Ex parte Sifford

22 F. Cas. 105, 5 Am. Law Reg. 659
CourtDistrict Court, S.D. Ohio
DecidedJuly 1, 1857
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 22 F. Cas. 105 (Ex parte Sifford) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, S.D. Ohio primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ex parte Sifford, 22 F. Cas. 105, 5 Am. Law Reg. 659 (S.D. Ohio 1857).

Opinion

LEAVITT, District Judge.

There is no ■cause to regret the indulgence which has "been extended to counsel, in the presentation and discussion of this case, or the time, which, for reasons not necessary to be stated, has elapsed since the hearing commenced. In some aspects, the questions arising are important, and require great deliberation in their decision. Every case of conflict between the national and state authorities casts upon the judge or court called to pass upon it a most responsible duty; and such cases are the more embarrassing and difficult when the jurisdiction oí the judge or court is challenged, and a decision of that question becomes necessary. It has been my aim to consider with calmness the case before me, and to reach such conclusions as my judgment will approve. If I have succeeded in this, the criticisms of those differing from me in my views will, I trust, have no disturbing influence.

On the 27th of May last, Lewis W. Sifford, the marshal of the United States for the Southern district of Ohio, presented his petition, duly sworn to, for a writ of habeas eorpus, alleging, among other things, that Benjamin P. Churchill and nine others, being deputy and assistant marshals, were unlawfully imprisoned in the jail of Clark county, by a process issued by a justice of the peace of said county, for acts done, or omitted to be done by them, as such deputies and assistants, in the proper discharge of their duties under a law, and by the authority of the United States. A writ of habeas corpus was issued, according to the prayer of the petition, directed to John E. Dayton, sheriff of said Clark county, requiring him to have the said Churchill and others, forthwith, before this court, with the cause of their caption and detention. The sheriff has promptly obeyed the writ, and has made a special return, stating the circumstances under which the deputies and assistants were delivered into his custody. The important questions arising in the case are presented on a motion for the discharge of these persons.

The facts necessary to be noticed, preliminary to the consideration of the points presented, are, that on the 23d of May last, separate warrants were issued by Edward B. Newhall, a commissioner of the circuit court of the United States, for the arrest of Hiram Gutridge and three other persons, residents of Champaign county, on charges of having aided and abetted a fugitive slave in his escape, and having resisted and obstructed the officers of the United States in the arrest of such fugitive. The persons named in the warrants were arrested by the deputy marshals and assistants; and when conveying them to Cincinnati, where the warrants were returnable, an attempt was made by the sheriff of Clark county to take said prisoners from the custody of the officers by a habeas eorpus issued by the probate judge of Champaign county. The sheriff, in his return to The habeas corpus issued to him from this court, alleges that the writ issued by the probate judge was put into his hands for execution by the sheriff of Champaign county, and that, in company with one Compton as an assistant, he attempted to serve it, by taking possession of the four prisoners in the custody of the deputy marshals and their assistants; and that in this attempt he was violently resisted and assaulted, and failed to execute the writ according to its command. It appears that, on a complaint made before one Huston, a justice of the peace of Clark county, that the deputies and their assistants had unlawfully assaulted and beat the said sher[107]*107iff, they were subsequently seized by a large Armed force and taken before the said justice, and by him committed to the jail of ■Clark county; and while so in custody, a new complaint was made against them for mi assault on the sheriff with intent to kill, And for shooting at said Compton with intent to kill, &c., before one Christie, a justice of the peace for said county, on which they were again arrested and committed to jail. It may be noticed here that, after the seizure of the deputy marshals by the armed force, as above stated, and the consequent rescue of the prisoners from their possession, they were taken by the sheriff of Greene county before the probate judge of Champaign, by •virtue of the habeas corpus issued by him and were summarily discharged by his order, and have since been at large.

In considering the question before me, I shall not attempt to review the exteuded and Able arguments of the counsel, or notice all the points raised in the discussion. It has been insisted very strenuously that this court •cannot order the discharge of the deputy marshals, on the ground that, at the time the writ of habeas corpus was served, the imprisonment alleged as existing when the writ issued had ceased, and they were then in custody on process afterwards issued. I do not propose to consider this point further than to remark that, from the return of the sheriff of Clark county, it would seem at least •doubtful whether, at the time of the service •of the habeas corpus, the deputies were in custody under the first or the second warrant. There seems to have been a continuous custody under these warrants; and it would be somewhat technical, in such a case as this, to base an order for remanding the deputies on the ground stated. It is also urged — and this is the main point of the argument of the counsel resisting the discharge •of the persons in custody — that, as it appears from the return to the habeas corpus, they are in the custody under process issued by a justice of the peace, regular and lawful on its face, this court has no jurisdiction to go behind that process, and inquire for wluit cause and under what circumstances it issued.

It is admitted that, in reference to the writ of habeas corpus issued by the courts and judges of the United States, under the judiciary act of 1789, the position assumed is undoubtedly correct. The return of the officers showing a detention under process, legal and valid on its face, would be conclusive and preclude the court or judge from further inquiry under that act. But the ha-beas corpus now in question,, was issued under the second section of the act of the 2d of March, 1833, which provides, “that either ■of the justices of the supreme court, or a judge of any district court, in addition to the Authority already conferred by law’, shall have pow'er to grant writs of habeas corpus in all cases of a prisoner or prisoners in jail or confinement, when he or they shall be committed or confined on or by any authority of law for any act done, or omitted to be done, in pursuance of a law of the United States, or any order, process or decree of any judge or court thereof — anything in any act of congress to the contrary notwithstanding.” The words of this provision are so explicit and intelligible, that there would seem to be no room for doubt as to their meaning. They do confer and W’ere intended to confer, on a federal judge, the power to issue the writ of habeas corpus whenever there is an imprisonment “by any authority of law for any act done or committed under a law of the United States.” Now, the point to be inquired into and determined by the judge issuing the habeas corpus is, whether the act for which the party is imprisoned has been done in the discharge of official duty, under the authority contemplated by the provision referred to. But if the return to the writ, showing an imprisonment, under state process, shuts out all further inquiry, the act of congress is a dead letter and its purpose altogether defeated.

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Bluebook (online)
22 F. Cas. 105, 5 Am. Law Reg. 659, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ex-parte-sifford-ohsd-1857.