1. The legal right to demand the extradition of fugitives from
justice, and the correlative duty to surrender, are not products of
international law, but exist only when created by treaty. P.
290 U. S.
287.
2. Extradition treaties should be construed liberally in favor
of rights of extradition claimed under them. P.
290 U. S.
292.
3. In ascertaining the meaning of a treaty, we may look beyond
its written words to the negotiations and diplomatic correspondence
of the contracting parties relating to the subject matter, and to
their practical construction of it. P.
290 U. S.
294.
4. In resolving doubts, the construction of a treaty by the
political department of the Government, while not conclusive upon
the courts, is nevertheless of weight. P.
290 U. S.
295.
5. Article X of the Webster-Ashburton Treaty of 1842, after
stipulating for surrender of fugitives charged with certain
specified offenses, contains a proviso 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 offence had there been committed. . . ."
Held that the proviso relates to procedure and proof,
and is not a limitation upon the definition of the offenses for
which extradition may be demanded. Pp.
290 U. S.
290-295.
6. Under Article X of the Webster-Ashburton Treaty,
supra, and the Blaine-Pauncefote Convention of 1889, with
which it must be construed, the limitation confining extradition to
acts that are criminal in both countries applies only to those
offenses to which it is attached in the clauses specifying them.
Pp.
290 U. S.
292-295.
7. Hence, for the act of receiving money knowing it to have been
fraudulently obtained, which is specified in the Convention without
that limitation, the fugitive is extraditable to England, where the
act is a crime, even though it may not be such in the Illinois,
where the fugitive in this case has sought refuge.
Id.
8. The obligation to surrender in such cases, being imposed by
the Treaty and Convention, and by the construction heretofore
contended
Page 290 U. S. 277
for by our Government, is to be obeyed by the Government and its
courts notwithstanding that a different construction of her
obligation in like cases may have been adopted by England. P.
290 U. S.
298.
9. The surrender of a fugitive, duly charged in the country from
which he has fled with an offense named by the treaty as one for
which extradition may be had and one generally recognized as
criminal at the place of asylum, involves no impairment of any
legitimate public or private interest, and the obligation to do
what some nations have done voluntarily, in the interest of justice
and friendly international relations, should be construed more
liberally than a criminal statute or the technical requirements of
criminal procedure. P.
290 U. S.
298.
10. All of the offenses named in the two treaties above
mentioned are not only denominated crimes by the treaties
themselves, but are recognized as such by the jurisprudence of both
countries. Even the crime here in question -- that of receiving
money knowing it to have been fraudulently obtained -- is a crime
under the laws of many of our States, if not in Illinois,
punishable either as the crime of receiving money obtained
fraudulently or by false pretenses, or as larceny. P.
290 U.S. 299.
11. The policy of our Government to name in its extradition
treaties only those offenses which are generally recognized as
criminal by the laws in force in its own territory affords no
adequate basis for declining to construe such a treaty in
accordance with its language, or for saying that its obligation, in
the absence of some express requirement, is conditioned on the
criminality of the offense charged according to the laws of the
particular place of asylum. P.
290
U.S. 299.
12. Such a restriction on the obligation in the present case
would restrict the reciprocal operation of the treaties, making the
right to extradition from the United States vary with the State or
Territory where the fugitive is found, although, under the Acts of
Parliament giving the treaties effect, extradition may be had from
Great Britain and her dependencies for all of the offenses named in
the treaties. P.
290 U. S.
300.
13. In no case in this Court has extradition been denied because
the offense charged was not also criminal by the laws of the place
of refuge.
Wright v. Henkel, 190 U.
S. 41;
Collins v. Loisel, 259 U.
S. 309;
Kelly v. Griffin, 241 U. S.
6, and
Bingham v. Bradley, 241 U.
S. 518, distinguished. P.
290 U. S.
301.
14. It is not necessary to determine in the present case the
question whether the Dawes-Simon Extradition Treaty of 1932,
having
Page 290 U. S. 278
been proclaimed by the President, is binding on the United
States although not binding on Great Britain until proclaimed by an
Order-in-Council. P.
290 U. S.
302.
15. The offense specified in the Dawes-Simon Treaty of receiving
money knowing the same to have been stolen or unlawfully obtained
covers the offense specified in the Blaine-Pauncefote Convention of
receiving money knowing it to have been fraudulently obtained. P.
290 U. S.
303.
16. In the expression "receiving money knowing the same to have
been stolen or unlawfully obtained," the meaning of the words
"unlawfully obtained" is not restricted by the rule of
ejusdem
generis to unlawfulness of the same type as stealing; they
indicate any form of criminal taking, whether or not embraced
within the term larceny in its various connotations. P.
290 U. S.
303.
17. An extradition proceeding begun under one treaty is not
abated by the promulgation of a second treaty superseding the
first, when the second continues to specify the offense with which
the fugitive is charged and does not purport to exclude from its
operation offenses committed before its signature or promulgation.
P.
290 U. S.
304.
18. A habeas corpus case involving the legality of an arrest for
extradition does not abate or become moot upon the supplanting of
the extradition treaty by another one when the obligation to
surrender, originating in the one treaty, is continued without
change of substance in the other. P.
290 U. S.
304.
61 F.2d 626 affirmed.
Certiorari, 289 U.S. 713, to review the reversal of a judgment
discharging the petitioner in habeas corpus. Ordered for
reargument, 289 U.S. 713.
Page 290 U. S. 286
MR. JUSTICE STONE delivered the opinion of the Court.
On complaint of the British Consul, a United States Commissioner
for the Northern District of Illinois issued his warrant to hold
petitioner in custody for extradition to England, under Article X
of the Webster-Ashburton Treaty of 1842 (1 Malloy's Treaties, pp.
650, 655, 8 Stat. 572, 576), as supplemented by the
Blaine-Pauncefote Convention of 1889 (1 Malloy's Treaties, p. 740,
26 Stat. 1508) and certified the evidence in the proceeding before
him to the Secretary of State under the provisions of § 651,
Tit. 18 U.S.C. The application for extradition was based on a
charge that petitioner, at London, had "received from Broadstreet
Press Limited" certain sums of money, "knowing the same to have
been fraudulently obtained." Upon application by the petitioner for
writ of habeas corpus, and certiorari in its aid, the District
Court for Northern Illinois ordered him released from custody on
the ground that the act charged was not embraced within the
applicable treaties because not an offense under the laws of
Illinois, the state in which the was apprehended and held. On
appeal, the Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit reversed the
judgment of the District Court, 61 F.2d 626, on the ground that the
offense was a crime in Illinois, as had been declared in
Kelly
v. Griffin, 241 U. S. 6. This
Court granted certiorari, 289 U.S. 713, on a petition which
presented as ground for the reversal of the judgment below that,
under the Treaty of 1842 and Convention of 1889, extradition may
not be had unless the offense charged is a crime under the law of
the state where the fugitive is found, and that "receiving money,
knowing the same to have been fraudulently obtained," the crime
with which the petitioner was charged, is not an offense under the
laws of Illinois.
In support of this contention, petitioner asserts that it is a
general principle of international law that an offense for which
extradition may be had must be a crime both in the demanding
country and in the place where
Page 290 U. S. 287
the fugitive is found, and that the applicable treaty
provisions, interpreted in the light of that principle, exclude any
right of either country to demand the extradition of a fugitive
unless the offense with which he is charged is a crime in the
particular place of asylum.
See Wright v. Henkel,
190 U. S. 40,
190 U. S. 61.
But the principles of international law recognize no right to
extradition apart from treaty. While a government may, if agreeable
to its own constitution and laws, voluntarily exercise the power to
surrender a fugitive from justice to the country from which he had
fled, and it has been said that it is under a moral duty to do so
(
see 1 Moore, Extradition, § 14; Clarke, Extradition
(4th Ed.) p. 14), the legal right to demand his extradition and the
correlative duty to surrender him to the demanding country exist
only when created by treaty.
See United States v.
Rauscher, 119 U. S. 407,
119 U. S.
411-412;
Holmes v.
Jennison, 14 Pet. 540,
39 U. S. 569,
39 U. S. 582,
614;
United States v. Davis, 2 Sumner 482;
Case of
Jose Ferreira dos Santos, 2 Brock. 493;
Commonwealth ex
rel. Short v. Deacon, 10 S. & R. 125; 1 Moore,
Extradition, §§ 9-13.
Cf. Matter of Washburn, 4
Johns.Ch. 105, 107; 1 Kent.Com. 37. To determine the nature and
extent of the right, we must look to the treaty which created it.
The question presented here, therefore, is one of the construction
of the provisions of the applicable treaties in accordance with the
principles governing the interpretation of international
agreement.
The extradition provisions of the treaty with Great Britain of
1842 [
Footnote 1] are embodied
in Article X, which provides
Page 290 U. S. 288
that each country "shall . . . deliver up to justice all persons
who, being charged with" any of seven named crimes "committed
within the jurisdiction of either, shall seek an asylum, or shall
be found, within the territories of the other." The crime charged
here is not one of those specified in Article X, and is therefore
not an offense with respect to which extradition may be demanded,
unless made so by the provisions of the supplemental convention of
1889. That convention recites that it is desired by the high
contracting parties that the provisions of Article X of the earlier
treaty should "embrace certain crimes not therein specified," and
agrees by Article I [
Footnote
2] that the provisions of Article X of the earlier treaty
Page 290 U. S. 289
shall be made applicable to an added schedule of crimes
specified in ten numbered classes of offenses and one unnumbered
class. In the case of certain offenses, those enumerated in the
classes numbered 4 and 10, and in the unnumbered class, Article X
applies only if they are, in the former case, "made criminal" and,
in the latter,
Page 290 U. S. 290
"punishable," "by the laws of both countries." No such
limitation is expressed with respect to the crimes enumerated in
the other eight classes, one of which, the third, includes the
crime with which petitioner is charged. Thus, like Article X of the
earlier treaty, Article I specifies by name those offenses upon
accusation of which the fugitive is to be surrendered. and it
extends to them the obligation of the earlier treaty. But Article
I, unlike Article X, singles out for exceptional treatment certain
of the offenses named, which in terms are brought within the
obligation of the treaty only if they are made criminal by the laws
of both countries.
Notwithstanding this distinction, appearing on the face of the
convention, petitioner insists that in no case does it require
extradition of a fugitive who has sought asylum in the United
States unless the criminal act with which he is charged abroad is
similarly defined as a crime by the laws of the particular state,
district, or territory of the United States in which he is found.
The only language in the two treaties said to support this
contention is the proviso in Article X of the Treaty of 1842,
following the engagement to surrender fugitives charged with
specified offenses, which reads as follows:
"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. . . ."
It cannot be said that these words give any clear indication
that a fugitive charged with acts constituting a crime named in the
treaty is not to be subject to extradition unless those acts are
also defined as criminal by the laws of the state in which he is
apprehended. The proviso would appear more naturally to refer to
the procedure to be followed in the country of the asylum in
asserting and making effective the obligation of the treaty,
Page 290 U. S. 291
and particularly to the quantum of proof -- the "evidence" --
which is to be required at the place of asylum to establish the
fact that the fugitive has committed the treaty offense within the
jurisdiction of the demanding country.
When the treaty was adopted, there was no statutory provision of
the United States regulating the procedure to be followed in
securing extradition of the fugitive, and the necessary procedure
was provided in the treaty itself. By the proviso, the observance
of the laws of the place of refuge is exacted in apprehending and
detaining the fugitive.
See Benson v. McMahon,
127 U. S. 457;
In re Metzger, 17 Fed.Cas. p. 232. It prescribes a method
of procedure, in conformity with local law, by which compliance
with the obligation of the treaty may be exacted at the place of
refuge, and sets up a standard by which to measure the amount of
the proof of the offense charged which the treaty requires as
prerequisite to extradition. The standard thus adopted is that
which, under local law, would determine the sufficiency of the
evidence to justify the apprehension and commitment "if the crime
or offence had there been committed." [
Footnote 3]
Page 290 U. S. 292
Were Article X intended to have the added meaning insisted upon
by petitioner, that there should be no extradition unless the act
charged is one made criminal by the laws of the place of refuge,
that meaning would naturally have been expressed in connection with
the enumeration of the treaty offenses, rather than in the proviso
which, in its whole scope, deals with procedure. That no such
meaning can fairly be attributed to the proviso becomes evident
when Article X is read, as for present purposes it must be, with
the supplementary provisions of the Convention of 1889.
The draftsmen of the latter document obviously treated the
proviso as dealing with procedure alone, since they took care to
provide in Article I that fugitives should be subject to
extradition for certain offenses only if they were defined as
criminal by the laws of both countries, but omitted any such
provision with respect to all the others enumerated, including the
crime of "receiving," with which petitioner is charged. [
Footnote 4] This was an unnecessary
Page 290 U. S. 293
precaution and one not consistently taken if the proviso already
precluded extradition when the offense charged is not also criminal
in the particular place of asylum. A less strained and entirely
consistent construction is that urged by respondent -- that the
specification of the crime of "receiving," as a treaty offense,
without qualification, evidenced an intention to dispense with the
restriction applied to other treaty offenses that they must be
crimes "by the laws of both countries."
In choosing between conflicting interpretations of a treaty
obligation, a narrow and restricted construction is to be avoided
as not consonant with the principles deemed controlling in the
interpretation of international agreements. Considerations which
should govern the diplomatic relations between nations, and the
good faith of treaties, as well, require that their obligations
should be liberally construed so as to effect the apparent
intention of the parties to secure equality and reciprocity between
them. For that reason, if a treaty fairly admits of two
constructions,
Page 290 U. S. 294
one restricting the rights which may be claimed under it, and
the other enlarging it, the more liberal construction is to be
preferred.
Jordan v. Tashiro, 278 U.
S. 123,
278 U. S. 127;
Geofroy v. Riggs, 133 U. S. 258,
133 U. S. 271;
In re Ross, 140 U. S. 453,
140 U. S. 475;
Tucker v. Alexandroff, 183 U. S. 424,
183 U. S. 437;
Asakura v. Seattle, 265 U. S. 332.
Unless these principles, consistently recognized and applied by
this Court, are now to be discarded, their application here leads
inescapably to the conclusion that the treaties, presently
involved, on their face require the extradition of the petitioner,
even though the act with which he is charged would not be a crime
if committed in Illinois.
In ascertaining the meaning of a treaty, we may look beyond its
written words to the negotiations and diplomatic correspondence of
the contracting parties relating
Page 290 U. S. 295
to the subject matter, and to their own practical construction
of it.
Nielsen v. Johnson, 279 U. S.
47,
279 U. S. 52;
In re Ross, supra, 140 U. S. 467;
United States v. Texas, 162 U. S. 1,
162 U. S. 23;
Kinkead v. United States, 150 U.
S. 483,
150 U. S. 486;
Terrace v. Thompson, 263 U. S. 197,
263 U. S. 223.
And in resolving doubts the construction of a treaty by the
political department of the government, while not conclusive upon
courts called upon to construe it, is nevertheless of weight.
Nielsen v. Johnson, supra, 279 U. S. 52;
Charlton v. Kelly, 229 U. S. 447,
229 U. S. 468.
But the exhaustive search by counsel through available diplomatic
records and correspondence in response to the invitation of the
Court in its order for reargument of this cause has disclosed
nothing in diplomatic history which would afford a basis for any
different conclusion.
Within two years of the proclamation of the Treaty of 1842, our
State Department had occasion to construe the provisions of Article
X now under consideration, and to take a definite position as to
their scope and meaning. Certain fugitive slaves, charged with
robbery and murder by indictment of the grand jury for the District
of Florida, had fled to Napan in the Bahama Islands. Requisition
was made in due course for their extradition, and the Governor of
the Bahamas, in conformity to the local procedure, issued his
requisition for the fugitives to the Chief Justice of the Colony.
The court over which he presided refused to order the extradition
of the fugitives and directed their discharge on the grounds that
the indictment was not of itself sufficient evidence of the
commission of the offense and that the offense charged, apparently
committed by the slaves in effecting their escape, although
criminal in Florida, did not appear to be so under British law.
From the ensuing diplomatic correspondence, it clearly appears
that this government then asserted that the Treaty of 1842
obligated both parties to surrender fugitives duly charged with any
of the offenses specified in
Page 290 U. S. 296
Article X without regard to the criminal quality of the
fugitive's acts under the law of the place of asylum. This
contention was supported by full and cogent argument in the course
of which it was specifically pointed out that the proviso of
Article X relates to the procedure to be followed in asserting
rights under the treaty, and is not a limitation upon the
definition of the offenses with respect to which extradition might
be demanded. [
Footnote 5]
Page 290 U. S. 297
The political department of the government, before the
negotiation of the Convention of 1889, had thus clearly
Page 290 U. S. 298
and emphatically taken the position that the correct
construction of Article X is that for which respondent contends
here, a construction which, as already indicated, is supported and
confirmed by the provisions of the Convention of 1889. Our
government does not appear to have receded from that position, and,
while the British government has never definitely yielded to it
except insofar as the arguments addressed to us in behalf of the
respondent may be taken to have that effect, that fact or even the
failure of Great Britain to comply with the obligations of the
treaty would not be ground for refusal by this government to honor
them or by this Court to apply them. Until a treaty has been
denounced, it is the duty of both the government and the courts to
sanction the performance of the obligations reciprocal to the
rights which the treaty declares and the government asserts even
though the other party to it holds to a different view of its
meaning.
Charlton v. Kelly, supra, 229 U. S.
472-473. The diplomatic history of the treaty provisions
thus lends support to the construction which we think should be
placed upon them when read without extraneous aid, but with that
liberality demanded generally in the interpretation of
international obligations.
Other considerations peculiarly applicable to treaties for
extradition, and to these treaties in particular, fortify this
conclusion. The surrender of a fugitive, duly charged in the
country from which he has fled with a nonpolitical offense and one
generally recognized as criminal at the place of asylum, involves
no impairment of any legitimate public or private interest. The
obligation to do what some nations have done voluntarily, in the
interest of justice and friendly international relationships,
see 1 Moore, Extradition, § 40, should be construed
more liberally than a criminal statute or the technical
requirements of criminal procedure.
Griffin v. Shine,
187 U. S. 181,
187 U. S. 184;
Yordi v.
Page 290 U. S. 299
Nolte, 215 U. S. 227,
215 U. S. 230.
All of the offenses named in the two treaties are not only
denominated crimes by the treaties themselves, but they are
recognized as such by the jurisprudence of both countries.
[
Footnote 6] Even that with
which petitioner is charged is a crime under the law of many
states, if not in Illinois, punishable either as the crime of
receiving money obtained fraudulently or by false pretenses, or as
larceny. [
Footnote 7]
See
United States v. Mulligan, 50 F.2d 687.
Compare Kelly v.
Griffin, supra, 241 U. S. 15. It
has been the policy of our own government, as of others, in
entering into extradition treaties, to name as treaty offenses only
those generally recognized as criminal by the
Page 290 U. S. 300
laws in force within its own territory. [
Footnote 8] But that policy, when carried into effect
by treaty designation of offenses with respect to which extradition
is to be granted, affords no adequate basis for declining to
construe the treaty in accordance with its language, or for saying
that its obligation, in the absence of some express requirement, is
conditioned on the criminality of the offense charged according to
the laws of the particular place of asylum. Once the contracting
parties are satisfied that an identified offense is generally
recognized as criminal in both countries there is no occasion for
stipulating that extradition shall fail merely because the fugitive
may succeed in finding, in the country of refuge, some state,
territory or district in which the offense charged is not
punishable. No reason is suggested or apparent why the solemn and
unconditional engagement to surrender a fugitive charged with the
named offense of which petitioner is accused should admit of any
inquiry as to the criminal quality of the act charged at the place
of asylum beyond that necessary to make certain that the offense
charged is one named in the treaty.
See Collins v. Loisel,
259 U. S. 309,
259 U. S. 317;
Griffin v. Shine, supra, 187 U. S.
188.
It is of some significance also that the construction which
petitioner urges would restrict the reciprocal operation of the
treaty. Under that construction, the right to extradition from the
United States may vary with the state or territory where the
fugitive is found, although extradition may be had from Great
Britain with respect to all the offenses named in the treaty.
While, under the laws of Great Britain, extradition treaties are
not self-executing, and effect must be given to them by an act of
Parliament designating the crimes upon charge of which
Page 290 U. S. 301
extradition from Great Britain and its dependencies may be had,
all the offenses named in the two treaties have been so designated
by Acts of Parliament of 1870, 33 and 34 Victoria, c. 52, as
amended by Act of 1873, 36 and 37 Victoria, c. 60.
The District Court for Southern New York decided, in 1847, that
the proviso in the Extradition Treaty with France of November 9,
1843, like that in Article X, did not require that the treaty
offense charged to have been committed in France should also be a
crime in New York, the place of asylum.
In re Metzger,
supra. The precise question now before us seems not to have
been decided in any other case, and in no case in this Court has
extradition been denied because the offense charged was not also
criminal by the laws of the place of refuge. In
Wright v.
Henkel, supra, the offense charged, fraud by a director of a
company, was, by paragraph 4 of Article I of the Convention of
1889, a treaty offense only if made criminal by the laws of both
countries. In
Collins v. Loisel, supra, and in
Kelly
v. Griffin, supra, the question was whether the crime charged
was a treaty offense. The court so held, and the right to
extradition was sustained. The offense charged was said to be a
crime in both countries, and it seems to have been assumed without
discussion, and not questioned, that its criminality at the place
of asylum was necessary to extradition.
See also Bingham v.
Bradley, 241 U. S. 511,
241 U. S. 518.
That assumption is shown here to have been unfounded.
The petitioner also objects that the Dawes-Simon Extradition
Treaty with Great Britain of 1932 (47 Stat. 2122), is now in force;
that it does not name as a treaty offense the receiving of money,
knowing it to have been fraudulently obtained, the crime with which
petitioner is charged, and, that, by abrogating the earlier
extradition treaties between the two countries, it has abated
this
Page 290 U. S. 302
proceeding and that for the extradition of the petitioner which
was brought while the Treaty of 1842 and the Convention of 1889
were in force.
The ratifications of the Dawes-Simon Treaty were announced by
presidential proclamation of August 9, 1932, which declared that
the treaty was made public to the end that "every article and
clause thereof may be observed and fulfilled with good faith" by
the United States and its citizens. Article 18 provides that:
"The present treaty shall come into force in ten days after its
publication in conformity with the forms prescribed by the high
contracting parties."
Under the applicable provisions of the British Extradition Act
of 1870, 33 and 34 Victoria, c. 52, as amended by the Act of 1873,
36 and 37 Victoria, c. 60, extradition treaties are carried into
effect and given the force of law in Great Britain by publication
of an Order-in-Council embodying the terms of the treaty, and
directing that the Extradition Act shall apply with respect to the
foreign state which has entered into the treaty. As appears from
the record, and as is conceded, no Order-in-Council has been
promulgated with respect to this treaty, and the State Department
appears not to have recognized it as in force in either country.
See Doe v. Braden,
16 How. 635,
57 U. S.
656.
We find it unnecessary to determine whether or not the treaty,
as suggested on the argument, is now in force and binding on the
United States, although not binding on Great Britain until
proclaimed by an Order-in-Council. For if we were to arrive at that
conclusion, we could not say that its obligation would not extend
to the offense with which petitioner is charged, or that its
substitution for the earlier treaties would abate the proceeding
for the extradition of petitioner or the pending habeas corpus
proceeding.
Paragraph 18 of Article 3 of the Dawes-Simon Treaty includes
among the offenses for which extradition may be
Page 290 U. S. 303
demanded "receiving any money, valuable security or other
property, knowing the same to have been stolen or unlawfully
obtained." It is insisted that "receiving money," knowing the same
to have been stolen or unlawfully obtained, is not the equivalent
of receiving money, knowing the same to have been fraudulently
obtained. It is not denied that the phrase "unlawfully obtained,"
standing alone, is as broad as the phrase "fraudulently obtained."
But it is asserted that its use in association with the word
"stolen" restricts its meaning to offenses of the same type of
unlawfulness as stealing, which it is said involves only those
forms of criminal taking which are without the consent or against
the will of the owner or the possessor. But we think the words of
the treaty present no opportunity for so narrow and strict an
application of the rule of
ejusdem generis. The rule is,
at most, one of construction, to be resorted to as an aid only when
words or phrases are of doubtful meaning. Extradition treaties are
to be liberally, not strictly, construed. The words "steal" and
"stolen" have no certain technical significance making them
applicable only with respect to common law larceny. They are not
uncommonly used as implying also a taking or receiving of property
by embezzlement or false pretenses, offenses which are often
embraced in modern forms of statutory larceny. [
Footnote 9] Whatever was left vague or uncertain
by the use of the word "stolen" was made certain by the added
phrase "or unlawfully obtained," as indicating any form of criminal
taking whether or not embraced within the term larceny in its
various connotations. Even if the word "stolen" were to be given
the restricted meaning for which the petitioner contends, it would
be so precise and comprehensive as to exhaust the genus and leave
nothing essentially similar on which the general phrase "or
unlawfully obtained" could operate. This phrase, like all the
other
Page 290 U. S. 304
words of the treaty, is to be given a meaning, if reasonably
possible, and rules of construction may not be resorted to to
render it meaningless or inoperative.
See Mason v. United
States, 260 U. S. 545,
260 U. S.
553.
As the crime with which petitioner is charged is an extraditable
offense under the Dawes-Simon Treaty, the effective promulgation of
that treaty and the consequent abrogation of earlier ones would not
abate the pending proceedings. The obligation of the later treaty,
by its terms, extends generally to fugitives charged with the
several offenses named, without regard to the date of their
commission.
See In re De Giacomo, 12 Blatch. 391; 1 Moore
on Extradition, § 86. It does not purport to exclude from its
operation crimes committed before signature or promulgation, as did
Article VIII of the Treaty of 1889. Hence, it did not, by mere
force of the abrogation of the earlier treaty, relinquish the
obligation under it to surrender the petitioner, but continued it
by making the offense with which he was charged extraditable even
though it antedated the treaty.
The extradition proceeding has not come to an end. The
petitioner's commitment by order of the commissioner was "to abide
the order of the Secretary of State," and continues in force so
long as the Secretary may lawfully order his extradition. Hence,
the new treaty, if in force, is authority for the Secretary to
issue his extradition warrant under § 653, Title 18 U.S.C. The
detention of the petitioner being lawful under treaty provisions
continuously in force since his arrest, the proceeding in habeas
corpus is not moot and does not abate merely because the obligation
to surrender the petitioner for trial upon the offense charged, and
for which he is held, originating in one treaty, was continued
without change of substance in the other.
See Abie State Bank
v. Bryan, 282 U. S. 765,
282 U. S.
781.
Affirmed.
Page 290 U. S. 305
[
Footnote 1]
The applicable provisions of the Treaty of 1842 are as
follows:
". . . and whereas it is found expedient, for the better
administration of justice and the prevention of crime within the
territories and jurisdiction of the two parties, respectively, that
persons committing the crimes hereinafter enumerated, and being
fugitives from justice, should, under certain circumstances, be
reciprocally delivered up. . . ."
"ARTICLE X. It is agreed that the United States and Her
Britannic Majesty shall, upon mutual requisitions by them, or their
ministers, officers, or authorities, respectively made, deliver up
to justice all persons who, being charged with the crime of murder,
or assault with intent to commit murder, or piracy, or arson, or
robbery, or forgery, or the utterance of forged paper, committed
within the jurisdiction of either, shall seek an asylum, or shall
be found within the territories of the other: 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 offence had there been committed: and the
respective judges and other magistrates of the two Governments
shall have power, jurisdiction, and authority, upon complaint made
under oath, to issue a warrant for the apprehension of the fugitive
or person so charged, that he may be brought before such judges or
other magistrates, respectively, to the end that the evidence of
criminality may be heard and considered, and if, on such hearing,
the evidence be deemed sufficient to sustain the charge, it shall
be the duty of the examining judge or magistrate to certify the
same to the proper executive authority, that a warrant may issue
for the surrender of such fugitive. The expense of such
apprehension and delivery shall be borne and defrayed by the party
who makes the requisition, and receives the fugitive."
[
Footnote 2]
The applicable provisions of the Convention of 1889 are as
follows:
"Whereas, by the Tenth Article of the Treaty concluded between
the United States of America and Her Britannic Majesty on the ninth
day of August, 1842, provision is made for the extradition of
persons charged with certain crimes;"
"And Whereas it is now desired by the High Contracting Parties
that the provisions of the said Article should embrace certain
crimes not therein specified, and should extend to fugitives
convicted of the crimes specified in the said Article and in this
Convention;"
"The said High Contracting Parties have appointed as their
Plenipotentiaries to conclude a Convention for this purpose; . .
."
"Who, after having communicated to each other their respective
full powers, found in good and due form, have agreed upon and
concluded the following Articles:"
"
ARTICLE I"
"The provisions of the said Tenth Article are hereby made
applicable to the following additional crimes:"
"1. Manslaughter, when voluntary."
"2. Counterfeiting or altering money; uttering or bringing into
circulation counterfeit or altered money."
"3. Embezzlement; larceny; receiving any money, valuable
security, or other property, knowing the same to have been
embezzled, stolen, or fraudulently obtained."
"4. Fraud by bailee, banker, agent, factor, trustee, or director
or member or officer of any company, made criminal by the laws of
both countries."
"5. Perjury, or subornation of perjury."
"6. Rape; abduction; child-stealing; kidnapping."
"7. Burglary; house-breaking or shop-breaking."
"8. Piracy by the law of nations."
"9. Revolt, or conspiracy to revolt by two or more persons on
board a ship on the high seas, against the authority of the master;
wrongfully sinking or destroying a vessel at sea, or attempting to
do so; assaults on board a ship on the high seas, with intent to do
grievous bodily harm."
"10. Crimes and offences against the laws of both countries for
the suppression of slavery and slave trading."
"Extradition is also to take place for participation in any of
the crimes mentioned in this Convention or in the aforesaid Tenth
Article, provided such participation be punishable by the laws of
both countries."
[
Footnote 3]
The Act of Congress, August 12, 1848, c. 167, § 1, 9 Stat.
302, prescribed the procedure before a commissioner or federal
judicial officer to secure the apprehension and detention of
fugitives whose extradition is demanded under any treaty or
convention with any foreign government. This enactment was the
source of § 5270, R.S., now § 651, Tit. 18 U.S.C., which
provides:
"If, on such hearing, he deems the evidence sufficient to
sustain the charge under the provisions of the proper treaty or
convention, he shall certify the same, together with a copy of all
the testimony taken before him, to the Secretary of State, that a
warrant may issue upon the requisition. . . ."
It does not require that the act charged as a treaty offense be
found to be one made criminal by the laws of the place of asylum.
By Act of August 3, 1882, c. 378, § 5, 22 Stat. 216, §
655, Tit. 18 U.S.C., provision was made for receiving in evidence
in such proceeding, depositions, warrants, and other papers such as
may be received for similar purposes by the tribunals of the
foreign country from which the fugitive shall have escaped. This
legislation has not been thought to dispense with the necessity of
the proviso contained in the Treaty of 1842, which has generally
been included in later treaties,
see footnote 4 infra but it has been deemed
to have relaxed the procedure exacted by the proviso in favor of
the demanding country.
Elias v. Ramirez, 215 U.
S. 398,
215 U. S. 409;
Bingham v. Bradley, 241 U. S. 511,
241 U. S. 517;
In re Dubroca y Paniagua, 33 F.2d 181;
compare Collins
v. Loisel, 259 U. S. 309,
259 U. S.
315-316.
[
Footnote 4]
The Supplementary Extradition Treaty with Great Britain of
December 13, 1900, Malloy's Treaties, p. 780, 32 Stat. 1864, added
three classes to the list of crimes for which extradition could be
demanded under the earlier treaties, but omitted any requirement
that they be criminal by the laws of both countries. By the
Supplementary Extradition Treaty with Great Britain of April 12,
1905, Malloy's Treaties, p. 798, 34 Stat. 2903, two other crimes
were added to the schedule of extraditable offenses, as
follows:
"14. Bribery, defined to be the offering, giving or receiving of
bribes made criminal by the laws of both countries."
"15. Offences, if made criminal by the laws of both countries,
against bankruptcy law."
By the Dawes-Simon Treaty of 1932 (47 Stat. 2122), not yet
promulgated by Great Britain, the proviso, modified and stated in a
separate article, reads as follows:
"The extradition shall take place only if the evidence be found
sufficient, according to the laws of the High Contracting Party,
applied to, either to justify the committal of the prisoner for
trial, in case the crime or offence had been committed in the
territory of such High Contracting Party, or to prove that the
prisoner is the identical person convicted by the courts of the
High Contracting Party who makes the requisition, and that the
crime or offence of which he has been convicted is one in respect
of which extradition could at the time of such conviction, have
been granted by the High Contracting Party applied to."
This treaty enumerates twenty-seven classes of extraditable
offenses and one unnumbered class, but extradition is conditional
upon the offense charged being criminal in the country of asylum in
the case of two classes only, as follows:
"6. Indecent assault if such crime or offence be indictable in
the place where the accused or convicted person is
apprehended."
"
* * * *"
"Extradition is also to be granted for participation in any of
the aforesaid crimes or offences, provided that such participation
be punishable by the laws of both High Contracting Parties."
The extradition treaty with Germany of July 12, 1930, contains a
stipulation that fugitives shall be delivered up with respect to
all the offenses enumerated in the treaty "only if they are
punishable as crimes or offenses by the law of both countries
applicable to the case." In each of the following treaties, the
proviso of Article X of the Treaty with Great Britain of 1842
appears, as does also the distinction made in Article I of the
Convention of 1889 between offenses with respect to which it is
specifically provided that they shall be extraditable only if they
are defined as criminal by the laws of both countries, and other
offenses with respect to which no such requirement is made:
Austria, January 31, 1930; Bolivia, April 21, 1900; Brazil, May 14,
1897; Bulgaria, March 19, 1924; Chile, April 17, 1900; Costa Rica,
November 10, 1922; Cuba, April 6, 1904, January 14, 1926;
Czechoslovakia, July 2, 1925; Denmark, January 6, 1902; Estonia,
November 8, 1923; Finland, August 1, 1924; Greece, May 6, 1931;
Latvia, October 16, 1923; Lithuania, April 9, 1924; Netherlands,
May 22, 1880, June 2, 1887; Norway, June 7, 1893, December 10,
1904; Panama, May 25, 1904; Poland, November 23, 1927; Portugal,
May 7, 1908; Rumania, July 23, 1924; Serbia, October 25, 1901;
Siam, December 30, 1922; Spain, August 7, 1882, June 15, 1904;
Sweden and Norway, March 21, 1860.
[
Footnote 5]
In a letter of instructions by Mr. Calhoun, then Secretary of
State, to Edward Everett, Minister to Great Britain, of August 7,
1844, the latter was directed to bring the subject to the attention
of the British Government, to press upon it this construction of
Article X and to ascertain what construction that government
intended to adopt. Department of State: 15 Instructions, Great
Britain, 205, No. 99. After quoting the provisions of the Article.
the Secretary of State said:
"It comprehends all
persons charged with the crimes of
murder, robbery, etc., etc.,
committed within the
jurisdiction of the party making the requisition, and
found in the territory of that on whom the requisition is
made. That these words are broad enough to comprehend the case
under consideration is beyond doubt, and, of course, the only
possible question which can be made is whether it is not taken out
by the provision which immediately follows. . . ."
And, after quoting the proviso, he continued:
"It is too plain to require proof that it relates to the
evidence on which the fugitive is to be given up to justice
exclusively without intending to restrict or change the body of the
agreement. That, having clearly specified who were to be delivered
up to justice on the requisition of either party, it became
necessary, in order to give effect to the agreement, to specify on
what evidence it should be done, and to do that, accordingly is the
sole object of the proviso. It specifies that it should be done on
such evidence of criminality as would justify his apprehension and
commitment for trial by the laws of the place where the fugitive is
found had the crime charged been there committed -- that is, if the
crime charged be murder or robbery, as in this case, on such
evidence as would justify apprehension and commitment for trial for
murder or robbery at the place."
"Taking the body of the agreement and proviso together, it would
seem to be unquestionable that the true intent of the article is
that the
criminality of the act charged should be judged
of by the laws of the country within whose jurisdiction the act was
perpetrated, but that the evidence on which the fugitive should be
delivered up to justice should be by the laws of the place where he
shall be found. Both are to be judged by the laws of the place
where they occur, and properly so, as they are paramount within
their respective limits. And hence it is expressly specified in the
body of the agreement that the crime charged must have been
committed within the jurisdiction of the party making the
requisition, and, in the proviso, that the evidence on which the
fugitive shall be delivered up shall be such as is required to
apprehend and commit for trial according to the laws of the place
where he is found."
Mr. Everett's report to the Secretary of November 23, 1844
(Department of State:53 Despatches, Great Britain, No. 216) of his
conversations with Lord Aberdeen, British Secretary of Foreign
Affairs, on this subject being deemed unsatisfactory by the
Secretary, he directed that the conversations be renewed in a
letter of instructions of January 28, 1845 (Department of State:15
Instructions, Great Britain, No. 120). After pointing out that the
question was equally important with respect to all the crimes
enumerated in Article X, he said:
"It is obvious from the preceding remarks that the question
whether the criminality of the Act is to be judged by the laws of
the country where the offence was committed or that, where the
fugitive may be found is one of wide extent, and of the first
magnitude in the construction of the treaty. We contend that it
must be by the laws of the place where the crime was charged to
have been committed, and not that where the fugitive was found, and
hold that such construction is in strict conformity with the
wording and true intent of the treaty; . . ."
"You are accordingly instructed to call again the attention of
Her Majesty's government to the subject, and to urge a speedy
decision in strong and earnest language."
The matter appears to have been fully presented to the British
government by Mr. Everett. Department of State: Mr. Everett to the
Secretary of State, January 31, 1845, 54 Despatches, Great Britain,
No. 250; No. 271, March 3, 1845. But, as the British Government
took the position that the indictment of itself was not sufficient
evidence of the commission of the offense in Florida, further
inquiry as to the government's construction of Article X seems not
to have been pressed or answered.
See also the case of
John Anderson, a fugitive slave whose extradition was sought from
Canada, discussed in 1 Moore, Extradition, § 440.
[
Footnote 6]
President Tyler, in his message transmitting the Treaty of 1842
to the Senate for consideration, referred to Article X as
"carefully confined to such offenses as all mankind agreed to
regard as heinous and as destructive to the security of life and
property. In this careful and specific enumeration of crimes, the
object has been to exclude all political offenses, or criminal
charges arising from wars or intestine commotions."
Executive Documents, vol. 1, 1842-43, Doc. No. 2, p. 22.
[
Footnote 7]
Alabama, Code of 1923, §§ 4131, 4912; Arkansas,
Crawford & Moses' Digest of Statutes of 1921, §§ 2449
and 2493; California, Penal Code of 1931, §§ 484, 496;
Idaho, Code of 1932, §§ 17-3902 and 17-3512; Indiana,
Burns' Annotated Statutes of 1926, § 2465; Kansas, Revised
Statutes of 1923, 21-551 and 21-549; Louisiana, Code of Criminal
Procedure and Criminal Statutes of 1932, art. 1306; Massachusetts,
General Laws of 1932, chap. 266, § 60; Minnesota, Mason's
Statutes of 1927, §§ 10358, 10374; Missouri, Revised
Statutes of 1929, §§ 4095 and 4083; Montana, Rev.Codes
1921, §§ 11410 and 11388; Nevada, Compiled Laws of 1929,
§ 10543, as amended by Laws 1931, c. 117, § 1; New
Jersey, § 52-166e(1) of 1925-1930 Supplement to Compiled
Statutes of 1911; New York, Penal Law, §§ 1290 and 1308;
North Carolina, Code of 1931, §§ 4277 and 4250; Ohio,
Throckmorton's Annotated Code of 1930, § 12450; Rhode Island,
General Laws of 1923, § 6072, and § 6070, as amended by
Laws 1928, c. 1208; Tennessee, Code of 1932, §§ 10949,
10950; Utah, Compiled Laws of 1917, §§ 8344 and 8297;
Virginia, Code of 1930, §§ 4459 and 4448; West Virginia,
Code of 1931, p. 1469, c. 61, art. 3, § 24; page 1647, c. 61,
art. 3, § 18; Wyoming, Revised Statutes of 1931, 32-318.
[
Footnote 8]
See Dispatch No. 3, August 4, 1885, Secretary Bayard to
Phelps, Minister to England; Letter from Ambassador Choate to the
Marquess of Lansdowne, of April 5, 1905.
[
Footnote 9]
See note 7
ante.
MR. JUSTICE BUTLER, dissenting.
I. The decision just announced holds that the United States is
bound by treaty to surrender its citizens and others to England
there to be prosecuted criminally and punished for that which if
committed here would transgress no law -- federal or state. And it
is so held despite the established rule that England is not by the
treaty bound to grant any extradition upon the demand of this
country unless the crime charged against the fugitive is also a
crime under English law. The Extradition Act 1870, § 26, and
First Schedule.
Ex parte Piot, 15 Cox, C.C. 208.
Re
Bellencoutre, 17 Cox, C.C. 253. Heretofore, this Court has
steadfastly held that a fugitive, whether alien or a citizen, will
not be extradited unless the facts alleged against him in the
demanding country are there made criminal, constitute a crime
covered by the treaty, and are denounced as crime either by some
act of Congress or by the laws of the state where the fugitive is
found.
Wright v. Henkel, 190 U. S. 40,
190 U. S. 58;
Kelly v. Griffin, 241 U. S. 6,
241 U. S. 14-15;
Bingham v. Bradley, 241 U. S. 511,
241 U. S.
517-518;
Collins v. Loisel, 259 U.
S. 309,
259 U. S.
311-312,
259 U. S. 317.
See Pettit v. Walshe, 194 U. S. 205,
194 U. S.
217-218;
Glucksman v. Henkel, 221 U.
S. 508,
221 U. S. 513.
The lower courts have adhered to the same rule.
In re
Muller, 17 Fed.Cas. page 975;
Cohn v. Jones, 100 F.
639, 645-646;
In re Frank, 107 F. 272, 277; Powell v.
United States,
206 F. 400, 403; Collier v. Vaccaro, 51
F.2d 17, 19;
Bernstein v. Gross, 58 F.2d 154, 155.
See
Greene v. United States, 154 F. 401, 406.
Cf. In re
Dubroca y Paniagua, 33 F.2d 181. [
Footnote 2/1]
Page 290 U. S. 306
All the text writers, at least so far as research of counsel and
court has disclosed, lay down the same principle. Pomeroy,
International Law (ed. by Woolsey) §§ 198, 199; Biron and
Chalmers, Extradition, p. 11; 1 Phillimore, International Law (3d
ed.) § 367, p. 521; Moore, Extradition, §§ 94,
96.
II. Petitioner, found in Illinois, is accused in England of
having received money knowing it to have been fraudulently obtained
by the Broad Street Press, Limited. Item 3 of the Convention of
1889 contains the pertinent words "receiving any money . . .
knowing the same to have been . . . fraudulently obtained." Such
receiving has not been made criminal by any act of Congress or any
law of Illinois. On that ground, petitioner sought discharge on
habeas corpus.
Kelly v. Griffin, supra, held that acts
such as those alleged against petitioner constitute crime in
Illinois. England did not contend that local criminality is not
essential, but relied upon the ruling in that case. District Judge
Fitzhenry, deeming himself bound, remanded petitioner.
At the hearing before the commissioner, petitioner called as
witnesses a number of eminent Illinois lawyers. Their testimony
shows beyond doubt that receiving money or property knowing the
same to have been fraudulently obtained has not been denounced as
crime by the laws of Illinois. England relied solely upon
Kelly
v. Griffin, and insisted that the commissioner was bound by
that decision. The latter accepted that view. Petitioner sought
review and release on habeas corpus. District Judge Carpenter heard
the application, found such receiving not a crime in Illinois, and
ordered petitioner's discharge. On appeal. England still insisted
that
Kelly v. Griffin required a contrary ruling. The
Circuit Court of
Page 290 U. S. 307
Appeals so held. One of the three judges dissented. It was in
that court that England first suggested that criminality in
Illinois is not essential. [
Footnote
2/2] The court held against that contention, citing
Collins
v. Loisel, supra; Kelly v. Griffin, supra, and
Wright v.
Henkel, supra.
On the first argument here, England adhered to its contention
that
Kelly v. Griffin ruled the case and also argued that
criminality at the place of asylum is not essential. Unable to hold
that the acts charged against petitioner constitute crime in
Illinois, this Court ordered reargument upon all questions and
directed attention to a point not theretofore suggested:
"The interpretation placed upon Article X of the Treaty of 1842
by the Secretary of the United States, John C. Calhoun, shortly
after the ratification of the Treaty (August 7, 1844, January 28,
1845, MSS. Inst.Gr.Br.), and also to the available diplomatic
correspondence relating to Article X of the Treaty of 1842 and the
Treaty of 1889."
On reargument, petitioner brought forward all diplomatic
correspondence available to him. It related not only to the
Treaties of 1842 and 1889, but also to subsequent treaties prior to
the Dawes-Simon Treaty 1932. The latter, designed to cover the
entire field and to supersede the treaties under consideration, was
adopted after extended negotiation. It has been ratified by the
Senate and published here. But, while it was duly ratified in
England on July 29, 1932, the Order-in-council necessary there to
make it effective has not yet been promulgated. Our Secretary of
State holds that the treaty is not in force. It results, therefore,
that the diplomatic correspondence leading up to its consummation
was not available to petitioner. England fails to produce any part
of it. She
Page 290 U. S. 308
appears to attribute to Secretary Calhoun's contentions cited in
our order little, if any, greater weight than when they were put
aside by Her Majesty's Government nearly a century ago. It is to be
presumed that, if correspondence leading up to the Dawes-Simon
Treaty would support the idea that local criminality is not
essential, England would produce it here.
On reargument, England gave little, if any, support to its claim
that the "receiving" alleged against petitioner is crime in
Illinois. And this Court, impliedly at least, now holds that it is
not, and to that extent overrules
Kelly v. Griffin.
England's brief on reargument frankly concedes that it has been the
policy of both parties to limit extradition to acts made criminal
in the place of asylum. It safely may be said that she does not now
seek the adoption of a contrary construction. But, taking a new
hold, she insists that the requirement of criminality in both
countries is here satisfied. In support of that position, she says
that petitioner cannot be convicted without proof of guilty
knowledge; that the record shows he was a party to the fraud by
which the money was obtained, and that, as obtaining by false
pretenses and participation in that offense are both criminal in
Illinois and extraditable, it must be held that extradition of the
petitioner would be within the rule. The court does not take that
point, and therefore it need not be considered here. It is
mentioned for the purpose of disclosing the principal, if not
indeed the sole, ground upon which extradition is now claimed.
III. But the court's decision rests upon the ground that the
United States impliedly agreed to extradite for acts not made
criminal by its laws or the laws of the state of asylum.
Admittedly, England did not so agree. There is no warrant for the
discrimination. The parties dealt as equals. All their extradition
treaties disclose the intention that they shall stand on the same
footing. The
Page 290 U. S. 309
governing principle always has been reciprocity and
equality.
The extradition provisions of the Jay Treaty of 1794, Art. 27, 8
Stat. 116, 120, which continued in force 12 years, were:
"It is further agreed that his Majesty and the United States, on
mutual requisitions . . . , will deliver up to justice all
persons, who, being charged with murder or forgery, committed
within the jurisdiction of either, shall seek an asylum within any
of the countries of the other,
provided that this shall
only be done on 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 offence had there been committed. . . ."
(Italics supplied.)
The Webster-Ashburton Treaty of 1842 (8 Stat. 572) in its
preamble declares:
"And whereas it is found expedient, for the better
administration of justice and the prevention of crime within the
territories and jurisdiction of the two parties, respectively, that
persons committing the crimes hereinafter enumerated, and being
fugitives from justice, should, under certain circumstances, be
reciprocally delivered up."
(Italics supplied.) It repeats the clause, originating in the
Jay Treaty, providing for mutual requisitions. It includes five
additional crimes, making seven in all. They are (Article X, p.
576): murder, assault with intent to commit murder, piracy, arson,
robbery, forgery, and the utterance of forged paper. It also
repeats the proviso contained in the Jay Treaty.
The declaration of purpose that fugitives be "reciprocally
delivered up" and the provision for "mutual requisitions" mean that
neither shall have advantage over the other or be entitled to
demand any extradition which under corresponding circumstances it
would not be bound
Page 290 U. S. 310
to grant, and directly negative the notion that the United
States alone is bound to extradite for acts not criminal where the
fugitive is found.
The Blaine-Pauncefote Convention of 1889 (26 Stat. 1508) added
to the list in the Webster-Ashburton Treaty ten numbered offenses.
They are:
"1. Manslaughter, when voluntary."
"2. Counterfeiting or altering money; uttering or bringing into
circulation counterfeit or altered money."
"3. Embezzlement; larceny; receiving any money, valuable
security, or other property, knowing the same to have been
embezzled, stolen, or fraudulently obtained."
"4. Fraud by bailee, banker, agent, factor, trustee, or director
or member or officer of any company, made criminal by the laws of
both countries."
"5. Perjury, or subornation of perjury."
"6. Rape; abduction; child-stealing; kidnapping."
"7. Burglary; house-breaking or shop-breaking."
"8. Piracy by the law of nations."
"9. Revolt, or conspiracy to revolt by two or more persons on
board a ship on the high seas, against the authority of the master;
wrongfully sinking or destroying a vessel at sea, or attempting to
do so; assaults on board a ship on the high seas, with intent to do
grievous bodily harm."
"10. Crimes and offences against the laws of both countries for
the suppression of slavery and slave-trading."
"Extradition is also to take place for participation in any of
the crimes mentioned in this Convention or in the aforesaid Tenth
Article, provided such participation be punishable by the laws of
both countries."
The Supplementary Treaty of 1900 (32 Stat. 1864) added:
"11. Obtaining money, valuable securities or other property by
false pretenses."
"12. Wilful and unlawful destruction or obstruction of railroads
which endangers human life."
"13. Procuring abortion. "
Page 290 U. S. 311
The Supplementary Treaty of 1905 (34 Stat. 2903) added:
"14. Bribery, defined to be the offering, giving or receiving of
bribes made criminal by the laws of both countries."
"15. Offences, if made criminal by the laws of both countries,
against bankruptcy law."
IV. The majority opinion notes the absence of any express
requirement of criminality in both countries in item 3, which
includes the acts alleged against petitioner; it emphasizes "made
criminal by the laws of both countries" qualifying "fraud" in item
4, and from that it infers that, as to acts not similarly
qualified, criminality in the asylum state here is not essential.
That indeed is the ground upon which the court's opinion rests.
But the indefinite terms by which the qualified offenses are
designated fully account for the use of the words of limitation. An
examination of the list discloses that, where there is an express
requirement of the criminality in both countries, the purpose is to
make certain that the acts are criminal or to safeguard against
demands for extradition for acts nor criminal in the asylum
country. Neither the Jay Treaty nor the Webster-Ashburton Treaty
contains any provision expressly limiting extradition to acts made
criminal in both countries. No such specification was necessary, as
the transgressions listed are grave and well known to have been
denounced as crimes by the laws of both countries. Qualifying
clauses are often used in treaties, statutes, and agreements where
the meaning would be the same if they were omitted. Article II of
the Convention of 1889 furnishes an example. It declares that no
fugitive shall be surrendered for any offense of a political
character. As no crime of that sort it listed, the provision is
unnecessary. That clause, like the expression requiring criminality
in both countries, is used not to add or change meaning, but to
Page 290 U. S. 312
emphasize and insure adherence to a well known general principle
always held applicable in the absence of any such specification.
And Article III declares that a person surrendered cannot be tried
in the demanding country for any crime committed prior to
extradition other than that for which he was extradited. These
clauses add nothing to the protection to which the fugitive has
been held entitled in the absence of such stipulations.
United
States v. Rauscher, 119 U. S. 407,
119 U. S.
419-422.
The history of item 4 negatives any inference such as that drawn
by the majority. It was taken from, and, omitting "public," is
precisely the same as, a clause in the British Extradition Act.
[
Footnote 2/3] As "public officer
of any company" is unknown to our law, the word "public" was
dropped. In the British statute, "fraud" is qualified by "made
criminal by any act for the time being in force." A corresponding
definition of "fraud" in the treaty was needed for clarification,
and so the clause "made criminal by the laws of both countries" was
added. The doubts that reasonably might arise as to the meaning of
the words used more than justified this qualification. Fraud may or
may not constitute crime. When the word is used without
qualification, it does not mean a criminal offense. The item
extends to numerous classes of persons, even to members of a
corporation. The word "company" is broad enough to include
unincorporated associations as well as corporations of all sorts.
The laws regulating bankers and others included are well known to
lack uniformity and to be subject to frequent changes. Absence of
some definitive expression would have left it uncertain whether the
"fraud" listed was a civil or criminal wrong.
Page 290 U. S. 313
The court does not invoke support from the other items in which
qualifying expressions are used. And these items show that the
implication drawn by the opinion from the qualifying words in item
4 is groundless, and that there is no basis for the application of
the canon of construction,
expressio unius, etc.
Springer v. Philippine Islands, 277 U.
S. 189,
277 U. S. 206.
Let them be examined.
Item 10 covers "crimes and offences against the laws of both
countries for the suppression of slavery and slave trading." If the
phrase "against the laws of both countries" were omitted, the
provision would have no meaning.
The unnumbered item in the Convention of 1889 covers
"participation" in the commission of the crimes listed in that
Convention and in the Treaty of 1842. The limitation to such as is
made punishable by the laws of both countries was added to bring
"participation" within the general principle. The parties did not
intend that one accused of such receiving in England would be
extraditable from a state where the act violates no law while the
person guilty of participation by aiding, inducing, procuring or
commanding him to commit the crime would be entitled there safely
to remain.
The "bribery," covered by item 14, is limited to such as is
defined by the laws of both countries. The correspondence leading
to agreement upon that item shows that both parties intended, as
always, to adhere to the principle of limiting extradition to acts
made criminal by the laws of both countries. Ambassador Choate for
the United States proposed a clause not expressly requiring
criminality in both countries. The Marquess of Landsdowne, for His
Britanic Majesty, proposed the form adopted. Choate accepted, and,
in a carefully prepared letter, made it perfectly plain that, upon
the principle declared in
Wright v. Henkel, supra, the
rule requiring criminality in both countries would apply even if
not stated in the item.
Page 290 U. S. 314
Offenses against bankruptcy law, if made criminal by the laws of
both countries, are covered by item 15. Lack of uniformity in
different parts of the Empire and, when no federal act is in force,
among the several states in this country made the qualification of
criminality in both countries necessary in the interest of
certainty and to maintain the general rule that the asylum country
denies extradition for acts not there deemed criminal. Moreover,
the qualifying clause is necessary to limit the provision to
criminal acts for without it "offences . . . against bankruptcy
law" would not necessarily imply criminality, but might include,
for example, such transgressions as merely require denial of
discharge.
It is said that, as some states denounce as criminal the
receiving of money or property knowing the same to have been
fraudulently obtained, while others do not, extradition is made to
depend upon the place where the fugitive happens to be found. That
suggestion gives no support to the decision. The negotiators well
knew that criminal laws are not the same throughout the territories
involved. England acted for all parts of the British Empire, the
United States acted for itself and all the states. Undoubtedly, the
criminal laws in England, Ireland, Scotland, Australia, Canada, and
other territories beyond the seas differ as widely as do those in
Illinois, New York, Pennsylvania, and other states. These treaties
were made having regard to such lack of uniformity.
While the proviso in Article X relates to the quantum of
evidence required to support the demand for extradition, rather
than to the obligations assumed or rights granted, it significantly
coincides with the principle that extradition will not be granted
by the asylum country for acts not there deemed criminally wrong.
Indeed, when taken in connection with the declaration of mutuality
and reciprocity and the crimes named in the list, the proviso
supports that principle. For, obviously, as in substance
Page 290 U. S. 315
suggested by England and held by the majority, the proviso means
that extradition shall only be granted upon such evidence as,
according to the laws of the place where the fugitive is found,
"would justify his apprehension and commitment for trial, if [the
acts constituting] the crime or offence had there been
committed."
V. The court's decision is in direct conflict with the principle
governing the interpretation of extradition treaties as propounded
by the United States and as declared by this Court in
Wright v.
Henkel, supra. The Solicitor General said (190 U.S. 55-56
[argument of counsel -- omitted herein]):
"That the offence must be one made criminal by the laws of both
countries is a principle inherent in all extradition treaties. This
is obvious because of the reciprocal nature of such engagements and
the existence and similarity of crime in all places, whatever the
differences as to definition and incidents of any particular crime.
. . . Treaties plainly imply the doctrine, but do not ordinarily
express it. Such is the force of the phrase 'mutual requisitions.
Art. X, Webster-Ashburton Treaty.' And, applying the rule to the
case then in hand, the brief added:"
"No phrase was needed in the treaty of 1889 to explain the
crimes of murder, burglary, etc., nor to express the necessity of
criminality in both countries. They are criminal in both countries
without that. The difference as to clause 4 . . . , respecting
fraud by bailee, is that, as to that class of offences not yet
completely established as criminal, the two powers decline to
engage respecting species still carrying a mere civil liability,
and therefore the phrase 'made criminal by the laws of both
countries' was used."
And this Court, speaking through its Chief Justice, said (pp.
190 U. S.
57-58):
"Treaties must receive a fair interpretation, according to the
intention of the contracting parties, and so as to carry out their
manifest purpose. . . . The general principle of international law
is that, in all cases of extradition, the act done on account of
which extradition
Page 290 U. S. 316
is demanded must be considered a crime by both parties, and, as
to the offense charged in this case [fraud covered by item 4], the
treaty of 1889 embodies that principle in terms. The offense must
be 'made criminal by the laws of both countries.' . . . P.
190 U. S. 60. Where there was
reason to doubt whether the generic term embraced a particular
variety, specific language was used. As, for instance, . . . as to
fraud and breach of trust, which had been brought within the grasp
of criminal law in comparatively recent times."
The principle governing interpretation of extradition treaties
so definitely explained by the Chief Justice in
Wright v.
Henkel, supra, has been uniformly followed here.
In
Kelly v. Griffin, supra, perjury was one of the
offenses for which Canada sought extradition of the fugitive from
Illinois. That offense is covered by item 5, which contains no
express requirement of criminality in both countries. In that
respect, it is identical with item 3, which covers the receiving
here involved. In that country, false testimony, whether material
or not, constitutes perjury. But materiality is essential in
Illinois. This Court found that the false testimony alleged to have
been given in Canada was in fact material to the matter there in
hand, quoted (p.
241 U. S. 14)
from
Wright v. Henkel, supra: "It is enough if the
particular variety was criminal in both jurisdictions," and held
for extradition.
In
Bingham v. Bradley, supra, the offense was receiving
money knowing the same to have been stolen. That is covered by item
3, the construction of which is here involved. The court assumed as
definitely established by prior decisions that criminality in both
countries was essential. And, in concluding its decision holding
the fugitive extraditable, it said (p.
241 U. S.
517):
"And, since the jurisdiction of the Commissioner is clear and
the evidence abundantly sufficient to furnish reasonable ground
Page 290 U. S. 317
for the belief that appellant has committed within the Dominion
of Canada a crime that is an offense under the laws of the
Dominion, as well as under those of Illinois . . . and is covered
by the terms of the treaty, and that he is a fugitive from justice,
a fair observance of the obligations of the treaty requires that he
be surrendered."
In
Collins v. Loisel, supra, the offense was obtaining
property by false pretenses, covered by item 11, which contains no
words requiring criminality in both countries. The court, directly
alluding to the established rule, said (p.
259 U. S.
311): "It is true that an offense is extraditable only
if the acts charged are criminal by the laws of both countries."
And further (p.
259 U. S.
312):
"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."
VI. Some of the reasons supporting the requirement of
criminality in both countries as sound and expedient are stated in
the report of a royal commission created in 1877 by Queen Victoria
to inquire into and consider the workings and effect of the laws
and treaties relating to extradition. [
Footnote 2/4] It says (§ IV):
"The crimes in respect of which
Page 290 U. S. 318
nations should make common cause against criminals, and refuse
them shelter, are those which it is the common interest of all to
repress. There are offences against society in respect of person
and property which, in all countries, there will always be found
persons disposed to commit, and which can only be kept under by the
strong arm of the law. It is these offences which it should be the
common purpose of all nations to endeavour to suppress by
preventing those who have committed them from escaping from
justice. But these offences are known to and dealt with by the law
of all civilised nations, though they may be differently dealt with
both as to procedure and punishment. If some offence, unknown to
the law of other nations -- to what may figuratively be called the
common law of nations -- should be created by the law of a
particular people, such an offence would not come within the
category of crimes which it is the purpose of extradition to
repress."
"If it be asked how it is to be ascertained that the offence
charged is known and recognised as an offence, the answer is that
our own law will afford a sufficient test, being abundantly
comprehensive as to offences against person and property."
"Besides which, there is another reason for seeing that the
charge in respect of which extradition is asked for is an offence
under our own law. It is and always must be necessary that a
prima facie case shall be made out before a magistrate in
order to support the application for extradition. But the English
magistrate cannot be expected to know or interpret the foreign law.
It is not desirable that he should be required to do more than
to see that the facts proved constitute prima facie
an
offence which would have been within judicial cognizance it done in
this country."
(Italics added.)
The principle that a nation will not grant extradition for acts
not there made criminal is laid down by authoritative writers on
the law of extradition.
Page 290 U. S. 319
Biron and Chalmers, in their work on Extradition, p. 11,
say:
"As against the state where the fugitive is found, his claim for
protection is imperative, unless it can be proved that, had his act
taken place therein, it would have involved the transgression of
the laws of that state."
Sir Robert Phillimore, 1 International Law, 3d ed., § 367,
p. 521, says:
"There are two circumstances to be observed . . . in . . . cases
of Extradition: 1. That the country demanding the criminal must be
the country in which the crime is committed. 2. That the act done,
on account of which his Extradition is demanded, must be considered
as a crime by both States."
Pomeroy, International Law, ed. by Woolsey, § 198, p. 237,
says: "The act done must be such as is regarded as a crime by both
states; this would cut off the case of all mere political
offenders." Moore, Extradition, § 96, p. 112, says:
"While it is an accepted principle that the acts for which
extradition is demanded must constitute an offence according to the
laws of both countries, yet the laws which have actually been
violated are those of the demanding government."
VII. The opinion of the majority leans but lightly upon the
construction put upon the treaty by the letters of Secretary
Calhoun brought into view by the order for reargument.
When the historical background and the precise point under
consideration are held in mind, it is plain that his contentions
have no bearing upon the question before us. For years prior to
1842, the right of owners to have fugitive slaves returned to them
had become a matter of grave concern in southern states. Mr.
Calhoun was a leader in the struggle for the vindication of that
right and the maintenance of slavery. England, having earlier moved
to suppress slave trading, had then quite recently abolished
slavery. Many of her people strongly favored abolition in the
United States and everywhere. Many slaves had fled from this
country to the West Indies and to Canada. Shortly before the case
in which Secretary Calhoun
Page 290 U. S. 320
wrote the letters in question, it was earnestly maintained by
leaders in the House of Lords that slaves who, for the purpose of
securing their freedom, killed their masters were guilty of no
offense. [
Footnote 2/5] Some of
England's most eminent statesmen and jurists opposed extradition of
fugitive slaves for any transgression of our laws. For example,
Aberdeen said:
"Not only was a fugitive slave guilty of no crime in endeavoring
to escape from a state of bondage, but he was entitled to the
sympathy and encouragement of all those who were animated by
Christian feelings."
70 Hansard, Third Series, p. 474.
The Secretary's letters were written not as rulings, but solely
for the purpose of furnishing the American minister arguments to be
submitted to Lord Aberdeen as Foreign Secretary. The case was this:
slaves in Florida killed those who held them in service and fled to
British West Indies. That state indicted them for murder. The
United States, upon the indictment, without more, demanded their
extradition. The insular court held no ground for extradition had
been shown. It said:
"An indictment,
per se, can never be received as
evidence. It is not enough for us to know that the American jury
thought the parties guilty. We ought to know the grounds upon which
they thought them guilty. What may constitute the crime of murder
in Florida may be very far from doing so according to the British
laws, or even in the laws of the northern states of America."
The Secretary, deeply moved by the implied suggestion that
homicide committed by a slave in an effort to secure release from
bondage was justifiable or excusable, directed the American
minister to present the case to the British
Page 290 U. S. 321
government. He maintained that, as in this country, the Florida
indictment was sufficient to justify the apprehension of the person
accused and his commitment for trial, then, by virtue of the
proviso in Article X, the asylum country was bound to hold that the
indictment, without more, was sufficient to require extradition of
the fugitive. As shown by our minister's report, Lord Aberdeen
merely held that, under the Act of Parliament carrying the treaty
into effect, "an indictment is not, of itself, sufficient ground
for giving up a fugitive." And he remarked that the same answer
would have been given had the persons demanded been free. The
question presented and decided was merely one of evidence. The
Secretary's suggestions as to requirements of criminality in the
asylum country were not germane, and therefore without weight as an
official interpretation.
His suggestion
arguendo that the treaty requires
extradition for acts not made criminal in the place of asylum has
never been adopted in England. That country has never claimed, and
does not now maintain, that the interpretation so brought forward
is binding on the United States. It has never been followed in
practice. It is directly repugnant to the contentions of the United
States and the opinion of this Court in
Wright v. Henkel,
supra, and conflicts with a long line of judgments following
that decision. It is disregarded, indeed impliedly repudiated, in
the official correspondence between Ambassador Choate and the
Marquess of Lansdowne above mentioned. It follows that Secretary
Calhoun's contentions, even if they were pertinent in the case
where made, do not make in favor of extradition or lend any support
to the court's decision.
I am of opinion:
The acts of receiving of which petitioner is accused in England
are not made criminal in Illinois where he was found. That is now
practically conceded by England.
Page 290 U. S. 322
The court impliedly so holds, and necessarily, even if
sub
silentio, overrules its decision on that point in
Kelly v.
Griffin, 241 U. S. 6,
241 U. S. 15.
The contracting parties, upon adequate grounds and in accordance
with uniform usage, have always adhered to the principle that
extradition will not be granted for acts that are not deemed
criminal in the place of asylum.
There is nothing in the treaties to support the majority opinion
that, while England is not similarly bound, the United States
agreed to deliver up fugitives for acts not criminal in the place
of asylum.
The proviso in Article X prescribes the evidence that the
demanding country is required to produce. It impliedly indicates
that neither party agreed to extradite for acts not criminal under
its laws.
The letters of Secretary Calhoun pointed to by our order for
reargument do not support the majority opinion. They have no
bearing upon the question presented.
The judgment of the Circuit Court of Appeals should be
reversed.
I am authorized to say that MR. JUSTICE BRANDEIS and MR. JUSTICE
ROBERTS join in this dissent.
[
Footnote 2/1]
It is true that Judge Betts, in 1847, in
In Re Metzger,
17 Fed.Cas. 232, construed a provision of the French-American
treaty that is not distinguishable from that now before us not to
require local criminality, and held that, unless otherwise
specified, both parties to the treaty are bound to grant
extradition for any listed offense even if not criminal in the
place of asylum. But the Supreme Court of New York, without passing
upon that point, discharged Metzger. 1 Barb. 248. It does not
appear that he was ever retaken or surrendered for prosecution in
France. England's brief on reargument fails to cite the case.
And see Moore, Extradition, § 344.
[
Footnote 2/2]
After the record in this case was made up before the
commissioner, the contention was made, but not passed upon, in the
United States Court for the Eastern District of Pennsylvania in
United States v. Fetters, 1 F. Supp. 637.
[
Footnote 2/3]
The first schedule of the British Extradition Act contains the
following:
"Fraud by a bailee, banker, agent, factor, trustee or director,
or member, or
public officer of any company made criminal
by any act for the time being in force."
The words italicized are omitted from the treaty.
[
Footnote 2/4]
Royal Commission on Extradition. Report of the Commissioners.
The Commissioners were: Sir Alexander Cockburn, Lord Chief Justice;
Baron Selborne, Privy Councillor; Baron Blackburn, Lord of Appeal;
Russell Gurney, Privy Councillor; Sir Richard Baggalay, Court of
Appeal; Sir William Brett, Court of Appeal; Sir John Rose; Sir
James Fitzjames Stephen, Q.C.; Sir William Harcourt, Q.C.; William
Torrens, Esq.
[
Footnote 2/5]
The occasion of these utterances was the mutiny, seizure of the
Creole in American waters, the killing of those in charge
of the ship, and flight of 120 slaves to Nassau, where a number of
them were taken into custody partly for murder and partly for
piracy.
See 60 Hansard, Parliamentary Debates, 3d Series,
pp. 26, 318.