In this postscript to a completed habeas corpus proceeding we are asked to assess costs of transporting the petitioner to and from Auburn State Prison to make him available for a hearing in this Court. 28 U.S.C. § 2243; United States ex rel. Griffin v. McMann,
I. EXPENSES OF ADMINISTRATION
Only specifically enumerated charges of Marshals may be taxed as costs. 28 U.S.C. § 1921. The sums expended for transportation of the petitioner, including guard hire, tolls, per diem expenses, and lodging for the prisoner, amounting to $101.45, do not come within this provision.
These sums should properly be regarded as expenses of the administration of justice assumed by the United States. The habeas corpus statute (28 U.S.C. § 2243) directs “[that] the person to whom the writ is directed shall be required to produce at the hearing the body of the person detained.” It is the duty of the Court to order production of the petitioner (Walker v. Johnston,
While the duty to produce the prisoner lies upon the Warden and the State of New York, the writ served upon the Warden merely directed that the petitioner be delivered into the custody of the United States Marshal for the Eastern District of New York. No specification of the means by which, or the place at which, such a delivery was to take place was made. The Warden fully complied with the directions of this Court when he transferred custody of petitioner at Auburn State Prison. At that point, custody rested in the United States Marshal, to whom the writ was equally directed. It became his duty to' produce the petitioner before the Court at the times required.
The Marshal could have required the State to undertake the transportation of the prisoner to New York City since the ultimate burden for production of the prisoner rests on the State. The State has taken the position that it is willing to transport incarcerated petitioners for habeas corpus hearings, using its own personnel and facilities. No reason is apparent why the United States Marshals need fetch petitioners from all corners of the State if the State is willing to do so. Just as there now are discussions under way involving federal and state judges and the New York Judicial Conference respecting a combined state-federal record of post-conviction remedies, there seems to be no reason why further state-federal cooperation should not result in a system permitting service upon a designated local representative of the State Attorney General who could arrange for the State to produce and maintain the prisoner when his presence in this district is required. The United States Attorney has suggested such an arrangement; it would be consistent with the responsibility of the State for the safekeeping of its own prisoners.
By accepting custody, without more, the Marshal in the instant case assumed the responsibility of transporting and lodging the prisoner. The expense
II. TAXABLE COSTS
This Court has power to tax proper costs against the State. Fairmont Creamery Co. v. Minnesota,
It seems hard to conclude, as the State asserts, that by amending 28 U.S.C. § 1825 to provide for initial payment by the United States of witness fees in for-ma pauperis habeas corpus cases, Congress indicated an intent that the United States be assessed all costs of such habeas corpus litigation. Section 1915(e) of Title 28 still provides that costs may be imposed as in other actions; it cannot be ignored in reading the 1965 amendments to 28 U.S.C. § 1825. There is nothing in § 1825 or its legislative history to indicate a change in the rules regarding costs where the petitioner is successful. The Report of the Senate Judiciary Committee on H.R. 1763, which amended 28 U.S.C. § 1825, expressly approves the procedure outlined in United States ex rel. Helwig v. Cavell,
The expenses incurred by the United States Marshal in serving the writ of habeas corpus on the Respondent Warden may properly be taxed as costs. 28 U.S.C. § 1921. These costs include the mileage fees incurred by the Marshal, in the sum of $89.40, and the fee for service of the writ, in the amount of $3.00. Whether they should be so taxed is a different matter.
III. DISCRETION NOT TO TAX COSTS
Although 28 U.S.C. § 1920 provides that the district courts may tax Marshal’s fees as costs, in the exercise of its sound discretion a court may decline to do so. United States v. Erie R. R. Co.,
By providing an alternate forum for the assertion of federal constitutional claims, the federal government assumed the responsibility of seeing that its own hearings on such post-conviction claims against the states met the requirements of due process of law. Cf. Smith v. Bennett,
Additionally, by extending the federal remedy, the federal government has made the expense of prosecution of these claims greater. Within a state, the court system is close to all. Federal courts, however, are few in number and frequently distant from the place of incarceration of state prisoners. This difficulty is made even greater in those states with more than one federal judicial district, because venue for the writ lies in both the district of imprisonment and the district in which the prisoner was sentenced. 28 U.S.C. § 2241. As is the case here, this can result in the necessity, under 28 U.S.C. § 2243, of transporting prisoners several hundred miles for hearings. A provision intended for the convenience of the federal court and petitioner should not be used to increase expenses of the State.
Finally, the imposition of these costs, so often de minimis, would be an exercise in futility. When a state and the federal government are involved, it is ultimately the taxpayer of both who bears the final costs imposed. Since the interest of the people lies in the enforcement of constitutional rights, the sovereignty which bears the burden of costs is of little import. The paperwork involved in court, Marshals’ and administrators’ time in shifting costs from the federal to state governments will often outweigh the actual sums involved.
For all these reasons, in the exercise of its discretion, this Court will not tax the costs for Marshal’s fees against the State of New York.
Costs requested by the United States Marshal for transporting the petitioner are to be borne by the United States. They will be assessed against neither the Petitioner nor Respondent.
So ordered.
