Judges: Fancher
Filed Date: 10/15/1873
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 10/18/2024
It will be proper to dispose of some preliminary questions before considering the merits of this matter.
1. During the proceedings it was objected by the district attorney of Kings county, that the writ of habeas corpus was improvidently issued by a justice of the supreme court when the court was in session. The statute under which the objection is made is itself an answer to the objection. It provides that application for the writ shall be made by petition, (1) to the supreme court during its sitting, or (2) during any term or vacation of the supreme court, to any one of the justices of the supreme court, or any officer who may be authorized to perform the duties of a justice of the supreme court at chambers, &c„ The common practice in this district is to apply for the writ to the justice of the court, sitting at chambers, and the writs are uniformly granted on such application. It has never been doubted that such jurisdiction is conferred by the statute on a justice of the court, though a term of the court may at the time be held (Exp. Beatty, 12 Wend., 229 ; People ex rel. Trainer v. Cooper, 8 How. Pr., 288; People ex rel. Bentley v. Hanna, 3 Id., 39).
2. It is objected that the writ should have been made returnable in the oyer and terminer while it was
3. It is further objected that the writ should have been returnable before some court or officer in Kings county. The objection is founded on section 38, formerly section 24, of the habeas corpus act (2 Rev. Stat., 564, § 24; same stat., 3 Id., 5 ed. 884, § 38.) It provides that whenever application for the writ be made to “ any officer,” not residing within the county where the prisoner shall be detained, he shall require proof that there is no officer in such county authorized to grant the writ. There are two answers to this objection. (1.) The petition on which the writ of habeas corpus issued, expressly averred that the petitioner was then “confined and restrained of his liberty by the sheriff of Kings county, in the court-house of the city and county of New York.” (2.) If it be conceded that the imprisonment was constructively in Kings county, it has been held both at special and general term of the supreme court, that the section referred to does not apply to a justice of the supreme court: and that a justice of that court can, even when sitting at chambers, award a writ of habeas corpus that shall run to any part of the State, although there is an officer in the county where the imprisonment exists who could issue the writ (People ex rel. Bentley v. Hanna, 3 How. Pr., 39 ; People ex rel. Trainer v. Cooper, 8 Id., 288 ; People v. Folmsbee, 60 Barb., 480-487).
4. Another point is made on § 5 of the habeas corpus act (2 R. S., 560, § 5, same stat., 3 Id., 5 ed., 877). It provides that whenever any person shall be committed on
Another question is raised on section 43 of the habeas corpus act (2 Rev. Stat., 568, § 43 ; same statute, 3 Rev. Stat., 5 ed., 838, §58.) It provides that if it appear that the party has been legally committed for any criminal offense, if he appear to be guilty of the offense, although
There is no difference in principle between the case supposed and the case under consideration. A commitment for an indefinite time is not authorized by law, and the court has no jurisdiction to make it. In People v. Hicks, 15 Barb., 153, it was held by the general term of this district that a commitment for contempt could not be discharged, if it appeared that the court or officer committing had power to require the act to be done, and authority to enforce the decision. It comes back to the question of power. There are cases' where, on habeas corpus, the inquiry into the practice: or legality of the order or judgment directing imprisonment cannot be made. Thus, where the legality of the. order can be tested on an appeal, there an appeal must be the remedy But the decisions which affect such
It was also held by the court of appeals in the Hackley case (24 N. Y., 74; affirming 12 Abb. Pr., 150), that the rule referred to, respecting the inability of the court on habeas corpus to examine the cause of commitment, has its qualification ; and that the court or officer on habeas corpus may inquire “whether the conduct charged as constituting the contempt” was such that delinquency or misbehavior can be predicated of it. The doctrine of the court of appeals in that case is to the effect that an adjudication of the court in which the alleged contempt occurred cannot establish as a contempt that which the law entitles á party to do. It is equally clear, on principle, that an adjudication of the court in which an alleged contempt has occurred cannot prescribe an unlawful punishment for the contempt. It is not intended to deny that the court of oyer and terminer in Kings county had authority to inquire into the alleged contempt. The commitment cannot be impeached for that cause. On habeas corpus the court is deprived by statute of any power “to inquire into the justice or propriety of any commitment for any contempt made by any court, officer or body, according to law, and charged in such commitment” (2 Rev. Stat., 568, § 42 ; same statute, 3 Id., 5 ed., 888, § 57). The essential qualification of a valid commitment for contempt is that it be “according to law.” The justice or propriety of the commitment cannot be inquired into if it be “ according to law.” There is meaning in those words of the statute.' This will appear on perusal of the entire section with the correlative sections of the habeas corpus act. The former part of section 57 [42] provides that no court or officer on habeas corpus shall have power to inquire into the legality or justice of any process, judgment, decree or execution specified in the preceding section 22. Turn
Appeals are the proper remedy for illegal judgments, and therefore they may not be inquired into on habeas corpus. The language of the statute is different when a commitment for a contempt is mentioned. There the only limitation is against an inquiry into the justice or propriety of any commitment for a contempt made “according to law.” If the commitment be not according to law, its “legality” may and should be inquired into.
The office of the writ of habeas corpus is to vindicate the right of personal liberty. It is a high prerogative writ, and whenever demanded on a proper petition must be issued, under severe penalty for refusal, imposed on the officer to whom the application is made. It lies in all cases of imprisonment, commitment, detention, confinement, or restraint, for whatever cause or under whatever pretense, except in the few specified instances where the statute forbids its use (2 Rev. Stat., 563, § 22 ; same statute, 3 Id., 5 ed., 883, § 36). The duty in all cases is to grant release where the imprisonment, detention or restraint is illegal. As was said by the court in Watson’s Case (5 Lans., 466 ; affirming 3 Id., 408): “If the magistrate who issues the process to imprison had not the right to issue such process, the imprisonment is illegal.” The same remark is applicable to a court. There is a wide differ-\ ence between an informal commitment and an illegal Í commitment. The former, if it be one which a court, could make for a contempt, plainly charged, is suffi- |
The result of these remarks is that the petitioner must be discharged.