216 Miss. 498 | Miss. | 1952
Tyler was indicted in Jefferson County, Alabama, for tbe crime of grand larceny in that county. The Governor of Alabama requested the Governor of Mississippi to cause Tyler to be arrested and delivered to Rufus Dudley, the designated agent of the State of Alabama. The Governor of Mississippi, after a hearing, granted the request. Tyler sued out this writ of habeas corpus against M. B. Pierce, Chief Detective of the City of Jackson, and Dudley, seeking his discharge from their custody and detention. The lower court denied the petition and Tyler appeals.
As we understand the petition it is grounded on two contentions: First, that the requisition papers are fatally defective, and, second, that appellant is not guilty of the crime, or, if so, he has settled and adjusted the matter.
Under the first contention he says that the writ for his arrest issued by the clerk of the circuit court of Jefferson County recites he was indicted by that court at the July Term, “19-1”; that this is no date whatever and renders the éxtradition proceedings void. There are two answers to the contention: The first is that the copy of the indictment, duly certified, states that the indictment was returned at the “July Term, 1941,” and the indictment prevails over recitations in the warrant for arrest as to the contents of the indictment, and the second is that the writ for the arrest is not a requisite part of the extradition papers, either under the Federal statute (Sec. 662, U. S. C. A., Title 28), or under the Mississippi statute (Sec. 3981, Miss. Code 1942). Ex Parte Walters, 107 Miss. 439, 64 So. 2; Bishop v. Jones, 207 Miss. 423, 42 So. 2d 421.
Appellant further urges the invalidity of the extradition papers because it is not in dispute that the date
As to the second contention, appellant testified he was arrested for grand larceny in Birmingham on the night of October 31, 1941, at a hotel operated by his foster sister ; that his arrest was occasioned by a woman who did not like him; that he was informed he was charged with larceny of money from this woman; that on his second day in jail he was informed by a boy that he knew an attorney who would get him out of jail for $35.00; that he gave, this boy that sum for that purpose. That later, accompanied by an attorney whose name he could not recall, he went before Judge Abernathy, and executed an appearance bond. A certified copy of this bond is in the record. It was signed by appellant as principal and by two other parties as sureties, the signatures of the sureties being signed by R. M. McLeod, attorney for the defendant Tyler. It was for $500.00. It obligated Tyler to appear “at the present term of the circuit court of Jefferson County, and from term to term and thereafter until discharged by law, to ansiyer a criminal prosecution for the offense of grand larceny. ” It recites that McLeod, the attorney for Tyler,
This Court has announced several principles applicable to extradition proceedings.
One is that the extradition papers, unless fatally defective, make out a prima facie case for extraditing the
Another is that all doubts are resolved in favor of the legality of the order of the Governor of the asylum state for delivery of the fugitive to the agent of the demanding state. Miller v. State, 207 Miss. 156, 41 So. 2d 375, cert. denied, appeal dismissed, Miller v. Wiggins, 94 L. Ed. 516.
Mere irregularities in the extradition papers, or reversible errors existing before conviction, cannot prevent extradition, but otherwise where the verdict and judgment are void on their face and nullities. Scott v. State, supra; Kelly v. Douglas, 164 Miss. 153, 144 So. 237.
The guilt or innocence of the accused cannot be inquired into. Ex Parte Devine, supra; Ex Parte Edwards, 91 Miss. 621, 44 So. 827; Bishop v. Jones, 207 Miss. 423, 42 So. 2d 421.
The rule announced in the Bishop case appears to be an exception to the general rule last announced — that is, that the guilt or innocence of the accused cannot be inquired into an extradition proceedings. Proof that the accused was not in the demanding state when the crime was committed may also be a defense on the merits.
In the case at bar the extradition papers consist of properly certified copies of the indictment, of the writ for the arrest of Tyler in Jefferson County, (which, as stated, was not necessary) and of the appearance bond; application to the Governor of Alabama by the Solicitor of the Tenth Judicial District for issuance of his official request to the Governor of Mississippi for extradition of Tyler; the issuance of that request by the Governor of Alabama, attaching as a part thereof the four first named documents ; an opinion by the Attorney General of Mississippi that he had examined all of the foregoing papers “and find same to be in due and proper form according to law, ’ ’ and-an .order of ¡the- Governor ¡of Mississippi,-issued-after
As hereinbefore adjudicated, these papers were all in proper form except as to the defects above discussed and these defects amount to no more than irregularities. The introduction of these papers made out a prima facie case for extradition of Tyler.
The testimony offered by Tyler was incompetent. It at most amounted to his saying in general terms he was not guilty, and that he thought he had settled the matter by paying a policeman a sum of money, which, of course, could not legally be done. His testimony is not within the Bishop case, supra. He admitted he was in Birmingham the night of the alleged crime. The lower court was correct in dismissing the habeas corpus petition and ordering Tyler to be delivered to the agent of the State of Alabama.
Affirmed.
(Cases appealed to the Supreme Court of the United States are not officially reported until disposed of there. This case was so appealed but the appeal was dismissed and the record was closed by the parties on May 7, 1953.)