Opinion
We examine the nature of the extradition powers and duties of the Governor of California. Is a mandatory obligation to comply with the extradition demand of another state imposed upon him by either the extradition clause of the United States Constitution (art. IV, § 2, cl. 2) or the provisions of California’s Uniform Criminal Extradition *768 Act (Pen. Code, § 1548 et seq.)? If so, may the courts of this state compel the Governor to discharge that duty? We will conclude that although the Governor’s duty may be characterized as “mandatory,” the judicial enforcement thereof is authorized neither by the federal Constitution nor the provisions of California’s extradition act, and we will deny the petition of the State of South Dakota for a writ of mandate. (For purposes of clarity, the Uniform Criminal Extradition Act will be referred to herein as the Uniform Act, whereas California’s own, slightly different version of the Uniform Act, will be referred to as the Extradition Act.)
On or about February 15, 1976, South Dakota presented an extradition demand to the Governor seeking extradition of Dennis James Banks. The demand alleged that Banks had been convicted of specified felonies in South Dakota and had fled to California while on bail. The Governor has not questioned the sufficiency of the demand nor has he expressly denied the request. Rather, he asserts that he is exercising his prerogative to “investigate” the equities of the case before acting on South Dakota’s demand. South Dakota, on the other hand, insists that the Governor’s extradition function is mandatory, once the conditions of the Extradition Act are satisfied, and seeks from us a writ of mandate to compel the state’s Chief Executive to issue a warrant for Banks’ arrest.
We emphasize at this point the veiy limited nature of our inquiry. We examine only the character of the Governor’s extradition power, not the propriety of its exercise. Our sole function is to resolve, under applicable law, the question whether he possesses any discretionary power to refuse a demand for extradition which is in proper form. We express no opinion on the wisdom of his refusal thus far to honor South Dakota’s demand under the particular circumstances of the Banks case.
As will appear, the subject of extradition is covered by both constitutional and statutory provisions which we now explore.
1. Federal Constitution
Article IV, section 2, clause 2, of the United States Constitution (hereafter, the Extradition Clause) provides: “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.” (Italics added.) Both the United States
*769
Supreme Court and this court have interpreted this clause as imposing on the state executive a mandatory duty to extradite upon demand.
(Kentucky
v.
Dennison
(1861)
Having so defined a governor’s obligation, however, the Supreme Court further emphasized that neither the Extradition Clause nor the federal legislation implementing it contained any procedure whereby a governor’s extradition duty might be judicially compelled.
(Id.,
at pp. 107-110 [16 L.Ed. at pp. 729-730].) As
Dennison
carefully explained, “The performance of this duty ... is left to depend on the fidelity of the state executive to the compact entered into with the other states when it adopted the Constitution of the United States, and became a member of the Union. ... [II]
[If the governor. . . refuses to discharge this duty, there is no power delegated to the general government, either through the judicial department or any other department, to use any coercive means to compel
him.”
(Id.,
at pp. 109-110 [
Subsequently, in
Taylor
v.
Taintor
(1872)
South Dakota does not challenge the continuing force of these two Supreme Court expressions which are more than one hundred years old. It is generally accepted that federal courts lack any authority to compel a governor to deliver up a fugitive to a demanding state. Petitioner, however, would confine application of
Dennison
to the exercise of
federal
power. Relying on the rule, well established in California, that mandamus will issue to compel performance of a Governor’s ministerial duties (e.g.,
Hollman
v.
Warren
(1948)
The California law on the point was established very early by a case which, although it was decided before both
Dennison
and
Taylor,
nonetheless anticipated their results and clearly recognized that in California mandate would not lie to order compliance with the constitutional obligation to extradite.
(In re Manchester
(1855)
*771 From all of the foregoing we conclude that while the federal Constitution imposes upon the Governor a mandatory obligation to extradite a fugitive to a demanding state, the Constitution does not empower the courts, federal or state, to enforce that duty by writ of mandate. No case has so held. Rather, the Constitution leaves the faithful execution of the extradition obligation in the hands of the state executive, trusting, in the words of Dennison, in the Governor’s “fidelity” to the federal Constitution.
2. California’s Extradition Act
If the United States Constitution creates no judicially enforceable duty to extradite a fugitive to a demanding state, is there any independent basis for such an obligation? South Dakota contends that the provisions of our state Extradition Act impose such a judicially enforceable responsibility. For reasons which we explain below, the Extradition Act, when read as a whole and examined within its historical context, does not support such an interpretation.
It is well established that states may agree among themselves to deliver up persons whose rendition is not required by the Extradition Cláuse
(Innes
v.
Tobin
(1916)
As originally proposed, section 7 of the Uniform Act read in part: “If the Governor decides that the demand should be complied with, he shall sign a warrant of arrest . ...” (11 U. Laws Ann., p. 180.) California, alone among the adopting states, modified the above language to read: “If a demand conforms to the provisions of this chapter, the Governor ... shall sign a warrant of arrest. . . .” (Pen. Code, § 1549.2; for enactments of other states, see 11 U. Laws Ann., supra, p. 181.) We are urged by petitioner to interpret this revision as an expression of legislative intent to deprive the California Governor of any and all discretion and to make *772 his duty to issue an extradition warrant a purely ministerial act which is subject to judicial enforcement.
The principal difficulty with the South Dakota argument is that the language of the Extradition Act (and of previous California extradition statutes) closely conforms to the language of the Extradition Clause itself, which has long and consistently been interpreted as imposing a duty which, despite its apparent “mandatory” nature, has not been judicially enforceable.
California’s original extradition statute was enacted in 1851. It provided, in language substantially similar to the Extradition Clause, that “A person charged in any State or Territory of the United States, with treason, felony, or other crime, who shall flee from justice, and be found in this State,
shall
on demand of the executive authority of the State or Territory from which he fled, be delivered up by the Governor of this State, to be removed to the State having jurisdiction of the crime.” (Stats. 1851, ch. 29, § 665, p. 286, italics added.) As previously noted, in 1855 we recognized that, notwithstanding this mandatory language, state courts had no power to control the Governor’s discretion in extradition matters.
(In re Manchester, supra,
In 1872 the extradition provisions were rephrased and renumbered as part of the formal codification of California’s Penal Code. The references to “territories” were omitted, and the words “shall on demand” were deleted in favor of the words “must, on demand.” (Pen. Code, former § 1548.) We attach little, if any, significance to the statutory substitution of the term “must” for “shall.” Of considerably greater import, in our view, is the fact that the language of the 1872 statute was adopted by the Legislature 10 years after the United States Supreme Court’s expression in
Dennison, supra,
California’s extradition statutes remained substantially unchanged until the Uniform Act was adopted (with some modifications) in 1937. (Stats. 1937, ch. 554, p. 1581.) As we have related above, our Extradition Act now provides that “If a demand conforms to the provisions of this chapter, the Governor . .. shall sign a warrant of arrest....” (Pen. Code, § 1549.2; see also § 1548.1 [“duty” of Governor to extradite].) This language, although phrased in mandatory terms, is once again substantially similar to the language of the Extradition Clause and the earlier California extradition statutes previously described. In
Dennison,
the high court, in examining similar language, specifically noted that although Congress, in federal implementing legislation, had provided that “It shall be the duty” of the Governor to extradite a fugitive on demand, nevertheless “. . . the court is of the opinion, the words ‘it shall be the duty’ were not used as mandatory and compulsory,
but as declaratory of the moral duty
which this compact [between the States] created, when Congress had provided the mode of carrying it into execution. The act does not provide any means to compel the execution of this duty, nor inflict any punishment for neglect or refusal on the part of the Executive of the State . . . .”
(Dennison, supra,
Similarly, the Extradition Act (as well as earlier versions of California extradition statutes), though phrased in mandatory language, contains no procedure whatever by which the Governor’s duty may be judicially enforced. Moreover, no source of legislative history has been cited, and none has been found, which even remotely suggests that the purpose of the Legislature’s adoption of the Extradition Act in 1937 was to change the long-standing preexisting rule
(In re Manchester, supra,
We have said, as a general rule, that when the Legislature enacts a law “framed in the identical language” of a previous law on the same subject, it is presumed that the new law has the same fundamental meaning as the old law.
(Los Angeles Met. Transit Authority
v.
Brotherhood of Railroad Trainmen, supra,
The validity of the foregoing interpretation is reinforced by an examination of other provisions of the Extradition Act. In this connection we are aided by two general rules of statutory construction. We have held that “a statute should be construed with reference to the entire statutory system of which it forms a part in such a way that harmony may be achieved among the parts . . . .”
(Merrill
v.
Department of Motor Vehicles
(1969)
*775
Penal Code section 1554, unamended since its enactment, was taken verbatim from section 21 of the Uniform Act. (11 U. Laws Ann.,
supra,
at p. 277.) The section provides that “The Governor
may recall
his warrant of arrest or may issue another warrant
whenever he deems it proper.”
(Italics added.) Clearly, a construction of the act which imposes on the Governor a judicially enforceable duty to issue an extradition warrant while, at the same time, conferring upon him absolute discretion to recall his warrant would create absurd results. It is a fundamental rule of statutory construction that statutes should be construed to avoid anomalies. (See
People
v.
Oliver
(1961)
It is further argued that section 1554 is inapplicable to warrants issued by the Governor in response to extradition demands from another state. Instead, it is urged, section 1554 concerns only the recall of warrants which are issued by the Governor to secure a fugitive received from another state in response to California’s extradition demand. In other words, it is contended that while the Governor may, at will, revoke a warrant issued in support of extradition to California he may not do so in cases of extradition from this state. A close examination, however, of the provisions of the Extradition Act readily refutes this contention.
As we have previously noted, section 1549.2 of the Extradition Act (derived from § 7 of the Uniform Act) directs the Governor to issue an arrest warrant once a proper demand has been received from another state. This section, and (with one exception) all other sections of the act which precede section 1554, relate to the subject of compliance with out-of-state extradition demands. (Section 1549 allows the Governor by agreement with another state to accomplish extradition to California despite the pendency of criminal proceedings in the other state.) It seems readily apparent that, using a common sense approach, the phrase “his warrant of arrest” in section 1554 (§ 21 of the Uniform Act) must refer to the arrest warrant specified in the preceding section 1549.2 (see also §§ 1549.3-1550.3, 1552-1552.2). We also observe that the subject of demanding extradition
to
California (and the issuance of an arrest warrant upon delivery of the fugitive
to
California) first appears in a
subsequent
sec
*776
tion of the act (§ 1554.1; § 22 of the Uniform Act). If South Dakota’s construction of legislative intent is accepted, this would seem an odd placement and an unusual statutory sequence. One would reasonably anticipate that the subject of the recall of a warrant (§21 Uniform Act; Pen. Code, § 1554) would
follow
rather than
precede
the substantive discussion of the warrant (§ 22 Uniform Act; Pen. Code, § 1554.1 et seq.). Although section 1554 may arguably apply to both extradition to and from California, a point we need not now decide, we discern no reason whatever for limiting the application of the section to California’s demands of extradition from other states. Our research discloses only one case interpreting section 21 of the Uniform Act (Pen. Code, § 1554) and it assumed-, as we do, that the section applies to the extradition demand of another state. (See
Ex Parte Oxford
(1953)
In addition to section 1554, another provision of the Extradition Act also strongly suggests a legislative intent to confer some degree of discretion upon the Governor in acting in response to extradition demands. Section 1548.3, unamended since its adoption, is substantially similar to section 4 of the Uniform Act. (11 U. Laws Ann., supra, p. 154.) Section 1548.3 provides that “When a demand is made upon the Governor of this State by the executive authority of another State for the surrender of a person so charged with crime, the Governor may call upon the Attorney General or any district attorney in this State to investigate or assist in investigating the demand, and to report to him the situation and circumstances of the person so demanded, and whether he ought to be surrendered according to the provision of this chapter.”
It would seem reasonable to conclude that if the Governor’s only duty in extradition matters was to determine the adequacy of the extradition papers, the Legislature in adopting section 1548.3 logically would have limited the authority of the Attorney General or district attorney to the investigation of the formal sufficiency of the demanding papers and to report simply whether extradition was required. Instead, the statute authorizes a broader investigation into the “situation and circumstances of the person” and a recommendation as to whether the fugitive
“ought
to be surrendered.” (Italics added.) These provisions would appear to be pure surplusage if the Governor’s duty was solely a ministerial one of surrendering the fugitive whenever the papers are found to be in proper order and the person sought is properly identified. But, we have held that “ ‘A cardinal rule of construction is that... a construction making some words surplusage is to be avoided.’ ”
(People
v.
Gilbert
(1969) 1 Cal.3d
*777
475, 480 [
Pointing to other sections of the Extradition Act, South Dakota reminds us that, in contrast to the mandatory language of section 1549.2, discussed above, the sections of the act which govern cases of extradition falling outside the Extradition Clause are framed in permissive terms. These provisions specify that the Governor “may” extradite a fugitive in those cases in which he has left the demanding state involuntarily (§ 1549), or was not present in the demanding state when he caused a crime to be committed therein (§ 1549.1), or is awaiting trial in this state (§ 1553.1). The inference suggested by this argument is that the Legislature having expressly used the term “may” in describing certain discretionary extradition situations must thereby have meant that the term “shall” imposed a mandatory duty on the Governor. Sections 1549, 1549.1, or 1553.1, however, are in no way inconsistent with the premise that section 1549.2 was not intended to create a judicially enforceable duty to extradite. The foregoing provisions pertain to special factual circumstances in which, by their very nature, extradition may not be appropriate. The Legislature, accordingly, would have had no reason in such cases to have adopted language reflecting any constitutionally imposed duty to extradite.
We are moved to our conclusion herein by another factor of considerable force. We have held that “. . . the contemporaneous administrative construction of the enactment by those charged with its enforcement and interpretation is entitled to great weight, and courts generally will not depart from such construction unless it is clearly erroneous or unauthorized.”
(City of Los Angeles
v.
Rancho Homes, Inc.
(1953)
We are able to document that the foregoing practice has extended almost 40 years because again we find that Justice Mosk identified, in his careful analysis written in 1939, the kind of case invoking gubernatorial discretion. He observed that “Occasionally there arises an exceptional *778 case in which the ends of justice require particular consideration.” (Mosk, supra, 14 State Bar J. at p. 125.) He cited the example of an escapee from custody in a southwestern state who for a period of 17 years led a blameless life, and concluded that “it would seem to have been a miscarriage of justice to have returned him to the demanding state.” Governor Olson declined to return him. Doubtless, it was this conclusion that prompted the editors of the State Bar Journal to preface the article with the headnote “Governor can prevent miscarriage of justice by refusing extradition.” In the same vein the article continues, “That raises the question of whether or not a governor may be compelled to return a fugitive when he thus arbitrarily determines against so doing. No cases have arisen in California, but the issue was decided in an early federal case, Ex Parte Kentucky v. Dennison . . . .” (Ibid., italics added.) Following a quotation from Dennison, and noting that as a practical matter former California Governors had complied with the federal and state Constitutions, Justice Mosk concludes: “Thus it would appear that the executive, in the last analysis, has the final authority in determining his duty in extradition problems.” (Ibid., italics added.) Our interpretation is not new.
The general acceptance of the practice of a succession of California Governors who, since Governor Olson, have on occasion, wisely or unwisely, declined to honor extradition demands is “entitled to great weight.”
(City of Los Angeles
v.
Rancho Homes, Inc., supra,
We note additionally similar evaluations which have been made by legal writers. Thus the author of 2 California Criminal Law Practice (Cont.Ed.Bar 1969) in section 27.11, at page 722, concludes that “no power exists to compel the governor to [extradite]....” While describing a California Governor as lacking “true discretionary power” to decline extradition, nevertheless “. . . resisting extradition is neither a hopeless fight nor a meaningless gesture. There is occasionally an exceptional case in which counsel can clearly demonstrate that ordering return of the fugitive to the demanding state would amount to a gross miscarriage of justice. This is the case that should be presented to the governor for his *779 consideration through an extradition hearing.” (Id., § 27.26 at p. 730; see also Note, 2 Lincoln L.Rev. (1966) 48, 51-52, fn. 14; Note, 66 Yale L.J. (1956) 97, 106 and fn. 47, 107-109; 31 Am.Jur.2d, Extradition, § 48, pp. 956-957.)
Finally, several considerations of public policy support and commend an interpretation of the Extradition Act permitting the Governor to exercise some discretion in refusing extradition in an appropriate case. Doubtless, individual circumstances, surrounding extradition demands are varied and diverse, thus rendering peculiarly inappropriate the mechanical application of fixed and absolute rules if justice is to be achieved in a particular case. It would be a harsh rule that stripped the Governor of all power to deny extradition in a case in which, for example, the Governor is satisfied that a fugitive, since residing in California, has established himself as a worthy law-abiding citizen, or in which his physical safety or right to a fair trial cannot be assured in the demanding state, or the offense charged does not constitute a crime in California. In a given case, various unanticipated equitable considerations may be paramount. As the Attorney General has properly urged in his brief before us, discretion is the technique by which the law guarantees that the application of norms will, in fact, achieve the objectives for which they were designed.
In 1960, former Chief Justice Traynor wisely observed that “Protection from unjustified extradition does not lie in reading into the extradition laws purely technical requirements . . .
but in the sound judgment of the respective Governors charged with the administration of those laws.
Their judgment is entitled to great weight.”
(In re Cooper
(1960)
Having determined that the Governor possesses discretionary power to refuse an extradition demand, we conclude by observing that the Governor does have an obligation enforceable by mandamus to
*780
exercise that discretion, either by granting or denying South Dakota’s demand. (See
Anderson
v.
Phillips
(1975)
The alternative writ of mandamus is discharged and the petition for a peremptory writ is denied.
Tobriner, Acting C. X, Manuel, X, Newman, X, and Racanelli, X, * concurred.
I dissent.
Dennis James Banks was convicted, after a jury trial in the Circuit Court, Seventh Judicial Circuit, South Dakota, on July 25 and 26, 1975, of riot while armed with a dangerous weapon and assault with a dangerous weapon without intent to kill. On July 26 Banks posted a bond, approved by the circuit court judge, in the sum of $10,000, in which he agreed in writing to return to the court for sentencing on August 5, 1975, upon the express condition, inter alia, that he “shall not travel out of the state for any purpose.” On August 5, 1975, he failed to appear in court, the bond was forfeited and a bench warrant was issued for his arrest and detention. Upon the subsequent apprehension of the fugitive in California, his extradition was requested by the Governor of South Dakota on February 9, 1976. In the more than two years thereafter, the Governor of California has taken no action on the request.
Thus the people of California now have at large in their midst a fugitive convicted felon solely because the Governor of this state has failed to fulfill the extradition duty imposed upon him by the Constitu *781 tion of the United States (art. IV, § 2, cl. 2) and by the laws of the State of California (Pen. Code, § 1548 et seq.). Whether that duty is mandatory as I believe, or discretionary as argued by the majority, is currently of little more than academic interest. The Governor has failed either to satisfy his mandatory duty or to exercise his purported discretion. For more than two years he has done absolutely nothing in response to South Dakota’s extradition demand. This inaction constitutes a contemptuous rebuff to the administration of justice in a sister state and a blow to cooperative law enforcement among the states.
I
There is no quéstion that a writ of mandate will lie to compel a Governor to perform a ministerial duty imposed upon him by law. As pointed out in
Jenkins
v.
Knight
(1956)
Chief Justice Marshall put the subject in perspective in
Marbury
v.
Madison
(1803) 5 U.S. (1 Crunch) 137, 170 [
Kentucky
v.
Dennison
(1861)
In a consistent line of cases, this court has maintained the right to direct a Governor to perform his prescribed duties. Just as Governor Knight was involved in
Jenkins
v.
Knight, supra,
II
The majority concede that every provision of the Constitution and laws relating to extradition speaks in mandatory terms. The federal Constitution provides that “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.” (Italics added; U.S. Const., art. IV, § 2, cl. 2.) Over a centuiy ago the United States Supreme Court characterized this requirement as merely “ministerial,” not “discretionary”
(Dennison, supra,
The courts of. California have declared that it “is now settled that extradition under the terms of the federal Constitution [citations] is an absolute duty and right. It is not a matter of mere comity, subject to the pleasure of each state.”
(In re Morgan
(1966)
This court, in a unanimous opinion
(In re Russell
(1974)
All the expressions employed by the foregoing and other cases—ministerial, duty, right, absolute right, shall, not a matter of comity, not subject to pleasure—clearly connote a mandatory rather than discretionary responsibility.
The majority strain mightily, in reading California code sections relating to extradition, to find a legislative intent to give discretion to the Governor. The hurdle they cannot leap, however, are the express terms of Penal Code section 1549.2—“If a demand conforms to the provisions of this chapter, the Governor . . . shall sign a warrant to arrest...”—and Penal Code section 1548.1—“it is the duty of the Governor of this State to have arrested and delivered up to the executive authority of any other State any person charged in that State with treason, felony, or other crime, who has fled from justice and is found in this State.” (Italics added.)
Seeking statutory comfort anywhere possible, the majority attempt to draw solace from Penal Code section 1554, which provides “The Governor may recall his warrant of arrest or may issue another warrant whenever he deems it proper.” They find that isolated use of the permissive “may” to be significant. Their misinterpretation is understandable due to inept placement of several code sections, but nevertheless my colleagues are clearly in error.
*784 Three related and numerically compatible code sections—1554, 1554.1 and 1554.2—all apply to the efforts of the Governor to return from another state a fugitive from California. Section 1554 gives the Governor authority to recall his warrant directed to the demanding state; section 1554.1 describes the method of issuing that warrant to his agent for receipt of the fugitive in the other state, and section 1554.2 provides the method of requisitioning a fugitive from a foreign state.
The majority clearly misread those three interrelated code sections when they apply any one of them to fugitives found within California. The history of the sections confirms the contrary interpretation. As originally enacted in 1872, former section 1554 enumerated the procedures to be followed by a district attorney upon learning that a fugitive from California justice has been apprehended in another state. In 1937, the old section 1554 was fractured and replaced by three sections—now 1554, 1554.1 and 1554.2—relating to the same subject, extradition to California from other states. The three sections were adopted simultaneously. (Stats. 1937, ch. 554, §§ 24, 25 & 26, pp. 1587-1588.)
As a result of finding gubernatorial discretion where none exists constitutionally or statutorily, the majority permit sanctuary to be accorded the convicted felon who is the fugitive in this case. Beyond that immediate result, however, the ultimate cost of the majority opinion is high in terms of judicial recognition and acquiescence in the unlimited exercise of discretion in an area in which discretion has been rejected by the very legislation under which the executive purports either to act or to refuse to act.
Ill
It was generous and flattering of the majority to liberally quote from my 1939 article in 14 State Bar J. 121. But, alas, they overlooked the key paragraph in my discussion of gubernatorial extradition hearing procedures. I pointed out that “The issues involved are confined within narrow limitations. The executive may not inquire into the innocence or guilt of the accused, nor may he receive testimony relative to the character of the crime, the motives underlying the demand, technical defects in the indictment or information, nor the criminal liability of the accused. He is bound to consider but three issues: first, that a crime was committed in the demanding state and that the fugitive was present in said state at the time of the commission of said crime; second, that the fugitive thereafter *785 fled from the demanding state and is now in custody in this state; and third, that the papers are in the correct form.” (Id. at p. 122.)
The majority deem it significant that previous California governors have declined to grant extradition. It is true that there have been a few instances over the decades in which former governors have refused to honor extradition warrants from other states. Such examples are not helpful as precedent here for two reasons. First, no negative action of previous governors has ever been challenged in court; thus there is no judicial precedent. Second, previous governors candidly confessed their denial of extradition was contrary to constitutional and statutory expectation, but out of human compassion in unusual circumstances they chose to violate their duty. 2 Here the Governor has failed to make that kind of forthright decision; he has declined to act in any manner.
I find difficulty in reconciling the vigor with which my learned colleagues enforce judicial orders directing the legislative branch of government to follow the law, and their reticence to require the executive to do likewise. For example, in
Ross
v.
Superior Court
(1977)
We do not have a contempt proceeding here. If the Governor were to be cited for contempt, I would probably invoke Chief Justice Marshall’s admonition to use restraint, not coercion
(Ogden
v.
Saunders
(1827)
*786 IV
The position of the Governor that he, and he alone, may determine whether to comply with the legal process of extradition is comparable to the claim of immunity from judicial process asserted in
United States
v.
Nixon
(1974)
Similarly in
Nixon
v.
Sirica
(D.C.Cir. 1973)
V
According to the majority, two years after the extradition request the Governor is still “exercising his prerogative to ‘investigate.’ ” The only statutory authority to inquire into an extradition request is contained in Penal Code section 1548.3, which provides that the Governor may call upon the Attorney General or any district attorney to investigate the demand. At oral argument the Attorney General conceded that he had not been requested to undertake any investigation and that he was unaware of any ‘investigation conducted for the Governor by any district attorney. No details of any past or present inquiry by the Governor have been offered to this court or to the courts below. We must conclude no *787 such statutory investigation has been undertaken on behalf of the Governor in the more than two years during which the matter has been pending.
What other justification is there for the position assumed by the Governor? I can find none. He concedes the extradition papers are in proper order; the fugitive was in the demanding state when the crimes were committed and was found guilty thereof; the fugitive is now in this state. If the Governor’s duty to extradite is mandatory, he has not complied. If the Governor has the discretion to deny extradition, as the majority contend, he has not exercised that discretion. If the Governor desires law enforcement agencies to “investigate,” he has yet to request them to do so. The Governor apparently insists he has some undefined inherent right to sit in perpetual contemplation of the matter, to neither grant nor deny the legal demand of a sister state for the return of a convicted felon who fled that state’s justice and is harbored in California. This court stultifies itself by placing approval on such whimsical disregard of constitutional and statutoiy duty.
The interests of an effective and impartial criminal justice system, and the prevention of discord and retaliation among the states of the union, are best preserved by the enforcement of the Governor’s mandatory duty to issue his warrant in response to a proper request for extradition. Should the fugitive believe the demand to be legally insufficient, he may review the proceedings by means of habeas corpus.
The foregoing principle is sound when the demanding state seeks return of a fugitive for purposes of trial. The validity of the concept is compounded when, as here, the fugitive has already been tried, found guilty of serious felonies, and has fled to avoid imposition of sentence.
I would issue the writ.
Clark, J., concurred.
Notes
Assigned by the Acting Chairperson of the Judicial Council.
There is serious question whether the rigid federalism of
Dennison
would be followed today when a constitutional issue is involved. The high court has not hesitated to order state and local officials to comply with constitutionally required school desegregation (see, e.g.,
Brown
v.
Board of Education
(1955)
In California history there have been a few such compassionate refusals (Mosk, Extradition Procedure in California (1939) 14 State Bar J. ,121, 125). In those “exceptional” instances, the Governors of California realized they were failing to meet their extradition obligations and forthrightly explained their reasons in a communication to the Governor of the demanding state.
