after making the foregoing statement, delivered the opinion of the court.
It is settled, that tt^e writ of habeas corpus will not issue unless the court under whose warrant1 petitioner'is held is without jurisdiction, and that it. cannot be used merely to correct errors. Ordinarily the writ will not be granted when there is a remedy *549 by writ of error or appeal, yet in rare and exceptional cases it may be issued, although such remedy exists.
In
New York
v. Eno,
. These principles were fully discussed in the cases of the appeals of Royall from judgments in
habeas corpus
in the Circuit Court of the United States for the Eastern District of Virginia.
While special reasons may exist why this should be the rule in respect of proceedings in state courts, which are not appli
*550
cable to cases in the courts of the United States, nevertheless we have frequently applied the same principle to such cases.
In re Chapman,
In Chapman’s case we held that it was a judicious and salutary general rule not to interfere with proceedings pending in the courts of the District of Columbia or in the Circuit Courts of the United States in advance of their final .determination. And we said:
“We are impressed with the conviction that the orderly administration of justice will be better subserved by our declining to exercise appellate jurisdiction in the mode desired until the conclusion of the proceedings. If judgment goes against petitioner and is affirmed by the Court of Appeals and a writ of error lies, that is the proper and better remedy for any cause of complaint he may have. If, on the other hand, a writ of error does not lie to this court, and the.,Supreme Court of the District was absolutely without-jurisdiction, the petitioner may then seek his remedy through application for a writ of habeas corpus. We discover no exceptional circumstances which demand our interposition in advance of adjudication by the courts of the District upon, the merits of the case before them. ”
In In re Lancaster, this court denied an application for leave to file a petition for habeas corpus in the circumstances stated in the opinion, which opinion was as follows-: ..
“The petitioners were indicted under sections 5508-and 5509 of the Reyised Statutes, on the 20th of November, 1890, in the Circuit Court for the Southern District of Georgia, and' have been taken into custody. They have not inyoked the action of the Circuit Court upon the sufficiency of the indictment by a motion to quash or otherwise, but ask leave to file in this court a-petition for a writ of habeas corpus, upon the ground that the matters and things set forth and charged do not constitute any offense or offenses under the laws of the United States, or cognizable in the Circuit Court, and that for other reasons the in *551 dictment cannot be sustained. In this posture of the case we must decline to interfere. ”
We are of opinion that the rule therein laid down should have been followed by the Circuit Court.
True, the present case is not one of the issue of the writ of habeas corpus■ in respect of confinement under state authority, nor of an application to this court for the writ, but is the case of custody taken under a capias issued on an indictment returned in the District Court and removed to the Circuit Court, and an application to that court for the writ before defendant had been compelled to take any step in the cause.
Defendant might have raised his objections to the indictment by motion to quash or otherwise. If the indictment were held good, as we are advised by the opinion of the Circuit Court it would have been, defendant would have pleaded and gone to trial, and might have been acquitted. If convicted, the remedy by writ of error was open to him.
There is nothing in this record to disclose that there were any special circumstances which justified a departure from the regular course of judicial procedure. That departure is contrary to the views we have heretofore explicitly expressed, and if we acquiesce in this method of invoking our jurisdiction, we sba.ll find ourselves obliged to decide questions in advance of final adjudication, contrary to the settled rule, and to many decisions we have heretofore announced upon the subject.
If we should affirm or reverse the final order in this case, we should recognize a proceeding below, which we would not ourselves have entertained; and we are not disposed to hold that this manner of testing such questions as are argued here ought to have been pursued.
Final order reversed and cause remanded with a direction to the Circuit Court to quash the writ of habeas corpus and dismiss the petition without prejudice.
