40 N.E.2d 167 | Ohio Ct. App. | 1941
Catherine J. Gregg filed this action in habeas corpus and the prayer of her petition was denied by the Common Pleas Court.
Catherine J. Gregg was indicted in the state of New York for larceny and embezzlement. The Governor of New York issued a demand for her extradition from the state of Ohio. After a hearing, the demand was recognized and the Governor of Ohio signed a warrant for her arrest and for the delivery of her person to the duly authorized agent of New York. This habeascorpus proceeding is in pursuance of Section 109-10, General Code.
At the hearing in the Court of Common Pleas, Catherine J. Gregg offered evidence to show that the prosecution in New York of Mrs. Gregg was not in good faith. This evidence was rejected by the court and the applicant's attorney made a proffer of evidence that the prosecution in New York was based solely on the complaint of Elizabeth C.T. Miller to avoid the payment of two judgments recovered against her in the Common Pleas Court of Cuyahoga county, Ohio, by Mrs. Gregg, and also that there was no embezzlement or theft intended or committed by Mrs. Gregg. This evidence was rejected by the trial court. *398
Clearly the applicant had no right in this proceeding to inquire into her guilt or innocence of the crime for which she had been indicted in New York. This is specifically the provision in Section 109-20, General Code. The enactment of this section, however, did not change the law, as it had always been held in Ohio that on a habeas corpus proceeding in an extradition matter the court would not hear evidence on the question of the guilt or innocence of the accused.
The question presented in this case is whether or not in ahabeas corpus action in an extradition proceeding, evidence that the prosecution was in bad faith and for the purpose of collecting a civil debt is admissible.
Prior to its repeal (117 Ohio Laws, 588) by the Uniform Extradition Act by the General Assembly of Ohio, on April 29, 1937, Section 110, General Code, relating to extradition, provided:
"The demand or application must be accompanied by sworn evidence that the party charged is a fugitive from justice, and that the demand is made in good faith for the punishment of crime and not for the purpose of the collection of debt or pecuniary mulct * * *."
While Section 110, General Code, was in effect there were decisions in Ohio holding that evidence as to the motive and good faith of the prosecution would be received in a habeas corpus action.
In Work, Agent, v. Corrington,
"No satisfactory reason is perceived why a Governor should issue or obey a requisition where he is satisfied that the sole object of the party complaining is to enforce the payment of a private claim for money. Such an abuse of process is equivalent to a fraudulent use of it."
See, also: In re Extradition of Williams,
Section 110, General Code, as stated, was repealed *399 when the new extradition law was passed which is now found in Sections 109-1 to 109-31, General Code, inclusive.
The Uniform Extradition Act in effect in Ohio does not contain old Section 110, General Code, or any similar provision. Counsel for Mrs. Gregg, at the hearing, contended that Section 109-23, General Code, reenacts the substance of old Section 110, General Code. An examination of Section 109-23, General Code, shows that it applies only to what the application of a prosecuting attorney in this state to the Governor of Ohio must contain when extradition is sought from another state, of a person charged with crime in this state. Section 109-23, General Code, provides that such an application must contain a statement to the effect that "the proceeding is not instituted to enforce a private claim."
New York has also enacted the Uniform Extradition Law and the statutes of New York contain a similar provision to Section 109-23, General Code.
In compliance with such provision, the district attorney of New York county, in his application to the Governor of New York to issue a requisition on the Governor of Ohio in this case, certified as follows:
"That this application is not made for the purpose of enforcing the collection of a debt, or of avoiding the penalty of a bail bond, or for any private purpose whatever, and that if the requisition applied for be granted, the criminal proceedings shall not be used for any of said purposes."
It is our opinion that whatever the law may have been previous to the repeal of Section 110, General Code, evidence as to the motive or good faith of a prosecution is not now admissible in ahabeas corpus proceeding in an extradition matter in Ohio.
This is in accord with the great weight of authority in this country and the decisions of the Supreme Court of the United States. In Drew, Sheriff, v. Thaw, *400
"There is no discretion allowed, no inquiry into motives."
In the case of People, ex rel. Carr, v. Murray, Sheriff,
The cases in this country on the question before this court are collected in a note to People, ex rel. Carr, v. Murray, Sheriff,supra, in 94 A.L.R., 1487 at 1493. Generally they support the view herein expressed.
For the reasons stated the judgment is affirmed.
Judgment affirmed.
LIEGHLEY, P.J., and SKEEL, J., concur. *401