1. Warrants of removal issued in triplicate are in legal effect
but a single warrant, and defendant, who had secured a supersedeas
on appeal from an order refusing relief by habeas corpus from
arrest under one, could not lawfully be arrested under another. P.
265 U. S.
228.
2. Where an accused person, on being surrendered by his surety
and instituting habeas corpus proceedings, is rearrested in removal
proceedings, due practice requires that a test of the second
confinement, involving only the same questions, be had by amendment
of the existing petition in habeas corpus, and, where a second
petition is erroneously brought, the two should be consolidated and
heard as one case, thus avoiding the confusion and expense of
double appeals. P.
265 U. S.
229.
3. The common law doctrine of
res judicata does not
extend to a decision on habeas corpus refusing to discharge a
prisoner. P.
265 U. S.
230.
4. But, in the exercise of its sound, judicial discretion "to
dispose of the party as law and justice may require" (Rev.Stats.
§ 761), a federal court may base its refusal to discharge on a
prior refusal, and, as a safeguard against abuse of the writ, the
applicant in any case may be required to show whether he has made a
prior application, and, if so, what was done on it.
Id.
5. Under the Sixth Amendment, an accused cannot be tried in one
district under an indictment showing that the offense was committed
in another district. P.
265 U. S.
232.
Page 265 U. S. 225
6. Nor is there any authority for a removal to a district other
than that in which the trial may constitutionally be had. P.
265 U. S.
232.
7. Under § 215 of the Criminal Code, to knowingly cause a
letter to be delivered by mail in accordance with the direction
thereon for the purpose of executing a fraudulent scheme is an
offense separate from that of mailing the letter or causing it to
be mailed for the same purpose, and, where the letter is so
delivered as directed, the person who caused the mailing causes the
delivery at the place of delivery, and may be prosecuted in that
district although he was not present there. P.
265 U. S.
233.
8. Under Jud.Code § 53, when a district contains several
divisions, the trial (in the language of the statute, the
"prosecution") of an offense must be in the division where it was
committed, unless the accused consents otherwise, but the
indictment may lawfully be returned in another division of the same
district. P.
265 U. S.
235.
9. Resistance to removal having been unreasonably protracted,
the Court directs immediate issuance of its mandate, with order
requiring that the accused, under his bonds, surrender himself
within ten days to the marshal in the district of the removal
proceeding or the district of the indictment. P.
265 U. S.
238.
Nos. 341 and 342 affirmed. 295 F. 498 (No. 705) reversed.
Appeals from two orders of the district court refusing release
in habeas corpus, and certiorari to a judgment of the circuit court
of appeals affirming a like order made on a third application.
MR. JUSTICE VAN DEVANTER delivered the opinion of the Court.
These three cases involve certain phases of a protracted
resistance by B. I. Salinger, Jr., to an effort by the United
Page 265 U. S. 226
States to have him removed to the District of South Dakota to
answer an indictment for a violation there of § 215 of the
Criminal Code, which makes it a punishable offense to use the mail
for the purpose of executing a scheme or artifice to defraud.
The indictment was returned in the District Court for the
District of South Dakota when sitting in the Western Division, and
the offense was charged as committed in the Southern Division, but
the grand jury which returned the indictment had been impaneled
from the body of the district, regardless of the divisions, and
instructed to inquire into and make due presentment of offenses
committed in any part of the district. After receiving the
indictment, the court, at the suggestion of the United States
attorney, remitted it to the Southern Division for trial and other
proceedings. A bench warrant was issued for Salinger's arrest, and
he appeared before a commissioner in Iowa and gave bond for his
appearance in the Southern Division on the first day of the next
term. But he failed to appear, and the bond was declared
forfeited.
Later, Salinger being in New York City, a proceeding was begun
before a commissioner there for his arrest and removal to South
Dakota under § 1014 of the Revised Statutes. He was arrested,
taken before the commissioner, and accorded a hearing. The
indictment was produced, he admitted he was the person charged,
and, on the evidence presented, the commissioner found there was
probable cause and committed him to await the issue of a warrant of
removal. He then sued out a writ of habeas corpus in the district
court for that district, but, after a hearing, the court discharged
the writ, remanded him to the marshal's custody, and issued a
warrant for his removal. On his appeal, that decision was reviewed
and affirmed by the Circuit Court of Appeals for the Second
Circuit.
In re Salinger, 288 F. 752. He made no attempt to
obtain any other or further review. When the mandate of the
Page 265 U. S. 227
circuit court of appeals went down, to avoid being removed in
the custody of the marshal, he gave a bond for his appearance two
weeks hence in South Dakota. Again he failed to appear, and that
bond was declared forfeited.
After giving the bond in New York, and before the day stipulated
therein for his appearance in South Dakota, Salinger went to New
Orleans, appeared with a representative of the surety in that bond
before a commissioner there, and was surrendered by the surety's
representative to the marshal of that district in the
commissioner's presence. Such a surrender in a distant district may
not have been in accord with § 1018 of the Revised Statutes,
and may not have discharged the surety, but nothing turns on that
here. The surrender seems to have been made with Salinger's full
consent, but, however made, it constituted no obstacle to further
proceedings for his removal. The commissioner accordingly directed
that he be held in the marshal's custody to await the institution
of such a proceeding. He then sued out a writ of habeas corpus in
the district court at New Orleans and was admitted to bail pending
a hearing on the writ.
In a few days, during which Salinger failed to appear in South
Dakota as stipulated in the bond given in New York, a proceeding
for his arrest and removal under § 1014 was begun before the
commissioner in New Orleans. He was arrested, taken before the
commissioner, and accorded a hearing. The indictment was produced,
evidence was presented tending to show he was the person charged,
and he gave testimony tending to show he was not in South Dakota at
the times he was charged with unlawfully using the mail. On all the
evidence, the commissioner found the requisite identity and
probable cause, and committed him to await the issue of a warrant
for his removal. He then sued out another writ of habeas corpus in
the district court, and was admitted to bail pending a hearing on
the writ.
Page 265 U. S. 228
On a hearing in the two cases, all the proceedings in South
Dakota, New York, the Circuit Court of Appeals for the Second
Circuit, and New Orleans which have been recited herein were
produced in evidence, and, on consideration thereof, the court
discharged both writs of habeas corpus, remanded Salinger to the
marshal's custody, and issued a warrant for his removal. Direct
appeals to this Court in two cases were then prayed by Salinger and
allowed by the district court, it being especially directed in both
cases that the appeal operate as a supersedeas on Salinger's giving
approved bail. The bail was given and approved. These cases are
Nos. 341 and 342.
Notwithstanding the supersedeas so effected, Salinger was taken
into custody by the marshal under the warrant of removal with a
view to executing its command. He then sued out a third writ of
habeas corpus in the district court, his petition therefor being
like his earlier petitions, save as in it he additionally
complained that his detention under the warrant of removal was in
contravention of the supersedeas allowed on the appeals in Nos. 341
and 342. After a hearing, the district court discharged the writ of
habeas corpus and remanded him to the marshal's custody for removal
under the warrant. An appeal was taken to the Circuit Court of
Appeals for the Fifth Circuit, where the decision was affirmed.
Salinger v. United States, 295 F. 498. The case is here on
certiorari,
263 U. S. 683, and
is No. 705. Bail in this case was allowed and given here when
certiorari was granted.
In disposing of the additional ground of complaint advanced in
No. 705, the circuit court of appeals proceeded on the assumption
that there were three distinct warrants of removal, and that one of
these was neither involved in the appeals in Nos. 341 and 342 nor
covered by the supersedeas. But the assumption was not well
founded. There was but one proceeding for removal before the
Page 265 U. S. 229
commissioner in New Orleans, and it was based on the single
indictment in South Dakota. There was also but one commitment for
removal in that proceeding. The warrant of removal issued by the
district court was based expressly on that commitment, but, for
reasons not explained, the warrant was issued in triplicate. In
substance, form, and date, the three papers were identical. Taken
either collectively or separately, they embodied a single command,
which was that the marshal "forthwith" remove Salinger to South
Dakota and there deliver him to the proper authority to be dealt
with under the indictment. To execute the command of one triplicate
was to execute that of all. In legal effect, therefore, there was
one warrant, not three. One was all that was sought, and no basis
was laid for more. The obvious purpose of the supersedeas was to
stay the execution of the command for removal pending the appeals
to this Court in Nos. 341 and 342, and, of course, that purpose
could not be thwarted by merely duplicating or triplicating the
warrant embodying the command. It follows that the additional
ground of complaint advanced in No. 705 was well taken. But, as
that ground could be effective only during the life of the
supersedeas in Nos. 341 and 342, it has no bearing on the decision
to be given in them on the right to remove.
Before coming to the questions presented in those cases, we
think the procedure which was followed in them calls for comment.
The first case was begun when Salinger was committed by the
commissioner to await a proceeding for his removal. Later, when
such a proceeding was begun and the commissioner definitely
committed him to await the issue of a warrant of removal, that
change in the situation should have been shown in the first case by
an appropriate amendment or supplement to the petition, instead of
being made the basis of a new and separate case. And when, in
disregard of the propriety of taking that course,
Page 265 U. S. 230
the second case was begun, the two should have been consolidated
and conducted as one. The parties were the same, and the cases
presented a single controversy. Maintaining them separately was
productive of confusion, and led to two appeals to this Court when,
had the right course been taken, one appeal plainly would have
sufficed, and would have lessened by one-half the printing and
other costs. As it is now, one record is largely a duplication of
what appears in the other, and both are exceedingly confusing. The
course that was taken should not have been selected, nor should the
court have permitted it.
In Nos. 341 and 342, the right to arrest and remove in virtue of
the indictment was questioned on the same grounds that were set up
in the earlier case in New York, where that right was upheld.
Because of this situation, counsel for the appellee invoke the
doctrine of
res judicata, and insist that the decision in
the New York case was a final adjudication of the right, and is
binding on all other courts, including this Court. We are unable to
go so far. At common law, the doctrine of
res judicata did
not extend to a decision on habeas corpus refusing to discharge the
prisoner. The state courts generally have accepted that rule where
not modified by statute; the lower federal courts usually have
given effect to it, and this Court has conformed to it, and thereby
sanctioned it, although announcing no express decision on the
point. The cases of
Carter v. McClaughry, 183 U.
S. 365,
183 U. S. 378,
and
Ex parte Spencer, 228 U. S. 652,
228 U. S. 658,
are notable instances. We regard the rule as well established in
this jurisdiction.
But it does not follow that a refusal to discharge on one
application is without bearing or weight when a later application
is being considered. In early times, when a refusal to discharge
was not open to appellate review, courts and judges were accustomed
to exercise an independent
Page 265 U. S. 231
judgment on each successive application, regardless of the
number. But when a right to an appellate review was given, the
reason for that practice ceased, and the practice came to be
materially changed -- just as, when a right to a comprehensive
review in criminal cases was given, the scope of inquiry deemed
admissible on habeas corpus came to be relatively narrowed.
The federal statute (§ 761, Rev.Stats.) does not lay down
any specific rule on the subject, but directs the court "to dispose
of the party as law and justice require." A study of the cases will
show that this has been construed as meaning that each application
is to be disposed of in the exercise of a sound judicial discretion
guided and controlled by a consideration of whatever has a rational
bearing on the propriety of the discharge sought. Among the matters
which may be considered, and even given controlling weight, are (a)
the existence of another remedy, such as a right in ordinary course
to an appellate review in the criminal case, and (b) a prior
refusal to discharge on a like application.
Ex parte
Royall, 117 U. S. 241;
Ex parte Fonda, 117 U. S. 516;
Ex parte Mirzan, 119 U. S. 584;
Cook v. Hart, 146 U. S. 183;
In re Frederich, 149 U. S. 70;
New York v. Eno, 155 U. S. 89;
In re Chapman, 156 U. S. 211;
Riggins v. United States, 199 U.
S. 547;
In re Lincoln, 202 U.
S. 178;
Henry v. Henkel, 235 U.
S. 219;
Ex parte Cuddy, 40 F. 62;
In re
Simmons, 45 F. 241;
Ex parte Moebus, 148 F. 39;
In re Kopel, 148 F. 505. The decision in the
Cuddy case was on a second application, and was given by
Mr. Justice Field. While holding the doctrine of
res
judicata inapplicable, he said:
"the officers before whom the second application is made may
take into consideration the fact that a previous application had
been made to another officer and refused, and in some instances
that fact may justify a refusal of the second. The action of the
court or justice on the second application will naturally be
Page 265 U. S. 232
affected to some degree by the character of the court or officer
to whom the first application was made and the fullness of the
consideration given to it."
In practice, the rules we here have outlined will accord to the
writ of habeas corpus its recognized status as a privileged writ of
freedom, and yet make against an abusive use of it. As a further
safeguard against abuse, the court, if not otherwise informed, may,
on receiving an application for the writ, require the applicant to
show whether he has made a prior application, and, if so, what
action was had on it.
Here, the prior refusal to discharge was by a court of
coordinate jurisdiction, and was affirmed in a considered opinion
by a circuit court of appeals. Had the district court disposed of
the later applications on that ground, its discretion would have
been well exercised, and we should sustain its action without
saying more. But its decision does not appear to have been put on
that ground, and, as circumstances are disclosed which make it
appropriate that we consider and pass on two of the objections
urged against a removal, we turn to them.
Both objections go to the jurisdiction of the court before which
it is proposed to take and try the accused. One is that, under the
Sixth Amendment to the Constitution, there can be no trial in the
District of South Dakota, because the indictment shows that the
offense charged was not committed in that district, but in a
district in Iowa, and the other that, even if the indictment be
taken as charging an offense in the District of South Dakota, it
shows that it was returned in a division of that district other
than the one in which the offense was committed.
It must be conceded that, under the Sixth Amendment to the
Constitution, the accused cannot be tried in one district on an
indictment showing that the offense was not committed in that
district, and it also must be conceded that there is no authority
for a removal to a district
Page 265 U. S. 233
other than one in which the Constitution permits the trial to be
had. We proceed, therefore, to inquire whether it appears, as
claimed, that the offense was not committed in the district to
which removal is sought.
The material part of § 215 of the Criminal Code on which
the indictment is based reads:
"Whoever, having devised or intending to devise any scheme or
artifice to defraud, . . . shall, for the purpose of executing such
scheme or artifice . . . place, or cause to be placed, any letter .
. . in any post office, . . . or authorized depository for mail
matter, to be sent or delivered . . . or shall knowingly cause to
be delivered by mail according to the direction thereon . . . any
such letter, . . . shall be fined not more than one thousand
dollars, or imprisoned not more than five years, or both."
The indictment charges that the defendants, of whom Salinger is
one, devised a scheme and artifice to defraud divers persons by
means described and thereafter for the purpose and with the intent
of executing their scheme and artifice did unlawfully and knowingly
"cause to be delivered by mail," according to the direction thereon
at Viborg within the Southern Division of the District of South
Dakota, a certain letter directed to a named person at that place,
the letter and the direction being particularly described. The
indictment then adds, in an explanatory way (
see Horner v.
United States, 143 U. S. 207,
143 U. S.
213), that, on the day preceding the delivery, the
defendants had caused the letter to be placed in the mail at Sioux
City, Iowa, for delivery at Viborg according to the direction
thereon. There were other counts in the indictment, but they need
not be particularly noticed, for the one just described is a fair
sample of all.
Section 215 is a reenactment, with changes, of an earlier
statute which made it an offense for the deviser of a scheme or
artifice to defraud to place or cause to be placed
Page 265 U. S. 234
in the mail any letter in furtherance thereof, but did not
contain the clause making it also an offense for the deviser to
cause such a letter "to be delivered by the mail according to the
direction thereon." Under the original statute, the offense was
held to be complete when the letter was placed in the mail
depository for transmission, and the place of the deposit was held
to be the place of commission, regardless of whether or where the
letter was delivered. The appellant insists that the introduction
of the new clause into the statute, as reenacted, is not of
material significance here. We are of a different opinion. That
clause plainly provides for the punishment of the deviser of the
scheme or artifice where he causes a letter in furtherance of it to
be delivered by the mail according to the direction on the letter.
This is done by way of enlarging the original definition of the
offense, the clause dealing with the placing of such a letter in a
mail depository being retained. Evidently Congress intended to make
the statute more effective, and, to that end, to change it so that,
where the letter is delivered according to the direction, such
wrongful use of the mail may be dealt with in the district of the
delivery, as well as in that of the deposit. A letter may be mailed
without being delivered, but if it be delivered according to the
address, the person who causes the mailing causes the delivery. Not
only so, but the place at which he causes the delivery is the place
at which it is brought about in regular course by the agency which
he uses for the purpose.
United States v. Kenofskey,
243 U. S. 440,
243 U. S. 443.
Were the government attempting to prosecute at both places, a
question might arise as to whether it should be required to elect
between them (
see Haas v. Henkel, 216 U.
S. 462,
216 U. S.
474), but, as there is no such attempt here, that
question need not be considered. The appellant relies on
United
States v. Stever, 222 U. S. 167, as
showing that the offense was committed at the place of the deposit,
and not at that
Page 265 U. S. 235
of the delivery; but the case is not in point. It arose before
the statute was changed. The indictment there was in two counts.
One was based on the original statute, and was expressly abandoned
by the government. The other was based on another statute relating
to the use of the mail in promoting lotteries and other schemes of
chance.
We conclude that there is no sound basis for the claim that the
indictment shows that the offense was not committed in the district
to which removal is sought. An effort was made to strengthen that
claim by producing testimony tending to show that Salinger was not
in that district at the time. But, of that effort, it suffices to
say that the nature of the offense is such that he could have
committed it, or have participated in its commission, even though
he was not then in the district.
In re Palliser,
136 U. S. 257;
Horner v. United States, 143 U. S. 207,
143 U. S. 213;
Burton v. United States, 202 U. S. 344,
202 U. S.
386.
The objection that the indictment was not returned in the
division in which it charges the offense was committed, and
therefore that jurisdiction could not be founded on it, is based on
a provision of § 53 of the Judicial Code, reading as
follows:
"When a district contains more than one division, . . . all
prosecutions for crimes or offenses shall be had within the
division . . . where the same were committed, unless the court, or
the judge thereof, upon the application of the defendant, shall
order the cause to be transferred for prosecution to another
division of the district."
South Dakota constitutes a single judicial district, with one
district court, but the district is divided into four divisions,
where sessions are held at times fixed by law, such sessions,
whether, in one division or another, being "successive terms of one
and the same court."
Hollister v. United States, 145 F.
773, 782. A like situation exists in many of the states.
Page 265 U. S. 236
Formerly, special statutes applicable to particular districts
indicated the division in which criminal proceedings should be had,
but the statutes were not uniform. Some provided that crimes and
offenses should be "indictable" and triable only in the division
where committed, or that all criminal proceedings should "be
brought" and had in such division. But the greater number, in
varying terms, required that the trial be in that division unless
the accused consented to its being in another. In districts where
the latter were in force, it was common to impanel a grand jury
from the district at large, to charge such grand jury with the
investigation and presentment of offenses committed in any part of
the district, and, when indictments were returned, to remit them
for trial and other proceedings to the divisions wherein the
offenses were committed, save as the defendant assented to a
disposal in another division. The practice is illustrated in
Logan v. United States, 144 U. S. 263,
144 U. S. 297,
and
Rosencrans v. United States, 165 U.
S. 257. The general provision in § 53 here relied
on superseded the special statutes. It obviously is less
restrictive in its terms than some of them were, and the prevailing
practice under it has been like that theretofore followed in
districts where the less restrictive provisions were in force.
See Biggerstaff v. United States, 260 F. 926;
United
States v. Chennault, 230 F. 942.
The contention is that the word "prosecution" in the general
provision includes the finding and return of an indictment. That
the word sometimes is used as including them must be conceded. But
there are also relations in which it comprehends only the
proceedings had after the indictment is returned. Here, we think it
is used with the latter signification. It appears twice in the
provision, doubtless with the same meaning. The first time is in
the clause directing that "all prosecutions" be had in the division
where the offense was committed, and the second
Page 265 U. S. 237
is in the clause permitting the court or judge at the instance
of the defendant, to order "the cause to be transferred for
prosecution" to another division. The connection in which it
appears the second time shows that it refers to the proceedings
after the indictment is found and returned -- that is to say, after
there is a cause susceptible of being transferred. Besides, had
Congress intended to put an end to the prevailing practice of
impaneling a grand jury for the entire district at a session in
some division and of remitting the indictments to the several
divisions in which the offenses were committed, unless the accused
elected otherwise, it is but reasonable that that intention would
have been expressed in apt terms, such as were used in some of the
exceptional special statutes. That practice was attended with real
advantages which should not be lightly regarded as put aside. In
many divisions, only one term is held in a year. If persons
arrested and committed for offenses in those divisions were
required to await the action of a grand jury impaneled there,
periods of almost a year must elapse in many instances before a
trial could be had or an opportunity given for entering a plea of
guilty and receiving sentence.
In our opinion, the real purpose of the provision -- that which
best comports with its terms when taken in the light of the
circumstances in which it was enacted -- is to require, where a
district contains more than one division, that the trial be had in
the division where the offense was committed, unless the accused
consents to be tried in another. The circuit court of appeals so
held in a well considered opinion in
Biggerstaff v. United
States, supra. The only decision the other way of which we are
advised was by the District Court for the Eastern District of
Louisiana in
United States v. Chennault, supra, and that
court receded from that decision in the cases now before us.
Page 265 U. S. 238
The appellant relies on
Post v. United States,
161 U. S. 583, as
making for the contrary conclusion. But it does not do so. The case
turned on a special statute, now superseded, declaring that "all
criminal proceedings" for offenses in the District of Minnesota
"shall be brought, had and prosecuted" in the division in which the
same were committed. The difference between that special direction
and the general one now before us is so marked that further comment
is not required.
Other objections to the removal are urged, but those we have
discussed and overruled are all that can with any propriety be
regarded as open to consideration on these appeals.
A survey of the records before us shows that the resistance to
removal has been unreasonably protracted. The mandate in these
cases will issue forthwith, and will embody an order requiring,
under the bail given on the appeals in Nos. 341 and 342 and under
that given on the granting of the writ of certiorari in No. 705,
that Salinger surrender himself into the custody of the marshal for
the Eastern District of Louisiana at New Orleans within 10 days
from the day the mandate bears date preparatory to a removal under
the warrant heretofore issued by the district judge of that
district, or, in the alternative, that he surrender himself within
such 10 days into the custody of the marshal for the District of
South Dakota at some place within that district, to be dealt with
according to law.
Judgments in Nos. 341 and 342 affirmed.
Judgment in No. 705 reversed.