212 N.W. 701 | Iowa | 1927
The plaintiff had been duly convicted in the district court of Lee County of the crime of escape from the penitentiary at Fort Madison. This conviction was had in January, 1922, and sentence was duly pronounced thereon.
At the time of his escape from the penitentiary, he was therein confined under a judgment of conviction entered in the Polk County district court for obtaining money by false pretenses. The false pretense charged in that prosecution was 1. HABEAS the uttering of his own check for $5.00 upon a CORPUS: bank in which he had not a sufficient deposit to scope of meet the check. Sentence of seven years in the inquiry: penitentiary at Fort Madison was imposed upon jurisdiction him, and was immediately executed by the of court. delivery of his custody to the warden of the penitentiary. While at work on the state farm in November, 1921, he escaped therefrom. This was the escape which furnished the basis of the later prosecution already referred to. The sentence imposed upon him for such escape by the district court of Lee County was for five years, "to begin after the termination" of service of the first sentence of seven years.
The theory upon which the writ of habeas corpus was prosecuted and sustained was that, at the time of his escape, in November, 1921, he was being illegally detained under a judgment of conviction which the district court of Polk County had no jurisdiction to impose; that, therefore, his escape was not illegal; and that he should not have been convicted of such alleged unlawful escape, and should not have been sentenced therefor. The theory is not tenable. Whether this illegality in the first prosecution could have been pleaded as a defense in the second prosecution, we need not inquire. The only legal question before us at this point is whether the prisoner may, in the habeas corpus proceeding, challenge the legality of the judgment of the district court of Lee County in the second prosecution, on the ground that the previous judgment entered by the district court of Polk County was illegal or invalid. The law is well settled to the contrary. State v. Bates,
We are considering now only the indictment which charged *354 the escape from the penitentiary. The district court of Lee County was not lacking in jurisdiction therein. And this is so even though the defendant therein (plaintiff herein) could have justified his escape on the ground of the want of jurisdiction in the district court of Polk County to sentence him to the penitentiary in the first prosecution.
The case as a whole, however, presents a very perplexing situation. The crime charged in the Polk County indictment rendered in August, 1921, was cognizable under Section 13047, Code of 1924, and was not cognizable under 2. HABEAS Section 13045. State v. Marshall,
All the justices concur.