In re Reynolds

20 F. Cas. 592, 1867 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 22
CourtDistrict Court, N.D. New York
DecidedJune 29, 1867
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 20 F. Cas. 592 (In re Reynolds) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, N.D. 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 Reynolds, 20 F. Cas. 592, 1867 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 22 (N.D.N.Y. 1867).

Opinion

HALL, District Judge.

On Saturday, the ICth of March last, a writ of habeas corpus was allowed in this case, returnable at the stated session of this court held at Utica on Tuesday, the 19th of that month. At that term a return was made by Capt. G. W. Walker, United States army, setting forth, in substance (among other things), that the petitioner was a regularly enlisted soldier in the army of the United States, and was held to service therein by virtue of such enlistment, and that while so held he deserted the service of the United States, “thus committing an offense agsfinst the laws of the United States, which crime, under said laws, is cognizable exclusively by a court of the United States of competent jurisdiction, denominated a ‘general court-martial.’ ” The return also set forth the arrest of the petitioner, as an alleged deserter, in consequence of the evidence contained in an affidavit made by one James Riley (a copy of which was annexed to the return) and in a descriptive list furnished by the military authorities. The most material statements of such affidavit and descriptive list will be hereafter more particularly set forth. The return also set forth the making of a military order for the petitioner’s transportation to h'ort Columbus, in New York Harbor; that afterwards, and just before he was placed on the cars, under that order, a writ of habeas corpus was allowed by the Hon. Geo. E. Lamont, county judge of Niagara Co., and was served upon the respondent; and that, after a full and fair hearing before said judge, the petitioner was remanded to the custody of the military authorities. The return, as originally drawn, concluded as follows: “This respondent further claims that this matter should be adjudged res adjudicata, and the habeas corpus dismissed, as no new matter has arisen subsequently to the prior adjudication which can in any way affect this question; and that no new state of facts between the parties has arisen subsequently to the prior adjudication.” By an addition to this return, the proceedings before Judge Lamont were presented and referred to as a part of the return, and “as containing all the matter set forth and the evidence adduced by the petitioner and respondent.” The return was immediately traversed, and petitioner alleged (among other things) that he was not a regularly enlisted soldier in the army of the United States, and that he was not held or bound to serve therein by virtue of any such enlistment, and that he had not deserted from the army; that on the hearing before Judge Lamont the counsel for said Walker, or for the United States, objected to the hearing of the case, or to the said judge inquiring into the cause of the arrest, on the grounds that he had no jurisdiction to do so, for the reason that said Walker had returned that he held the petitioner under the laws of the United States. The petitioner, by his traverse, also insisted that Judge Lamont had no jurisdiction of the ease heard before him; both parties thus taking, in this court, in respect to that question, positions directly opposed to those they occupied before Judge Lamont. Both the return and traverse contained many other allegations not necessary to be considered in the decision of the case as finally presented.

After a brief argument it was announced by the court that its opinion then was that Judge Lamont had jurisdiction of the proceedings before him upon habeas corpus, and that (conceding his jurisdiction) such proceedings, and his decision thereon, were no bar to proceedings by habeas corpus in this court. It was, however, intimated that these questions would be reserved for further consideration, and that they might be again discussed by the counsel when the case was argued upon the merits. The petitioner, being present with his witnesses, and in custody, pressed for an immediate trial; but the counsel for the government stating that, in case the proceedings before Judge Lamont were not held to bar the petitioner’s right to proceed in this court, he desired time to procure witnesses to show that the petitioner was an enlisted soldier, and to establish his identity as the person who enlisted under the name of William Sloan, and also stating that some of such witnesses were at Little Rock, in Arkansas, where the company to which the petitioner belonged was then stationed, it was determined to postpone the hearing of the case until the present term. And it was announced that the questions of res adjudicata and of the jurisdiction of Judge Lamont would be examined by the judge of this court in vacation. The question in regard to the effect of the prior adjudication was supposed to involve the examination of the question of jurisdiction, for it was not contemplared that it would be contended that the decision of a tribunal which would have no jurisdiction of the questions in controversy could be interposed as an effectual bar to an inquiry into the merits of [594]*594the ease before another court of competent jurisdiction. It was well understood that the question of the jurisdiction of state courts and judges, in cases like the present, had been frequently denied, and that there was a conflict of authority upon the question. The knowledge of this conflict, and the fact that I had theretofore examined and noted most of the earlier decisions upon this important question, induced me. at the iUarch term, to promise to examine it further during the vacation; and, having redeemed that promise, I shall now state the result of my examination, notwithstanding the fact that, some five or six days before the commencement of the present Ma.y term, I received from the counsel who, at the last term, insisted that tlie proceedings before Judge Lain out were a legal bar to the proceedings commenced in this court, an elaborate brief in favor of the position then sought to be maintained by his opponent, — that state courts and judges had no jurisdiction in cases like that before Judge Lamont. I deem it proper and expedient to do so, because the question is one that will often arise, and it will probably save future labor if I now state what will be deemed the law' of this court until it is overruled by higher authority. And I am not the less inclined to take this course because I am unwilling that nearly all the labor of disposing of this class of eases, in a judicial district containing nearly two million and a quarter of people, should be unnecessarily and improperly cast upon the judge of this court, while his other judicial duties require more labor than any single judge should be required to perform.

The question of jurisdiction was considered open to discussion for several years after the adoption of the federal constitution, very lew cases having arisen in which it became necessary to decide it; but for nearly thirty-five years, prior to 1859, it had, I think, been considered definitely settled in favor of the jurisdiction of state courts and judges. The question will therefore be considered as one depending upon the authority of decided cases, more than upon any argument now' to be advanced; and I shall not attempt to repeat the arguments by which the doctrines of decided cases have been sustained.

The position taken by the learned counsel for the government in his brief, furnished just before the commencement of this term, is stated in his fourth point, in this language: “Judges of the state courts have no power to issue a writ of habeas corpus, or to continue proceedings under it when issued, in cases of commitment or detainer under the authority of the United States."’ Under this point he cites twenty-eight different cases or authorities, w'hieh I shall presently consider, but.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
20 F. Cas. 592, 1867 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 22, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-reynolds-nynd-1867.