Citation Numbers: 27 Tex. 731
Judges: Reeves
Filed Date: 7/1/1865
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 10/19/2024
This was a proceeding before the District Court of Trinity county. The petition charges that the relator, who was in the military service of the Confederate States, had furnished a substitute, fifty-one years old, who was accepted. That after his. discharge he was held in the service and thereby illegally restrained of his liberty. The record recites that the court refused to grant the writ on the ground that the petition did not disclose any fact sufficient to entitle the applicant to the writ. A motion for a new trial having been overruled, the relator prosecutes this appeal.
By the Code of Criminal Procedure, Art. 122, “ the Supreme Court or either of the judges, the District Court or either of the judges, have power to issue the writ of habeas corpus, and it is their duty, upon proper application, to grant the writ under the rules herein prescribed.” By Art. 131, “ the writ of habeas corpus shall be granted without delay by the judge or court receiving the petition, unless it be manifest by the statements of the petition itself, or some document annexed to it, that the party is entitled to no relief whatever.”
The question in this case is, whether an appeal will lie from the refusal of the District Court to grant the writ.
An appeal may be taken by the applicant where the court or judge has decided against the application under habeas corpus, .that is, after a trial, but the statute makes no provision for an appeal, if the writ be denied. (Code Criminal Procedure, Art. 719.)
If the grounds disclosed were sufficient to entitle the appellant to the writ, the action of this court in dismissing the appeal would not be conclusive. It is only so after a hearing upon the facts and law arising upon the record, and not where the appeal is from the refusal to grant the writ. The denial of the writ by one judge is not conclusive against the applicant, but he may apply to another and have the opinion of any one or all of the judges as to the legality of his restraint. (Ingersoll on Habeas Corpus, 33, and authorities there referred to; also, Ex parte Lawrence, 5 Binn. R., 304; Crispin v. Jones, 3 Sergt. & Rawle, 167.) After indictment, as in art. 125, Code Criminal Procedure, ap
Appeal dismissed.