In re the Extradition of Mutchler

8 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 345

This text of 8 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 345 (In re the Extradition of Mutchler) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Common Pleas of Ohio, Franklin County, Civil Division primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re the Extradition of Mutchler, 8 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 345 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1909).

Opinion

Bigger, J.

The case is before the court pursuant to the provisions of Section 97, Revised Statutes, F. IT. Mutchler having been arrested by virtue of a warrant issued by the Governor of Ohio, addressed to the sheriff of this county, commanding him to arrest the said F. IT. Mutchler and to bring him before any judge of the Supreme Court, circuit court, or common pleas cour-t of this state, in whose district or jurisdiction the said Mutchler may be found.

The evidence submitted to the court upon the hearing, it is agreed by the parties, is the same evidence which was presented io the Governor and upon which the warrant was issued. It is admitted that F. IT. Mutchler, named in the requisition papers is the person in the custody of the sheriff.

[346]*346The evidence consists of the paper containing the demand of the Governor of Virginia, and a certificate of the commonwealth attorney of Henry county, Virginia, attached thereto, as well as a copy of an indictment against the said F. II. Mutchler returned by the grand jury of said Henry county, Virginia, and which the Governor, certifies to be authentic and duty authenticated in accordance with the laws of Virginia.

• It is claimed that the requisition papers do not comply with the provisions of our statute, Section 95 Revised Statutes. In so far as this statute is in furtherance of the provisions of the United States Constitution and laws, it is valid, but clearly, both upon reason and authority, in so far as it imposes any restrictions or additional requirements than those found in the United States Constitution and laws, it is of no force and effect, and without stopping to discuss this question further, I am of opinion that the proceedings are not defective because, certain of the requirements of Section -95 were not complied with, because they do attempt to impose restrictions upon the exercise of this power by the executive of the state, which are not found in the federal Constitution and laws.

But there is another question which is more serious, and it is this: There was no evidence whatever before the Governor, and there is none before this court — the evidence here being the same as was submitted to the Governor — to show that the said F. IT. Mutchler is a fugitive from justice. The language of the federal Const'tution is, “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.” Before a person whose extradition is demanded should be delivered up, two things are essential: first,, that ho be charged with a crime in the demanding state, and second, that he be a fugitive from justice. It is just as necessary that one of these facts be shown as the other. Upon this subject, Spear says at page 378:

“The words here placed in italics relate to the flights from justice. They are words of description, and as such, state a [347]*347fact which forms an essential part of the case, and which must be in every case of extradition authorized by the Constitution. It is not enough that the party is, in a proper judicial proceeding, charged with treason, felony, or other crime, since this of itself does not make the case specified. Nor is it enough that he is thus charged in one state and found in any other state, since this does not present the case stated in the Constitution. * * * The flight from justice and the being found in another state than that in which the crime is charged to have been committed, present a distinct fact in .the case, not identical with the charge and not necessarily involved in it or proved by it. And yet this fact exists in the case stated in the Constitution, and must hence be shown to exist when the provision is prac-ticallv applied for the purpose of extradition.”

Again the same author says at page 387:

“Both the Constitution and the law of Congress by making the flight of the accused person a material part of the case, necessarily assume that some evidence of this fact will and must be presented in the first instance to the demanding governor, and if he deems it sufficient, then by him to the governor to whom he addresses his requisition. This evidence in respect to both governors, must be legal evidence; not mere hearsay or suspicion or mere rumor, and must hence be under oath and must at least- be sufficient to create a prima facie case of flight. Without such evidence, it cannot be known to either governor that such a fact exists at all, and until this is reasonably known, there is no occasion for any action on the part of either.”

The same author quotes Judge Cooley to this effect:

“The Governor ought to have some showing under oath that the person demanded is in truth a fugitive from the state whose request is before him. This showing is as essential as is the evidence of the charge of crime, and is demanded no more b¡y the fair import of the Constitution than by justice. Without it, as was shown in the case of the Mormon prophet, a man has no security against being sent to distant states to answer charges from which he could never have fled, because he was never there. ’ ’

In the case, In re Samuel D. Jackson, cited by Spear at page 388, Judge AVithy of the United States District Court for the AVesteru District of Michigan, in discharging a prisoner for the [348]*348want of any proof that he was a fugitive from justice, uses this language:

"It is as essential to the right of arrest and extradition to prove to the satisfaction of the Governor of Michigan that the person charged with crime has fled from justice, as to prove that he. is charged with crime in such other state. * * * The evidence that the person has fled from justice must not only be satisfactory to the Governor, but must be legally sufficient, before the executive authority can be exercised. lie cannot act upon rumor nor upon the mere reputation of the person, nor upon the demanding Governor’s certificate. It should be sworn evidence such as will authorize a warrant of arrest in any other case."

Without stopping to cite further decisions of courts other than our .own state upon this point, my examination of the question satisfies me that the decisions of the courts both federal and state, aré almost unanimous as to the necessity of proof that the person demanded is a fugitive from justice, which, of course, involves the fact of his presence in the demanding state and his flight therefrom. It is not necessary now to consider what constitutes flight, as that question is not now involved.

I come, therefore, to a decision of the cases in our own state, and especially of the decision of the Supreme Court of this state in the case Ex Parte Sheldon. The fourth paragraph of the syllabus is:

"After an alleged fugitive from justice has been arrested on an extradition warrant, he will not be dicharged on the ground that there was n'o evidence before the executive issuing the warrant, showing that the fugitive had fled from the demanding state to avoid prosecution."

If this be taken apart from the facts of the case, it would seem to support the contention of counsel representing the commonwealth of Virginia. But the syllabus of a "case must be read in the light of the facts in the case. Witty v. Lockwood, 39th O.

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8 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 345, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-the-extradition-of-mutchler-ohctcomplfrankl-1909.