Apart from the provisions of treaties on the subject, there
exists no well defined obligation on one independent nation to
deliver to another fugitives from its justice, and though such
delivery has often been made,
Page 119 U. S. 408
it was upon the principle of comity. The right to demand it has
not been recognized as among the duties of one government to
another which rest upon established principles of international
law.
In any question of this kind which can arise between this
country and a foreign nation, the extradition must be negotiated
through the federal government, and not by that of a state, though
the demand may be for a crime committed against the law of that
state.
With most of the civilized nations of the world with which the
United States have much intercourse, this matter is regulated by
treaties, and the question now decided arises under the treaty of
1842 between Great Britain and the United States, commonly called
the Ashburton Treaty.
The defendant in this case being charged with murder on board an
American vessel on the high seas, fled to England and was demanded
of the government of that country, and surrendered on this charge.
The Circuit Court of the United States for the Southern District of
New York, in which he was tried, did not proceed against him for
murder, but for a minor offense not included in the treaty of
extradition, and the judges of that court certified to this Court
for its judgment the question whether this could be done.
Held:
(1) That a treaty to which the United States is a party is a law
of the land, of which all courts, state and national, are to take
judicial notice and by the provisions of which they are to be
governed, so far as they are capable of judicial enforcement.
(2) That on a sound construction of the treaty under which the
defendant was delivered to this country, and under the proceedings
by which this was done, and acts of Congress on that subject,
Rev.Stat. §§ 5212, 5275, he cannot lawfully be tried for any other
offense than murder.
(3) The treaty, the acts of Congress, and the proceedings by
which he was extradited clothe him with the right to exemption from
trial for any other offense until he has had an opportunity to
return to the country from which he was taken for the purpose alone
of trial for the offense specified in the demand for his surrender.
The national honor also requires that good faith shall be kept with
the country which surrendered him.
(4) The circumstance that the party was convicted of inflicting
cruel and unusual punishment on the same evidence which was
produced before the committing magistrate in England in the
extradition proceedings for murder does not change the
principle.
The case is stated in the opinion of the Court.
MR. JUSTICE MILLER delivered the opinion of the Court.
Page 119 U. S. 409
This case comes before us on a certificate of division of
opinion between the judges holding the Circuit Court of the United
States for the Southern District of New York arising after verdict
of guilty, and before judgment, on a motion in arrest of judgment.
The prisoner, William Rauscher, was indicted by a grand jury for
that, on the 9th day of October, 1884, on the high seas, out of the
jurisdiction of any particular state of the United States and
within the admiralty and maritime jurisdiction thereof, he, the
said William Rauscher, being then and there second mate of the ship
J. F. Chapman, unlawfully made an assault upon Janessen,
one of the crew of the vessel of which he was an officer, and
unlawfully inflicted upon said Janessen cruel and unusual
punishment. This indictment was found under § 5347 of the Revised
Statutes of the United States.
The statement of the division of opinion between the judges is
in the following language:
"This cause coming on to be heard at this term, before judgment
upon the verdict, on a motion in arrest of judgment, and also on a
motion for a new trial before the two judges above mentioned at
such hearing the following questions occurred:"
"First. The prisoner having been extradited upon a charge of
murder, on the high seas, of one Janessen, under § 5339, Rev.Stat.,
had the Circuit Court of the Southern District of New York
jurisdiction to put him to trial upon an indictment, under § 5347,
Rev.Stat. charging him with cruel and unusual punishment of the
same man, he being one of the crew of an American vessel of which
the defendant was an officer, and such punishment consisting of the
identical acts proved in the extradition proceedings?"
"Second. Did or not the prisoner, under the extradition treaty
with Great Britain, having been surrendered upon a charge of
murder, acquire a right to be exempt from prosecution upon the
charge set forth in the indictment, without being first afforded an
opportunity to return to Great Britain?"
"Third. Was it error on the part of the trial judge to overrule
a plea to the jurisdiction of the court to try the indictment
Page 119 U. S. 410
under § 5347 of the United States Revised Statutes, charging the
accused with cruel and unusual punishment of one Janessen, one of
the crew of a vessel of which accused was an officer, it having
been established upon said plea that the accused was extradited
under the extradition treaty with Great Britain, upon the charge of
murder of the same Janessen, under § 5339 of the United States
Revised Statutes?"
"Fourth. Was it error on the part of the trial judge to refuse
to direct a verdict of acquittal after it had been proven that the
accused was extradited under the extradition treaty with Great
Britain upon the charge of murder, it also appearing that in the
proceedings preliminary to the warrant of extradition, the same act
was investigated and the same witnesses examined as at the
trial?"
"In respect to each of which questions, the judges aforesaid
were divided in opinion."
"Wherefore, at the same term at the request of the United States
attorney, they have caused the points above stated to be certified
under the seal of this court, together with a copy of the
indictment and an abstract of the record, to the Supreme Court of
the United States for final decision according to law."
"WM. J. WALLACE"
"CHAS. L. BENEDICT"
The treaty with Great Britain under which the defendant was
surrendered by that government to ours upon a charge of murder is
that of August 9, 1842, styled
"A treaty to settle and define the boundaries between the
territories of the United States and the possessions of Her
Britannic Majesty in North America, for the final suppression of
the African slave trade, and for the giving up of criminals,
fugitive from justice, in certain cases."
8 Stat. 576.
With the exception of this caption, the tenth article of the
treaty contains all that relates to the subject of extradition of
criminals. That article is here copied, as follows:
"It is agreed that the United States and Her Britannic Majesty
shall, upon mutual requisitions by them or their ministers,
officers, or authorities, respectively made, deliver up
Page 119 U. S. 411
to justice all persons who, being charged with the crime of
murder, or assault with intent to commit murder, or piracy or arson
or robbery or forgery, or the utterance of forged paper committed
within the jurisdiction of either shall seek an asylum or shall be
found within the territories of the other, provided, that this
shall only be done upon such evidence of criminality as, according
to the laws of the place where the fugitive or person so charged
shall be found, would justify his apprehension and commitment for
trial if the crime or offense had there been committed, and the
respective judges and other magistrates of the two governments
shall have power, jurisdiction, and authority, upon complaint made
under oath, to issue a warrant for the apprehension of the fugitive
or person so charged, that he may be brought before such judges or
other magistrates, respectively, to the end that the evidence of
criminality may be heard and considered, and if, on such hearing,
the evidence be deemed sufficient to sustain the charge, it shall
be the duty of the examining judge or magistrate to certify the
same to the proper executive authority, that a warrant may issue
for the surrender of such fugitive."
Not only has the general subject of the extradition of persons
charged with crime in one country who have fled to and sought
refuge in another been matter of much consideration of late years
by the executive departments and statesmen of the governments of
the civilized portion of the world, by various publicists and
writers on international law, and by specialists on that subject,
as well as by the courts and judicial tribunals of different
countries, but the precise questions arising under this treaty, as
presented by the certificate of the judges in this case, have
recently been very much discussed in this country and in Great
Britain. It is only in modern times that the nations of the earth
have imposed upon themselves the obligation of delivering up these
fugitives from justice to the states where their crimes were
committed for trial and punishment. This has been done generally by
treaties made by one independent government with another. Prior to
these treaties and apart from them,
Page 119 U. S. 412
it may be stated as the general result of the writers upon
international law that there was no well defined obligation on one
country to deliver up such fugitives to another, and though such
delivery was often made, it was upon the principle of comity, and
within the discretion of the government whose action was invoked,
and it has never been recognized as among those obligations of one
government toward another which rest upon established principles of
international law.
Whether in the United States, in the absence of any treaty on
the subject with a foreign nation from whose justice a fugitive may
be found in one of the states and in the absence of any act of
Congress upon the subject, a state can, through its own judiciary
or executive, surrender him for trial to such foreign nation is a
question which has been under consideration by the courts of this
country without any very conclusive result.
In the case of
Daniel Washburn, 4 Johns.Ch. 106, who
was arrested on a charge of theft committed in Canada and brought
before Chancellor Kent upon a wit of habeas corpus, that
distinguished jurist held that irrespective of all treaties, it was
the duty of a state to surrender fugitive criminals. The doctrine
of this obligation was presented with great ability by that learned
jurist, but shortly afterwards Chief Justice Tilghman, in the case
of
Commonwealth v. Deacon, 10 S. & R. 125, in the
Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, held the contrary opinion -- that
the delivery up of a fugitive was an affair of the executive branch
of the national government, to which the demand of the foreign
power must be addressed; that judges could not legally deliver up,
nor could they command the executive to do so, and that no
magistrate in Pennsylvania had the right to cause a person to be
arrested in order to afford the President of the United States an
opportunity to deliver him up, because the President had already
declared he would not do so.
In the case of
Holmes v.
Jennison, 14 Pet. 540, on a writ of error to the
Supreme Court of Vermont, it appears that application had been made
to the President for the extradition of Holmes, a naturalized
citizen of the United States, who was
Page 119 U. S. 413
charged with having committed murder in Lower Canada. There
being then no extradition treaty between the two governments, the
President declined to act through an alleged want of power. Holmes,
having been arrested under authority from Governor Jennison, of
Vermont, obtained a writ of habeas corpus from the supreme court of
that state, and the sheriff returned that he was detained under an
order of the governor, which commanded the sheriff to deliver him
up to the authorities of Lower Canada, and the supreme court of the
state held the return sufficient. On the writ of error from the
Supreme Court of the United States, two questions were presented --
first, whether a writ of error would lie in such case from that
court to the supreme court of the state, and second whether the
judgment of the latter court was right. The eight judges who heard
the case in this Court were equally divided in opinion on the first
of these questions, and therefore no authoritative decision of the
principal question could be made. A very able and learned opinion
in favor of the appellate jurisdiction of the Supreme Court of the
United States and against the right attempted to be exercised by
the governor of Vermont was delivered by Chief Justice Taney, with
whom concurred Justices Story, McLean, and Wayne. Justices
Thompson, Barbour, and Catron delivered separate opinions denying
the power of the Supreme Court of the United States to revise the
judgment of the Supreme Court of Vermont. These latter, with whom
concurred Justice Baldwin, did not express any clear opinion upon
the power of the authorities of the State of Vermont, either
executive or judicial, to deliver Holmes to the government of
Canada, but, upon return of the case to the Supreme Court of that
state, it seems that that court was satisfied, by the arguments of
the Chief Justice and those who concurred with him, of the error of
its position, and Holmes was discharged. In the final disposition
of the case, the Court uses the following language: "I am
authorized by my brethren," says the Chief Justice,
"to say that, on an examination of this case as decided by the
Supreme Court of the United States, they think, if the return had
been as it now is, a majority of that Court would have
Page 119 U. S. 414
decided that Holmes was entitled to his discharge and that the
opinion of a majority of the Supreme Court of the United States was
also adverse to the exercise of the power in question by any of the
separate states of the union. The judgment of the court therefore
is that Holmes be discharged from his imprisonment."
Ex Parte Holmes, 12 Vt. 631.
The Court of Appeals of New York, in the case of
People v.
Curtis, 50 N.Y. 321, also decided that an act of the
legislature of that state authorizing the rendition to foreign
states of fugitives from justice was in conflict with the
Constitution of the United States. This was in 1872.
The question has not since arisen so as to be decided by this
Court, but there can be little doubt of the soundness of the
opinion of Chief Justice Taney that the power exercised by the
Governor of Vermont is a part of the foreign intercourse of this
country, which has undoubtedly been conferred upon the federal
government, and that it is clearly included in the treatymaking
power, and the corresponding power of appointing and receiving
ambassadors and other public ministers. There is no necessity for
the states to enter upon the relations with foreign nations, which
are necessarily implied in the extradition of fugitives from
justice found within the limits of the state, as there is none why
they should in their own name make demand upon foreign nations for
the surrender of such fugitives.
At this time of day, and after the repeated examinations which
have been made by this Court into the powers of the federal
government to deal with all such international questions
exclusively, it can hardly be admitted that even in the absence of
treaties or acts of Congress on the subject, the extradition of a
fugitive from justice can become the subject of negotiation between
a state of this union and a foreign government. Fortunately this
question, with others which might arise in the absence of treaties
or acts of Congress on the subject, is now of very little
importance, since with nearly all the nations of the world with
whom our relations are such that fugitives from justice may be
found within their dominions or within ours, we have treaties which
govern the rights and conduct of
Page 119 U. S. 415
the parties in such cases. These treaties are also supplemented
by acts of Congress, and both are in their nature exclusive.
The case we have under consideration arises under one of these
treaties made between the United States and Great Britain, the
country with which, on account of our intimate relations, the cases
requiring extradition are likely to be most numerous. This treaty
of 1842 is supplemented by the acts of Congress of August 12, 1848,
9 Stat. 302, and March 3, 1869, 15 Stat. 337, the provisions of
which are embodied in §§ 5270, 5272, and 5275 of the Revised
Statutes, under Title LXVI, "Extradition."
The treaty itself, in reference to the very matter suggested in
the questions certified by the judges of the circuit court, has
been made the subject of diplomatic negotiation between the
executive department of this country and the government of Great
Britain in the cases of Winslow and Lawrence. Winslow, who was
charged with forgery in the United States, had taken refuge in
England, and, on demand's being made for his extradition, the
foreign office of that country required a preliminary pledge from
our government that it would not try him for any other offense than
the forgery for which he was demanded. To this Mr. Fish, the
Secretary of State, did not accede, and was informed that the
reason of the demand on the part of the British government was that
one Lawrence, not long previously extradited under the same treaty,
had been prosecuted in the courts of this country for a different
offense from that for which he had been demanded from Great Britain
and for the trial of which he was delivered up by that government.
Mr. Fish defended the right of the government or state in which the
offense was committed to try a person extradited under this treaty
for any other criminal offense, as well as for the one for which
the extradition had been demanded, while Lord Derby, at the head of
the Foreign Office in England, construed the treaty as requiring
the government which had demanded the extradition of an offender
against its laws for a prescribed offense mentioned in the treaty
and in the demand for his extradition to try him for that offense
and for no other. The correspondence is an able one upon both
sides,
Page 119 U. S. 416
and presents the question which we are now required to decide as
to the construction of the treaty and the effect of the acts of
Congress already cited and of a statute of Great Britain of 1870 on
the same subject. The negotiations between the two governments,
however, on that subject, were inconclusive in any other sense than
that Winslow was not delivered up, and Lawrence was never actually
brought to judgment for any other offense than that for which his
extradition was demanded. The question was also discussed in the
House of Lords, and Lord Derby stated and defended his views of the
construction of the treaty with marked ability, while he conceded
that the act of Parliament on that subject, which declared that the
person extradited could be tried for no other offense than that for
which he had been demanded, had no obligatory force upon the United
States as one of the parties to the treaty. Foreign Relations of
the United States, 1876-1877, pp. 204-307.
The subject was also very fully discussed by Mr. William Beach
Lawrence, a very learned authority on matters of international law,
living in this country, in several published articles. 14 Albany
Law Journal 85; 15 Albany Law Journal 224; 16 Albany Law Journal
361. In these, the author, with his usual ability, maintains the
proposition that a person delivered up under this treaty on a
demand charging him with a specific offense, mentioned in it can
only be tried by the country to which he is delivered for that
specific offense, and is entitled, unless found guilty of that, to
be restored in safety to the country of his asylum at the time of
his extradition.
A very able article arising out of the same public discussion at
that time, to-wit, 1876, is found in the American Law Review, said
to have been written by Judge Lowell, of the United States court at
Boston, in which, after an examination of the authorities upon the
general rule, independent of treaties, as found in the continental
writers on international law, he says that rule is that the person
whose extradition has been granted cannot be prosecuted and tried
except for the crime for which his extradition has been obtained,
and, entering upon the question of the construction of the treaty
of 1842, he gives to it the same effect in regard to that matter.
10 Am.Law Review 1875-76, p. 617.
Page 119 U. S. 417
Mr. David Dudley Field, in his draft of an outline for an
international code, published about the same time, adopts the same
principle. Field's International Code § 237, p. 122. It is
understood that the rule which he lays down represents as well what
he understands to be existing law as also what he supposes it
should be.
A very learned and careful work published in this country by Mr.
Spear, in 1879, and a second edition in 1884, after considering all
the correspondence between our government and Great Britain upon
the subject, the debate in the House of Lords, the articles of Mr.
Lawrence and Judge Lowell, as well as the treatise of Mr. Clarke,
an English writer, with a very exhaustive examination of all the
decisions in this country relating to this matter, arrives at the
same conclusion. This examination by Mr. Spear is so full and
careful that it leaves nothing to be desired in the way of
presentation of authorities.
The only English work on the subject of extradition we have been
able to find which discusses this subject is a small manual by
Edward Clarke, of Lincoln's Inn, published in 1867. He adopts the
same view of the construction of this treaty and of the general
principles of international law upon the subject which we have just
indicated.
Turning to seek in judicial decisions for authority upon the
subject, as might be anticipated, we meet with nothing in the
English courts of much value, for the reason that treaties made by
the Crown of Great Britain with other nations are not in those
courts considered as part of the law of the land, but the rights
and the duties growing out of those treaties are looked upon in
that country as matters confided wholly for their execution and
enforcement to the executive branch of the government. Speaking of
the Ashburton Treaty of 1842, which we are now construing, Mr.
Clarke says that,
"In England, the common law being held not to permit the
surrender of a criminal, this provision could not come into effect
without an act of Parliament, but in the United States, a treaty is
as binding as an act of Congress."
Clarke on Extradition 38.
This difference between the judicial powers of the courts of
Great Britain and of this country in regard to treaties is thus
Page 119 U. S. 418
alluded to by Chief Justice Marshall in the Supreme Court of the
United States:
"A treaty is in its nature a contract between two nations, not a
legislative act. It does not generally effect, of itself, the
object to be accomplished, especially so far as its operation is
infraterritorial, but is carried into execution by the sovereign
power of the respective parties to the instrument. In the United
States, a different principle is established. Our Constitution
declares a treaty to be the law of the land. It is consequently to
be regarded in courts of justice as equivalent to an act of the
legislature whenever it operates of itself, without the aid of any
legislative provision; but when the terms of the stipulation import
a contract, when either of the parties engages to perform a
particular act, the treaty addresses itself to the political, not
the judicial, department, and the legislature must execute the
contract before it can become a rule for the court."
Foster v.
Neilson, 2 Pet. 253,
27 U. S.
314.
This whole subject is fully considered in the
Head Money
Cases, 112 U. S. 580, in
which the effect of a treaty as a part of the law of the land, as
distinguished from its aspect as a mere contract between
independent nations, is expressed in the following language:
"A treaty is primarily a contract between independent nations.
It depends for the enforcement of its provisions on the interest
and the honor of the governments which are parties to it. If these
fail, its infraction becomes the subject of international
negotiations and reclamations, so far as the injured party chooses
to seek redress, which may in the end be enforced by actual war. It
is obvious that with all this the judicial courts have nothing to
do, and can give no redress. But a treaty may also contain
provisions which confer certain rights upon the citizens or
subjects of one of the nations residing in the territorial limits
of the other, which partake of the nature of municipal law and
which are capable of enforcement as between private parties in the
courts of the country. An illustration of this character is found
in treaties which regulate the mutual rights of citizens and
subjects of the contracting nations in regard to rights of property
by descent or
Page 119 U. S. 419
inheritance when the individuals concerned are aliens. The
Constitution of the United States places such provisions as these
in the same category as other laws of Congress by its declaration
that"
" This Constitution, and the laws made in pursuance thereof, and
all treaties made, or which shall be made under authority of the
United States, shall be the supreme law of the land."
"A treaty, then, is a law of the land, as an act of Congress is,
whenever its provisions prescribe a rule by which the rights of the
private citizen or subject may be determined. And when such rights
are of a nature to be enforced in a court of justice, that court
resorts to the treaty for a rule of decision for the case before it
as it would to a statute."
See also Chew Heong v. United States, 112 U.
S. 536,
112 U. S. 540,
112 U. S.
565.
The treaty of 1842 being therefore the supreme law of the land,
of which the courts are bound to take judicial notice, and to
enforce in any appropriate proceeding the rights of persons growing
out of that treaty, we proceed to inquire, in the first place, so
far as pertinent to the questions certified by the circuit judges,
into the true construction of the treaty. We have already seen that
according to the doctrine of publicists and writers on
international law, the country receiving the offender against its
laws from another country had no right to proceed against him for
any other offense than that for which he had been delivered up.
This is a principle which commends itself, as an appropriate
adjunct, to the discretionary exercise of the power of rendition,
because it can hardly be supposed that a government which was under
no treaty obligation nor any absolute obligation of public duty to
seize a person who had found an asylum within its bosom and turn
him over to another country for trial would be willing to do this
unless a case was made of some specific offense of a character
which justified the government in depriving the party of his
asylum. It is unreasonable that the country of the asylum should be
expected to deliver up such person to be dealt with by the
demanding government without any limitation, implied or otherwise,
upon its prosecution of the party. In exercising its
Page 119 U. S. 420
discretion, it might be very willing to deliver up offenders
against such laws as were essential to the protection of life,
liberty, and person, while it would not be willing to do this on
account of minor misdemeanors or of a certain class of political
offenses in which it would have no interest or sympathy.
Accordingly, it has been the policy of all governments to grant an
asylum to persons who have fled from their homes on account of
political disturbances and who might be there amenable to laws
framed with regard to such subjects and to the personal allegiance
of the party. In many of the treaties of extradition between the
civilized nations of the world, there is an express exclusion of
the right to demand the extradition of offenders against such laws,
and in none of them is this class of offenses mentioned as being
the foundation of extradition proceedings. Indeed, the enumeration
of offenses in most of these treaties, and especially in the treaty
now under consideration, is so specific, and marked by such a clear
line in regard to the magnitude and importance of those offenses,
that it is impossible to give any other interpretation to it than
that of the exclusion of the right of extradition for any
others.
It is therefore very clear that this treaty did not intend to
depart in this respect from the recognized public law which had
prevailed in the absence of treaties, and that it was not intended
that this treaty should be used for any other purpose than to
secure the trial of the person extradited for one of the offenses
enumerated in the treaty. This is not only apparent from the
general principle that the specific enumeration of certain matters
and things implies the exclusion of all others, but the entire face
of the treaty, including the processes by which it is to be carried
into effect, confirms this view of the subject. It is unreasonable
to suppose that any demand for rendition, framed upon a general
representation to the government of the asylum (if we may use such
an expression) that the party for whom the demand was made was
guilty of some violation of the laws of the country which demanded
him, without specifying any particular offense with which he was
charged, and even without specifying an offense mentioned in the
treaty, would receive any serious attention, and yet such
Page 119 U. S. 421
is the effect of the construction that the party is properly
liable to trial for any other offense than that for which he was
demanded and which is described in the treaty. There would, under
that view of the subject, seem to be no need of a description of a
specific offense in making the demand. But, so far from this being
admissible, the treaty not only provides that the party shall be
charged with one of the crimes mentioned, to-wit, murder, assault
with intent to commit murder, piracy, arson, robbery, forgery, or
the utterance of forged paper, but that evidence shall be produced
to the judge or magistrate of the country of which such demand is
made of the commission of such an offense, and that this evidence
shall be such as, according to the law of that country, would
justify the apprehension and commitment for trial of the person so
charged. If the proceedings under which the party is arrested in a
country where he is peaceably and quietly living and to the
protection of whose laws he is entitled are to have no influence in
limiting the prosecution in the country where the offense is
charged to have been committed, there is very little use for this
particularity in charging a specific offense, requiring that
offense to be one mentioned in the treaty, as well as sufficient
evidence of the party's guilt to put him upon trial for it. Nor can
it be said that in the exercise of such a delicate power under a
treaty so well guarded in every particular, its provisions are
obligatory alone on the state which makes the surrender of the
fugitive, and that that fugitive passes into the hands of the
country which charges him with the offense free from all the
positive requirements and just implications of the treaty under
which the transfer of his person takes place. A moment before, he
is under the protection of a government which has afforded him an
asylum from which he can only be taken under a very limited form of
procedure, and a moment after, he is found in the possession of
another sovereignty by virtue of that proceeding, but divested of
all the rights which he had the moment before and of all the rights
which the law governing that proceeding was intended to secure.
If, upon the face of this treaty, it could be seen that its
sole
Page 119 U. S. 422
object was to secure the transfer of an individual from the
jurisdiction of one sovereignty to that of another, the argument
might be sound; but as this right of transfer, the right to demand
it, the obligation to grant it, the proceedings under which it
takes place, all show that it is for a limited and defined purpose
that the transfer is made, it is impossible to conceive of the
exercise of jurisdiction in such a case for any other purpose than
that mentioned in the treaty and ascertained by the proceedings
under which the party is extradited, without an implication of
fraud upon the rights of the party extradited and of bad faith to
the country which permitted his extradition. No such view of solemn
public treaties between the great nations of the earth can be
sustained by a tribunal called upon to give judicial construction
to them.
The opposite view has been attempted to be maintained in this
country upon the ground that there is no express limitation in the
treaty of the right of the country in which the offense was
committed to try the person for the crime alone for which he was
extradited, and that, once being within the jurisdiction of that
country, no matter by what contrivance or fraud or by what pretense
of establishing a charge provided for by the extradition treaty, he
may have been brought within the jurisdiction, he is, when here,
liable to be tried for any offense against the laws as though
arrested here originally. This proposition of the absence of
express restriction in the treaty of the right to try him for other
offenses than that for which he was extradited is met by the
manifest scope and object of the treaty itself. The caption of the
treaty, already quoted, declaring that its purpose is to settle the
boundary line between the two governments, to provide for the final
suppression of the African slave trade, adds, "and for the giving
up of criminals, fugitive from justice, in certain cases." The
treaty, then, requires, as we have already said, that there shall
be given up, upon requisitions respectively made by the two
governments, all persons charged with any of the seven crimes
enumerated, and the provisions giving a party an examination before
a proper tribunal, in which, before he shall be delivered up on
this demand, it must be shown that the offense for which
Page 119 U. S. 423
he is demanded is one of those enumerated, and that the proof is
sufficient to satisfy the court or magistrate before whom this
examination takes place that he is guilty, and such as the law of
the state of the asylum requires to establish such guilt, leave no
reason to doubt that the fair purpose of the treaty is that the
person shall be delivered up to be tried for that offense and for
no other.
If there should remain any doubt upon this construction of the
treaty itself, the language of two acts of Congress heretofore
cited, incorporated in the Revised Statutes, must set this question
at rest. It is there declared, Rev.Stat. § 5272, the two preceding
sections having provided for a demand upon this country and for the
inquiry into the guilt of the party, that
"It shall be lawful for the Secretary of State, under his hand
and seal of office, to order the person so committed to be
delivered to such person or persons as shall be authorized, in the
name and on behalf of such foreign government,
to be tried for
the crime of which such person shall be so accused, and such
person shall be delivered up accordingly."
For the protection of persons brought into this country by
extradition proceedings from a foreign country, § 5275 on the
Revised Statutes provides:
"Whenever any person is delivered by any foreign government to
an agent of the United States for the purpose of being brought
within the United States and tried for any crime of which he is
duly accused, the President shall have power to take all necessary
measures for the transportation and safekeeping of such accused
person, and for his security against lawless violence, until the
final conclusion of his trial for the crimes or offenses specified
in the warrant of extradition and until his final discharge from
custody or imprisonment for or on account of such crimes or
offenses, and for a reasonable time thereafter, and may employ such
portion of the land or naval forces of the United States, or of the
militia thereof, as may be necessary for the safekeeping and
protection of the accused."
The obvious meaning of these two statutes, which have reference
to all treaties of extradition made by the United
Page 119 U. S. 424
States, is that the party shall not be delivered up by this
government to be tried for any other offense than that charged in
the extradition proceedings, and that when brought into this
country upon similar proceedings, he shall not be arrested or tried
for any other offense than that with which he was charged in those
proceedings, until he shall have had a reasonable time to return
unmolested to the country from which he was brought. This is
undoubtedly a congressional construction of the purpose and meaning
of extradition treaties such as the one we have under
consideration, and whether it is or not, it is conclusive upon the
judiciary of the right conferred upon persons brought from a
foreign country into this under such proceedings. That right, as we
understand it, is that he shall be tried only for the offense with
which he is charged in the extradition proceedings and for which he
was delivered up, and that if not tried for that, or after trial
and acquittal, he shall have a reasonable time to leave the country
before he is arrested upon the charge of any other crime committed
previous to his extradition.
This precise question has been frequently considered by courts
of the highest respectability in this country. One of the earliest
eases is that of
United States v. Caldwell, 8 Blatchford
131. Caldwell was extradited from Canada, in 1870, under the treaty
of 1842 with Great Britain, charged with forgery. He was not tried
for this offense, however, but was tried and convicted for bribing
an officer of the United States, an offense not designated in that
treaty. In the circuit court of the United States, held by Judge
Benedict, Caldwell called the attention of the court to this fact
and claimed that under the treaty he could not be tried for any
offense, committed prior to his extradition other than the one
charged in the proceedings. To this plea the government interposed
a demurrer, which was sustained, and the prisoner was tried,
convicted, and punished for the bribery. Judge Benedict said
that
"while abuse of extradition proceedings, and want of good faith
in resorting to them, doubtless constitutes a good cause of
complaint between the two governments, such complaints
Page 119 U. S. 425
do not form a proper subject of investigation in the courts,
however much those tribunals might regret that they should have
been permitted to arise. . . . But whether extradited in good faith
or not, the prisoner, in point of fact, is within the jurisdiction
of the court, charged with a crime therein committed, and I am at a
loss for even a plausible reason for holding, upon such a plea as
the present, that the court is without jurisdiction to try him, . .
. and I cannot say that the fact that the defendant was brought
within the jurisdiction by virtue of a warrant of extradition for
the crime of forgery affords him a legal exemption from prosecution
for other crimes by him committed."
The next case, tried before the same court, was that of
United States v. Lawrence, 13 Blatchford 295. Lawrence was
extradited from Ireland and brought into this country under the
treaty of 1842 on a charge of a single and specific forgery. He was
indicted and put upon his trial for other forgeries than that
specified in the extradition proceedings. To his trial for any
other forgery than that he objected by proper pleadings on the
ground that, under the treaty with Great Britain, he could not be
so tried for other forgeries. Judge Benedict held that he could be
so tried, and he was tried, and a verdict of guilty was rendered.
It appears, however, but not very clearly from any report of the
case, that though tried and convicted, and having pleaded guilty to
the other offenses of forgery, he was admitted to bail, and no
judgment was ever pronounced. Judge Benedict, adverting to the case
of
United States v. Caldwell and to a decision of the
Court of Appeals of New York in
Adriance v. LaFave, 59
N.Y. 110, proceeded to say:
"This ground of defense is therefore dismissed with the remark
that an offender against the justice of his country can acquire no
rights by defrauding that justice. Between him and the justice he
has offended, no rights accrue to the offender by flight. He
remains at all times, and everywhere, liable to be called to answer
to the law for his violations thereof, provided he comes within the
reach of its arm."
And in addition to the proposition urged in the
Caldwell
Page 119 U. S. 426
case that a question of that character arising on the treaty is
exclusively for the consideration of the executive departments of
the respective governments, he proceeds to say.
"It is true that it [the act of Congress] assumes, as well it
may, that the offender will be tried for the offense upon which his
surrender is asked, but there are no words indicating that he is to
be protected from trial for all other offenses. The absence of any
provision indicating an intention to protect from prosecution for
other offenses, in a statute having no other object than the
protection of extradited offenders, is sufficient to deprive of all
force the suggestion that the act of 1869, as a legislative act,
gives to the treaty of 1842 the construction contended for by the
accused."
There are perhaps two or three other cases in which the circuit
or district judges of the United States have followed these
decisions rendered by Judge Benedict.
On the other hand, Judge Hoffman, of the District Court of
California, in the case of
United States v. Watts, 14 F.
130, decided that the defendant, having been surrendered under the
extradition treaty of 1842 by Great Britain, could not be tried for
other offenses than those enumerated in that treaty, and supported
this view with a very learned and able opinion. Judge Deady, of the
District Court of Oregon, in
Ex Parte Hibbs, 26 F. 421,
431, February 4, 1886, held, in regard to the treaty of 1842, that
for a government to detain a person extradited under that treaty
for any other charge than the one for which he had been
surrendered
"would be not only an infraction of the contract between the
parties to the treaty, but also a violation of the supreme law of
this land in a matter directly involving his personal rights. A
right of person or property, secured or recognized by treaty, may
be set up as a defense to a prosecution in disregard of either,
with the same force and effect as if such right was secured by an
act of Congress."
But perhaps the most important decisions on this question are to
be found in the highest courts of the states.
The case of
Adriance v. LaFave, 59 N.Y. 110, has been
cited as supporting the doctrine held by Judge Benedict, and
Page 119 U. S. 427
undoubtedly the language of the opinion delivered by Chief
Justice Church for the court in that case adopts the reasoning of
Judge Benedict's opinion. Considering the high character of that
court, it may be proper to make an observation or two on that case.
First. It seems that while LaFave was held for trial in this
country under extradition proceedings, by which he was removed from
France under the treaty of 1843 with that nation, being out on
bail, he was arrested under a writ in a civil suit for debt, which
issued from one of the courts of the State of New York. He made
application by a writ of habeas corpus to be released from this
arrest on the ground that he was protected from it by the terms of
the treaty under which he was surrendered, which, in that respect,
are similar to those of the treaty of 1842 with Great Britain. The
difference between serving process in a civil action brought by a
private party, whether arrest be an incident to that process or
not, and the indictment and prosecution of a person similarly
situated for a crime not mentioned in the treaty of extradition
under which the defendant was by force brought to this country is
too obvious to need comment. And while it is unnecessary to decide
now whether he could be so served with process in civil
proceedings, it does not follow that he would be equally liable to
arrest, trial, and conviction for a crime, and especially a crime
not enumerated in the extradition treaty, and committed before his
removal. Second. The case of
Adriance v. LaFave was
decided in the supreme court of the state by an order discharging
LaFave from arrest under the writ, and the writ was vacated. This
judgment was the unanimous opinion of the court, in which sat three
eminent judges of that state, to-wit, Daniels, Davis, and Brady. In
the Court of Appeals, this judgment was reversed by a divided
court, Judges Folger and Grover dissenting.
While this is believed to be the only decision in the highest
court of a state adopting that view of the law, there are three or
four cases decided by appellate courts of other states holding a
directly opposite doctrine.
The first of these is
Commonwealth v. Hawes, 13 Bush
697. Hawes was demanded from the Dominion of Canada under
Page 119 U. S. 428
the treaty of 1842 on four indictments charging him with as many
acts of forgery, and was delivered up on three of them. He was
brought to trial on two of these indictments in the courts of
Kentucky and acquitted, while the other two were dismissed on
motion of the attorney for the commonwealth. There were, however,
other indictments pending against him charging him with
embezzlement, and on one of these a motion was made to bring him to
trial. Upon this motion, the question was raised whether, under the
circumstances in regard to the extradition, he could be tried for
that offense. Judge Jackson, before whom the case was pending in
the Kenton County Criminal Court, decided that he was bound to take
judicial notice of the treaty of 1842 between the United States and
Great Britain, and that the defendant could not be tried for any
offense for which he was not extradited, although he was within the
power of the court, as the treaty was the supreme law of the land.
By the terms of that treaty, he held that Hawes could be tried for
no other offense, because that treaty provides only for extradition
in certain cases and under certain circumstances of proof, and that
the right of asylum is to be held sacred as to anything for which
the party was not and could not be extradited. He adds:
"I do not mean to say that he [Hawes] may not hereafter be
tried, but what I mean to say is that, in the face of the treaty
herein referred to, he is not to be tried until there is a
reasonable time given him to return to the asylum from which he was
taken."
The case was carried to the Court of Appeals of Kentucky, in
which the whole matter was fully discussed, the opinion of the
court, a very able one, being delivered by Chief Justice Lindsay,
in 1878. The substance of the opinion is thus stated in the
syllabus:
"1. Extradited criminals cannot be tried for offenses not named
in the treaty, or for offenses not named in the warrant of
extradition. A prisoner extradited from the Dominion of Canada
under Art. 10 of the treaty of 1842 between the United States and
Great Britain cannot be proceeded against or tried in this state
for any other offenses than those mentioned in
Page 119 U. S. 429
the treaty and for which he was extradited without first being
afforded an opportunity to return to Canada, and after being
acquitted on trials for the offenses for which he was extradited,
he cannot be lawfully held in custody to answer a charge for which
he could not be put on trial."
"3. The right of one government to demand and receive from
another the custody of an offender who has sought asylum upon its
soil depends upon the existence of treaty stipulations between
them, and in all cases is derived from, and is measured and
restricted by, the provisions, express or implied, of the
treaty."
In 1881, a case involving the same question came before the
Texas Court of Appeals,
Blandford v. State, 10 Tex.App.
627, in which the same principles were asserted as in that of
Hawes. The case seems to have been very well considered,
and the authorities up to that date were fully examined.
In 1883, the same question came before the Supreme Court of Ohio
in
State v. Vanderpool, 39 Ohio St. 273. Vanderpool and
Jones, having been delivered up under the treaty of 1842 by the
Dominion of Canada for offenses specified in that treaty, were
tried, convicted, and sentenced to the penitentiary for the crimes
for which they were extradited. They were afterwards indicted for
other offenses, to which they pleaded in abatement that by reason
of the facts already stated, they could not be tried for these
latter offenses until a reasonable time had elapsed after the
expiration of their sentences for the crimes of which they had been
convicted. The Supreme Court of Ohio, to which the case came on
appeal from the judgment of the court of common pleas, sustained
this view, and this was done upon the same general reasoning,
already stated, as to the construction to be placed upon the
Ashburton Treaty, of the obligations of that treaty as a law of the
land, and of the rights conferred upon the party who was arrested
and extradited under its provisions.
Upon a review of these decisions of the federal and state
courts, to which may be added the opinions of the distinguished
writers which we have cited in the earlier part of this
Page 119 U. S. 430
opinion, we feel authorized to state that the weight of
authority and of sound principle are in favor of the proposition
that a person who has been brought within the jurisdiction of the
court, by virtue of proceedings under an extradition treaty, can
only be tried for one of the offenses described in that treaty, and
for the offense with which he is charged in the proceedings for his
extradition, until a reasonable time and opportunity have been
given him, after his release or trial upon such charge, to return
to the country from whose asylum he had been forcibly taken under
those proceedings.
Two other observations remain to be made. One of these is that
the operation of this principle of the recognition of the rights of
prisoners under such circumstances by the courts before whom they
are brought for trial relieves the relations between the executive
department of the United States government and the courts of a
state before whom such case may be pending of a tension which has
more than once become very delicate and very troublesome. Of
course, the interference of the executive branch of the federal
government, when it may have been called upon by the nation which
has delivered up a person to be tried for an offense against the
laws of a state, with the proceedings of a state court in such
case, is likely to be resented by such court, and yet, if the only
mode of enforcing the obligations of the treaty is through the
action of the respective national governments, it would seem that
the government appealed to ought to have the right to see that the
treaty is faithfully observed and the rights of parties under it
protected. In Great Britain, the control of such matters would
undoubtedly be recognized by any court to be in the Crown, but in
this country such a proposition is, to say the least, not
unaccompanied by serious embarrassments. The principle we have here
laid down removes this difficulty, for under the doctrine that the
treaty is the supreme law of the land and is to be observed by all
the courts, state and national, "anything in the laws of the states
to the contrary notwithstanding," if the state court should fail to
give due effect to the rights of the party under the treaty, a
remedy is found in the judicial branch of the federal government
which has been
Page 119 U. S. 431
fully recognized. This remedy is by a writ of error from the
Supreme Court of the United States to the state court which may
have committed such an error. The case being thus removed into that
court, the just effect and operation of the treaty upon the rights
asserted by the prisoner would be there decided. If the party,
however, is under arrest and desires a more speedy remedy in order
to secure his release, a writ of habeas corpus from one of the
federal judges or federal courts, issued on the ground that he is
restrained of his liberty in violation of the Constitution or a law
or a treaty of the United States, will bring him before a federal
tribunal, where the truth of that allegation can be inquired into,
and, if well founded, he will be discharged.
Ex Parte
Royall, 117 U. S. 241,
117 U. S. 251.
State courts also could issue such a writ, and thus the judicial
remedy is complete when the jurisdiction of the court is admitted.
This is a complete answer to the proposition that the rights of
persons extradited under the treaty cannot be enforced by the
judicial branch of the government, and that they can only appeal to
the executive branches of the treaty governments for redress.
The other observation we have to make regards an argument
presented in this particular case -- namely that the prisoner was
convicted on the same testimony which was produced before the
magistrate who ordered his extradition. Although it is thus stated
in the brief, the record affords no sufficient evidence of it. What
is found on that subject in the fourth question certified to this
Court is as follows:
"Was it error on the part of the trial judge to refuse to direct
a verdict of acquittal after it had been proven that the accused
was extradited under the extradition treaty with Great Britain upon
the charge of murder, it also appearing that, in the proceedings
preliminary to the warrant of extradition, the same act was
investigated, and the same witnesses examined, as at the
trial?"
It might be a sufficient answer to this argument to say that
this does not prove that the evidence was the same upon the two
trials. Although the act charged may have been the same, and the
witnesses may have been the same, yet the evidence
Page 119 U. S. 432
elicited on the last trial may have been very different from
that obtained on the first. While the identity of facts
investigated in the two trials is charged a little more
specifically in the first question, we are of opinion that no
importance should be attached to this matter, even if it were found
that the party was convicted of inflicting cruel and unusual
punishment on the seaman on the same evidence precisely upon which
the committing magistrate in Great Britain delivered him up under a
charge of murder. It may be very true that evidence which satisfied
that officer that the prisoner was guilty of the crime of murder
would also establish that he had inflicted cruel and unusual
punishment on the person for whose murder he was charged; but, as
the treaty only justified his delivery on the ground that he was
proved to be guilty of murder before the committing magistrate, it
does not follow at all that such magistrate would have delivered
him on a charge, founded upon precisely the same evidence, of
inflicting cruel and unusual punishment -- an offense for which the
treaty made no provision and which was of a very unimportant
character when compared with that of murder. If the party could be
convicted on an indictment for inflicting cruel and unusual
punishment where the grand jury would not have found an indictment
for murder, the treaty could always be evaded by making a demand on
account of the higher offense defined in the treaty, and then only
seeking a trial and conviction for the minor offense not found in
the treaty. We do not think the circumstance that the same evidence
might be sufficient to convict for the minor offense which was
produced before the committing magistrate to support the graver
charge justifies this departure from the principles of the
treaty.
This fourth question may also properly be treated as immaterial,
for the question is, should the trial judge have directed a verdict
of acquittal? As all the matters set up by the defendant are in the
nature of pleas in abatement, going rather to the question of trial
on that indictment at that time, and not denying that at some
future time, when the defendant may have been properly brought
within the jurisdiction of the court, or rightfully found within
such jurisdiction, he may
Page 119 U. S. 433
be then tried, it did not involve an issue on the question of
guilty or not guilty, on which the court, if it proceeded to try
that question at all, could direct either an acquittal or a
conviction. Under the views we have taken of the case, the
jurisdiction of the court to try such an offense, if the party
himself was properly within its jurisdiction, is not denied, but
the facts relied upon go to show that while the court did have
jurisdiction to find the indictment as well as of the questions
involved in such indictment, it did not have jurisdiction of the
person at that time so as to subject him to trial. The question
therefore is immaterial.
The result of these considerations is that the first of the
questions certified to us is answered in the negative, the second
and third are answered in the affirmative, and it is ordered to be
so certified to the judges of the circuit court.
MR. JUSTICE GRAY, concurring.
I concur in the decision of the Court upon the single ground
that by the Act of Congress of March 3, 1869, c. 141, § 1 (embodied
in § 5275 of the Revised Statutes), providing measures by which any
person, delivered up by a foreign government for the purpose of
being tried here for a crime of which he has been accused, may be
secured against lawless violence
"until the final conclusion of his trial for the crimes or
offenses specified in the warrant of extradition, and until his
final discharge from custody or imprisonment for or on account of
such crimes or offenses, and for a reasonable time thereafter,"
the political department of the government has clearly
manifested its will, in the form of an express law (of which any
person prosecuted in any court within the United States has the
right to claim the protection), that the accused shall be tried
only for the crime specified in the warrant of extradition, and
shall be allowed a reasonable time to depart out of the United
States before he can be arrested or detained for another
offense.
Under the broader question whether, independently of any act of
Congress, and in the absence of any affirmative restriction in the
treaty, a man surrendered for one crime should
Page 119 U. S. 434
be tried for another, I express no opinion, because not
satisfied that that is a question of law within the cognizance of
the judicial tribunals, as contradistinguished from a question of
international comity and usage, within the domain of statesmanship
and diplomacy.
MR. CHIEF JUSTICE WAITE, dissenting*
I am unable to concur in the decision of this case. A fugitive
from justice has no absolute right of asylum in a country to which
he flees, and, if he can be got back within the jurisdiction of the
country whose laws he has violated, he may be proceeded with
precisely the same as if he had not fled, unless there is something
in the laws of the country where he is to be tried, or in the way
in which he was got back, to prevent. I do not understand this to
be denied. All therefore depends in this case on the treaty with
Great Britain under which this extradition was effected and § 5275
of the Revised Statutes. I concede that the treaty is as much a
part of the law of the United States as is a statute, and if there
is anything in it which forbids a trial for any other offense than
that for which the extradition was made, the accused may use it as
a defense to a prosecution on any other charge until a reasonable
time has elapsed after his release from custody on account of the
crime for which he was sent back. But I have been unable to find
any such provision. The treaty requires a delivery up to justice,
on demand, of those accused of certain crimes, but says nothing
about what shall be done with them after the delivery has been
made. It might have provided that they should not be tried for any
other offenses than those for which they were surrendered, but it
has not. Consequently, as it seems to me, the accused has acquired
no new rights under the treaty. He fled from the justice of the
country whose laws he violated, and has been got back. The treaty
under which he was surrendered has granted him no immunity, and
therefore it has not provided him with any new defense. This seems
to have been the view taken by the English government during the
time of the controversy growing out of the demand made
Page 119 U. S. 435
for the extradition of Winslow, for, in the debate in the House
of Lords, the Lord Chancellor (Cairns), while supporting the
English view of the matter and referring to the cases which had
been cited against it, said:
"In that class of cases . . . , the prisoners, who had been
surrendered on one charge and who were being tried upon another,
themselves attempted to raise the defense that they could not be
tried for an offense different from that for which they had been
surrendered. Such cases certainly have no application whatever to
the present question, because nothing can be more clear than that a
prisoner himself has no right to raise such a defense. Even in
France, where . . . the law and practice of extradition goes far
beyond that which prevails in this country and in the United
States, a prisoner is not permitted to set up such a defense, for
the clear reason that he is within the jurisdiction of the court
which has the authority to try him for the offense of which he is
charged, and that whether he ought to be tried for an offense other
than that for which he has been surrendered is a matter of
diplomacy between the two countries, and not of question between
the prisoner and the court before which he is being tried."
Foreign Relations of the United States, 1876, p. 291.
This is, I think, the true rule, and it is in full accord with
the principles applied by this Court in
The
Richmond, 9 Cranch 102, where it was insisted upon
by way of defense that a vessel proceeded against for a violation
of the nonintercourse act had been seized within the territorial
jurisdiction of Spain. As to this, Chief Justice Marshall said, in
delivering the opinion of the Court:
"The seizure of an American vessel within the territorial
jurisdiction of a foreign power is certainly an offense against
that power, which must be adjusted between the two governments.
This Court can take no cognizance of it, and the majority of the
Court is of opinion that the law does not connect that trespass, if
it be one, with the subsequent seizure by the civil authority,
under the process of the district court, so as to annul the
proceedings of that court against the vessel."
If either country should use its privileges under the treaty to
obtain a surrender of a fugitive on the
Page 119 U. S. 436
pretense of trying him for an offense for which extradition
could be claimed, so as to try him for one for which he could not,
it might furnish just cause of complaint on the part of the country
which had been deceived, but it would be a matter entirely for
adjustment between the two countries, and which could in no way
inure to the benefit of the accused, except through the
instrumentality of the government that had been induced to give him
up.
As to § 5275 of the Revised Statutes, I have only to say that in
my opinion, it neither adds to the rights of the accused nor
changes the effect of the treaty as a part of the law of the United
States. The accused was surrendered by Great Britain to the United
States, and the United States are alone responsible to that country
for whatever may be done with him in consequence of his surrender.
He was delivered into the possession of the United States, and, in
my opinion, that possession may at any time be regained by the
United States under this statute from the state, or its
authorities, so long as the accused remains in custody, if it
should be necessary in order to enable them to keep their faith
which Great Britain in respect to the surrender.
I do not care to elaborate the argument on either of these
questions. My only purpose is to state generally the grounds of my
dissent.