In re Briscoe

51 How. Pr. 422, 1876 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 198
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 5, 1876
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 51 How. Pr. 422 (In re Briscoe) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re Briscoe, 51 How. Pr. 422, 1876 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 198 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1876).

Opinion

Westbrook, J.

— On the 3d day of July, 1876, Briscoe was arrested by the sheriff of the county of Hew York, in a civil action commenced in the supreme court of this state, upon an order of arrest made and issued by Mr. justice Donohue, directing the said sheriff to arrest Briscoe, and hold him to bail-in the sum of $7,000. Briscoe is now held by such sheriff under such order of arrest, and one subsequently issued by Mr. justice Westbbook, in another action for the sum of $1,800, in default of bail, and the sheriff returns both of said .orders as the causes for the detention of said Briscoe.

On the 8th day of July, 1876, the governor of Georgia issued his requisition to the governor of the state of Hew York requesting him to return Briscoe to the state of Georgia, in accordance with the laws of the United States, and for such purpose to deliver him to A. M. Perkenson, the petitioner. Accompanying the requisition of the governor of Georgia were the following papers :

1. An affidavit of Perkenson, bearing date July 8, 1876, that Briscoe was not in the state of Georgia, but was in the state of Hew York.

2. A warrant for the arrest of Briscoe, of the date of said 8th of July, 1876.

[424]*4243. A return of C. C. Green, deputy sheriff of Fulton, county, Georgia, that Briscoe is not to be found in that county.

4. A copy of an indictment against A. J. West, Shelton Edwards and Benjamin W. Briscoe, charging that the said persons, being partners as commission merchants, under the firm name of West, Edwards & Co., were intrusted by the Holston Salt and Plaster Company, a corporation under and by the laws of the state of Virginia, with 250 sacks of salt, of the value of $500, and had then and there, fraudulently and without the consent of the company, converted the proceeds of the said salt to their own use, and had failed to pay over to said company, on demand, such proceeds, contrary to the laws of the said state of Georgia.

' 5. A certificate of one Collins, clerk of the court of Fulton county, Georgia, that the copy of the indictment forwarded was a true copy..-

6. A certificate of J. C. People, judge of said court, that Collins, who certified to the correctness of the copy indictment, was the clerk of such court.

7. The certificate of the governor of Georgia.

Upon the foregoing papers, the governor of the' state of blew York issued his mandate on the 22d of July, 1876, to the sheriff and other officers of the state of blew York, to arrest and secure Briscoe in the said state and deliver him back to the state of Georgia.

The petitioner, Perkenson, having demanded Briscoe from the sheriff of the county, who holds him under the orders of arrest before mentioned, upon the refusal of such sheriff to surrender him, applies to this court, upon habeas corpus, to order Briscoe’s surrender by such sheriff to him, to the end that he may be taken to Georgia, there to answer the indictment found against him.

The statement of the case, which has been given at length for the proper understanding of the points made, shows that questions of unusual interest and grave importance are pre[425]*425sented, so grave and important that however pressing the need of a speedy decision, the court did not feel at liberty to dispose of them upon the argument, but reserved them for a more deliberate and careful examination. Such examination has been very much aided by the elaborate briefs presented by the counsel favoring and opposing the application, as well as by the lucid and learned oral arguments, which were heard with very great profit and pleasure. The results of such examination as we have been able to give will now be stated, and the various questions considered in the order they were presented.

From the return to the writ of habeas corpus it appears that Briscoe is in custody by virtue of civil process from “ a court legally constituted,” and he therefore “ can only be discharged ” upon this proceeding for one of the causes specified in- the statute (3 R. S. [6th ed.], p. 878, sec. 56). A reference to that statute will show that for no such cause as is here presented has the court power to discharge Briscoe from the custody of the sheriff, which must be done before he can be delivered to the custody of the agent of the state of Georgia. With these plain provisions in the habeas corpus act, limiting the power of the court when a party is detained by civil process, it is useless to examine the point whether the writ is ever maintainable to deliver a party from one imprisonment in order to transfer him to another. It is enough for the purposes of this proceeding that the statute has specified the cases in which a party detained, as Briscoe is, can be discharged, and has placed a prohibition upon the power to release by further declaring that only in one of the defined cases can the prisoner be released. For this reason alone, then, the writ must be dismissed and the prisoner remanded, and perhaps discussion should end here, but the case involves several other questions of so interesting a character that their examination also may be profitable.

It is further claimed by the counsel objecting to the discharge of Briscoe from the custody of the sheriff and his [426]*426delivery to the agent of the state of Georgia, that the governor of this state has no power to issue his warrant for the arrest and extradition of a fugitive from the justice and jurisdiction of another state, except by proceedings initiated through the judiciary, in conformity with chapter 350 of the Laws of 1839 of this state. It is argued that subdivision 2 of section 2 of article 4 of the constitution of the United States, which declares “ a person charged in any state with treason, felony or other crime, who shall flee from justice and be found in another state, shall, on demand of the executive authority of the state from which he fled, be delivered up to be removed to the state having jurisdiction of the crime,” is simply declaratory of an obligation which one state owes to another under the federal constitution, and that it imposes no dnty and confers no power upon the executive of the state within which the fugitive shall be found. Without legislation, then, it is claimed that 'the governor of this state had no power to act, and that the act of congress of February 12, 1793, which makes it the duty of the executive authority of the state to which the person charged with crime has fled, on the demand of the “ executive authority of any state in the union, or of either of the territories north-west or south of the river Ohio,” * * * “to cause him or her to be arrested and secured, and notice of the arrest to be given to the executive authority making such demand, or to the agent of such authority appointed to receive the fugitive, and to cause the fugitive to be delivered to such agent when he shall appear,” is unconstitutional and void, because congress has no power to impose duties upon the governor of any state; or, at most, that the act of congress aforesaid should be so construed as simply to authorize the executive of the state to initiate proceedings before the jndiciary, in conformity with the state law of 1839 before referred to (chap. 350, Laws of 1839). The court is not insensible to the force of the reasoning sustaining this view, but the point has been so fully and entirely adjudged the other way that original reasoning must end.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
51 How. Pr. 422, 1876 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 198, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-briscoe-nysupct-1876.