DocketNumber: No. 6655.
Citation Numbers: 152 P.2d 91, 107 Utah 99, 1944 Utah LEXIS 119
Judges: Wolfe, Larson, McDonough, Wade, Moffat
Filed Date: 10/4/1944
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 11/15/2024
The second contention set forth is that the trial court was without jurisdiction to sentence Thompson under the Habitual Criminal Act. This argument is based upon the fact that the information affirmatively disclosed that the two previous *Page 102 convictions upon which the state would rely to show that Thompson was an habitual criminal were not sufficient to support a conviction under the Habitual Criminal statute.
We have considered the arguments and authorities cited in support of each of these contentions. In the former opinion we held that the writ of habeas corpus could be used to correct jurisdictional errors and to determine whether 1 or not the petitioner had been deprived of any constitutional right. Except in these two respects, errors in proceedings before a trial court must be corrected by appeal. One of the basic difficulties inherent in a contrary holding is the question of where to draw the line. Somewhere and sometime there must be an end to litigation. The writ of habeas corpus must not be used to discover and correct all errors which might creep into a criminal trial. The time for taking an appeal has wisely been limited by law. If the writ of habeas corpus were to be used to reach all defects in the trial which could be raised by a timely appeal, no conviction could ever become final. We recognize that some errors are more prejudicial to a defendant than are others, but if habeas corpus is to be used to correct error, where can we draw the line? Should we leave the determination as to when there has been and has not been sufficient error to warrant interference by the use of a writ of habeas corpus entirely to the discretion of each judge based on standards which he may invoke from his own mind? We believe that the only sound line that can be drawn is to restrict the use of the writ of habeas corpus to the correction of jurisdictional errors and to errors so gross as to in effect deprive the defendant of his constitutional substantive or procedural rights. Anything short of that must be corrected on appeal or by the Board of Pardons. And this of course is true whether the constitutional right is granted by the State Constitution or by the Federal Constitution through absorption in the Fourteenth Amendment. Even here Mr. Justice Cordozo in Palko v Connecticut, 302 U, S. 319,
The plaintiff must necessarily assert that he has not been accorded due process of law in order to claim constitutional protection. The question then resolves itself at bottom as to whether introduction of previous convictions of unrelated crimes in the trial of the instant charge denies him due process. A much cited case on the history and nature of due process, Hurtado v.State of California,
"The supreme court of Mississippi, in a well-considered case (Brown v. Levee Com'rs,
Says Mr. Chief Justice Fuller in Leeper v. Texas,
"* * * That by the fourteenth amendment the powers of states in dealing with crime within their borders are not limited, except that no state can deprive particular persons, or classes of persons, of equal and impartial justice under the law. That law in its regular course of administration through courts of justice is due process, and when secured by the law of the state the constitutional requirement is satisfied; and that due process is so secured by laws operating on all alike, and not subjecting the individual to the arbitrary exercise of the powers of government unrestrained by the established principles of private right and distributive justice. Hurtado v. California,
The same language is repeated in Caldwell v. Texas,
Due process may mean something more than the existing law of the land for as observed in Hurtado v. State of California, supra, "otherwise it would be no restraint upon legislative power". Nor according to Mr. Justice Matthews in the Hurtado case do the "settled usages and modes of proceeding existing in the common and statute law of England before the emigration of our ancestors, and which are shown not to have been unsuited to their civil and political condition by having been acted on by them after the settlement of this country" "furnishes an indispensable test of what constitutes ``due process of law;' [so] that any proceeding *Page 105 otherwise authorized by law, which has not been sanctioned by usage, or which supersedes and displaces one that is, cannot be regarded as due process of law." The fact that the early English cases judicially condemned the introduction into the instant case of evidence of previous unrelated crimes cannot be the test of due process at least in a situation where this evidence is not introduced as proof of the commission of the instant crime but of a status of habitual criminality even though that charge is joined with that of the instant crime.
In Munn v. Illinois,
"A person has no property, no vested interest, in any rule of common law. That is only one of the forms of municipal law, and is no more sacred than any other. Rights of property which have been created by the common law cannot be taken away without due process; but the law itself, as a rule of conduct, may be changed at the will, or even at the whim, of the legislature, unless prevented by constitutional limitations. Indeed, the great office of statutes is to remedy defects in the common law as they are developed, and to adapt it to the changes of time and circumstances."
"* * * process of law, which is not otherwise forbidden, must
The Hurtado case goes on to say:
be taken to be due process of law, if it can show the sanction of settled usage both in England and in this country; but it by no means follows, that nothing else can be due process of law. * * * to hold that such a characteristic is essential to due process of law, would be to deny every quality of the law but its age, and to render it incapable of progress or improvement. It would be to stamp upon our jurisprudence the unchangeableness attributed to the laws of the Medes and Persians."
After canvassing the specific guarantees of freedom and fair trial contained in our Constitution we may be fearful in trying to give any test of "due process of law" except in terms which are as susceptible of varying content as is 2-4 that phrase itself. It includes or perhaps is coterminous with those "principles of justice so rooted in *Page 106 the traditions and conscience of our people as to be ranked as fundamental." There may be difference of opinion as to what those principles are when we pass the requisites of fair trial free of star chamber proceedings, right to testify on his own behalf and to be confronted with witnesses against him, right to aid of counsel, right to be apprised of the accusation against him and time to prepare to meet it, "the need to be protected against torture physical or mental" including forced confessions. At all events we do not believe that the immunity from coupling proof of a charge of habitual criminality with that of an instant charge is one of these immutable principles the denial of which violate our traditions of what is a fair trial in the fundamental sense. We cannot say that proof of prior convictions or crimes as probative of the issue presented by the instant charge "subjects the individual to the arbitrary exercise of powers of government unrestrained by the established principles of private right . . ." The rule excluding such evidence was invoked by the courts, not because it with without probative value, but because the jury would tend to give excessive weight to it. And with greater positiveness we can say that the defendant has no constitutional right to be shielded from consideration of such evidence in the determination of the guilt or innocence of an instant crime, where such evidence is not introduced in support of the instant charge, but in pursuance of the proof of the status of habitual criminality. We should add that at this time we do not intend and in the original opinion did not intend to pass on the question of the procedure which should pertain in view of Sec. 105-21-47, U.C.A. 1943, in bringing before the jury the charge of habitual criminality, whether that and the instant charge can be brought contemporaneously, or the former await the conviction of the latter. We need go no further now than to hold that the defendant is not constitutionally protected against contemporaneous consideration.
The case of State v. Walsh,
It is urged that reading to the jury the allegations of former convictions contained in the information and, a *Page 108 fortiori, introduction of proof in support of them interferes with the constitutional privilege of his electing to take the stand. There is no substance to this. The 7-9 constitutional right is that he shall not be compelled to give evidence against himself. This certainly does not mean that he is constitutionally protected against wrong or incompetent evidence given by others against him and it certainly does not mean that he has constitutional protection against evidence or procedure which may be damaging to him where the legislature has the right to provide that it may come before the jury either in connection with the instant charge or in support of an issue of habitual criminality which may be coupled with the instant charge. The fact that, when it is coupled with the instant charge, it may have influenced or even importuned him to take the stand in his own defense when he would otherwise have remained off and not run the risk of being confronted with past convictions of felonies, cannot by the greatest stretch of the imagination be construed as taking away or even trammelling his constitutional immunity from giving evidence against himself. Many matters, rightly or wrongly introduced in the State's case, may determine him to go on the stand in his own defense. But he still has the choice of going on or staying off. All that can be said is that something has occurred which takes away the potency of the reasons for remaining off or furnishes weight in favor of a decision to go on the stand. As already noted, the fundamental question herein presented is: Has the defendant a constitutional right to have withheld from the jury evidence relating to prior convictions for unrelated felonies? This should not be confused with restrictions against selfincrimination, or other constitutional limitations.
The petitioner's second contention must also fail. The sentence imposed on the verdict rendered was a correct sentence in view of the verdict. This fact cannot be over-emphasized. He was charged with the substantive crime of robbery and with being in the status of an habitual criminal. The 10-11 jury found him to be guilty of robbery and found that he was an habitual criminal. Upon this *Page 109
verdict the sentence imposed was a correct one. It is in this respect that the case differs from the Lee Lim v. Davis case,
The petition for rehearing is therefore denied.
McDONOUGH and WADE, JJ., concur.