Ex parte Browne

148 F. 68, 1906 U.S. App. LEXIS 4304
CourtDistrict Court, S.D. New York
DecidedAugust 14, 1906
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 148 F. 68 (Ex parte Browne) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, S.D. New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ex parte Browne, 148 F. 68, 1906 U.S. App. LEXIS 4304 (S.D.N.Y. 1906).

Opinion

HOUGH, District Judge.

In the year 1903 several indictments were found by the grand jury of this district against the relator. In one he was charged with conspiring to defraud the United .States of duties upon imports, and in another with procuring the admission of go.ods into the United States in violation of Revised Statutes, § 5444 [U. S. Comp. St. 1901, p. 3677]. Upon the conspiracy charge Browne was duly convicted and sentenced to a term in the prison at Sing Sing. This conviction was affirmed upon appeal, and an application for certiorari to the Supreme Court refused. Upon the charge under section 5444 he has never been tried. Browne, having been released on bail' pending appeal, fled to Canada after the affirmance of his conviction. Thereupon the United States demanded his extradition as a convict, pursuant to our extradition convention of 1889 with the government of Great Britian. This demand was refused. Immediate^ a new demand was made, based upon the indictment for violation of section 5444. This requisition Canada honored, and delivered Browne to the proper officer, with whom he was traveling when he was arrested on the railroad train under a warrant based upon the conspiracy conviction, taken away from the extradition officer who had him in charge, and lodged in Sing Sing; whence he has been brought under this writ alleging that his incarceration is in violation of the obligations of the United States under the Ashburton Treaty of 1842 as extended by the above-mentioned convention of 1889, and therefore in violation of the supreme law of the land. The return to the writ shows no warrant for holding Browne in prison, other than his regular commitment under the conspiracy conviction.

[69]*69Counsel have discovered no instance later than Miller’s Case (C. C.) 23 Fed. 32, of the extradition of a convict upon an untried charge followed by imprisonment under his conviction. Miller was before Judge Acheson in 1885, and governmental action substantially identical writh that taken here was distinctly approved. The celebrated case of Rauscher, 119 U. S. 407, 7 Sup. Ct. 234, 30 L. Ed; 425, was argued early in 1886, and the court does not advert to Judge Aclieson’s ruling. This omission of so important an instance from so thorough a review of the whole subject of extradition can only have occurred because Miller’s Case was not reported in time for consideration. It is now brought forward as justification for the manner of Browne’s incarceration. Such claim cannot be sustained, for Miller may have been, and Browne may be, lawfully detained, but not for the reasons advanced by Judge Acheson, whose whole opinion is based on the decisions carefully considered, and decisively overruled in the Rauscher Case.

The learned counsel for the government remind the court that since 1885 no facts like the present have arisen for judicial consideration, and, while admitting that the judgment in Rauscher’s Case has for 20 years rendered it unlawful to try a person surrendered in extradition for any offense committed prior to surrender other than that specified in the demand for extradition, assert (1) that upon the trüe construction of the Rauscher Case it is lawful to apprehend an escaped convict, even though at the time of apprehension he has been brought within this country solely by virtue of a demand in extradition wholly unconnected with the crime for which he became a convict; and (2) that such right to seize con-xdcts is especially secured to our government in its relations with the king of Great Britain and Ireland by the terms of the Ashburton Treaty of 1842 as supplemented by the extradition convention of 1889, the latter instrument, be it noted, having come into existence since the Rauscher decision. The arrest of Browne under the circumstances above recited certainly constitutes a vigorous assertion of this doctrine. Counsel have, respectively, laid stress upon the manner of Browne’s flight to his Canadian asylum, and the “trick” of getting him within the reach of the warrant now holding him in prison, upon the pretense of wanting him upon another charge. These considerations, however, are all circumstances of inflammation, for neither the manner or time of Browne’s escape nor the intent behind his enforced return are material to the present inquiry. They suggest subjects fit for diplomatic, rather than for judicial, consideration.

The sole question here presented is not whether that which has been done is wrong or tricky, or injudicious, but whether it is'unlawful. Concededly the facts submitted are very different from those considered in the case of Rauscher, but I cannot concur in the narrow view of that decision now urged upon me. The Supreme Court there found great contrariety of opinion not only among judges, but diplomats, as to what might or might not be done [70]*70to persons delivered upon demands in extradition. It bad under especial consideration the Ashburton Treaty, which on these points is entirely silent; and it must have been aware that the action of this court in the case of Lawrence (so elaborately considered in the Rauscher opinion) had resulted in a refusal on the part of Lord Derby to honor our demand for the surrender of one Winslow unless the United States would especially covenant to do nothing’ and permit nothing to be done to Winslow, except try him for the offense for which his surrender was requested — a position in which Secretary Fish found it inconsistent with the dignity of this country to acquiesce. Such situation called for and received what I must regard as a declaration of principles by a co-ordinate^ branch of our government and a chart in all matters of extradition, not grounded upon mere legality, but resting on foundations of national honor. The sum of the doctrine decláred is, in the language of the court:

“This right [of extradition], the right to demand it, the obligation to grant it, the proceedings under which it takes place, all show that it is for a limited and defined purpose that the transfer is made. It is impossible to conceive of the exercise of jurisdiction in such a ease for any other purpose than that mentioned in the treaty, and ascertained by the proceedings under which the party is extradited, without an implication of fraud upon the rights of the party extradited and bad faith to the country which permitted his extradition. No such view of solemn public treaties between the great nations of the earth can be sustained by a tribunal called upon to give judicial construction to them.”

Nor are decisions wanting in which the broadest significance has been given to the judgment containing these vigorous expressions.

In Re Reinitz (C. C.) 39 Fed. 204, 4 L. R. A. 236, Judge Brown of this district discharged from custody a man arrested on civil process immediately after his acquittal of the charge of forgery upon which he had been extradited, remarking that the case of Rauscher had definitely settled that an extradited person “cannot be arrested or tried” for any offense committed prior to extradition other than that for which he had been, surrendered. In re Baruch (C. C.) 41 Fed. 472, the* same distinguished jurist quoted the above extract from the Rauscher opinion and applied it to the case of one who had been haled from New Jersey to New York in order that he might be extradited, and upon his discharge and before returning to New Jersey had been arrested in civil process for the same cause as that for which his extradition had 'been demanded. He further referred with approval to the opinion of Governor Hill of this state in the case of Hope (Sup.) 10 N. Y. Supp.

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Bluebook (online)
148 F. 68, 1906 U.S. App. LEXIS 4304, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ex-parte-browne-nysd-1906.