That the arrest by state or municipal authorities is illegal
does not affect the jurisdiction of a United States Extradition
Commissioner.
The omission of a formal act of release of one held under an
illegal arrest by state authorities and of a subsequent formal and
legal arrest thereafter by a United States Marshal under an
extradition warrant
held, under the circumstances of this
case, not to furnish grounds for release on habeas corpus, it not
appearing that a different rule applies in the demanding
country.
In this case,
held that the complaint charging the
person demanded with having committed in Canada perjury, obtaining
money under false pretenses, and receiving stolen property, states
offenses of perjury and obtaining money by false pretenses within
the meaning of the extradition provisions of the treaty with Great
Britain both in Canada, where the offenses were committed, and in
Illinois, where the person demanded was arrested; but
quaere whether it does state an offense of receiving
stolen property, which is a crime in both jurisdictions.
Where the complaint properly charges an offense included in the
extradition treaty and also charges one that is not included, the
court will not release on habeas corpus, but will presume that the
demanding country will respect an existing treaty and only try the
person surrendered on the offenses on which extradition is
allowed.
The facts, which involve the validity of an order for
extradition under the treaties with Great Britain, are stated in
the opinion.
Page 241 U. S. 11
MR. JUSTICE HOLMES delivered the opinion of the Court.
The appellant was held for extradition to Canada, and petitioned
for and obtained a writ of habeas corpus. After a hearing upon the
returns to the writ and to a writ of certiorari issued to the
commissioner by whose warrant, the
Page 241 U. S. 12
petitioner was detained, the district judge discharged the writ.
An appeal was allowed and several objections have been pressed to
the proceeding, which we will take up in turn. The matter arises
out of frauds in the construction of the new Parliament buildings
at Winnipeg, in which Kelly, the contractor, and a number of public
men are alleged to have been involved.
First it is said that jurisdiction of the appellant's person has
not been obtained legally. On October 1, 1915, he was arrested
without a warrant on a telegram from Winnipeg. The next day, a
complaint was made before the commissioner by the British Vice
Consul General in Chicago upon information and belief, a warrant
was issued, and the petitioner was turned over to the United States
Marshal by the Chicago police. On October 15, a new complaint was
filed by the British Consul General, a new warrant was placed in
the hands of the marshal, and the former complaint was dismissed.
Wright v. Henkel, 190 U. S. 40,
190 U. S. 42-44,
190 U. S. 63.
The contention is that the original arrest was illegal, and that
the appellant was entitled to be set at liberty before the warrant
of October 2 or that of October 15 could be executed with
effect.
But, however illegal the arrest by the Chicago police, it does
not follow that the taking of the appellant's body by the marshal
under the warrant of October 2 was void. The action of the officers
of the state or city did not affect the jurisdiction of the
commissioner of the United States. Furthermore, the order
dismissing the complaint of October 2 was that the appellant be
discharged forthwith from custody, so that, on the face of the
record, it would seem that, before being held under the present
warrant, the appellant had the moment of freedom which he contends
was his right. It is urged that the Canadian authorities are trying
to take advantage of their own wrong. But the appellant came within
reach of the commissioner's warrant by his own choice, and the most
that can be said
Page 241 U. S. 13
is that the effective exercise of authority was made easier by
what had been done. It was not even argued that the appellant was
entitled to a chance to escape before either of the warrants could
be executed. This proceeding is not a fox hunt. But merely to be
declared free in a room with the marshal standing at the door
having another warrant in his hand would be an empty form. We are
of opinion that, in the circumstances of this case as we have
stated them, the omission of a formal act of release and a
subsequent arrest, if they were omitted, furnishes no ground for
discharging the appellant upon habeas corpus. All the intimations
and decisions of this Court indicate that the detention of the
appellant cannot be declared void.
Pettibone v. Nichols,
203 U. S. 192;
Iasigi v. Van de Carr, 166 U. S. 391,
166 U. S.
393-394;
Nishimura Ekiu v. United States,
142 U. S. 651,
142 U. S. 662.
If we were satisfied that a different rule would be applied by the
final authority in Great Britain, other questions would arise.
Charlton v. Kelly, 229 U. S. 447. But
we are not convinced by anything that we read in
Hooper v.
Lane, 6 H.L.C. 443, that a different rule would be applied,
and we think it unnecessary to discuss the differences in
detail.
The complaint of October 15 charges perjury, obtaining money by
false pretenses, and, conjointly, stealing or embezzling and
unlawfully receiving money and other property of the King which had
been embezzled, stolen, or fraudulently obtained by means of a
conspiracy as set forth. The perjury alleged is swearing falsely to
the proportion of cement sand and broken stone put into the
caissons of the new Parliament buildings at Winnipeg, in a judicial
proceeding before the Public Accounts Committee of the Legislative
Assembly of the Province of Manitoba, the appellant knowing his
statements to be false. It is objected that, although perjury is
mentioned as a ground for extradition in the treaty, the appellant
should not be surrendered because the Canadian Criminal Code,
§ 170,
Page 241 U. S. 14
defines perjury as covering false evidence in a judicial
proceeding, "whether such evidence is material or not." As to this,
it is enough to say that the assertions charged here were material
in a high degree, and that the treaty is not to be made a dead
letter because some possible false statements might fall within the
Canadian law that perhaps would not be perjury by the law of
Illinois. "It is enough if the particular variety was criminal in
both jurisdictions."
Wright v. Henkel, 190 U. S.
40,
190 U. S. 60-61.
There is no attempt to go beyond the principle common to both
places in the present case. It is objected further that, although
the above committee was authorized to examine witnesses upon oath,
it was only in "such matters and things as may be referred to them
by the House." But even if there were not some evidence and a
finding,
Ornelas v. Ruiz, 161 U.
S. 502,
161 U. S. 509,
the nature of the investigation, the purposes for which the
committee was appointed, and the fact that the appellant appeared
before it without objection would warrant a presumption of
regularity in a summary proceeding like this.
The plan for the foundations of the buildings was changed from
piling called for by the written contract to caissons filled with
concrete, and the false representations alleged concerning the
amount of concrete, lumber, iron rings, and bolts used in the extra
work. They consisted in bills or "progress estimates" addressed to
the provincial government for "labor and material supplied,"
setting forth the amount of each item thus stated to have been
supplied. It is objected that the amounts demanded by the bills
were paid not upon the bills, but upon vouchers coming from the
Department of Public Works, and that the provincial architect who
certified the bills was not deceived. The person who made out the
certificates relied upon the bills in good faith, and it appears
that, without the bills, the payments would not have been made. The
fact that there were other steps necessary in addition
Page 241 U. S. 15
to sending in a false account, or that other conspirators
cooperated in the fraud, does not affect the result that, on the
evidence, Kelly obtained the money from the provincial government
by fraudulent representations to which he was a party, and that his
false statement was the foundation upon which the government was
deceived.
The last charge, stealing or embezzling and receiving money
fraudulently obtained, needs a word of explanation. It may be
assumed that there is no evidence of larceny or embezzlement as
(commonly) defined, but the receiving of property known to have
been fraudulently obtained is a crime by the laws of both Canada
and Illinois. There may be a doubt whether the appellant, if a
party to the fraud, received the money of the government directly
from it, or through a third hand, so as to be guilty under this
count of the complaint. We are not prepared to pronounce his
detention upon the count unjustifiable, in view of the finding. We
assume, of course, that the government in Canada will respect the
convention between the United States and Great Britain, and will
not try the appellant upon other charges than those upon which the
extradition is allowed. Therefore, we do not think it necessary to
require a modification of the complaint before the order
discharging the writ of habeas corpus is affirmed.
Final order affirmed.