1. The provision of the Fifth Amendment against double jeopardy
does not prevent the commitment of a person for extradition on new
affidavits after he has been discharged on others identical in form
and substance. P.
262 U. S.
429.
2. Under the extradition treaty with Great Britain, a fugitive
may be arrested a second time upon a new complaint charging the
same crime when he has been discharged by the magistrate on the
first complaint or the first complaint has been withdrawn. P.
262 U. S.
429.
3. Refusal of the State Department to issue a warrant of
extradition because of the pendency of habeas corpus proceedings,
does not bar further proceedings for the same cause on a new
complaint. P.
262 U. S.
430.
4. A discharge in habeas corpus based on mere irregularities in
extradition proceedings does not operate as
res judicata
against a new proceeding for the same offense. P.
262 U. S.
430.
Page 262 U. S. 427
5. The pendency of habeas corpus proceedings relating to one
charge in extradition does not deprive the magistrate of
jurisdiction to entertain an application for arrest on other
charges or render invalid his warrant issued on such application.
P.
262 U. S.
430.
6. The crime for which a fugitive is extradited need not be
specifically set forth in the magistrate's order of commitment if
sufficiently identified by the magistrate's finding and his
certificate to the Secretary of State. P.
262 U. S.
431.
7. By established practice, the warrant of extradition issued by
the Secretary of State likewse identifies the crime. P.
262 U. S.
431.
Affirmed.
Appeal from a judgment of the district court dismissing a
petition for habeas corpus.
See post, 730.
MR. JUSTICE BRANDEIS delivered the opinion of the Court.
This is the third appeal by Collins in habeas corpus proceedings
instituted to prevent his extradition to British India. After the
decision in
Collins v. Miller, 252 U.
S. 364, the district court dismissed the application for
habeas corpus so far as the commitment was based on the charge of
obtaining property by false pretenses from Mahomed Alli Zaimel Ali
Raza, and remanded Collins to the custody of Loisel, the marshal.
The judgment of the district court discharged the prisoner so far
as the commitment was based on charges of obtaining property by
false pretenses from Pohoomul Bros. and from Ganeshi Lall &
Sons. The ground of the discharge, stated in the judgment, was that
Collins had been remanded to await further proceedings on these
charges to the end that he might be given the opportunity of
introducing evidence at a preliminary examination under the law of
Louisiana; that no further examination had been held;
Page 262 U. S. 428
that the prosecution on those affidavits had been definitely
abandoned, and that other new affidavits had been filed by the
British consul general. In this judgment the British consul general
acquiesced. Collins appealed. The judgment was affirmed in
Collins v. Loisel, 259 U. S. 309.
On those new affidavits, referred to in the judgment, apparently
Collins was again committed to await extradition; the papers were
transmitted for action to the Department of State with the
magistrate's certificate, but, owing to the fact that proceedings
were still pending in the district court, the department refused to
issue the warrant of extradition. Thereafter, while the
Loisel case was pending in this Court and while Collins
was being held in custody to answer on the charge of obtaining
property from Mahomed Alli Zaimel Ali Raza, a third set of
affidavits were lodged against the prisoner by the British consul
general before the same committing magistrate. They were in form
and substance identical with those in which Collins had been
previously charged with obtaining property by false pretenses from
Pohoomul Bros. and from Ganeshi Lall & Sons and discharged by
the district court. Alleging that the affidavits were identical
with those first filed on which he had been so discharged, Collins
moved, before the magistrate, to quash the new affidavits. His
motion was overruled and, after due hearing, an order was entered
by the magistrate again committing Collins to be held for
extradition on these charges. Then he filed, in the same district
court, this petition for a writ of habeas corpus and certiorari.
Judgment was entered therein in December, 1922, dismissing this
second petition for a writ of habeas corpus; Collins was remanded
to the custody of the marshal, and this appeal was taken under
§ 238 of the Judicial Code. After hearing counsel for
appellant, this Court, on May 4, 1923, ordered that the judgment
below be affirmed, and that
Page 262 U. S. 429
the mandate issue forthwith. Because of the importance of the
question presented, the reasons for this decision are now
stated.
Collins contended that commitment on the new affidavits, after
discharge in proceeding based on others identical in form and
substance, was a violation of the Fifth Amendment and of the Treaty
with Great Britain. The constitutional provision against double
jeopardy can have no application unless a prisoner has theretofore
been placed on trial.
See Kepner v. United States,
195 U. S. 100,
195 U. S. 126.
The preliminary examination of one arrested on suspicion of a crime
is not a trial, and his discharge by the magistrate upon such
examination is not an acquittal.
Commonwealth v. Rice, 216
Mass. 480;
People v. Dillon, 197 N.Y. 254, 256. Even the
finding of an indictment followed by arraignment, pleading thereto,
repeated continuances, and eventually dismissal at the instance of
the prosecuting officer on the ground that there was not sufficient
evidence to hold the accused was held, in
Bassing v. Cady,
208 U. S. 386,
208 U. S. 391,
not to constitute jeopardy. Likewise, it has been consistently held
under the treaties with Great Britain and other countries that a
fugitive from justice may be arrested in extradition proceedings a
second time upon a new complaint charging the same crime where he
was discharged by the magistrate on the first complaint or the
complaint was withdrawn. [
Footnote
1] The precise question appears not to have been passed upon by
this Court in any case involving international extradition. But, in
Bassing v. Cady, supra, the rule was applied to a case of
interstate rendition. Protection against unjustifiable vexation and
harassment incident
Page 262 U. S. 430
to repeated arrests for the same alleged crime must ordinarily
be sought not in constitutional limitations or treaty provisions,
but in a high sense of responsibility on the part of the public
officials charged with duties in this connection. The proceedings
before the committing magistrate on the first and on the second set
of affidavits and the action of the Department of State on the
latter were no bar to the proceedings on the third set of
affidavits here involved. The filing by the British consul general
of these new affidavits were clearly justified.
The discharge of Collins on the first petition for habeas
corpus, so far as it related to the charge of obtaining property
from Pohoomul Bros. and from Ganeshi Lall & Sons does not
operate as
res judicata. It is true that the Fifth
Amendment, in providing against double jeopardy, was not intended
to supplant the fundamental principle of
res judicata in
criminal cases,
United States v. Oppenheimer, 242 U. S.
85, and that a judgment in habeas corpus proceedings
discharging a prisoner held for preliminary examination may operate
as
res judicata. But the judgment is
res judicata
only that he was at the time illegally in custody, and of the
issues of law and fact necessarily involved in that result.
[
Footnote 2] The discharge here
in question did not go to the right to have Collins held for
extradition. It was granted because the proceedings on which he was
then held had been irregular, and the British consul general,
instead of undertaking to correct them, had concluded to abandon
them and to file the charges anew by another set of affidavits.
The contention was also made that, as the arrest on the new
affidavits after discharge on the old was an independent
proceeding, and Collins was then being held on an entirely
different charge under review by this Court
Page 262 U. S. 431
in the
Loisel case, the magistrate was without
jurisdiction. There was here no attempt to interfere by the second
proceeding with the custody of Collins on the first. The fact that
Collins was in the custody of the court did not render invalid the
second warrant. It would merely prevent withdrawal of the prisoner
from the custody of the court by means of the execution of a second
warrant.
In re MacDonnell, 11 Blatch. 170, 177-178;
Compare Ponzi v. Fessenden, 258 U.
S. 254,
258 U. S. 260.
The pendency of habeas corpus proceedings, relating to the charge
involved in the
Loisel case,
supra, did not
deprive the magistrate of jurisdiction to entertain this
application for arrest on other charges.
Stallings v.
Splain, 253 U. S. 339,
253 U. S.
342.
It was further contended that the magistrate's order of
commitment was insufficient because it adjudged that Collins be
held for extradition "for trial on the charges pending against him
in the Chief Presidency Magistrate's Court at Bombay," and that,
since he could legally be tried there only on the charge for which
he was extradited, the order of commitment must specifically set
forth that crime.
United States v. Rauscher, 119 U.
S. 407. The contention is unsound. The order must, of
course, be interpreted as limited by the finding therein made, that
the evidence produced "justify his commitment on the charge of
having obtained property by false pretenses." The certificate which
the magistrate issued thereon to the Secretary of State identifies
the charges as those set forth in the two new affidavits. By
established practice, the warrant of extradition issued by the
Secretary of State likewise identifies the crime with which the
prisoner has been charged and for the trial of which the prisoner
is delivered up. Moreover, it may be assumed that the British
government will not try appellant upon charges other than those
upon which the extradition is allowed.
Kelly v. Griffin,
241 U. S. 6,
241 U. S. 15.
Affirmed.
[
Footnote 1]
6 Op.Atty.Gen. 91; 10 Op.Atty.Gen. 501;
In re
MacDonnell, 11 Blatch. 170, 179;
In re Kelly, 26 F.
852;
Fergus, Petitioner, 30 F. 607;
Ex parte
Schorer, 195 F. 334.
See also 1 Moore on Extradition,
pp. 457-464; 1 Hyde, International Law, p. 596;
Muller's
Case, 5 Phila. 289;
In re Farez, 7 Blatch. 345.
[
Footnote 2]
Compare 34 U. S. 9
Pet. 704,
34 U. S. 710;
In re White, 45 F. 237;
United States v. Chung
Shee, 71 F. 277, 76 F. 951;
Ex parte Gagliardi, 284
Fed.190.