121 S.E. 161 | W. Va. | 1924
Jay McAninch was indicted at the January, 1923, term of the circuit court of Monongalia county for a violation of the prohibition statute. The gravamen of the charge is that he unlawfully brought into the state and carried from place to place within the state and within that county a quantity of intoxicating liquor. Upon being arraigned for trial he tendered a plea the substance of which was that about the 12th day of December, 1922, a justice of the peace of that county issued a warrant for him charging him with the identical offense set out in the indictment, and on the following day while being held in the state of Pennsylvania, by officers of that state, without warrant or legal process, certain officers from the county of Monongalia came into the state of Pennsylvania for the purpose of taking him back to West Virginia to answer the warrant without extradition papers or any legal authority whatever for his arrest in that state, and removed him to the state of West Virginia; that against his protest, objection and will, they then and there handcuffed him, placed him in an automobile, and by threats and violence forcibly brought him into the state of West Virginia against his continuing protest, and took him before the justice who had issued the warrant, where, upon a preliminary hearing, he was required to give, and did give, bond to answer the indictment which was later found against him. The state objected to the filing of the plea, and moved to strike. The state's motion was sustained, and the plea rejected. Upon joint application of the parties the action of the court in thus rejecting the plea was certified to this court for review. *364
It is very generally held that the jurisdiction of the court in which an indictment is found is not affected by the manner in which the accused is brought into the court's jurisdiction and before it for trial. It is very generally held, with few exceptions, that if the accused has been illegally arrested or that he has been, by trickery, fraud or force or by any illegal means, brought within the jurisdiction of the court, that fact does not oust the jurisdiction nor impair its right to try on the indictment. 16 C. J. 175, sec. 228, Subject, "Manner of bringing accused within the jurisdiction." Citations to decisions by many of the courts of the states and of England and Ontario will there be found, and they fully sustain the text. The case of Plyant Mahon v. Abner Justice, jailor of Pike county, Kentucky,
The ruling of the circuit court in rejecting the plea is affirmed.
*365Ruling affirmed.