Lead Opinion
аfter making the foregoing statement, delivered the opinion of the court.
As the application for the writ of habeas corpus was, by stipulation of the parties taken as the answer of the accused to the return of the officer holding him in custody, and as that answer was stricken out by the court below as immaterial, we must, on this appeal, regard as true all the facts sufficiently alleged in the application which, in a legal sense, bear upon the question whether the detention of the accused by the state authorities was in violation of the Constitution or laws of the United States.
That application is too lengthy to be incorporated at large in this opinion. It is sufficient to say that its allegations present the case of a conspiracy between the Governors of Idaho and Colorado, and the respective officers and agents of those States, to have thе accused taken from Colorado to Idaho under such circumstances and in such way as would deprive him, while in Colorado, of the privilege of invoking the jurisdiction of the courts there for his protection against wrongful deportation from the State — it being alleged that the Governor
. In the forefront of this case is the faсt that the' appellant is held in actual custody for trial under an indictment in one of the courts of Idaho for the crime .of murder charged to have been committed in that State against its laws, and it is the purpose of the State to try the question of his guilt or innocence ‘ of that charge.
Undoubtedly, the Circuit Court had jurisdiction to discharge the appellant from the custody of the-state authorities if. their exercise of jurisdiction over his person would be in violation of any rights secured to him by the Constitution or laws of the United States. But that court had a discretion as to the time and mode in which, by the exercise of such power, it would by its process obstruct or delay a criminal prosecution in the state court. The’ duty of a Federal court to interfere, on habeas corpus, for the' protection of orié alleged to be restrained of his liberty in violation of the Constitution or laws of the United States, must often be controlled by the special circumstances of the case, and unless in some emergency demanding prompt action the party held in custody by a State and seeking to be enlarged will be left to stand his trial in the state court, which, it will be assumed, will enforce — as it has the power to do equally with a court of the United States; Robb v. Connolly,
The appellant, however, contends that the principle settled in Ex parte Royall and other like cases can have application only where the State has legally acquired jurisdiction over the person of the accused, and cannot apply when, as is alleged to be the case here, his presence in Idaho was obtained by fraud and by a violation of rights guaranteed by the Constitution and laws of the United States. Under such circumstances, it is contended, no jurisdiction could legally attach for the purpose of trying the accused under the indictment for murder.
In support of this view we have been referred to that clause of the Constitution of the United States providing that if “a person charged in any State with treason, felony, or other crime, who shall flee from justice and be found in another State, shall, on demand of the executive authority of the State from which he fled, be delivered up to be' removed to the State having jurisdiction of the crime.” Art. 4, § 2;
Looking, first, at what was alleged to have occurred in the State of Colorado touching the arrest of the petitioner and his deportation from that State, we do not perceive that anything done there, however hastily or inconsiderately done, can be adjudged to be in violation of the Constitution or laws of the United States. We pass by, both as immaterial and inappropriate, any consideration of the motives that induced the action of the Governor of Cоlorado. This court will not inquire as to the motives which guided the Chief Magistrate of a State when executing the functions of his office. Manifestly, whatever authority may have been conferred upon the Governor of Colorado by the constitution or laws of his State, he was not required, indeed, was not authorized by the Constitution or laws of the United States to have the petitioner arrested, unless within the meaning of such Consti
.But the petitioner contends that-his arrest and deportation from Colorado \yas, by fraud and connivance, so arranged and carried out as to deprive him of an opportunity to prove, before the Governor of that State, that he was not a fugitive from justice; as well as opportunity to appeal to some court in Colorado to. prevent his illegal deportation from its territory. If we should assume, upon the present, record, that the facts are as alleged, it is not perceived that, they make a case of the
We come now to inquire whether the petitioner was entitled to his discharge upon making proof in the Circuit Court of the United States, 'sitting in Idaho, that he was brought into that State as a fugitive from justice when he was not, in fact, such a fugitive. Of course, it cannot be contended that the Circuit Court, sitting in Idaho, could rightfully discharge the petitioner upon proof' simply that he did not commit the crime of murder charged аgainst him. His guilt or innocence of that charge is within the exclusive jurisdiction of the Idaho state court. The constitutional and statutory provisions referred to were based upon the theory that, as between the States, the proper place for the inquiry into the question of the guilt or innocence of an alleged fugitive from justice is in the courts of the State where the offense is charged to have been committed. The question, therefore, in the court below was not whether the accused was guilty or innocent, but whether the Idaho court could properly be prevented from proceeding in the' trial of that issue, upon proof being made in the Circuit Court of the United States, sitting in that State, that the petitioner was not a fugitive from justice and not liable, in virtue of the Constitution and laws of the United States, to arrest in Colorado under the wаrrant of its Governor and carried into Idaho. As the petitioner is within the jurisdiction of Idaho, and is held by its authorities for trial, are the particular methods by which he was brought within her limits at all material in the proceeding by habeas corpus?
It is contended by the State that this question was determined in its favor by the former decisions of this court. This is controverted by the petitioner, and we must, therefore, and particularly because of the unusual character of this case and
In Ker v. Illinois,
The court overruled the plea of abatement, and-the trial in the state court proceeded, resulting in a verdict of guilty. The judgment' was affirmed by the Supreme Court of Illinois, and this court affirmed, upon writ of error, the judgment of the latter court. It was held by the unanimous judgment of this court that, so -far as any question of Federal right was involved, no error was committed by the state court; and that, notwithstanding the illegal methods pursued in bringing
If Ker, by virtue of the treaty with Peru, and because оf his ’ forcible And illegal abduction from that country, did not acquire an exemption from the criminal process of the courts ' of Illinois, whose laws he had violated, it is difficult to see how Pettibone acquired, by virtue of ’ the Constitution and laws .of the United States, an exemption from prosecution by the 'State of Idaho, which has custody of his person.
An instructive case on this subject is Mahon v. Justice,
After a review of the authorities, including the ease of Ker v. Illinois, above cited, the court concluded: “So in this case,
These principles determine the present case and require an affirmance of the judgment of the Circuit Court. It is true the decision in the Mahon case was by a- divided court, but its authority is none the less controlling. The principle upon which it rests has been several times recognized and reaffirmed by this court, and is no longer to be.questioned. It was held in Cook v. Hart,
To the above citations we may add In re Moore, 75 Fed. Rep. 821, in which it appeared or was alleged that one accused of crime against the laws of a State and in the custody of its authorities for trial, was brought back from- another State as a fugitive from justice by means of an extradition warrant procured by false affidavits. In his application to'the Circuit Court of the United States for a writ of habeas corpus the peti-
The principle announced in the Mahon and other cases above
It is said that the present case is distinguished from the Mahon case in the fact that the illegal abduction complained of in the latter was by persons who neither acted nor assumed to act under the authority of the State into the custody of whose authorities they delivered Mahon; whereas, in this case, it Is alleged that Idaho secured the presence of Pettibone within its limits through a conspiracy on the part of its Governor and other officers. This difference in the eases is not, we think, of any consequence as to the principle involved; for, the question now is — and such was the fundamental question in Mahon’s case — whether a Circuit Court of the United States when asked, upon habeas corpus, to discharge a person held in actual custody by a State for trial in one of its courts
In this connection it may be well to say that we have not overlooked the allegation that the Governor and other officers of Idaho well knew at the time the requisition was made upon the Governor of Colorado, that Pettibone was not in Idaho on December 30, 1905, nor at any time near that date, and had the purpose in all they did to' evade the constitutional and statutory provisions relating to fugitives from justice. To say nothing of the impropriety of any such facts being made the subject of judicial inquiry in a Federal court, the issue thus attempted to be presented was wholly immaterial. Even were it conceded, for the purposes of this case, that the Gow-ernor of Idaho wrongfully issued his requisition, and that the Governor of Colorado erred in honoring it and in issuing his warrant of árresf, the vital fact remains that Pettibone is held by Idaho in actual custody for trial under an indictment charging him with crime against its laws, and he seeks the aid of the Circuit Court to relieve, him from custody, so that he may leave that State and thereby defeat the prosecution against him without a trial. In the present case it is not necessary to go behind the indictment and inquire as to how it happened that he came within reach of the process of the Idaho court in which the indictment is pending. And any investigation as to the motives which induced the action taken by
We perceive no error in the action of the Circuit Court and its final order is
Affirmed.
Dissenting Opinion
dissenting.
I am constrained to dissent from the opinion and judgment of the court. The- principle announced, аs I understand it, is that “ a.Circuit Court of the United States, when asked upon habeas corpus to discharge a person held in actual custody by a State for trial in on'e of its courts under an indictment charging a crime against its laws, cannot properly take into account the methods whereby the State obtained such custody.” In other words, and to illuminate the principle by the light of the facts in this case (facts, I mean, as alleged, and which we must assume to be true for the purpose of our discussion), that the officers of one State may falsely represent that a person was personally present in the State and committed a crime there, and had fled from its justice, may arrest such person and take him from another State, the officers of the latter knowing of the false accusation and conniving in and aiding its purpose, thereby depriving him of an opportunity to appeal to the courts, and that such person cannot invoke the rights guaranteed to him by the. Constitution and statutes of the United States in the State to which he is taken. And this, it is said, is supported. by the cases of Ker v. Illinois,
I submit that the .facts in this case are different in kind and transcend in consequences those in the cases of Ker v. Illinois and Mahon v. Justice, and differ from and transcend them as the pоwer of a State transcends the power of an individual. No individual or individuals could have accomplished what the power of the two States accomplished; no individual or individuals could have commanded- the means and success; could have made two arrests of prominent citizens by invading their homes; could have commanded the resources of jails, armed guards and special trains; could have successfully timed all acts to prevent inquiry and judicial interference.
The accused, as soon as he could have done so, submitted his rights to the consideration of the courts. He could not have done so in Colorado, he could not have done so on the way from Colorado. At the first instant that the State of Idaho relaxed its restraining power he invoked the aid of
I also dissent in Nos. 250, 251, 265, 266 and 267. (See p. 222, post.)
