In re Thaw

167 A.D. 104, 33 N.Y. Crim. 128, 152 N.Y.S. 771, 1915 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 7433
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedApril 16, 1915
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 167 A.D. 104 (In re Thaw) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of 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 Thaw, 167 A.D. 104, 33 N.Y. Crim. 128, 152 N.Y.S. 771, 1915 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 7433 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1915).

Opinions

Hotchkiss, J.:

Prior to the year 1886 the decisions of State courts and as well those of inferior Federal courts were conflicting upon the question whether a fugitive who had been extradited from a foreign country could, in any State or Federal court, be proceeded against for a crime other or different from that for which he had been extradited, or whether he could there be subjected to process in civil proceedings. In Adriance v. Lagrave (59 N. Y. 110) the Court of Appeals held that in the absence of an express treaty stipulation there was no implied obligation binding upon State courts not to detain an extradited person brought within their jurisdiction from a foreign country for any act, criminal or civil, committed prior to the extradition, except the crime for which he had been surren[107]*107dered. and that such a person might be detained here on civil process. In 1886 the decision in United States v. Rauscher (119 U. S. 407) set the question at rest. It was there held that under the treaties existing between this country and most of the civilized countries of the world, the treaties themselves and the acts of Congress passed for the enforcement thereof exempted the fugitive from trial for any other offense than that for which he had been extradited until he had had an opportunity to return to the country from which he had been taken. Although Bauscher had been extradited for a crime, the principles of the decision were so broad as to comprehend the detention on civil process of any one so extradited.

On the question whether the rule of international extradition should be applied between the States under the provisions of the United States Constitution (Art. 4, § 2, subd. 2) and the laws of the United States (U. S. B. S. §§ 5278, 5279), passed to carry the same into effect, the decisions of the State courts continued to be at irreconcilable variance. In this State (People ex rel. Post v. Cross, 135 N. Y. 536), in Massachusetts (Commonwealth v. Wright, 158 Mass. 149) and in other States, the decisions in all of which certainly constituted the weight of authority, it was held that the obligation of the States to surrender fugitives was not founded upon comity or treaty, but solely upon the Constitution, and was not limited to specific offenses, but embraced all crimes, and that inasmuch as neither the Constitution nor any law of the United States imposed as a condition that the State to which a fugitive was surrendered could not try him for any other offense than that upon which he had been brought within its jurisdiction, no such condition would be implied. The question remained unsettled until the decision of Lascelles v. Georgia (148 U. S. 537), which confirmed the result theretofore reached in the New York and Massachusetts and similar cases. Mr. Justice Jackson, writing for a unanimous court in the Lascelles case, rejected the argument that “a fugitive from justice acquires in the State to which he may flee some state or personal right of protection, improperly called a right of asylum, which secures to him exemption from trial and punishment for a crime committed in another State, unless such crime is [108]*108made the special object or ground of his rendition,” and applied the rule that the jurisdiction of a court in a criminal case, unless restricted by treaty or statute, is in no wise dependent upon the circumstances under which the defendant has been brought within such jurisdiction.

Prior to the Lascelles case, in several States it had been decided that an extradited person was not subject to arrest on civil process until he had had a reasonable opportunity to return to the State which had surrendered him. The decisions to this effect cited to us by the appellant are Matter of Cannon, 47 Mich. 481 (1882); Compton, Ault & Co. v. Wilder, 40 Ohio St. 130 (1883), and Moletor v. Sinnen, 76 Wis. 308 (1890). In the Ohio case the decision went on the ground of fraudulent abuse of process by an individual who had procured the extradition proceedings to be instituted. The Wisconsin case seems to have been decided on the theory that a defendant brought within the State by criminal process after acquittal is exempt from civil process for a reasonable time thereafter to permit him to leave the State, the court holding that in this respect the rule was the same as in the case of a suitor voluntarily coming into the State. The Michigan case went on the same ground and also held that the exemption extended to crimes other than those on which the extradition was based. Since the Lascelles case, however, all of the decisions to which we are cited have held that an extradited fugitive is not exempt from civil process in the State to which he has been rendered (Reid v. Ham, 54 Minn. 305; Matter of Walker, 61 Neb. 803; Rutledge v. Krauss, 73 N. J. Law, 397), all of which go upon the ground that it was settled in the Lascelles casé that no conditions or limitations are imposed upon the jurisdiction or authority of the State to which a fugitive is returned, and that the rule that one coming into a State voluntarily as a witness or party to a suit is free from civil process has no application because the principles upon which that rule is founded are entirely lacking. It is settled that this distinction between parties voluntarily entering the State and those who come involuntarily prevails in this State, and that cases where the presence of the defendant has been secured by extradition proceedings furnish no exception. (Netograph Mfg. Co. v. Scrugham, 197 N. Y. 377.)

[109]*109The present attempt to assail the good faith of the extradition proceedings as a means for attacking the commitment cannot succeed. The facts set forth in the petition in this regard consist entirely of statements alleged to have been made by two attorneys who represented the State in proceedings before the Immigration Department of the Dominion of Canada at a hearing on an application to that government for the deportation of Thaw in September, 1913, before Thaw entered the State of blew Hampshire, and before his indictment for the crime upon which he was subsequently extradited from that State. When these proceedings failed or were abandoned as a means of retaking Thaw, and when he had thereafter been lawfully indicted and upon that indictment extradition proceedings had been taken and completed, and Thaw had been tried upon such indictment, I see no justification for questioning the good faith of those proceedings (assuming they were the subject of inquiry), because of what some representative of the State may have said under the circumstances disclosed. But I do not think that any question of good faith in securing the extradition of Thaw is in any way material or may enter into our consideration. As I have shown, there are no limitations on the right of the executive to grant extradition save such as are imposed by the United States Constitution. In Commonwealth of Kentucky v. Dennison (24 How. [U. S.] 66) it was held that the Constitution imposed no more than a moral duty upon the State to grant or recognize warrants for extradition, the issuance or refusal of which could not be coerced by the courts. In Adriance v. Lagrave (supra)

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2 Pa. D. & C. 263 (Northampton County Court of Common Pleas, 1922)
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Bluebook (online)
167 A.D. 104, 33 N.Y. Crim. 128, 152 N.Y.S. 771, 1915 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 7433, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-thaw-nyappdiv-1915.