United States ex rel. Steneck v. Levy

3 F.2d 816 | N.D. Ill. | 1925

EVAN A. EVANS, Circuit Judge.

The four petitioners herein, Steneek, Rutz, Wanner, and Fauntleroy, were on March 27, 1924, indicted, along with some 90 others, and charged with a violation of the Sherman Anti-Trust Act (Comp. St. § 8820 et séq.)-Certain defendants were arrested, or appeared and filed demurrers or motions to-quash, and challenged the sufficiency of the indictment. A decision favorable to the government on this issue followed, whereupon the government has since sought to remove the individual defendants, who reside in many states other than Ohio, the place of trial. The individual defendants (including-petitioners) have opposed such removal proceedings, and this writ of habeas corpus is-prosecuted to prevent further effort o,n the part of the government to remove petitioners from Illinois. Both parties recognize-the right to remove exists under section 1014, R. S. (Comp. St. § 1674).

The government first sought to remove-petitioners by applying to Court Commissioner Glass, of this district. He found against the government and dismissed the proceedings. The government then instituí-*817ed proceedings before Judge Cliffe, and while such proceedings were so pending, hut before a hearing, petitioners secured the issuance of this writ of habeas corpus, upon the ground that the proceedings before the court commissioner were final and a bar to another application in the same action.

The object of the statute is so obvious that it is hardly necessary to state it. One accused of crime is entitled to a trial in the district wherein the offense was committed. The government cannot and should not be permitted to force an accused to trial in a district far removed from the scene of tlie alleged offense. Likewise one who commits an offense against the government should not be permitted to escape the consequences of his criminal misconduct by moving to another state and defying the prosecution. To meet this situation, section 1014 was enacted. By it a procedure was outlined, whereby one accused of crime might be removed to the place of trial, which was also the place where the crime was committed.

Such difficulties as have arisen over the application of this statute are due to the fact that offenses to-day may, and often do, involve a largo number of individuals, who reside in different and remote parts of the United States. In some of these crimes, the prosecution may be conducted in one of several judicial districts, because the offense is in fact committed in different districts. This is particularly true of such offenses as conspiracy, scheme to defraud, and the use of the mails in furtherance thereof, and violations of the Anti-Trust Act. If the defendants named in the indictments be numerous, and they reside in various districts, oppositions to removal may be successfully used as dilatory tactics. They may greatly delay the criminal prosecution. The result is more readily accomplished when the court commissioner misconceives his duties and sits as a trior of guilt and a reviewing court to pass upon the decisions and rulings of the court wherein the case is pending.

The court commissioner should only pass upon the issue of probable cause. The government is not required to prove defendants’ guilt to the satisfaction of each and every commissioner who may be asked to direct the removal of the accused. The court commissioner is not to review the evidence upon which the grand jury acted and set his judgment against tho finding of the body created by law to vote and return indictments. He should ascertain whether the individual before him is one of the defend-: ants named in the indictment, and the gov-emment must convince him that there is probable cause to believe such defendant is guilty of the offense charged in the indictment. Tinsley v. Treat, 205 U. S. 20, 27 S. Ct. 430, 51 L. Ed. 689. This probable cause is ordinarily established by the indictment,, and when an indictment is presented the burden shifts to the defendant to overcome the prima facie ease thus disclosed. In fact, it is much more than a mere prima facie case. It requires a strong ease on the part of the accused to justify a finding of no probable cause.

But further discussion of the duties of the commissioner is beside the controversy. The question presented is a very narrow one. The foregoing statement serves merely as a background to assist in determining whether the commissioner’s action in finding a want of probable cause is conclusive or a bar to a similar proceeding before the judge. That the court commissioner’s action is not res adjudícala must bo conceded. In fact, it is not so contended by petitioners. In their brief it is said:

“We contend that, even if the former adjudication cannot be pleaded as res adjudi-cata in the technical sense, there are other rules of law which prevent the government from rearresting and retrying, without reference to the propriety of the action in the first tribunal, defendants who have already been discharged in the first proceeding. In applying, therefore, for a hearing de novo, without attempting to show any error upon the part of Commissioner Glass or the existence of new evidence, the government is in fact claiming the right to retry an issue which has already been litigated and rightly decided.”

Throughout the brief there are references to “res adjudícala in the technical sense” and “not technically res adjudícala” — refinement of distinctions being made which, I confess, I do not appreciate. If the determination by Court Commissioner Glass is not res adjudícala, then what authority is there for the writ of habeas corpus to prevent Judge Cliffe from hearing the matter? There is not the slightest suggestion that the judge before whom tho present application is pending will not give to the decision of the court commissioner such weight as it deserves. Yet by this writ of habeas corpus it is sought to deny to Judge Cliffe the right to hear the removal proceedings and such position cannot be sustained by questioning whether he will give to the court commissioner’s finding such weight as petitioners believe it is entitled to receive. Conceding *818the right to a hearing under any circumstance, the foundation upon which the ha-beas corpus proceedings were instituted crumbles.

A decision is res adjudicata only when certain facts exist. Those facts are so decidedly absent here as to- dispense with any discussion of them. Analogous situations likewise need not be cited to show that the ruling of the commissioner is not res adjudieata upon this issue of probable cause. One ease, United States v. Haas (D. C.) 167 F. 211 (decision by Judge Holt, May 9, 1906), justified special reference. The court said:

“The defendant’s counsel claims that the decision of Commissioner Ridgway should be held to be conclusive. He admits that such a decision is not technically res adjudicata, and the authorities so hold. The decision of a committing magistrate refusing to hold a prisoner for trial or removal, like the grand jury’s decision in refusing to find an indictment, is not res adjudicata, and another application can be made upon the same facts. In re Martin, 5 Blatch. 307, Fed. Cas. No. 9,151; Cooley’s Const. Lim. 404; 1 Bish. New Cr. Law, § 1014, par. 2; Com. v. Hamilton, 129 Mass. 479.”

. It is not necessary to stress other objections J;o this procedure by writ of habeas corpus. The petition before Judge Cliffe did not even disclose the prior proceedings before Commissioned Glass. The judge, therefore, was clearly authorized to proceed with the hearing. He was not permitted to do so, because this writ of habeas corpus was - secured. It is difficult to escape the conclusion that this proceeding was for the purpose of delay, and such practices should be condemned. I have, however, investigated the legal question, and expressed these views to facilitate, if possible, the final disposition of the matter. •

The motion to quash the writ of habeas corpus is granted. Let an order be entered accordingly.