Ex parte dos Santos

7 F. Cas. 949, 2 Brock. 493
CourtU.S. Circuit Court for the District of Virginia
DecidedNovember 15, 1835
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 7 F. Cas. 949 (Ex parte dos Santos) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ex parte dos Santos, 7 F. Cas. 949, 2 Brock. 493 (circtdva 1835).

Opinion

BARBOUR, District Judge.

Jose Ferrei-ra dos Santos, a Portuguese subject, having been committed'for trial before this court, under a charge of piracy, and the grand jury having found the indictnu -t against him not a true bill, he would be entitled to a discharge from custody, as it regards that accusation. But an application is now made, at the instance of the charge des af-faires of Portugal, that he may be detained, [953]*953until the government of Portugal shall have time to make a demand on that'of the United • States, that he may be surrendered to the former, as a fugitive from justice, to •be tried there, under a charge of murder; which it is alleged that he has committed in that country. And the question is, whetb'er it is proper, or competent, for this court to detain him in prison, for the purpose before stated? The solution of this question depends upon that of two others: 1. Has -a nation, whose citizen or subject commits a crime within its own jurisdiction, and is -afterwards found within that of another, a right, by the law of nations, upon its demand, to have him delivered up by that other, for the purpose of being tried where the ■crime was committed? 2. If such right exist, have the judicial officers of the United States, supposing the evidence to be sufficient, any authority to act in relation to it, as auxiliary to the executive department?

As to the first point, as far as I am informed, the subject has not been before any •of the federal courts of the Union. The case of Jonathan Robins is not an exception to this remark. He was, indeed, at the request -of the then president of the United States, Mr. Adams the elder, delivered .up by the ■district judge of South Carolina, to the British consul, on a charge of murder, committed by him, (Robins,) on board of a British vessel on the high seas. But, that case depended upon the twenty-seventh article of the treaty with Great Britain, made in the year 1794, by which it was agreed, that fugitives -charged with murder, or forgery, committed within the jurisdiction of either, and seeking an asylum within any of the countries ■of the other, should be reciprocally delivered nj). in the manner and upon the terms therein stated. The question then, in that case, ns it relates to this point was, whether the -casus foederis of this article had occurred; whereas, in this case, there is no treaty stipulation, and the question must, therefore, ■depend upon the right of the government of Portugal to make the demand, and the consequent obligation of our government to surrender the person charged, independently of -any treaty or compact between them.

There have, however, been two decisions upon the subject, made by two distinguished jurists of our country: the one, by Judge Kent, of New York; the other, by' Chief Justice Tilghman, of Pennsylvania; the first, •asserting the right (see the ease of In re Washburn. 4 Johns. Ch. 106); the other adopting a different line of reasoning, and arriving in many respects, at different conclusions (see the case of Short v. Deacon, 10 Serg. & R. 126). It becomes necessary, then, to examine the question upon the principles laid down by the writers on public law, with reference to the application made of them in the two cases just cited, to the authoritative declarations of our own government, and generally, to all the bearings and relations of the subject Grotius asserts the right to demand, and the consequent obligation to surrender, all persons charged with crimes, who have fled to another country, whether they are citizens or subjects of that country, or foreigners, although, in practice, it is not insisted on. except in crimes against the state, or of a very heinous nature. As to lesser crimes, he says, they are connived at, unless otherwise agreed on, by treaty. In this doctrine, he is followed by Burlam - aqui, Heineccius, and Wynne. Vartel asserts the right and obligation, in case of great crime; butspeaksonlyasto the subjects of the country, on which the demand is made. And his reasoning applies to them only; because it is put upon the principle of the duty of the sovereign to prevent his subjects from doing mischief to other states, and the consequent, duty to punish or surrender. Puffendorf, on the contrary, holds the doctrine, that the- obligation to deliver up a criminal, is rather in virtue of some treaty, than in consequence ■ of a common and indispensable obligation. Martens, after stating that a sovereign may punish foreigners who fly to his dominions, after having committed a crime in the dominions of another, as well as those who commit it in his, adds: “But in neither, is he perfectly obliged to send them for punishment to their own country, not even supposing them to have been condemned before their escape.” He says, also, that according to modem custom, a criminal is frequently sent back to the place where the crime is committed, on the request of a power who offers to do the like service, and that we often see instances of this. Ward seems strongly to countenance the idea of Puffen-dorf.

I have thus given an abbreviated stater ment of these writers on public law; more detailed views of whose reasoning may be seen by reference to the works themselves, or to quotations from them, in the two cases before cited from New York and Pennsylvania. Thus much was necessary as a basis for my future reasoning. Upon the mere authority of foreign publicists, then, it would appear to be doubtful whether there was. independently of treaty, any obligation, on the part of our government, to surrender to another. a fugitive from justice. To decide the question, let us descend from these principles of abstract writers, and see .what has been the practice of Europe in ancient and modern times. Lord Coke, in his 3 Inst. 180 (I quote now from 10 Serg. & R.), after expressing a decided opinion against delivering up fugitives, gives us three instances of a refusal to deliver up; the first, a qualified one; the two others, absolute. Henry YII. of England, demanded of Ferdinand of Spain, the earl of Suffolk, attainted of high treason by parliament. Ferdinand refused to deliver him, until Henry promised not to put him to death. Henry VIII. of England, demanded of the king of France, Car[954]*954dinal Pool, being his subject and attainted of treason; the demand was not complied with. Queen Elizabeth, demanded of Henry IV. of Prance, Morgan and others of her subjects, who had committed treason against her. He replied, that all kingdoms were free to fugitives, and it was the duty of kings to defend, every one, the liberties of his own kingdom; and, that Elizabeth had, not long before, received Montgomery, the prince of Condé, and other Frenchmen. Ohief Justice Tilghman adds the case of Perkin Warbeck, who had fled to Scotland, and who was refused to be delivered, although demanded by Henry VII. Chancellor Kent, in the Case of Washburn, cites some cases in England, as settling the principle, and acting on the practice of surrendering fugitives. As to Lundy’s Case, 2 Vent 314, that of Rex v. Kimberley, 2 Strange, 848, there cited, and East India Co. v. Campbell, 1 Ves. Sr. 247, Chief Justice Tilghman, in my opinion, gives a satisfactory answer: It is—that the territories where the crime was committed, and to which the criminal fled, were parts of the same empire, and under one common sovereign. The king of England could have no privilege against the king of Ireland, being one and the same person. He states, indeed, the case of Rex v. Hutchinson, 3 Keb.

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7 F. Cas. 949, 2 Brock. 493, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ex-parte-dos-santos-circtdva-1835.