A district judge of the United States, on application to remove
from the district where defendant is arrested to that where the
offense is triable, acts judicially, and the provision of § 1014,
Rev.Stat., that the proceedings are to be conducted agreeably to
the usual mode of process in the state against offenders has no
application to the inquiry on application for removal.
While in a removal proceeding under § 1014, Rev.Stat., an
indictment constitutes
prima facie evidence of probable
cause, it is not conclusive, and evidence offered by the defendant
tending to show that no offense triable in the district to which
removal is sought had been committed is admissible, and its
exclusion is not mere error, but the denial of a right secured
under the federal Constitution.
Page 205 U. S. 21
The facts are stated in the opinion.
Page 205 U. S. 24
MR. CHIEF JUSTICE FULLER delivered the opinion of the Court.
In May, 1906, the grand jury in the United States Circuit Court
for the Middle District of Tennessee returned an indictment against
thirty corporations, two partnerships, and twenty-five persons as
defendants. This indictment contained six counts. Generally
speaking, the first, second, fourth, and fifth charged the
defendants with violating § 1 of the Act of Congress approved July
2, 1890, entitled "An Act to Protect Trade and Commerce against
Unlawful Restraints and Monopolies," and the third and sixth counts
charged them under § 5440 of the Revised Statutes. In July, 1906,
the government presented to the district judge of the Eastern
District of Virginia at Richmond, a complaint made by Morgan Treat,
United States Marshal, alleging that he believed James G. Tinsley
stood indicted as aforesaid, and
Page 205 U. S. 25
annexing a certified copy of the indictment as a part of the
complaint, and praying that Tinsley might
"be arrested and imprisoned and removed or bailed, as the case
may be, for trial before the said circuit court of the United
States for the middle district of Tennessee, and further dealt with
according to law."
Tinsley was arrested and taken directly before the district
judge, who acted as committing magistrate as well as the judge to
order removal. In the proceedings before the district judge,
Tinsley admitted that he was one of the defendants named in the
indictment. The government relied on the certified copy of the
indictment, and offered no evidence except that, and asked for an
order to be made for Tinsley's commitment and removal
forthwith.
The record of those proceedings states:
"And thereupon the defendant, J. G. Tinsley, offered himself as
witness in his own behalf, and, being about to be sworn, the United
States, by its counsel, thereupon objected to the witness being
sworn or to any testimony being given in rebuttal of the indictment
in these proceedings, on the ground that, the identity of the
defendant being admitted, inasmuch as the indictment on its face
charges offenses against the United States, committed and triable
in the jurisdiction in which the defendant stands indicted, no
evidence is admissible here to impeach the indictment, and the
order of commitment should be made without other proof."
"The defendant's counsel thereupon offered to prove by the
defendant and other witnesses, then and there present, that the
circuit court for the middle district of Tennessee had no
jurisdiction over the person of said defendant touching the
offenses charged in said indictment, in that defendant ant and said
other witnesses would, if permitted, testify that defendant is, and
has been for many years, a resident and citizen of the City of
Richmond, State of Virginia, and that defendant never at any time,
or at any place in the State of Tennessee at the times charged in
the indictment, did or performed, or was party to, or engaged in,
any act or thing in the said indictment
Page 205 U. S. 26
charged as having been done and performed in any way whatsoever
by this defendant in the said State of Tennessee; nor has defendant
done, or performed, or been engaged in, or a party to, the same or
any of them in any other place or places at any other time or times
whatsoever."
"Thereupon counsel for the government renewed its objections as
aforesaid."
"After hearing counsel on both sides, the court announced its
conclusions as follows:"
" The conclusion reached by the court is that, in a proceeding
for the arrest and removal of persons charged with a violation of
the laws of the United States pursuant to section 1014 of the
Revised Statutes of the United States, before a United States
district judge, sitting in the State of Virginia, in which state
there no longer exists the right of a preliminary examination upon
a crime charged prior to the trial upon the merits, when said judge
is called upon to act as well in the matter of the apprehension of
such persons as in their removal to the jurisdiction in which they
have been indicted, that, upon the government's presentation of a
sufficient indictment, regularly found by a grand jury in a court
of the United States, properly charging the commission of an
offense within the district in which such indictment is found,
coupled with proof of the identity of the person indicted, it is
its duty to properly bail such person for appearance before the
court in which he is indicted, or cause him to be removed
thereto."
It was then ruled that the testimony offered was inadmissible,
and the district judge ordered that the accused either give bail or
be held for removal. Tinsley declined to give bond, a warrant
directing removal to the Middle District of Tennessee was issued,
and he remained in custody pending its execution. No objection was
offered to the indictment at any time during the proceedings before
the district judge.
The district judge should not have allowed himself to be
controlled by the statutes of Virginia. In that commonwealth, it
appears to have been formerly required that, after indictment,
Page 205 U. S. 27
an examination should be had; but, by subsequent legislation, it
was provided that, where an indictment had been found, a
capias should be issued for the arrest of the defendant,
and no inquiry was to be made. But, when there was no indictment, a
person arrested for an indictable offense must be taken before a
magistrate for preliminary examination, and it was the magistrate's
duty to inquire whether or not there was sufficient cause for
charging the accused with the offense. Pollard's Annotated Virginia
Code, §§ 3955, 3969, 4003;
Jones v. Commonwealth, 86 Va.
661.
But, as hereinafter seen, the district judge, on application to
remove, acts judicially, and that part of § 1014 of the Revised
Statutes of the United States which says that the proceedings are
to be conducted "agreeably to the usual mode of process against
offenders in such state," has no relation to the inquiry on
application for removal.
Application was then made to the circuit court for writs of
habeas corpus and certiorari, which were granted and due returns
made. The petition alleged that Tinsley was unlawfully restrained
of his liberty by the marshal, under color of authority of the
United States, by virtue of a warrant for removal, claimed to have
been issued under § 1014, Revised Statutes. It set forth in full
the proceedings taken before the district judge and the rulings and
orders made during the hearing. It was charged that, under and by
virtue of clause 3, § 2, Article III, of the Constitution, and of
the Sixth Amendment, he was entitled to be tried, and could only be
tried for any alleged offense against the United States in the
state and district where the offenses charged in the indictment
were committed; that the offenses specified in the indictment were
not committed in the Middle District of Tennessee; that none of the
acts supposed to have been engaged in by petitioner were done
within that district; that the indictment stated no offense and was
insufficient and void. It was further alleged that the warrant of
removal was in violation of § 2 of Article III of the
Constitution
Page 205 U. S. 28
and of the Sixth Amendment; that the rulings of the district
judge, in holding the certified copy of the indictment conclusive
and in refusing to permit the introduction of any evidence on
behalf of petitioner, deprived him of rights secured by the
Constitution and by section 1014, Revised Statutes, and that he was
deprived of his liberty without due process of law.
At the hearing before the circuit court, in addition to the
record of the proceedings before the district judge, an offer was
made to prove by witnesses the facts set forth in the petition, but
the court did not admit the same, because it was held that the
certified copy of the indictment, with proof of the identity of the
party accused, sufficiently established the existence of probable
cause.
In other words, the indictment was in effect held to be
conclusive. The circuit judge said, it is true, that probable cause
must be shown in order to obtain a removal, but he held that,
inasmuch as the copy of the indictment alone was regarded as
sufficient evidence of probable cause in
Beavers v.
Henkel, 194 U. S. 73, it
was sufficient in the present case. In that case, however, no
evidence was introduced to overcome the
prima facie case
made by the indictment except that evidence was offered as to what
passed in the grand jury room, and rejected on that ground, and not
because it went to the merits.
Section 1014 of the Revised Statutes reads as follows:
"For any crime or offense against the United States, the
offender may, by any justice or judge of the United States, or by
any commissioner of a circuit court to take bail, or by any
chancellor, judge of a supreme or superior court, chief or first
judge of common pleas, mayor of a city, justice of the peace, or
other magistrate of any state where he may be found, and agreeably
to the usual mode of process against offenders in such state, and
at the expense of the United States, be arrested and imprisoned, or
bailed, as the case may be, for trial before such court of the
United States as by law
Page 205 U. S. 29
has cognizance of the offense. Copies of the process shall be
returned as speedily as may be into the clerk's office of such
court, together with the recognizances of the witnesses for their
appearance to testify in the case. And where any offender or
witness is committed in any district other than that where the
offense is to be tried, it shall be the duty of the judge of the
district where such offender or witness is imprisoned seasonably to
issue, and of the marshal to execute, a warrant for his removal to
the district where the trial is to be had."
Obviously the first part of this section provides for the arrest
of any offender against the United States wherever found, and
without reference to whether he has been indicted; but when he has
been indicted in a district in another state than the district of
arrest, then, after the offender has been committed, it becomes the
duty of the district judge, on inquiry, to issue a warrant of
removal. And it has been repeatedly held that in such cases the
judge exercises something more than a mere ministerial function,
involving no judicial discretion. He must look into the indictment
to ascertain whether an offense against the United States is
charged, find whether there was probable cause, and determine
whether the court to which the accused is sought to be removed has
jurisdiction of the same.
"The liberty of the citizen, and his general right to be tried
in a tribunal or forum of his domicil, imposes upon the judge the
duty of considering and passing upon those questions."
Mr. Justice Jackson, then Circuit Judge,
In re Greene,
52 F. 106. In the language of MR. JUSTICE BREWER, delivering the
opinion in
Beavers v. Henkel, supra:
"It may be conceded that no such removal should be summarily and
arbitrarily made. There are risks and burdens attending it which
ought not to be needlessly cast upon any individual. These may not
be serious in a removal from New York to Brooklyn, but might be if
the removal was from San Francisco to New York. And statutory
provisions
Page 205 U. S. 30
must be interpreted in the light of all that may be done under
them. We must never forget that in all controversies, civil or
criminal, between the government and an individual, the latter is
entitled to reasonable protection. Such seems to have been the
purpose of Congress in enacting § 1014, Rev.Stat., which requires
that the order of removal be issued by the judge of the district in
which the defendant is arrested. In other words, the removal is
made a judicial, rather than a mere ministerial, act."
In
Greene v. Henkel, 183 U. S. 249,
Greene was indicted in the District Court of the United States for
the Southern District of Georgia. He was arrested and taken before
a commissioner in the State of New York. The commissioner held that
the certified copy of the indictment was conclusive evidence of
probable cause, and refused to hear any evidence on the part of the
defendant, and thereupon application was made to the district judge
of the Southern District of New York for an order of removal. That
judge held that the commissioner should have heard evidence, and
remanded the case. Evidence was then taken before the commissioner,
and he decided that there was probable cause. Application was again
made to the district judge for an order of removal, and he held
that the evidence showed the existence of probable cause, and made
the order accordingly. Greene thereupon presented his petition to
the circuit court for a writ of habeas corpus, which was denied,
and the case brought here on appeal. The evidence before the
commissioner and before the district judge was not annexed to the
petition nor brought up on certiorari, so that it formed no part of
the record in the habeas corpus case. We held that, in the absence
of the evidence, we must assume that the finding of probable cause
was sustained.
But it was insisted that the offense was only that which was
contained in the indictment, and, if the indictment were
insufficient for any reason, that then no offense was charged upon
which removal could be had. This Court, however,
Page 205 U. S. 31
ruled that the indictment did not preclude the government from
giving evidence of a certain and definite character concerning the
commission of the offense, and that the mere fact that there might
be lacking in the indictment some averment of time or place or
circumstance in order to render it free from technical defects
would not prevent the removal if evidence were given on the hearing
which supplied such defects and showed probable cause to believe
the defendants guilty of the offense defectively stated in the
indictment. MR. JUSTICE PECKHAM, in delivering the opinion, was
careful to say that it was not held that, where the indictment
charged no offense against the United States or the evidence failed
to show any, or, if it appeared that the offense charged was not
committed or triable in the district to which the removal was
sought, the judge would be justified in ordering the removal,
because there would be no jurisdiction to commit or any to order
the removal of the prisoner.
"There must be some competent evidence to show that an offense
has been committed over which the court in the other district had
jurisdiction, and that the defendant is the individual named in the
charge, and that there is probable cause for believing him guilty
of the offense charged."
On the facts of that case, it was not found necessary to express
an opinion upon the question whether the finding of an indictment
was, in the proceeding under § 1014, conclusive evidence of the
existence of probable cause for believing the defendant in the
indictment guilty of the charge set forth. Although it may be said
that if the indictment were conclusive upon the accused, it would
be conclusive upon the government also.
It was held in
Beavers v. Henkel, supra, Benson v.
Henkel, 198 U. S. 1,
Hyde v. Shine, 199 U. S. 62, as
well as
Greene v. Henkel, supra, that an indictment
constituted
prima facie evidence of probable cause, but
not that it was conclusive.
We regard that question as specifically presented in the
Page 205 U. S. 32
present case, and we hold that the indictment cannot be treated
as conclusive under section 1014.
This being so, we are of opinion that the evidence offered
should have been admitted. It is contended that that evidence was
immaterial, and, if admitted, could not have affected the decision
of either the district or circuit judge. Of course, if the
indictment were conclusive, any evidence might be said to be
immaterial; but if the indictment were only
prima facie,
then evidence tending to show that no offense triable in the Middle
District of Tennessee had been committed by defendant in that
district could not be regarded as immaterial.
The Constitution provides that
"The trial of all crimes, except in cases of impeachment, shall
be by jury, and such trial shall be held in the state where the
said crimes shall have been committed"
(Article III, § 2), and that
"In all criminal prosecutions, the accused shall enjoy the right
to a speedy and public trial by an impartial jury of the state and
district wherein the crime shall have been committed"
(Amendment VI), and, in order that anyone accused shall not be
deprived of this constitutional right, the judge applied to to
remove him from his domicil to a district in another state must
find that there is probable cause for believing him to have
committed the alleged offense, and in such other district. And in
doing this, his decision does not determine the question of guilt
any more than his view that the indictment is enough for the
purpose of removal definitely determines its validity.
Appellant was entitled to the judgment of the district judge as
to the existence of probable cause on the evidence that might have
been adduced, and even if the district judge had thereupon
determined that probable cause existed, and such determination
could not be revised on habeas corpus, it is nevertheless true that
we have no such decision here, and the order of removal cannot be
sustained in its absence. Nor can the exclusion of the evidence
offered be treated as
Page 205 U. S. 33
mere error, inasmuch as the ruling involved the denial of a
right secured by statute under the Constitution.
This conclusion is fatal to the order and warrant of removal,
and requires a reversal of the judgment below and the discharge of
appellant.
Final order reversed and cause remanded with directions to
discharge appellant from custody under the order and warrant of
removal, without prejudice to a renewal of the application to
remove.
MR. JUSTICE HARLAN dissented.
MR. JUSTICE MOODY took no part in the disposition of the
case.