227 F. 314 | E.D. Pa. | 1915
An outline statement of a few facts will be helpful to enable us to understand in what way the questions discussed in this case arise, and to follow the course which the discussion has taken:
Frank C. Marrin, the defendant, was convicted in this court on October 5, 1907, and on March 18, 1908, was sentenced to the payment of a fine and four years’ imprisonment. He took an appeal from the judgment of conviction, and was admitted to bail pending its disposition. The appeal was unsuccessful, and on March 10, 1909, a mandate came down from the Circuit Court of Appeals affirming the judgment of conviction, and remanding the record of the case to this court to have the sentence carried into execution. The defendant failed to appear, and his bail failed to produce him. In consequence his recognizance was forfeited. This forfeiture the court refused to remit. United States v. Marrin (D. C.) 170 Fed. 476. On September 10, 1915, he was found in the state of New York and was taken into custody, and by order of the United Stales District Court for the Northern District of New York was remanded to this jurisdiction, and is now in the custody of the United States marshal here. The authority of the marshal for holding him is implied in the part of the record of the case above quoted.
' This court was then asked to issue the usual order of commitment. This is asked for on the basis of the defendant being a fugitive from justice following a forfeiture of his recognizance to appear here to submit himself to commitment to have the sentence imposed carried into execution. This application is met by a petition for a writ of habeas corpus. This petition in its turn is based upon the following state of facts:
There is a denial of the fact that the defendant has absconded. Before his indictment for the offense of which he was here convicted, the defendant had been indicted in a state court of Kings county, N. Y., for an offense alleged to have been previously committed against the lawns of the state oí New York. For this he had not at that lime been tried. Pending the decision of the appeal above referred to, and while within the jurisdiction of this court, he was arrested by the New York state authorities, with a view to have him sent to Kings county, N. Y., for trial under the indictment there found against him. He thereupon made application to this court for a writ of habeas corpus on the ground that, being in the custody of this court, through the bail entered by him, this court shoidd not permit him to be taken out of its custody into another jurisdiction. The writ was allowed, and the defendant relieved of this arrest and remanded to the custody of his bail.
With matters in this situation, the defendant voluntarily, and presumably with the consent of his bail, expressed or implied, left this jurisdiction and went into the state of New York. He was there again taken into custody by the New York state authorities with a view” to his trial under the indictment above mentioned, found against him in Kings county. He made application for his discharge from that arrest on the plea that he was subject to the control of this court
' Marrin -was accordingly tried, convicted, and the conviction on appeal affirmed, and he was sentenced to an indeterminate term of from 15 to 20 years in the proper prison of tire state of New York. Ajiother effort to be relieved of imprisonment in the state of New York was made by the defendant. This was in the form of an application to transfer the custody of defendant to this court. This was refused; the opinion of Judge Gavegan planting the refusal on tire ground of lack of power. People v. Benham, 71 Misc. Rep. 345, 128 N. Y. Supp. 610.
It may be well to make clear by explicit statement, what is implied in the foregoing, that the two offenses to which we have referred were in every sense distinct and separate, and 'there is no connection in any way between the two. Following the conviction last referred to Marrin was committed in pursuance of the sentence then imposed, and remained in prison for a period of nearly 7 years.
By the provisions of the New York statutes certain convicts become entitled to what is the practical 'equivalent of a commutation of sentence through and by the parole system which is in vogue in that state. Marrin was made the recipient of the benefits of this parole provision of the statute. He was also given the benefit of the exercise of executive clemency. The precise form in which this benefit was conferred is argued to be of importance here, and so far as of importance to this discussion will be referred to later.
It should be interpolated at this point that the authorities of the United States, while not intervening to interfere with either the trial, sentence, or tlie carrying out of the sentence of the New York, state court after the commitment of the defendant under that sentence, lodged with the authorities of the prison in which he was incarcerated the usual detainer for the purpose of holding him to answer to his sentence here. Upon release of Marrin from actual detention within his prison walls, the authorities of the United States claimed the detainer to have come into operation and took him into custody.
The defendant again had recourse to habeas corpus proceedings, in which he raised the question of the legality of his arrest. Fie raised also substantially the same question by opposition to the application to have him sent into this jurisdiction. The result of these several efforts is shown by the fact of his presence here under an order of removal.
The. other proposition presented is that there is no authority of law to commit Marrin to prison here, other than the authority of his original sentence, and, as the time limit of that sentence has already long since expired, there is no lawful authority to detain him further; or to present the same thought in another form, the operation of the two sentences imposed was concurrent, and the sentence here imposed ran itself out during the running of the other.
It is too clear for the necessity of the citation of supporting authorities that any court has the power to assert its jurisdiction and in the legal sense preserve its dignity by preventing the interference of any other authority with the work which that court had in hand to do. In the enforcement of this principle courts will relieve from arrest, and even from the service of civil process, parties or witnesses who are in attendance upon the business of the court. In recognition of the same principle no court will direct the service of its process upon persons who are thus in attendance upon another court. These propositions are stated, not because they are in dispute here, but merely for the purpose of securing a starting point from which the discussion may proceed.
The position of the United States here is that the doctrine is applied wholly and solely out of the deference paid by one court to another, and if that court which under the rule mentioned would be accorded full and free sway for the assertion of its power yields to the exercise of the jurisdiction of the other court, no right of the individual defendant concerned is involved. In other words, the cdurt which has the possession of the person of a defendant who is also subject to the control of another court will exercise its power in accordance with a discretion which is governed in its exercise by the rule of comity, to which reference has been made. This is tire principle which has been heretofore applied in the case of the present defendant, and which has sufficient supporting authority in Mahon v. Justice, 127 U. S. 700, 8 Sup. Ct. 1204, 32 L. Ed. 283.
There is no- reason supplied by the facts of this case to induce this court to- decline to have its sentence carried into effect out of regard to- any spirit of comity, because it clearly appears that the courts of the other jurisdiction to which this comity would be due have neither asked for nor expected its extension. This conclusion is consistent with the rulings to which we have been referred by counsel for the relator, of which In re Jones- may be taken as typical. There it is true that the court released the relator, but it was done because the court thought the case was a proper one for the application of the quoted principle. Had the facts of that case been the facts of this case, the court might have reached a different conclusion in accordance with the principle upon which that case was ruled.
As authority in support of this contention we are referred to the case of In re Jennings (C. C.) 118 Fed. 479. We are constrained to
A re fereuce to the practice and the technical forms of procedtire in such cases will bring out clearly the principle which the court applied in the Jennings Case, and which is applicable here. A formal statement of the whole situation involves the fact of first a conviction and then a sentence. What follows is in the nature of execution process. When a prisoner is brought to the keeper of the jail, the prison authorities, before they can receive him, must have some authority for so doing. This is practically supplied in the form of a warrant of commitment, which directs them) ho receive the prisoner and to hold him for a given length of time. A case may arise, and frequently does, in which the time mentioned in the original sentence has expired before any commitment issues authorizing the prison authorities to receive the prisoner. A man, for instance, may be convicted and sentenced. From this judgment he may take an appeal, and the appeal may not be disposed of until after the term of the sentence has expired. If a warrant of commitment authorized the jailer only to hold the prisoner in accordance with the language of the original sentence, that term would already have expired when the commitment was received.
There may also be the case of a man who1 has been convicted and sentenced, and who evades the authorities until after the time of his original sentence has elapsed. He may then be apprehended or surrender himself. If the instructions in the warrant of commitment followed the language of the original sentence, and authorized the jailer only to hold him during the term for which originally sentenced, it would obviously confer no authority to hold him at all. Out of this as a necessary consequence has come the practice of issuing warrants of commitment in accordance with the facts, and hence also the application for a warrant here. In the Jennings Case, as the authority in the warrant of commitment which the marshal held had expired, he was without the possession of authority to hold the prisoner, and the
The whole question, therefore, resolves itself into one qf the propriety of the court now issuing an order of Commitment against the defendant to serve the sentence, no part of which has been served. The United States, as already stated, asks for this on the ground that the defendant is an absconder. The defendant opposes it upon the ground that he is not an absconder, but that he failed to surrender himself because of his inability to do so, and that this inability resulted from two things. One was his arrest by the New York state authorities, and the other was the acquiescence of the United States authorities in his detention there. • Practically the position taken is that, inasmuch as the United States authorities might have had control of the defendant 7 years ago-, and might then have had him committed to serve his sentence, and inasmuch as they voluntarily did not do it then, the court ought not now to commit him to jail; the time of his original sentence having, expired. This plea is enforced by a strong and. moving appeal on the ground that the man has already served an imprisonment of 7 years, that by good conduct and the confidence of the New York state authorities that he will comply with the conditions of his parole he has been restored to a conditional liberty, and that the effect of his commitment here will be to- malee him unable to comply with the condition of his parole, and will in consequence .subject him to the possibility of a further imprisonment of perhaps 13 years.
There is also implied the presence of this situation. The defendant was under bail. The New York arrest prevented him from surrendering himself. The United States had the option of asking for his return to this jurisdiction or of forfeiting his recognizance. They voluntarily and deliberately chose the latter, and ought not now to- return to the former. The appeal here is to the ethical standards by which the executive should be controlled. We can pass only upon the legal rights of the defendant.
We can see no escape from the conclusion that defendant’s appeal is properly made to- those authorities which have the extension of clem
The order of commitment applied for is allowed. As no valid grounds for the discharge of the prisoner are disclosed in his petition for a writ of habeas corpus, the writ might be refused; but, as counsel may prefer to have the formal record show a remanding of the prisoner, the writ may be allowed, and the answer to the petition filed as a return to the writ, and a formal order made that the discharge of the prisoner is refused, and that he be remanded to the custody of the marshal, to have the order of commitment now made complied with.
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