Under an indictment charging violations of the Trading with the
Enemy Act of October 6, 1917, c. 106, 40 Stat. 411, in failing to
report enemy property and credits, the contention, raised before a
commissioner in removal proceedings and based on the allegations
and defendant's uncontradicted evidence, that the report, if
required, would show defendant guilty under the same act of trading
with the enemy, and thus compel him to be a witness against
himself, contrary to the Fifth Amendment, is matter for defense at
the trial, and does not go to the issue of probable cause. P.
250 U. S.
287.
A finding of fact made by a commissioner in removal proceedings
and supported by competent evidence is not reviewable in habeas
corpus. P.
250 U. S.
289.
The duty, imposed by the Trading with the Enemy Act, § 7a,
to make report of enemy property and credits to the Alien Property
Custodian involves the duty to make it at his office, and a willful
failure so to make it is an offense committed in the district where
the office is established.
Id.
Page 250 U. S. 284
Where defendant was indicted in the Southern District of New
York for a conspiracy to omit making such a report and for perjury
in verifying a false one,
held that it was discretionary
with the court of that district, without requiring a statement of
reasons from the government, to order his removal under a later
indictment charging failure to make the report in the District of
Columbia, and that the discretion was not renewable by this Court
in habeas corpus. P.
250 U. S.
289.
256 F. 565 affirmed.
The case is stated in the opinion.
MR. JUSTICE PITNEY delivered the opinion of the Court.
This is an appeal from a final order of the District Court for
the Southern District of New York dismissing writs of habeas corpus
and certiorari sued out by appellant to determine the legality of
his detention under a commitment issued by appellee Hitchcock, as
United States commissioner, to hold appellant in the custody of the
United States marshal pending the issuance of a warrant for his
removal to the District of Columbia to answer an indictment
returned against him by the grand jury of that District for an
alleged violation of the Act of Congress of October 6, 1917, c.
106, 40 Stat. 411, known as the Trading with the Enemy Act.
This is an appeal from a final order of the District Court for
the Southern District of New York dismissing writs of habeas corpus
and certiorari sued out by appellant to determine the legality of
his detention under a commitment issued by appellee Hitchcock, as
United States Commissioner, to hold appellant in the custody of the
United States Marshal pending the issuance of a warrant for his
removal to the District of Columbia to answer an indictment
returned against him by the grand jury of that District for an
alleged violation of the Act of Congress of October 6, 1917, c.
106, 40 Stat. 411.
This indictment, described as the "Washington indictment,"
contains two counts, each of which recites the existence at the
time of the offense charged, of a state of war between the United
States and the Imperial German government, and sets out that the
Act of October 6, 1917, was in force, and that the Alien Property
Custodian, an officer of the United States appointed
Page 250 U. S. 285
under authority of that act, had his office for the transaction
of official business in the District of Columbia, and at no other
place. In the first count, it is recited that the statute made it
the duty of any person in the United States having custody or
control of any property of or on behalf of an enemy of the United
States to report the fact to the Alien Property Custodian within a
period said to have expired December 20, 1917, and it is alleged
that, on October 6, 1917, and on each day thereafter down to and
including the date of the indictment (December 2, 1918), appellant
had the custody and control of certain property in the United
States, that is to say, certain capital stock of the S. S. McClure
Newspaper Corporation, a corporation of the state of New York,
which, as appellant knew, belonged to the Imperial German
government, and that appellant "at the District of Columbia and
within the jurisdiction of this Court" willfully failed, neglected,
and omitted to report that fact to the Alien Property Custodian
within the period prescribed by law and continuously down to and
including the date of the indictment. The second count, in addition
to the matter already stated, recites the provision of the act
which made it the duty of any person in the United States indebted
to an enemy of the United States to report the fact to the
Custodian within a period prescribed, and avers that, on October 6,
1917, and on each day thereafter down to, etc., appellant, then
being within the United States, was indebted in the sum of
$1,451,700 to the Imperial German government as he well knew, and
being so indebted "at the District of Columbia and within the
jurisdiction of this Court," willfully failed, neglected, and
omitted to report the fact of such indebtedness to the
Custodian.
Previous to the Washington indictment, two indictments had been
returned by the United States grand jury for the Southern District
of New York, upon which
Page 250 U. S. 286
appellant was on bail awaiting trial. These were found August 2,
1918, one of them being against appellant alone, and charging
perjury in a report made by him December 4, 1917, to the Alien
Property Custodian, in that, being required to state the property
held by him for alien enemies and indebtedness owed by him to alien
enemies, he swore that the only item in this category was a note
for $100,000 made by him and payable to one Herman Sielcken,
whereas it was alleged he was not indebted to Sielcken, but was
indebted to the Imperial German government in the sum of
$1,301,700, and held and had control of certain property belonging
to that government, consisting of shares of the capital stock of
the S.S. McClure Newspaper Corporation, a corporation of the State
of New York, which facts appellant did not report to the Custodian.
In the other New York indictment, appellant and one Kaufmann were
indicted for a conspiracy to omit to report to the Custodian the
fact that appellant had in his custody and control certain property
consisting of shares of the capital stock of the S.S. McClure
Newspaper Corporation for and in behalf of the Imperial German
government, and that appellant was indebted to the said government
in the sum of $1,431,700.
At the hearings before the commissioner, appellant admitted his
identity and offered no evidence to meet the
prima facie
case made by producing an exemplified copy of the Washington
indictment. On the other hand, it was and is admitted in behalf of
the government that the New York indictments relate to the same
transactions as the Washington indictment, and that they were
pending in the Southern District of New York at the time the
Washington indictment was found. To meet objections raised upon the
hearing of the habeas corpus, the district court embodied in the
final order dismissing the writ clauses to the following
effect:
Page 250 U. S. 287
(a) One giving the consent of that court to the removal of
defendant to the District of Columbia notwithstanding the pendency
of the indictments in the New York district;
(b) One directing a stay of removal pending appeal to this
Court;
(c) And one directing that, within 30 days after appellant had
pleaded to the Washington indictment, the United States attorney
either for the Southern District of New York or for the District of
Columbia should give him at least two weeks' notice as to which
indictment it was intended to move first for trial.
Appellant's first point is that, in a legal sense, there was no
probable cause to believe that he had been guilty of the offense
charged in the Washington indictment, because he could not be
required to make a report to the Alien Property Custodian of the
facts alleged in that indictment, since this would compel him in a
criminal case to be a witness against himself, contrary to the
provision of the Fifth Amendment to the Constitution of the United
States in that behalf. As a basis for this contention, appellant
relies upon the uncontroverted averment in the first count of the
Washington indictment that he held stock in the McClure Corporation
for and on behalf of the German government and did not report that
fact to the Alien Property Custodian; adds to this the fact, said
to have been established by his own evidence introduced before the
commissioner and not controverted by the government, that, during a
considerable period, he had traded for the benefit of and with the
McClure Corporation, so that (it is said) he was guilty of trading
with the enemy contrary to § 3 of the act, from which it is
deduced that if, as required by § 7(a) of the act, he had
reported to the Alien Property Custodian that he held the McClure
Corporation stock for the German government, as the first count of
the Washington indictment alleges he was obliged to do, this
disclosure would have tended to show that he
Page 250 U. S. 288
was guilty under § 3 of the act of trading without a
license, because it would have furnished an essential link in the
chain of evidence necessary to convict him of that offense.
It is at least questionable whether the point, assuming it to
have merit, would have any application to the second count of the
Washington indictment, which relates not to ownership of stock in
the McClure Corporation, but to an indebtedness owing by appellant
to the German government and not reported.
And it is further doubtful whether there is foundation for the
contention as applied to the first count, since appellant
predicates his trading with the enemy solely upon the fact of his
trading with the McClure Corporation, a New York corporation,
whereas, by § 2 of the act, the definition of "enemy," for the
purposes of the statute, is to include merely
"any corporation incorporated within such territory of any
nation with which the United States is at war or incorporated
within any country other than the United States and doing business
within such territory."
But consideration of these questions, or of any question raised
under the Fifth Amendment, would be premature in this proceeding,
since it is entirely plain that they do not go to show a "want of
probable cause" within the meaning of the rule that is invoked. The
accusatory averments of the indictment, admitted for the purposes
of this proceeding to be true, make out a
prima facie case
of an offense against the laws of the United States indictable in
the District of Columbia.
Hyde v. Shine, 199 U. S.
62,
199 U. S. 84;
Haas v. Henkel, 216 U. S. 462,
216 U. S. 481.
Appellant's constitutional point merely raises a probability that a
defense will be interposed, and that thus a controversy will arise
the determination of which is within the proper jurisdiction of the
court in which the indictment was found. This furnishes no legal
obstacle to the removal of the accused to that jurisdiction, nor
may the writ of habeas corpus
Page 250 U. S. 289
be employed as an anticipatory writ of error.
Henry v.
Henkel, 235 U. S. 219,
235 U. S.
229.
It is contended, indeed, that there was no probable cause to
believe that the offense charged in the Washington indictment was
committed within the District of Columbia, and this upon the ground
that appellant was not personally present in the District at the
time of the alleged offense, and that he was under no duty to make
report there to the Alien Property Custodian. The commissioner,
however, found as a matter of fact that the Custodian's office was
in the District of Columbia, and as the finding was supported by
competent evidence, the district court properly held that it was
not reviewable on writ of habeas corpus. That being so, the duty
imposed by the statute to make report to the Alien Property
Custodian involved the duty to make such report in the District of
Columbia, and failure to make it was an offense against the United
States committed in that District.
United States v.
Lombardo, 241 U. S. 73,
241 U. S. 76;
New York Central, etc., R. Co. v. United States, 166 F.
267, 269.
It is contended that the removal of appellant to the District of
Columbia amounts to an invasion of his constitutional right to a
speedy trial on the New York indictments, and that the consent of
the District Court for the Southern District of New York to such
removal ought not to have been given without requiring from the
representative of the government a statement of reasons. These
points raise no more than questions of discretion the determination
of which is not for our review.
Final order affirmed.
THE CHIEF JUSTICE dissents.