Citation Numbers: 254 S.W. 1087, 300 Mo. 661, 1923 Mo. LEXIS 276
Judges: Blair, David, Graves, Grayes, James, Ragland, Walker, Woodson
Filed Date: 10/6/1923
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 10/19/2024
The writ of habeas corpus is here invoked to effect the release of the petitioner from the penitentiary, where he is imprisoned under a two years' sentence rendered by the Circuit Court of Pettis County, following his plea of guilty to a felony, with the commission of which he was formally charged and arraigned in that court.
The return filed herein of the Warden of the Penitentiary, omitting the caption and his official signature, is as follows:
"For return to the writ of habeas corpus J.S. Crawford, Warden of the Missouri State Penitentiary, states that he has the said James Thornberry in his custody by virtue of and under a certified copy of a sentence and judgment of the Circuit Court of Pettis County, Missouri, a copy of which is hereto annexed.
"And the said J.S. Crawford further states that the petitioner having waived the production of his body before this Honorable Court on the hearing of the application for a writ of habeascorpus, or at any other time that he would be entitled to be present in the course of this proceeding, which waiver is now on file with the papers in this case, for this reason does not produce the body of the petitioner."
Attached thereto is the following:
"Now, at this day comes the prosecuting attorney for the State, and also comes the defendant herein, in *Page 665 person, in custody of the sheriff of this county, and in the presence of his attorney and counsel in open court, whereupon said defendant is informed by the court that he has heretofore been sentenced to the Penitentiary of the State of Missouri for a period of two years, at which time a stay of execution was granted until six o'clock in the afternoon of the day on which sentence of the court was passed, conditioned that if he was found in Pettis County after that time he was to be arrested and committed to the penitentiary as per sentence heretofore passed.
"It is therefore ordered by the court that the defendant, James Thornberry, having been found and arrested in said County of Pettis since the stay of execution has expired, be committed accordingly, and that the sheriff of this county shall, without delay, remove and safely convey the said defendant to the said penitentiary, there to be kept, confined and treated in the manner directed by law, and the warden of said penitentiary is required to receive and safely keep him, the said defendant, in the penitentiary aforesaid until the judgment and sentence of the court herein be complied with, or until the said defendant shall otherwise be discharged by due course of law. It is further considered, ordered and adjudged by the court, that the State have and recover of said defendant the costs in this suit expended, and that execution issue therefor."
The certificate of clerk that the foregoing is a true copy is omitted.
I. The State, in opposing the granting of this writ, urges that the stay granted was in the nature of a parole and the petitioner having violated the same is not entitled to be discharged. The modification made by the judge of the circuit court of the otherwise formal judgment of conviction bears noParole. resemblance to a parole. This form of clemency authorized by our law (Secs. 4157-4167, R.S. 1919) possesses certain *Page 666 distinctive features which constitute necessary conditions to the legal operation of the statute. The utter absence from the record of all of these conditions renders a specific reference to them unnecessary. [Ex parte Cornwall, 223 Mo. l.c. 270.] It will be enough to say, therefore, that the construction of this judgment as embodying a parole is not tenable and cannot be sustained.
II. The condition of this record is such that the authorized consideration of the matter at issue might be limited to a somewhat narrow compass but for the construction placed by the petitioner upon the cases cited in support of the issuance of the writ. While a return to a writ of habeas corpus isAdmissions not of itself conclusive under our practice, as itof Return. was at common law and under the Habeas Corpus Act (31 Car., II C 2), where, as here, the facts pleaded in the return are not denied, they are to be taken as the ultimate facts in the case. [In re Tartar, 278 Mo. l.c. 365; In re Breck, 252 Mo. l.c. 319; Ex parte Durbin, 102 Mo. l.c. 104; Ex parte Bryan,
III. First let us consider the formal sufficiency of the return. Here, as in many other jurisdictions, the requisites of a return have been prescribed by statute (Sec. 1891, R.S. 1919). They are in short that the person upon whom the writ has been served shall state if he has the petitioner inCommitment his custody and if so the authority for suchon Re-Sentence. restraint; *Page 667 if detained by virtue of any writ, warrant or other written authority, a copy thereto shall be annexed to the return.
The warden of the penitentiary, as disclosed by his return, states that he has the petitioner in his custody by virtue of and under a certified copy of a sentence and judgment of the Circuit Court of Pettis County and attaches thereto a copy of the latter. This copy embodies all of the essentials of a formal judgment upon a conviction for a felony. [Sec. 4059, R.S. 1919.] Aside from the admission of its correctness in the failure of the petitioner to deny the same, its verity is further attested by the general presumption of legality which always attends the records of a judicial proceeding. As a further manifest of the conformity of this sentence with the facts upon which the original judgment was rendered, it is shown that the petitioner was present when it was rendered and neither then raised or now raises any objection to its correctness. However, it is apparent from the instrument itself that it is a rescript or a repetition of a judgment heretofore entered against the petitioner which remains unsatisfied and upon which he is re-sentenced. While this is not urged as a ground for his discharge its presence on the face of the return renders its consideration pertinent in determining the legality of the petitioner's restraint. It may be admitted that it would have been more nearly in conformity with the literal requirements of the statute (Section 4059, supra) if the commitment had been based upon the original judgment; but, in what respect has the petitioner suffered injury by reason of his formal re-sentence and commitment thereunder? A judgment was outstanding against him, which without any pretense remains unsatisfied. His arrest by the officer was authorized upon this unsatisfied judgment, and if the officer did not have a copy of same he could have obtained it from the clerk of the circuit court (Sec. 4060, R.S. 1919). The proceeding therefore of haling the petitioner into court to be *Page 668
re-sentenced and of committing him upon such re-sentence, while irregular and unnecessary in view of the fact that this latter sentence conforms in all its material features to the original, is not of sufficient magnitude to warrant the petitioner's discharge. If it was deemed necessary this court might order the clerk of the circuit court to transmit to the warden a copy of the original sentence and judgment and require the latter to make a return based thereon. Fully appraised as we are of all of the facts as disclosed by the return, we do not deem the course indicated necessary, either in protection of the rights of the petitioner or in furtherance of a wholesome administration of the criminal law. We are not inclined therefore to grant this discharge on the ground that the instrument appended to the return, although embodying all of the material features of the original judgment, is not a literal copy of same. It is the essentials of the judgment and not its mere letter that are required by the statute (Sec. 1891, R.S. 1919) to accompany the return. This conclusion finds ample support in the cases cited and discussed by GRAVES, J., in Ex parte Hagan,
IV. The further condition to which we refer appears in the judgment of conviction as shown by the return and which it is contended by the petitioner invalidates his imprisonment. Following the usual judgment in cases of this character there was incorporated therein by the court the provision thatStay of a stay of execution was granted until six o'clock ofExecution. the afternoon of the day on which the sentence was *Page 669
rendered and if the defendant was found in Pettis County thereafter he was to be arrested and committed to the penitentiary as per the sentence theretofore passed. Having been found thereafter in said county he was arrested, re-sentenced and is now undergoing imprisonment in satisfaction of the original judgment. The condition imposed, while wholly unauthorized and more properly characterized as an edict of banishment rather than a stay of execution, did not vitiate the authorized portions of the judgment. [In re Frederick Knaup,
The effect of the condition incorporated by the court in the judgment was to indefinitely stay its execution. No such power is conferred on the courts. We so held in Ex parte Cornwall,
In People v. Boehm, 176 A.D. (N.Y.) 401,
In People ex rel. v. Seeger,
In People v. Shattuck,
In Cook v. Jenkins,
In a late Indiana case, Hunt v. State,
Where an unauthorized stay of execution has been made it is immaterial so far as the rights of the State are concerned whether the defendant has consented thereto or not. The conduct of the petitioner in the instant case is such as to authorize the presumption, however, that he consented to the attempted stay. This presumption may properly be indulged where the court's action, although a nullity, embraced no act prejudicial to the petitioner. [St. Hilaire, Pet.,
Numerous cases sustaining the rule as above announced are cited and discussed in 16 C.J. p. 1333, sec. 3139, and notes.
The reason for the rule is found in the nature of our systems of government, national and state. The power to grant reprieves and pardons and that to sentence for crime being distinct and different in their origin and nature, their exercise has been kept separate and distinct, the one having been confided to the executive and the other to the judicial department. The recognition *Page 672 of the power of a court to suspend a sentence indefinitely or to stay its execution would be to allow the judicial department to usurp the power and exercise one of the functions of the executive department. This is upon the well grounded theory that a court's power in the administration of the criminal law, is limited, upon the conviction of the accused, to the imposition of the sentence authorized to be imposed. [8 R.C.L. p. 248, sec. 252 et seq., and cases.]
V. The suspension being void, to what extent does this affect the remainder of the judgment?
We have adverted to the authorized portions of the judgment and have cited the Knaup and Bockstruck cases, supra, as sustaining the conclusion as to their validity. These cases it is true involved convictions for misdemeanors but the rule there announced as to the validity of certain parts of the judgments and the invalidity of others is general in itsRemainder of application, applying as well to one class of casesJudgment. as to another. The presence of certain well recognized requisites is necessary to the validity of a judgment, viz.: jurisdiction as to subject-matter and persons and an adjudication limited to the issues. Within this appointed sphere a court may act in the rendition of a judgment and if its action, by its terms, is separable from unauthorized acts, the invalidity of the latter will not affect the former. Applying this test to the case at bar we find the presence of all of the requisites to a judgment of conviction for a felony. The portion incorporated therein in which it was attempted to suspend the execution, being separable from the authorized judgment and an empty nullity, will not affect the validity of the latter.
VI. The rule announced in the Cornwall Case,
An altogether different state of facts characterizes the case at bar. The judgment therein was valid. The re-sentence was upon this judgment, and it is conceded and the record shows that it simply reiterates the findings of the former. It is difficult therefore to determine upon what theory the Cornwall Case can be said to support the petitioner's contention in the case at bar.
VII. The illustrations employed in the opinion in the Cornwall Case as auxiliary reasons for the court's ruling are, to say the least, not happily chosen and the cases cited are not apposite. It is said in effect in the opinion (p. 272) that the part performance of an erroneous judgment will not authorize the court, at a subsequent term, to revise it andChanges in substitute therefor a new judgment. This fact is notSentence. to be gainsaid, but it is not the compliance with conditions in the judgment or their noncompliance by the prisoner that limits or controls the court's action, but a lack of jurisdiction which, having been exhausted by the entry of a final judgment, cannot be renewed for any purpose which will modify or change the original sentence. The rule, with a limitation, is so stated in 12 Cyc. Law Proc. 784, and is cited in the Cornwall Case. The limitation is to this effect that: "Changes in the sentence which do not alter the punishment but only changed the time or place of its infliction may be made at a subsequent term." The rule as thus limited has been approved by the Supreme Courts of North Carolina and Wyoming. [State v. Cardwell,
Nor do the facts in Ex parte Lange, 18 Wall. 163, authorize its citation in support of the ruling in the Cornwall Case. In the Lange Case the offense with which the prisoner was charged, the unlawful appropriation of mail bags, was punishable by a fine or imprisonment. Upon a trial in a U.S. District Court and a verdict of guilty, the defendant was sentenced to one year's imprisonment and to pay a fine of $200. He paid the fine and was committed to jail in execution of the sentence of imprisonment. The day succeeding his sentence and at the same term he was brought before the trial court on a writ of habeas corpus and an order was entered vacating the former judgment and sentencing him to one year's imprisonment from that date in the county jail. Upon his application for a second writ of habeas corpus in the trial court, two district judges sat with the trial judge at the hearing and the prisoner was remanded. A petition for a writ ofhabeas corpus was then filed in the United States Supreme Court, which upon a hearing held in effect that the judgment of conviction, while erroneous, was not void; that it was rendered by a court which had jurisdiction of the person and the offense and upon a valid verdict of guilty. The error of the trial court in imposing two punishments when it only had the alternative of one did not render the judgment wholly void. When a prisoner, as in this case, by reason of a valid judgment has fully suffered one of the alternative punishments to which the law alone subjected him, the power of the court to punish further is exhausted, and he cannot again be punished for that offense. The record of the court's proceedings at the moment when the second sentence was rendered showed that in that very case for that very offense the prisoner had fully performed, completed and endured one of the alternative punishments which the law prescribed for that offense, and had suffered five days' imprisonment on account of the other. It (the record) thus showed the *Page 676 court that its power to punish for that offense was at an end. Justice MILLER in summing up the court's conclusion in this case says: "Unless the whole doctrine of our system of jurisprudence, both of the Constitution and the common law, for the protection of personal rights in that regard, are a nullity, the authority of the court to punish the prisoner was gone. The power was exhausted; its further exercise was prohibited. It was error, but it was error because the power to render any further judgment did not exist. It is no answer to this to say that the court had jurisdiction of the person of the prisoner, and of the offense under the statute. It by no means follows that these two facts make valid, however erroneous it may be, any judgment the court may render in such case."
The following rule may with propriety be deduced from the court's reasoning in the Lange Case: where a court has full jurisdiction to render one kind of a judgment operative upon a particular person or subject and it renders one it has a right to render and something more, the excessive exercise of power is simply void. The distinctive difference between the Lange and the Cornwall Case is apparent. In the former it was attempted by indirection to punish the prisoner twice for the same offense; in the latter, to correct an invalid sentence of imprisonment which should have, under the statute, been limited to a fine. A discussion of the character of the former judgment in each of these cases is unnecessary, except to demonstrate the validity of the one, and the invalidity of the other, and this only for the purpose of demonstrating the court's lack of power to render the sentence under which the prisoner in each case was held. With the showing therefore as to the court's lack of jurisdiction in the judgments under consideration, their similarity ends; and the citation of the ruling of one to sustain the conclusion reached in the other is not, under the facts in each, a matter readily to be determined. But it is contended that the similitude of these cases consists *Page 677 in the fact that in each an erroneous sentence which had been partly executed did not authorize the court to revise the judgment entered and impose a new sentence, even at the same term. This general statement, the correctness of which when properly applied we do not question, when attempted to be applied to the case at bar should be read in the light of the facts in each of the cases cited. In the Lange Case the compliance referred to was as to the valid portion of the judgment. In the Cornwall Case to the attempted correction of an invalid judgment. The valid portion of the judgment in the Lange Case being separable, as the United States Court must have held, from the invalid portion, a compliance with the former could confer no power upon the court in regard to the latter. The re-sentence in the Cornwall Case, as we have shown, being wholly void, a compliance with all or any part of same did not authorize the court to enter the same after its entire power had been exhausted. The power of the courts therefore in these cases being forspent there was nothing left to be revised, modified or restored and Ex nihilo nihil fit finds appropriate application.
A different state of facts confronts us in the instant case. The validity of the judgment is conceded. It has not been satisfied. Its correctness as set forth in the return is not open to question. There has been no effort to in any wise change it. The re-sentence which it is contended constitutes another and a subsequent judgment is but a literal rescript of the original; and cannot be seriously urged as a ground for the prisoner's discharge. Whatever view may be taken of the effect of a part compliance with a judgment in a criminal case at variance with our conclusion herein, it can have no application here. The condition as to the punishment by imprisonment was a nullity, and there was no legal obligation thereby imposed on the prisoner to comply with the unauthorized condition incorporated therein. If he did so it could not affect the right of the State to inflict upon him the authorized portion of the judgment. *Page 678
That the State has broken faith with the prisoner in permitting him to escape punishment on compliance with the condition will not stand the test of analysis. Broken faith implies the pre-existence of an obligation. An obligation cannot be created by an unauthorized judicial act.
In view of all of which the prisoner should be remanded and it is so ordered. Woodson, C.J., and Ragland and David E.Blair, JJ., concur; James T. Blair, J., concurs in the result;White, J., not sitting; Graves, J., stands on his opinion now on file.
In Re Hagan , 295 Mo. 435 ( 1922 )
Ex Parte Lange , 21 L. Ed. 872 ( 1874 )
State v. . Cardwell , 95 N.C. 643 ( 1886 )
Ex Parte Gugenhine v. Gerk. , 326 Mo. 333 ( 1930 )
State v. Smith , 221 Mo. App. 146 ( 1927 )
State Ex Rel. Attorney-General v. Skinker , 324 Mo. 955 ( 1930 )
Ex Parte Sheehan , 100 Mont. 244 ( 1935 )
Opinion No. 207-80 (1980) ( 1980 )
State Ex Rel. Browning v. Kelly , 309 Mo. 465 ( 1925 )
Serra v. Cameron , 133 Colo. 115 ( 1956 )
State v. Cain , 2009 Mo. App. LEXIS 680 ( 2009 )
Wakefield v. Thorp , 283 S.W.2d 467 ( 1955 )
State v. Mabry , 96 N.M. 317 ( 1981 )
State v. Higgins , 1979 Mo. LEXIS 343 ( 1979 )
Ockel v. Riley , 1976 Mo. LEXIS 335 ( 1976 )
State v. Brinkley , 354 Mo. 1051 ( 1946 )
State Ex Rel. Stewart v. Blair , 356 Mo. 790 ( 1947 )
Ex Parte Lime v. Blagg , 345 Mo. 1 ( 1939 )
State Ex Rel. Chase v. Calvird , 324 Mo. 429 ( 1930 )