This is a petition for certiorari
1
from an order of a district court discharging a writ of habeas corpus issued upon the petition of Arthur L. Semendinger, who is incarcerated in the Arkansas Valley Correctional Facility. Semendinger obtained the writ to challenge a request by which the district attorney for the County of San Bernardino, California, sought to obtain temporary custody of Semendinger for the purpose of bringing him to trial on a felony charge pending in that jurisdiction. We accept
I.
The petitioner, Arthur L. Semendinger, was convicted of two counts of aggravated robbery in Gunnison County District Court and was sentenced on March 3,1987, to the custody of the Department of Corrections for two consecutive terms of ten years each. He was incarcerated in the Arkansas Valley Correctional Facility near Ord-way in Crowley County, Colorado. A de-tainer was lodged against Semendinger with the Department of Corrections by law enforcement officials of San Bernardino County, California, based on a murder charge pending against Semendinger in that jurisdiction, and pursuant to the Interstate Agreement on Detainers (IAD), §§ 24-60-501 to -507, 10B C.R.S. (1988). Thereafter, the district attorney for San Bernardino County filed a written request for temporary custody of Semendinger pursuant to article IV(a) of the IAD, § 24-60-501(IV)(a), 10B C.R.S. (1988), in order to obtain his presence in California to face trial on the murder charge. Semen-dinger then petitioned the Crowley County District Court for a writ of habeas corpus to contest the sufficiency of the request for temporary custody and to prevent Colorado authorities from permitting California officials to take custody of him pursuant to that request. In that petition, Semendinger asserted, among other things, that he was not the same person sought by California and that the documents requesting temporary custody failed to show probable cause for the charge pending in California. The court issued the writ 3 and scheduled a hearing.
At the hearing the People relied on the documents filed by the California authorities in support of the request for temporary custody and offered no additional evidence. Semendinger offered no evidence but relied instead on arguments that the documentation was insufficient to establish identity and probable cause. The district court disagreed, ordered the writ of habeas corpus discharged, and directed that the petitioner be returned to California pursuant to the request for temporary custody. The district court then stayed execution of the temporary custody order pending appeal and the petitioner sought review in this court.
II.
The People contend that the petitioner has no right to appeal from discharge of the writ of habeas corpus but instead may seek review only by a petition for certiorari directed to this court. As authority for this position, the People rely on section 16-19-111, 8A C.R.S. (1986), a part of the Uniform Criminal Extradition Act, §§ 16-19-101 to -133, 8A C.R.S. (1986), and
Moen v. Wilson,
In
Moen v. Wilson
we considered a contention that the provision of article IV of the IAD for delivery of temporary custody of a prisoner to another state violates due process of law “because it fails to provide prisoners with notice and the right to contest their transfer to another state for the purpose of trial,” unless the IAD should be interpreted “to contain the same right to a hearing that is afforded a prisoner in testing the legality of transfer under the Uniform Criminal Extradition Act [
4
]....”
Id.
at 87,
We continued our analysis in
Moen v. Wilson
by considering the nature of the protections necessary to satisfy due process and whether such protections are available under the IAD. Recognizing that procedural due process is a flexible concept,
Wolff v. McDonnell,
Prior to 1986, review of orders discharging writs of habeas corpus, including writs of habeas corpus issued to contest extradition proceedings, was available in this court as a matter of right.
See, e.g., Moog v. Williams,
Semendinger argues that the amendment to section 16-19-111 applies only to habeas corpus writs sought to contest extradition and that therefore habeas corpus writs contesting transfers of custody under article IV of the IAD continue to be appealable as a matter of right. The People advance the contrary argument— that the amendment to section 16-19-111 applies to habeas corpus petitions contesting transfers of temporary custody under article IV of the IAD as well as to habeas corpus petitions challenging transfer under the Extradition Act, and that therefore Semendinger is entitled only to petition for certiorari from the order discharging his writ of habeas corpus and cannot appeal as a matter of right. We conclude that the People are correct.
The General Assembly is presumed to be cognizant of prior decisional law when enacting or amending statutes.
Rauschenberger v. Radetsky,
As a result, Semendinger’s right to appellate review of discharge of the writ of habeas corpus in this case is limited to the right to petition this court for certiorari. Although Semendinger has cast his application for review as an appeal, we elect to treat it as a petition for certiorari in order to expedite the review process. We also elect to issue the writ of certiorari and to review the merits of Semendinger’s assertion that the documentation submitted by San Bernardino County with its request for temporary custody was insufficient to establish identity and probable cause.
III.
A.
The petitioner contends that the documentation in support of the application for temporary custody does not contain a sufficient
prima facie
showing of identity. He bases this contention upon the request for temporary custody submitted by the district attorney for San Bernardino County and seeking custody of “Arthur
Semenginer,”
rather than Arthur
Semendinger,
which is the petitioner’s name. He notes correctly that a presumption of identity arises if the name of the person in custody is the same as the name appearing in the documents seeking custody.
See, e.g., Richardson v. Cronin,
In finding that the application for temporary custody contained a sufficient
prima facie
showing of identity, the trial court did not rely solely on the similarity of the name “Semenginer” in the request for temporary custody to the petitioner’s name. Instead, the court considered all the documents submitted in support of the request, including a picture of the person whose custody was sought by California authorities. The arrest warrant, the declaration in support of arrest warrant, the fingerprint card, the felony complaint, and the San Bernardino Municipal Court felony docket sheet all describe the person sought as either Arthur L. Semendinger or Arthur Lewis Semendinger. A photograph of the person sought by San Bernardino County was attached to the fingerprint card, and the trial judge found this to be a picture of petitioner Arthur L. Semendinger, who was present in the courtroom. On the basis of this additional information, the trial court found an identity between the name of the
B.
The petitioner also contends that the documents submitted in support of the request for temporary custody do not establish probable cause to believe that he committed the crime with which he is charged in California. We disagree.
A prisoner can contest his transfer to another state to face charges by a writ of habeas corpus on the basis that the documents supporting a request for temporary custody do not establish that probable cause exists to believe he committed the crime with which he is charged.
Moen v. Wilson,
We conclude that the judge who issued the California warrant necessarily determined that probable cause existed to believe that the petitioner committed the crime with which he was charged in California. Therefore, the trial court correctly determined that the 'Supporting documents were sufficient to establish the validity of the request for temporary custody.
See Breault v. Wilson,
We affirm the order of the district court discharging the writ of habeas corpus.
Notes
. The petitioner has sought review by appeal. As determined in part II of this opinion, however, review is available only by certiorari. We have elected to treat Semendinger’s appeal as a petition for certiorari and have also elected to grant the petition and review his assertions of error on their merits. See part II of this opinion.
. See n. 1.
. The writ does not appear in the record. In subsequent proceedings, however, the parties and the court assume that a writ was issued.
. Sometimes cited hereafter as "Extradition Act.”
. The prisoner may contest not only whether the temporary custody request complies with the IAD but "will also be able to contest the transfer on the grounds afforded to those that are to be transferred pursuant to the Extradition Act....”
Moen
v.
Wilson,
. Cal. Penal Code § 813 (West) remains substantially unchanged. See Cal. Penal Code § 813 (West 1985 & 1989 Supp.) (authorizing magistrate to issue warrant or summons after finding of probable cause).
