In re Fowler

4 F. 303
CourtU.S. Circuit Court for the District of Southern New York
DecidedJuly 1, 1880
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 4 F. 303 (In re Fowler) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Southern New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re Fowler, 4 F. 303 (circtsdny 1880).

Opinion

Blatchford, C. J.

This case is before the court on habeas corpus, in proceedings for extradition brought before this court by a certiorari. On a complaint made before Commissioner Osborn by the consul general of Great Britain, at New York, that the relator, George Fowler, alias R. Gray, had, on the eighteenth of September, 1880, at Bradford, in England, committed the crimes of forgery and the utterance of forged paper, by feloniously forging and uttering, knowing the same to be forged, a check or bank draft dated at Bradford, on that day, for 1210 sterling, payable to the order of W,. Jow.etrt, and purporting to be drawn by said Jowett on. the Bradford Banking Company* limited, and indorsed by said [305]*305Jowett, with intent thereby to defraud said Jowett, or said company; that said Fowler had, on said day, at Bradford, feloniously forged, and afterwards feloniously uttered, knowing the same to be forged, a check or bank draft dated Bradford, September 18, 3880, for £50 sterling, payable to the order of W. Jowett, .and purporting to be drawn by said Jowett on said company, and indorsed by said Jowett, with intent thereby to defraud said Jowett or said company, and which complaint set forth the other' necessary matters, the said commissioner issued the proper warrant for the arrest of said Fowler, with a view to his extradition under article 10 of the treaty of August 9, 1842, between the United States and Great Britain, (8 U. S. St. at Large, 576.) The relator was arrested and brought before the commissioner, and, as the result of the hearing, the commissioner decided that the evidence was sufficient to sustain the charge, and he committed the relator to the custody of the marshal to await a warrant of Surrender.

In the course of the hearing before the commissioner, certain documentary evidence was offered by the prosecution, and admitted under the objection of the relator. There is a copy of an information and complaint sworn to by Jowett, September 21,1880, at Bradford, before a justice of the peace there, charging Fowler with having feloniously forged and uttered the banker’s checks for £60 sterling, with intent to defraud. Such copy is certified by Angus Holden, a j nstice of the peace at Bradford, to be a true copy of the original information. On the back of the copy is a certificate by Godfrey Lushing-ton, assistant under secretary of state for the home department, certifying that the signature of Holden is the signature of a magistrate in England, having authority to take the information, and that the information “ so verified by a magistrate, when the same was taken and authenticated by a minister of state, and sealed with his official seal, would be received as evidence of the criminality of a fugitive criminal from the United States charged before a tribunal in Great Britain with an extradition crime under the extradition treaty as existing between that country and the United States.”

[306]*306' Under said certificate is a certificate by T. Y. Lister, -assistant under secretary of state, sealed with the seal of the foreign office, certifying that Lushington’s said signature is the handwriting of Godfrey Lushington, assistant under secretary of state for the home department. Under said two certificates is a certificate by J. E. Lowell, envoy extraordinary and minister plenipotentiary of the United States of America, made at the legation of the United States, London, under the seal of the legation of the United States of America to Great Britain, certifying that Lister’s said signature is the handwriting of G. Y. Lister, “one of the assistant under secretaries of state for foreign affairs, and that the annexed documents are authenticated in the manner required by the statutes of the United States.”

There is also a copy of a warrant, issued at Bradford, September 21,1880, by a justice of the peace there, reciting said information, and commanding the constables of Bradford to arrest Fowler, and bring him before a justice of the peace to answer said information. This copy is certified by Angus Holden, a justice of the peace at Bradford, to be a true copy of the original warrant.

On the back of the copy is a certificate by said Lushington of the same tenor, mutatis mutandis, as his certificate on the back of the copy of the information. Under said certificate is a certificate of Julian Pauncefote, assistant under secretary of state of foreign affairs, sealed with the seal of the foreign office, of the same tenor as the said certificate of said Lister. Under said two certificates is a certificate by Mr. Lowell, made at the legation .of the United States, London, under the seal of the legation of the United States to Great Britain, certifying that Pauncefote’s said signature was the handwriting of Sir Julian Pauncefote, “one of the assistant under secretaries of state for foreign affairs, and that the annexed documents are authenticated in the manner required by the statutes of the United States.” There are, also, an original deposition of William Jowett, and an original deposition of Edwin I. Hustler, signed by them respectively, and sworn to at Bradford, September 30, 1880, before W. Pollard, a justice of the peace [307]*307there, in reference to said forgeries. These depositions bear certificates of the same character, from the home department, and the foreign office, and the United States legation, as those certifying the copies of the information and the warrant.

The second section of the act of August 12, 1848, (9 U. S. St. at Large, 302,) provided as follows: “In every case of complaint as aforesaid, and of a hearing upon the return of the warrant of arrest, copies of the depositions upon which an original warrant in any such foreign country may have been granted, certified under the hand of the person or persons issuing such warrant, and attested upon the oath of the party producing them to be true copies of the original depositions, may be received in evidence of the criminality of the person so apprehended.” This was a narrow provision. It allowed in evidence here, not any original depositions on which a warrant abroad issued, not any original depositions used abroad on the hearing of the charge after an arrest under the warrant, not any copies of the latter depositions, not such original warrant, not a copy of it, not any other original paper, or a copy thereof, but only copies of the depositions abroad on which the warrant abroad issued, and then it required such copies to be certified in a particular way, and to be attested by a particular oath.

Then followed the act of June 22, 1860, (12 U. S. St. at Large, 84,) which provided as follows: “In all cases where any depositions, warrants, or other papers, or copies thereof, shall bo offered in evidence upon the hearing of an extradition case,” under the second section of the act of 1848, “such depositions, warrants, and other papers, or copies thereof, shall bp admitted and received for the purposes mentioned in the said section, if they shall bo properly and legally authenticated, so as to entitle them to be received for similar purposes by the tribunals of the foreign country from which the accused party shall have escaped, and the certificate of the principal diplomatic or consular officer of the United States, resident in such foreign country, shall be proof that any paper or other document so offered is authenticated in tlie maimer required by this act.”

[308]*308It was held by this court, in In re Heinrich, 5 Blatchf.

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Bluebook (online)
4 F. 303, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-fowler-circtsdny-1880.