DocketNumber: No. 11540
Citation Numbers: 183 Ga. 207
Judges: Gilbert
Filed Date: 10/14/1936
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 10/19/2024
St. Clair Johnson was convicted of the offense of burglary, in the circuit court of Jefferson County in the State of Alabama, in March, 1931. Before completing his term in the penitentiary in that State he was paroled. Before the term of his parole expired he was arrested by the State officers in Alabama for the United States District Court for the Northern District of Alabama, and was later turned over to the United States marshal of that court, was indicted, and pleaded guilty in that
“One accused of crime has a right to a full and fair trial according to the law of the government whose sovereignty he is alleged to have offended, but he has no more than that. He should not be permitted to use the machinery of one sovereignty to obstruct his trial in the courts of the other, unless the necessary operation of such machinery prevents his having a fair trial. He may not complain if one sovereignty waives its strict right to exclusive custody of him for vindication of its laws in order that the other may also subject him to conviction of crime against it. In re Andrews, 236 Fed. 300; United States v. Marrin, 227 Fed. 314. Such a waiver is a matter that addresses itself solely to the discretion of the sovereignty making it and of its representatives with power to grant it. . . There is no express authority authorizing the transfer of a Federal prisoner to a State court for such purposes. Yet we have no doubt that it exists and is to be exercised with the consent of the attorney-general. In that officer the power and discretion to practice the comity in such matters between the Federal and State courts is vested. . . “"The penitentiary is not a place of sanctuary; and an incarcerated convict ought not to enjoy an immunity from trial merely because he is undergoing punishment on some earlier judgment of guilt.’” Ponzi v. Fessenden, 258 U. S. 254, 260, 261, 264 (42 Sup. Ct. 309, 66 L. ed. 607). The State of Alabama had the sovereign power to waive or pardon the
Judgment affirmed.