101 Minn. 303 | Minn. | 1907
This is an appeal from an order of the district court of the county of St. Louis discharging the writ of habeas corpus issued in this case and remanding the relator to the custody of the respondent as sheriff. The matter was heard in this court upon the petition for the writ, the writ, •the return thereto, and the traverse thereof. It appears from such documents that a demand was made by the governor of the state of California upon the governor of the state of Minnesota for the surrender of the relator to the demanding state as a fugitive from justice; that such demand was honored by the governor of this state, who issued his warrant to the respondent, directing him to arrest the relator and ■deliver him to the ■ agent of the demanding state; and, further, that the respondent now detains the relator by virtue of such warrant.
The relator here urges that the extradition proceedings, including the warrant of rendition, are not sufficient to justify his arrest and detention by the respondent as sheriff. In order that a person may be held for extradition, it must appear that he is a fugitive from the justice ■of the demanding state, and that a demand has been made for his ■surrender by the governor thereof, accompanied by a copy of an in-, ■dictment found or an affidavit made before a magistrate of the demanding state charging him with having committed a crime therein, certified .as authentic by the governor or chief magistrate of such state. Section 5278, R. S. U. S. [U. S. Comp. St. 1901, p. 3597]. If there was a compliance with these requisites in this case, the relator’s detention.is legal; ■otherwise, not.
The warrant in this case recites that:
Whereas, a demand has been made pursuant to the constitution and laws of the United States by J.' N. Gillett, governor of the state of California, upon the governor of the state of Minnesota, for the delivery of J. H. Grande as a fugitive from justice of the state of California, and supposed to be within the limits of the state of Minnesota; and
Whereas, the said J. H. Grande stands charged upon complaint in the county of San Joaquin, in the state of California, with the crime of forgery,'alleged to have been committed on the 30th day of October, A. D. 1906, in the county of San Joaquin and state of California, a copy of which was duly produced and annexed to the demand, duly certified to as authentic by the said J. N. Gillett, governor of the state of California, which said charge as set forth in said complaint is made criminal by the laws of such state.
It is to be noted that the word “complaint” is used in the warrant, instead of the word “affidavit”; and counsel for relator, relying upon the case of State v. Richardson, 34 Minn. 115, claim that the warrant is void for that reason and that the relator must be discharged.
In the case cited the warrant recited that the alleged fugitive “stands charged by the complaint,” and the legality of his detention was determined on habeas corpus proceedings solely upon the warrant, and this court held that a complaint was not necessarily an affidavit'; hence, in the absence of the record upon which the governor acted, the warrant alone was not a justification for the detention of the alleged fugitive. In so holding the court said: “It is not necessary that copies of the indictment, affidavit, or other records be annexed to the warrant. It is sufficient that they be produced if the warrant be called in question, or that the jurisdictional facts are recited on the face of the warrant. People v. Donohue, 84 N. Y. 438; In the Matter of Romaine, 23 Cal. 585. * * * Here the warrant assumes to set out and recite the jurisdictional facts relied on, and the relator claims it to be insufficient in the
See, in this connection, the case of State v. Clough, 71 N. H. 594, 598, 53 Atl. 1086, 1089 (61 L. R. A. 946) in which the court said: “If the evidence is legally sufficient to support the necessary facts, it must be presumed, even from a warrant which does not contain a full- recital of such facts, that it was based upon their existence.”
In the case at bar the warrant recites the ultimate fact that a demand was made upon the governor of this state by the governor of the state of California for the delivery of the relator as a fugitive from justice-, of the state of California, pursuant to the constitution and laws of the United States, and that the relator stands charged with the crime of forgery alleged to have been committed in the demanding state.
But, if it be conceded that by the use of the word “complaint” in the warrant, instead of the word “affidavit,” this case falls within the rule of the case of State v. Richardson, 34 Minn. 115, 24 N. W. 354, yet it appears, from the sheriff’s return in this case and the papers before the court, that the warrant is sufficient within the rule of that case, and that the relator is not unlawfully restrained of his liberty by the sheriff, the respondent herein. It appears, from the return to the writ and the papers accompanying and made a part of the return, which papers constitute the record upon which the governor acted in issuing his warrant and which are a part of the record in this court in this case, that the governor of California duly demanded the surrender of the relator as a fugitive from the justice of that state; that such demand was made in strict accordance with the constitution and laws of the United States; that the complaint referred to in the governor’s warrant was a verified complaint in form and legal effect an affidavit charging the relator with the crime of forgery with sufficient definiteness to show that the crime had been committed, and, further, that it was the duty of the governor of this state to surrender the relator to the agent of the governor of the state of California, and that he was authorized
It is therefore ordered and adjudged that the order appealed from be, and it is, hereby affirmed, and that the writ of habeas corpus herein be, and it is, discharged, and the relator remanded to the custody of the respondent, as sheriff, to be by him delivered to the agent named in the warrant of the governor of this state. Counsel for the relator having requested, in the event of an adverse decision, a stay to enable him to apply for a writ of error from the supreme court of the United States, it is ordered that the execution of this judgment be stayed for ten days.