Beavers v. Henkel

194 U.S. 73, 24 S. Ct. 605, 48 L. Ed. 882, 1904 U.S. LEXIS 874
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedApril 11, 1904
Docket535
StatusPublished
Cited by118 cases

This text of 194 U.S. 73 (Beavers v. Henkel) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of the United States primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Beavers v. Henkel, 194 U.S. 73, 24 S. Ct. 605, 48 L. Ed. 882, 1904 U.S. LEXIS 874 (1904).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Brewer,

after making the foregoing statement, delivered the opinion of the court.

This case turns upon th‘e efficacy of an indictment in removal proceedings. The government offered no other evidence of petitioner’s guilt. His counsel state in their brief:

“The controlling questions to be discussed on this appeal are whether the indictment offered in evidence before the commissioner can be regarded as conclusive evidence against the accused of the facts therein alleged; whether it was competent at all as evidence of such facts, and whether such indictment was entitled to be accorded any probative force whatever.”

At the outsét it is well to note that this is not a case of extradition. There was no proposed surrender of petitioner by the United States to the jurisdiction of a foreign nation, no abandonment of the duty of protection which thé nation owes to all *83 within its territory. There was not even the qualified extradition which arises when one State within the Union surrenders • to another an alleged fugitive from its justice. There was simply an effort on the part of the United States to subject a citizen found within its territory to trial before one of its own courts. The locality in which an offense is charged to have been committed determines under the Constitution and laws the place and court of trial. And the question is what steps are necessary to bring the alleged offender to that place and before that court.

Obviously very different considerations are applicable to the two cases. In an extradition the nation surrendering relies for future protection of the alleged offender upon the good faith of the nation to which the surrender is made, while here the full protecting power of the United States is continued after the removal from the place-of arrest to the place of trial. It may be conceded that no such removal should be summarily and arbitrarily made. There are risks and burdens attending it which ought not to be needlessly cast upon any individual. These may not be serious in a removal from New York to Brooklyn, but'might be if the removal, was from San Francisco to New;York. And statutory provisions must be interpreted in the light of all that may be done under them. We must never forget that in all controversies, civil or criminal, between the government and an individual the-latter is entitled to reasonable protection. Such seems to have been the purpose of Congress in enacting section 1014, Rev. Stat., which requires that the order of removal be issued by the judge of the district in which the defendant is arrested. In other words, the removal is made a judicial rather than a mere ministerial act.

In the light of these considerations we pass to ah inquiry into the special matters here presented. Article 5 of the amendments to the Constitution provides:

bio person shall be held to answer for a capital, or otherwise infamous crime, unless on a presentment or indictment of a grand jury, except in cases arising in the land or naval forces, *84 or in the militia, when in actual service in time of war. or public danger.”

While many States. in the exercise of their undoubted sovereignty, Hurtado v. California, 110 U. S. 516, have provided for trials of criminal offenses upon information filed by the prosecuting officer and without any previous inquiry or action by a grand jury, the national Constitution,- in its solicitude for the protection of the individual, requires an indictment as a prerequisite to a trial. The grand jury is a body known to the common law, to which is committed the duty of inquiring whether there be probable cause to believe the defendant guilty of the offense charged. Blackstone says (vol. 4, p. 303):

"This grand jury are previously instructed in the articles of their inquiry, by a charge from the judge who presides upon the bench. They then withdraw, to sit and receive indictments, which are preferred to them in the name of the king, but at the suit of any private prosecutor; and they are only to hear evidence on behalf of the prosecution; for the finding of. an indictment is only in the nature of an inquiry or accusation, which is afterwards to be tried and determined; and the grand jury are only to inquire, upon their oaths, whether there be sufficient cause to call upon the party to answer it. A grand jury, however, ought to be thoroughly persuaded of the truth of an indictment, so far as their evidence goes; and not to rest satisfied merely with remote probabilities: a doctrine that might be applied to very oppressive purposes.”

The thought is that no one shah be subjected to the. burden and expense of a trial until there has been a prior inquiry and adjudication by a responsible tribuna!that there is probable cause to believe him guilty. But the Constitution does not require two such inquiries and adjudications. The govern-' ment, having once satisfied the provision for an inquiry and obtained an adjudication by the proper tribunal of the existence of probable cause, ought to be able without further litigation concerning that fact to bring the part;/ charged into *85 court for trial. The existence of probable cause is not made more certain by two inquiries and two indictments. Within the spirit of the rule of giving full effect to the records and judicial proceedings of other courts, an indictment, found by the proper grand jury, should be accepted everywhere through the United States as at least prima facie evidence of the existence of probable cause. And the place where such inquiry must be had and the decision of a grand jury obtained is the locality in which by the Constitution and laws the final trial must be had.

. While the indictment is prima facie evidence it is urged that there are substantial reasons why it should not be regarded as conclusive. An investigation before the grand jury, it is said, is generally ex parte — although sometimes witnesses in behalf of the defendant are heard by it — and the conclusion of such ex parte inquiry ought, not to preclude the defendant from every defence, even the one thaft he was never within the State or district in which the crime is charged to have been committed, or authorize the government to summarily arrest him wherever he may be found, transport him perhaps far a,way from his home and subject him among strangers to the difficulties and expense of making his defence. It is unnecessary to definitely determine this question. It is sufficient for this case to decide, as we do, that the indictment is prima facie evidence of the existence of probable cause. This is not in conflict with the views expressed by this court in Greene v. Henkel, 183 U. S. 249. There it appeared that after an indictment Had beon found by a grand jury of the United States District Court for the Southern District of Georgia the defendants were arrested in New York; that on a hearing before the commissioner he ruled that the indictment was” conclusive evidence of the existence of probable cause, and declined to hear any testimony offered by the defendants.

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Bluebook (online)
194 U.S. 73, 24 S. Ct. 605, 48 L. Ed. 882, 1904 U.S. LEXIS 874, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/beavers-v-henkel-scotus-1904.