19 N.Y.S. 271 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1892
The relator, George W. Post, being indicted by the grand jury of Albany county at the court of sessions held on February 13, 1889, for the crime of grand larceny, was on October 9, 1891, arrested on a requisition by the governor of New York to the executive of Wisconsin, in the latter state, (his then residence,) brought to this state, and delivered to the sheriff of Albany county. During the same month, he was arraigned on said indictment, and, pleading not guilty, was committed to the custody of said sheriff upon a bench warrant issued by the district attorney. On November 30, 1891, relator, at a court of oyer and terminer in said county, was indicted by the grand jury for robbery in the first degree, and, being arraigned, pleaded not guilty. On April 21, 1892, the former indictment for grand larceny was, by order of the" court, duly quashed, and on that day, and before the prisoner was released, the said district attorney issued to the sheriff a bench warrant on the indictment for robbery; and relator is now imprisoned thereunder. He claims and insists that being brought to this state on the requisition of its governor, on the charge of grand larceny, he cannot be held here on a charge for another and different crime until he has had a reasonable time to return to the state from which he was brought, and hence that he is now entitled to be discharged.
It may at this time be deemed settled that a fugitive from justice, extra dited from a foreign country, can only be held and tried for the offense for which his extradition was obtained. Formerly, there was some conflict of authority on this question, but the decision of the supreme court of the United States in U. S. v. Rauscher, 119 U. S. 407, 7 Sup. Ct. Rep. 234, has settled the law in this regard. Does the doctrine, as laid down in that case and kindred authorities, apply in cases of interstate extradition? The question is a debatable one, but in my judgment there is a clear distinction between cases of foreign and interstate extradition. In the former case the right to demand a fugitive from justice depends upon treaties between governments. In U. S. v. Rauscher, supra, it was held: “(1) That a treaty to which the United States isa party is a law of the land, of which all courts, state or national, are to take judicial notice, and by the provisions of which they are to be governed, so far as they are capable of judicial enforcement. (2) That on a sound construction of the treaty under which the defendant was delivered to this country, and under the proceedings by which this was done, and acts of con
Maxhabi and Herrick, JJ., concur.
The application of the relator to be discharged is founded upon the assumption that interstate extradition is governed by the same principles as extradition from foreign countries. This, I think, is error. It seems to me entirely unnecessary to call attention to the fact that the relations between the states of the Union, and the relation between the United States, or one of the states, and foreign governments, are entirely different. Without discussing or citing the various cases that have arisen and have been reported in the different state courts and in the United States courts, and among which there is considerable conflict of opinion, it seems to me that a brief discussion or review of the principles which have guided the courts in determining that prisoners extradited from foreign countries cannot be tried for any other than the specific crime for which they were extradited will show that the
Mayham and Putnam, JJ., concur.