 25. He further testified he had been employed by *353 the H.A. Montgomery Company oil dealers, of Detroit, Michigan, with title of sales manager or district manager, and had eleven salesmen working for him, and that he had been once at the St. James Hotel in Davenport, calling on salesmen, but did not remember the approximate time. He said the signature on the check looked like his and did not deny he signed it.
The arresting officer, a Chicago policeman, testified that relator told him he had been in Iowa and had stopped in a hotel in Davenport the latter part of May, 1938; that he gave the hotel a check intending to make it good, and sent a man there for that purpose, but guessed the man did not do so. Relator did not deny, in any particular, the testimony of the officer.
The affidavit upon which the extradition proceedings are based is not abstracted and does not appear in the record. Nor is it in any way pointed out wherein the affidavit fails to charge a crime. The Governor's warrant makes a prima facie case and the burden is upon the prisoner to prove he is entitled to discharge.(People v. Martin,
Relator was likewise required, under the prima facie case made by the Governor's rendition warrant, to show he was not the person therein named. The identity of names gives rise to a presumption that he is the person mentioned in the warrant.(People v. Nash,
Under section 2 of the Fugitives from Justice act (Ill. Rev. Stat. 1937, chap. 60, par. 2) one of the defenses that can be made against extradition is that the prisoner is not a fugitive from justice — that is, that he was not physically present in the demanding State on or about the date upon which the offense with which he is charged is alleged to have been committed.(People v. Meyering,
The questions of the guilt or innocence of the relator or whether the check was fraudulent are not cognizable in this proceeding. People v. Meyering,
The judgment of the criminal court of Cook county remanding relator to the sheriff was correct, and is affirmed.
Judgment affirmed.