Judges: Condon, Frost, Paolino, Roberts
Filed Date: 2/15/1961
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 11/14/2024
This is a petition for a writ of habeas corpus brought by the petitioner to obtain his discharge from the allegedly unlawful custody of the respondent warden. The petitioner has been held in custody by the respondent pursuant to a sentence of thirty years imposed on June 10, 1955 by a justice of the superior court in the case of State v. George Marion Gavin, Indictment No. 25287.
In that indictment the defendant George Marion Gavin, hereinafter referred to as Gavin, was charged with the commission of the crime of murder. The indictment followed the apprehension of Gavin after the fatal shooting of Charles Kimatian in Providence on April 19, 1950 during ■the perpetration of a robbery. Along with other defendants Gavin went to trial under this indictment in October 1950 and was found guilty of murder in the first degree by
While Gavin was in custody pursuant to the life sentence so imposed, he filed in the superior court a petition for habeas corpus which was heard by a justice of that court on April 15, 1953. Thereafter, on October 9, 1953, the said justice granted the petition for the writ and entered an order which in substance directed that Gavin be discharged from further custody pursuant to the sentence imposed by reason of his conviction for murder in the first degree.
Gavin was not discharged from actual custody, however, being further detained by reason of the pendency of other charges against him which arose out of the same criminal action. Gavin does not dispute the legality of this detention. It appears that thereafter counsel for Gavin and the attorney general engaged in a series of conferences concerning the disposition to be made of the various charges pending against Gavin. The record does not disclose the nature of the conclusions or agreements reached at these conferences, but it does appear that on June 3, 1955 a justice of the superior court granted a motion “to vacate the record of conviction of murder in the 1st degree,” ordered the cause reinstated for trial, and permitted Gavin to file certain special pleas.
Thereafter, on June 10, 1955, Gavin appeared before the superior court and pleaded nolo contendere to a charge of murder in the second degree and was given the sentence pursuant to which he is now held in the custody of the respondent warden. The docket entry concerning this proceeding is as follows: “1955, June 10, Jalbert, J. Murder, nol prossed as to deft. Gavin. Deft. Gavin arraigned on charge of Murder in 2nd Degree, pleads nolo contendere and sentence [sic] to Mens Reformatory for 30 years and committed.”
The ground upon which Gavin relies primarily for the issuance of the writ here is that having been discharged pursu
The generally accepted rule is that a discharge from custody upon a writ of habeas corpus precludes any further detention or imprisonment under the same process or in the same proceeding but that such a discharge does not bar a subsequent prosecution with consequent arrest and detention in a new proceeding or under new process. In many jurisdictions this rule has been given legislative sanction by statutory enactment. The rule has been aptly stated in State ex rel. Cacciatore v. Drumbright, 116 Fla. 496, as follows: “* * * the general rule in most jurisdictions is that an order or judgment discharging a person in such proceedings is conclusive in his favor that he is illegally held in custody and is res judicata of all issues of law and fact necessarily involved in that result, and he cannot be again arrested for the same cause; that is, upon the same warrant, indictment or information which was therein held illegal. While it usually terminates the pending proceeding against the petitioner, it does not necessarily prevent the institution of a subsequent prosecution against him under proceedings which are legal and sufficient and which remove the illegalities, or supply the defects, on account of which the order of discharge was granted.”
Similar judicial declarations that a discharge from custody by a writ of habeas corpus in effect vitiates the process pursuant to which the questioned detention was effected
This court, when confronted with a question in In re Deslovers, 35 R. I. 256, which involved the effect of a discharge from custody on a writ of habeas corpus, appears to have held that one who had been in custody under an indictment charging him with the crime of murder and who' pursuant to a writ of habeas corpus was discharged from that custody may not again ibe deprived of his liberty under that indictment. It does not appear from an examination of the opinion, however, that in reaching this conclusion the court considered the statutory provisions now invoked by Gavin which were then in effect in G. L. 1909, chap. 305, sec. 28.
Deslovers had been indicted for murder on September 16, 1912 and thereafter on his petition for habeas corpus was discharged from custody on the ground that, having been held without being bailed or tried within six months after the indictment, his statutory rights had been violated and he was entitled to a discharge from custody on the writ. See G. L. 1956, §12-13-7. After the opinion was filed in In re Deslovers, 35 R. I. 248, the state moved for permission to reargue certain issues. We have examined the mem-' orandum of law filed by the state in support of that motion and conclude therefrom that, among other things, the. state was contending that, conceding a violation of this particular statutory right of the prisoner, he was being lawfully detained pursuant to a valid indictment and therefore:
The court, however, was of the opinion that the detention of Deslovers became illegal when he was held in violation of the statute and that he thereupon became entitled to foe discharged not from responsibility for the crime, if any, but from detention under the process pursuant to which the detention had been effected. In the Deslovers case, 35 R. I. 256, at page 258, the court said: “We do not mean ¡by 'discharge’ that the prisoner is to be released from the consequences of the crime of which he is accused, but simply that he cannot be further detained in prison and deprived of his liberty under the present indictment.” The court went on to say by way of dicta: “We may be warranted in adding that it does not now appear to us that the prisoner could be tried under the present indictment or even be required to give his personal recognizance as a precedent condition to his liberty.” We consider the language employed by the court to be significant of its intention to subscribe to the rule stated in State ex rel. Cacciatore v. Drumbright, supra. We reiterate that the court in reaching this conclusion did so without reference to the statute invoked by Gavin in the instant case.
After the state’s motion for permission to reargue was denied, the original indictment was nol-prossed and a new indictment was returned charging Deslovers with the same offense. Under this indictment he was tried and convicted. Deslovers then prosecuted a bill of exceptions to this court wherein he raised the question, inter alia, whether his discharge on a habeas corpus from his prior imprisonment pursuant to the original indictment “forever barred the State from further imprisoning or prosecuting him on account of the crime for which he was in said first indictment charged.” State v. Deslovers, 40 R. I. 89, 94.
The court held that further prosecution of Deslovers for the crime with which he had been charged was not barred by his prior discharge on a habeas corpus, saying at page 97
Then the court for the first time referred to the statute upon which Gavin relies in the instant petition. At page 97 the court said: “We are further strengthened in our view, that a discharge from imprisonment under a writ of habeas corpus does not amount to an acquittal of the crime charged in the indictment, by Section 28 of Chapter 305, which expressly provides that 'No person who has been discharged upon a writ of habeas corpus shall be again imprisoned or restrained for the same cause, unless he shall be indicted therefor * * *.’ ” This is now G. L. 1956, §10-9-29. The court said that these provisions indicate a legislative intent contrary to the argument that a discharge under a habeas corpus bars any further prosecution for the same offense, in other words, that the statute authorizes the reindictment of such a defendant.
We have discussed the Deslovers cases at some length because we consider them to be persuasive that this court recognized the principle of law upon which is based the rule expressed in State ex rel. Cacciatore v. Drumbright, supra. It is our opinion that those cases evidence this court’s acceptance of the rule that a discharge by habeas corpus vitiates the process pursuant to which the detention was effected but that such discharge is not res judicata of the issue of the defendant’s guilt of the offense with which he was charged.
When we view the statutory provisions invoked by Gavin in the instant case in the light of the decisions herein referred to, including the Deslovers cases, we are persuaded
The issue before us for decision, however, is whether the imprisonment of Gavin pursuant to a sentence imposed under the original indictment after a plea of nolo contendere to the charge of murder in the second degree is lawful, said Gavin having, been discharged from a prior detention under that indictment on a writ of habeas corpus. Because of the view which we have taken of the effect of such a discharge on the process involved, we are constrained to hold that the detention is unlawful.
The petition is granted, and the respondent is therefore ■directed to discharge the petitioner forthwith from that custody in which he is held pursuant to a sentence of thirty ■years imposed by the superior court on June 10, 1955 after a plea of nolo contendere to. a charge of murder in the second degree.