Court Opinion

ID: 6571837
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-07-20 19:30:16.070969+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T15:56:56.083563
License: Public Domain

The opinion of the court was delivered by
Collamer, J.
Were this a question of mere recapture on fresh suit, it would be of simple solution. As the duty of protection on the part of the government is the correlative of allegiance on the part of the citizen, it becomes a grave question, whether this duty can be performed by the court of justice and other functionaries of our government, if our citizens are at the same time subject to the authority of the officers of another government, over whom we have no control, and who owe to us no official responsibility. It is obvious that all those authorities which go to settle that recapture on fresh suit may be made in another county of the same nation, tend little to settle this question.^ The case in Connecticut as reported in Root, lends no assistance ; as in that case the warrant was sanctioned and endorsed by the authority of the state in which it was ultimately executed. It is however urged that by the case* (Nichols vs. Ingersoll, 7 John. R. 155,) it is decided that bail have a right to arrest the principal in another state. From this it is concluded that an officer may do the same. In relation to that case it is to be observed, that it is understood not to be recognized as law in New York, as some of our citizens have had sad occasion to know. It may be true, though not'yet so decided, that inasmuch as ■the bail is the keeper of the principal at his own request, and is said to hold him as by a string, and may generally circumscribe or enlarge his wanderings, and may arrest even after a voluntary enlargement, he might by virtue of this power and right existing by contract •and ^licence between the parties, even arrest in another state. The condition of an officer is entirely different. His power is derived wholly from his official character and his precept, and must on principle cease where his official character and precept cease to have validity and jurisdiction. The same may be said of the analogy mistakenly attempted to be drawn from a right acquired to property, by contract or the laws of the country in which it is situate, remaining good elsewhere.
Every government owes protection to its citizens and sojourners, who cannot be forcibly taken out of its jurisdiction without the consent of the constituted authorities. For this purpose each state is a sovereign government and so important and absolute was ■this considered that in the 2d sec. of the 4th art, of the United *196®taÉes constitution provision is made that felons and fugatives from, justice are to be surrendered ; but even this is to be done only on application to the executive. If our citizens are subject to be taken by the officers of a neighboring state they are equally subject to be taken and transported , to Louisiana or Missouri. Except in those delegations of power invested in the general government and those restrictions provided in the United States constitution, each state is a national sovereignty and holds the same relation to the other states which it holds to other nations. As the United States constitution contains no provision on this subject, our citizens are as much subject to the authority and pretended recapture by the officers of England or France as of New York. This suggests consequences entirely at war with all civil liberty, protection and national independence. We are entirely unprepared to adopt so dangerous and fearful .a principle and practice as that for which the defendant here contends.

Dexter for plaintiff.

Harman for defendant.

Judgment affirmed.