1. To warrant extradition (in this case, to India under the
treaties with Great Britain), it is not necessary that the name by
which the crime is described in the two countries be the same, nor
that the scope of the liability be coextensive, or, in other
respects, the same in each; it is enough if the particular act
charged is criminal in both jurisdictions. P.
259 U. S.
311.
2. The Act of August 3, 1882, c. 378, § 5, 22 Stat. 216,
repealing Rev.Stats. § 5271 so far as inconsistent, admits as
evidence in extradition proceedings warrants and other papers, and
copies thereof, as well as depositions, authenticated so as to
authorize their admission for similar purposes in courts of the
foreign country when such authentication is proven by the
certificate of the principal diplomatic or Consular officer of the
United States resident in such country. P.
259 U. S.
313.
3. In extradition for an offense committed at Bombay, India is
the "foreign country" within the meaning of this statute, and the
papers may be certified by the Consul General of the United States
stationed at Calcutta, of whose identity and of whose status as our
principal diplomatic or Consular officer resident in that country
the court takes judicial notice. P.
259 U. S.
314.
4. Evidence that the accused obtained valuable personal property
by knowingly false representations of his wealth and standing, of
his authority to draw the draft given the vendor, and of the
identity and financial standing of the drawee
held
sufficient to show an obtaining by false pretenses within the law
of Louisiana, as well as a cheat at common law. P.
259 U. S.
314.
Page 259 U. S. 310
5. Under the Treaty of August 9, 1842, with Great Britain,
providing that extradition shall only be had on such evidence of
criminality as, according to the laws of the place where the person
charged is found, would justify his arrest and commitment for trial
if the offense had been committed there, and under the law of
Louisiana, allowing accused persons to present evidence in their
own behalf before the committing magistrate, a person arrested for
extradition is entitled to introduce evidence rebutting probable
cause, but not evidence in defense. P.
259 U. S.
315.
6. The function of the committing magistrate is to determine
whether there is competent evidence sufficient to hold the accused
for trial, and not whether it would suffice for a conviction. P.
259 U. S.
315.
7. His conclusions as to relevancy of evidence are not
reexaminable in habeas corpus unless so clearly unjustified a to
amount to denial of the hearing prescribed by law. P.
259 U. S.
317.
8. The phrase "such evidence of criminality" in the Treaty of
1842,
supra, refer to sufficiency of evidence in elements
essential to a conviction, not to the character of specific
instruments of evidence or to rules governing admissibility. P.
259 U. S.
317.
9. The procedural law of the state cannot entitle the prisoner
to introduce evidence made irrelevant by the treaty. P.
259 U. S.
317.
Affirmed.
Appeal from a judgment of the district court in habeas corpus,
remanding the appellant to the custody of the marshal under a
commitment issued in an extradition proceeding.
MR. JUSTICE BRANDEIS delivered the opinion of the Court.
This is the second appeal by Collins in this case. The first was
dismissed in
Collins v. Miller, 252 U.
S. 364, for want of jurisdiction. There, the earlier
proceedings and the nature of the controversy are fully set forth.
After our decision, the case was again heard by the district
court
Page 259 U. S. 311
on the same record and the same evidence, and on October 25,
1921, judgment was entered. By that judgment, the writ of habeas
corpus was granted so far as the commitment was based on charges of
obtaining property by false pretenses from Pohoomull Bros. and from
Ganeshi Lall & Sons, and as to these commitments, the court
discharged Collins. But as to the commitment based on the charge of
obtaining property by false pretenses from Mahomed Ali Zaimal Ali
Raza, the court dismissed the application for habeas corpus and
remanded Collins to the custody of Loisel, the marshal. The British
Consul General acquiesced in this judgment. Collins appealed from
so much thereof as recommitted him to the custody of the marshal.
As the judgment below was final and disposed of the whole case, we
now have jurisdiction. It is insisted on several grounds that the
committing magistrate was without jurisdiction, and that
consequently the appellant should have been discharged.
First. Collins contends that the affidavit of the
British Consul General does not charge an extraditable offense. The
argument is that the affidavit charges cheating merely; that
cheating is not among the offenses enumerated in the extradition
treaties; that cheating is a different offense from obtaining
property under false pretenses, which is expressly named in the
treaty of December 13, 1900; that to convict of cheating, it is
sufficient to prove a promise of future performance which the
promisor does not intend to perform, while to convict of obtaining
property by false pretense, it is essential that there be a false
representation of a state of things past or present.
See State
v. Colly, 39 La.Ann. 841. It is true that an offense is
extraditable only if the acts charged are criminal by the laws of
both countries. It is also true that the charge made in the court
of India rests upon § 420 of its Penal Code, which
declares:
"Whoever cheats and thereby dishonestly induces the person
deceived
Page 259 U. S. 312
to deliver any property to any person . . . shall be punished
with imprisonment of either description for a term which may extend
to seven years and shall also be liable to fine, [
Footnote 1]"
whereas § 813 of the Revised Statutes of Louisiana
declares:
"Whoever, by any false pretense, shall obtain, or aid and assist
another in obtaining, from any person, money or any property, with
intent to defraud him of the same, he shall, on conviction, be
punished by imprisonment at hard labor or otherwise, not exceeding
twelve months."
But the affidavit of the British Consul General recites that
Collins stands charged in the Chief Presidency Magistrate's Court
with having feloniously obtained the pearl button by false
pretenses, and the certificate of the secretary to the government
of India, which accompanies the papers on which Collins' surrender
is sought, describes the offense with which he is there charged as
"the crime of obtaining valuable property by false pretenses." The
law does not require that the name by which the crime is described
in the two countries shall be the same, nor that the scope of the
liability shall be coextensive or in other respects the same in the
two countries. It is enough if the particular act charged is
criminal in both jurisdictions. This was held with reference to
different crimes involving false statements in
Wright v.
Henkel, 190 U. S. 40,
190 U. S. 58;
Kelly v. Griffin, 241 U. S. 6,
241 U. S. 14;
Benson v. McMahon, 127 U. S. 457,
127 U. S. 465,
and
Greene v. United States, 154 F. 401.
Compare Ex
parte Piot, 15 Cox C.C. 208. The offense charged was therefore
clearly extraditable.
Second. Collins contends that the evidence introduced
was wholly inadmissible. That particularly objected to
Page 259 U. S. 313
on this ground is the warrant of arrest and copies of
prima
facie proceedings in the Court of the Chief Presidency
Magistrate, Bombay, which accompanied the affidavit of the British
Consul General. The Consul General for the United States in
Calcutta had certified that these papers proposed to be used upon
an application for the extradition of Collins "charged with the
crime of obtaining valuable property by false pretenses alleged to
have been committed in Bombay" were
"properly and legally authenticated, so as to entitle them to be
received in evidence for similar purposes by the tribunals of
British India, as required by the Act of Congress of August 3,
1882."
That act, c. 378, § 5, 22 Stat. 215, 216, declares that
"depositions, warrants, and other papers, or the copies thereof" so
authenticated, shall be received and admitted as evidence for all
purposes on hearings of an extradition case if they bear "the
certificate of the principal diplomatic or Consular officer of the
United States resident in such foreign country." One argument of
Collins is that the admissibility of evidence is determined not by
the above provision of the Act of 1882, but by § 5271 of the
Revised Statutes, which provided only that copies of foreign
depositions shall be admitted when "attested upon the oath of the
party producing them to be true copies," and which did not provide
for the admission of "warrants or other papers," and that, on these
grounds, copies both of the Indian documents and of certain London
depositions should have been excluded, since neither the Consul
General at Calcutta, the Secretary of the Embassy at London, nor
the British Consul General at New Orleans could attest that the
papers were true copies. But § 6 of the Act of 1882 expressly
provides for the repeal of so much of § 5271 as is
inconsistent with earlier provisions of that act, and under §
5 thereof, the admissibility of papers is not so restricted.
Another argument of Collins is that the Indian documents were
not
Page 259 U. S. 314
properly authenticated, because they were certified to by the
Consul General at Calcutta, and not by the Consul at Bombay, where
the offense charged is alleged to have been committed. The "foreign
country" here in question is India, not Bombay, and we may, in this
connection, take judicial notice of the fact that the Consul
General of the United States, who is stationed at Calcutta, is the
principal diplomatic or Consular officer resident in that country,
and who he is.
Compare 58 U. S. Co. v.
Winans, 17 How. 30, 41;
Keyser v. Hitz, 133 U.
S. 138,
133 U. S. 146.
The papers were therefore properly authenticated, and were
admissible.
Compare In re Behrendt, 22 F. 699;
In re
Charleston, 34 F. 531;
In re Orpen, 86 F. 760.
Third. Collins contends that the evidence introduced
did not support the charge of obtaining property by false
pretenses. The papers introduced tended to prove that Collins
obtained the pearl button from the jewelers as a result of his
representing that he was a wealthy man; that he was a partner in
William Collins & Sons Company of Glasgow and London; that he
was a colonel in the Howe Battalion of the Royal Naval Division and
was then on six months' leave; that he had a right to draw on
Messrs. E. Courtice & Co., 8 Clarges Street, London, the draft
of �1,700 which he gave the jewelers, and that this was a
firm of bankers. The papers tended to prove also that all these
representations were false to Collins' knowledge. It is clear that
evidence to this effect, if competent and believed, would justify a
conviction not only for cheating, but also of obtaining property
under false pretenses.
State v. Tessier, 32 La.Ann. 1227;
State v. Jordan, 34 La.Ann. 1219;
State v. Will,
49 La.Ann. 1337;
State v. Seipel, 104 La. 67. The
contention of Collins is that the evidence established only a
broken promise or, at most, common law cheating. It was not the
function of the committing magistrate to determine whether Collins
was guilty, but
Page 259 U. S. 315
merely whether there was competent legal evidence which,
according to the law of Louisiana, would justify his apprehension
and commitment for trial if the crime had been committed in that
state.
Charlton v. Kelly, 229 U.
S. 447,
229 U. S. 456.
If there was such evidence, this Court has no power to review his
finding.
Ornelas v. Ruiez, 161 U.
S. 502,
161 U. S. 508;
Terlinden v. Ames, 184 U. S. 270,
184 U. S. 278;
McNamara v. Henkel, 226 U. S. 520. The
papers tended to establish more than a broken promise or common law
cheating, and, according to the law of Louisiana, they furnished
"such reasonable ground to suppose him guilty as to make it proper
that he should be tried."
See Glucksman v. Henkel,
221 U. S. 508,
221 U. S.
512.
Fourth. Finally, Collins contends that the evidence of
criminality was not such as under the law of Louisiana would have
justified his apprehension and commitment for trial if the crime or
offense had been committed there. The argument is that, by the law
of Louisiana, a person charged with having committed an offense is
entitled to make a voluntary declaration before the committing
magistrate and also to present evidence in his own behalf (Revised
Statutes 1870, § 1010; Laws 1886, Act No. 45); that this right
to introduce such evidence is therefore secured to a prisoner by
the treaty; [
Footnote 2] and
that this requirement as to evidence of criminality was not
complied with, because Collins was not permitted to introduce
evidence in his own behalf.
Collins was allowed to testify, and it was clearly the purpose
of the committing magistrate to permit him to testify fully to
things which might have explained ambiguities or doubtful elements
in the
prima facie case
Page 259 U. S. 316
made against him. In other words, he was permitted to introduce
evidence bearing upon the issue of probable cause. The evidence
excluded related strictly to the defense. It is clear that the mere
wrongful exclusion of specific pieces of evidence, however
important, does not render the detention illegal.
Charlton v.
Kelly, 229 U. S. 447,
229 U. S. 461.
The function of the committing magistrate is to determine whether
there is competent evidence to justify holding the accused to await
trial, and not to determine whether the evidence is sufficient to
justify a conviction.
Griffin v. Shine, 187 U.
S. 181,
187 U. S. 197;
Benson v. McMahon, 127 U. S. 457,
127 U. S. 461;
Ex parte Glaser, 176 F. 702, 704.
In Re Wadge, 15
F. 864, 866, cited with approval in
Charlton v. Kelly,
supra, 229 U. S. 461,
the right to introduce evidence in defense was claimed; but Judge
Brown said:
"If this were recognized as the legal right of the accused in
extradition proceedings, it would give him the option of insisting
upon a full hearing and trial of his case here, and that might
compel the demanding government to produce all its evidence here,
both direct and rebutting, in order to meet the defense thus
gathered from every quarter. The result would be that the foreign
government, though entitled by the terms of the treaty to the
extradition of the accused for the purpose of a trial where the
crime was committed, would be compelled to go into a full trial on
the merits in a foreign country, under all the disadvantages of
such a situation, and could not obtain extradition until after it
had procured a conviction of the accused upon a full and
substantial trial here. This would be in plain contravention of the
intent and meaning of the extradition treaties."
The distinction between evidence properly admitted in behalf of
the defendant and that improperly admitted is drawn in
Charlton
v. Kelly, supra, between evidence rebutting probable cause and
evidence in defense. The Court there said:
"To have witnesses produced to contradict the testimony for the
prosecution is
Page 259 U. S. 317
obviously a very different thing from hearing witnesses for the
purpose of explaining matters referred to by the witnesses for the
government."
And, in that case, evidence of insanity was declared
inadmissible as going to defense, and not to probable cause.
Whether evidence offered on an issue before the committing
magistrate is relevant is a matter which the law leaves to his
determination unless his action is so clearly unjustified as to
amount to a denial of the hearing prescribed by law.
The phrase "such evidence of criminality," as used in the
treaty, refers to the scope of the evidence or its sufficiency to
block out those elements essential to a conviction. It does not
refer to the character of specific instruments of evidence or to
the rules governing admissibility. Thus, unsworn statements of
absent witnesses may be acted upon by the committing magistrate,
although they could not have been received by him under the law of
the state on a preliminary examination.
Elias v. Ramirez,
215 U. S. 398;
Rice v. Ames, 180 U. S. 371. And
whether there is a variance between the evidence and the complaint
is to be decided by the general law and not by that of the state.
Glucksman v. Henkel, 221 U. S. 508,
221 U. S. 513.
Here, the evidence introduced was clearly sufficient to block out
those elements essential to a conviction under the laws of
Louisiana of the crime of obtaining property by false pretenses.
The law of Louisiana could not, and does not attempt to, require
more. It is true that the procedure to be followed in hearings on
commitment is determined by the law of the state in which they are
held.
In re Farez, 7 Blatchf. 345, Fed.Cas. No. 4645;
In re Wadge, supra; In re Kelley, 25 F. 268;
In re
Ezeta, 62 F. 972, 981. But no procedural rule of a state could
give to the prisoner a right to introduce evidence made irrelevant
by a treaty.
Affirmed.
[
Footnote 1]
Imprisonment under the Indian Code is either "simple" or
"rigorous" -- the latter with hard labor. Indian Penal Code, §
___. "Whoever does anything with the intention of causing wrongful
gains to one person, or wrongful loss to another, is said to do
that thing dishonestly." Indian Penal Code, § 24.
[
Footnote 2]
"Provided that this shall only be done upon such evidence of
criminality as, according to the laws of the place where the
fugitive or person so charged shall be found, would justify his
apprehension and commitment for trial if the crime or offense had
there been committed."
Treaty of August 9, 1842, Art. X, 8 Stat. 572, 576.