In re Farez

40 How. Pr. 107
CourtUnited States Circuit Court
DecidedJune 15, 1870
StatusPublished

This text of 40 How. Pr. 107 (In re Farez) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Circuit Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re Farez, 40 How. Pr. 107 (uscirct 1870).

Opinion

Blatchford, J.

In this case a writ of habeas corpus and a writ of certiorari have been issued to review the pro[108]*108’ceedings which have taken place before Kenneth G-. White, Esq., a United States commissioner, in reference to the application of the authorities of the Swiss confederation for the extradition of the petitioner, Francois Farez. The proceedings which tooki place before the commissioner have been brought before me, and the questions involved have been fully discussed by the respective counsel.

It appears by the record that the proceedings went on be fore commissioner White by consent, he not having been the commissioner who issued the warrant of arrest, and that before the matter was proceeded with at all before commissioner White on the part of the prosecuting party, a motion was made before the said commissioner by the accused, to dismiss the complaint and warrant on several grounds.

The first ground was that the complaint was insufficient, because it did not contain any thing more than an official statement on the part of the deponent, as consul, &c., that the prisoner was charged with the crimes stated, arid did not contain the express personal averment to that effect required by law. I do not think there is anything in that objection. Necessarily, in carrying out the provisions of extradition treaties, the complaint must, in many cases, be made by the representative of the foreign government; and all that can be required is that it shall be sufficiently specific, clear, and distinct in its averments to enable the party accused to understand precisely what it is he is charged with. The complaint made in this case by the Swiss consul in his official capacity, he not pretending to any personal knowledge of the matters set forth in the complaint, contains all the necessary and proper averments to enable the party accused to understand what offenses he is charged with having committed ; and there is.no force in the objection that it does not contain any thing but an official statement.

The second objection was that it did not appear by the complaint that by what magistrate abroad the, warrant against the prisoner had been issued, so as to enable the commissioner [109]*109to decide whether such magistrate had authority in the premises. The complaint states that a warrant of arrest against the prisoner, on account of the crimes specified in the complaint, has been issued by the proper and competent judicial authority for the purpose in the jurisdiction of the Swiss confederation. If the averment in question were a material averment, undoubtedly the one found in this complaint would be insufficient. But it is not a necessary preliminary step to an investigation under an extradition treaty, that a warrant shall have been issued abroad. Therefore, the averment in question is surplussage.

The third objection was that it did not appear by the warrant that the commissioner was appointed by the circuit court of the United States for the purpose of issuing the same. That objection was not urged on the hearing before me. The point involved in the objection is, that the warrant does not show that the commissioner was appointed by the circuit court to issue this particular warrant. That is true; but it is not necessary that it should so appear. It does appear, on the face of the warrant, that he was appointed to issue warrants in all cases of extradition falling under the provisions of the acts of congress of August 12, 1848, and June 22, 1860. The act of 1848, (9 U. S. Stat. at Large, 302,) applies to any treaty or convention for extradition between the government of the United States and any foreign government and gives the power to issue a warrant to any commissioner authorized so to do by any of the courts of the United States. This warrant avers that the commissioner who issues it is a commissioner appointed by the circuit court of the United States, for the southern district of New York, and is a magistrate, and is a commissioner specially appointed to execute the act of August 12, 1848, and the act of June 22,1860. That is sufficient.

The fourth objection was that the complaint did not allege that the crime in question was punishable by infamous punishment in the United States, and that it was [110]*110necessary that the crime should be so punishable to bring it under the treaty. The averment of the complaint in that respect is, that the crimes alleged are contrary to the laws of the Swiss confederation, and are by. such laws subject' to infamous punishment, and to punishment by imprisonment in the state prison. There is no averment that they are subject to infamous punishment by the laws of the United States. The convention for extradition between the United States and Switzerland, (11 U. S. Stat. at Large, 593, 594,) says, that persons shall be delivered up according to the provisions of the convention, who shall be charged with the crimes therein specified, “ when tiese crimes are subject to infamous punishment.” My interpretation of this provision is, that when one of the specified crimes has been com-mitted, and the extradition of the person who has committed it is demanded, it is sufficient if such crime is subject to infamous punishment in the country where it is committed, without its being necessary that it should be also subject to infamous punishment in the country from which the extradition of such person is demanded. The complaint is, therefore, sufficient in this respect, without regard to the question whether it is necessary to make any averment of the kind in the complaint, which perhaps may be doubtful.

The fifth objection was, that there was no evidence that the supreme power of the Swiss confederation, had made a demand on the goverment of the United States for the extradition of the prisoner. That objection was cured by the production afterwards of the mandate from the president of the United States, which sufficiently showed that a demand for the extradition of the prisoner, had been made by the only authority which the government of the United States is called upon to recognize as representing the Swiss confederation.

The objections referred to were all of them properly overruled by the commissioner. He also properly over[111]*111ruled a motion, based upon those objections, to dismiss the proceedings. Then the case on the part of the prosecution was commenced, and the counsel for the prisoner claimed the right to cross-examine the complainant before any other evidence should be offered on the part of the prosecution. That claim was overruled by the commissioner, and an exception to such ruling was taken. I see no objection whatever to that ruling. The prisoner had the right to call the Swiss consul, who was the complainant, as a witness, and examine him at any stage of the case, but he could not properly claim the right to cross-examine him before any other evidence was offered, when it appeared on the face of the complaint that the consul did not pretend to have any personal knowledge of the matters stated in the complaint.

Then the complaint, and the sworn depositions attached thereto, made before the judicial authorities in Switzerland, were offered in evidence before the commissioner. The counsel for the prisoner objected to their admission in evidence on several grounds. The first, was that the mandate issued from the state department had not been produced and put in evidence. The mandate was then produced by the counsel for the prosecution, and given to the commissioner, and it is now before me.

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Bluebook (online)
40 How. Pr. 107, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-farez-uscirct-1870.