79 Ga. 785 | Ga. | 1887
The petition for habeas corpus was filed by the mother of George Daniels in behalf of her son. The substantial facts appearing upon the face of it are, that at the superior court held for Fulton county, at the kSeptember term, 1885, George Daniels was tried and convicted for the of-fence of burglary, and sentenced to the penitentiary. The judgment of conviction came to this court by writ of error sued out by him, and was affirmed. The trial took place before Judge Richard H. Clark, judge of the Stone Mountain circuit, and he as judge of that circuit, presiding, passed sentence upon the convict. The petition alleges, that while he was conducting this trial in the basement of the court-house, Judge Marshall J. Clarke, judge of the Atlanta circuit, was presiding in the superior court, with a jury regularly empanelled, in the trial of civil causes. The point is made that Judge Richard H. Clark, under these circumstances, had no power to proceed in a case of felony in the basement of the courthouse, and that the jury serving with him was not a legal jury, inasmuch as there was another jury in the court-room above doing service in the presence of Judge Marshall J.
In McMillan vs. Nichols, 62 Ga. 36, a distinction was taken between the judge and the court, and it was there held, that exception to the judge’s competency to preside in a given case should be taken at the trial, and that a judgment rendered by him, whether competent or not to preside in the case, was not void, but was the judgment of the court and not of the judge, and if the court had jurisdiction, and the judge presiding exercised it, it was sufficient. See also Small vs. The State, 63 Ga. 386.
To the same effect, we think, is the text of Wharton, in Wharton’s Grim. Pleading and Prac. §§995, 996.
The general principle is as ruled in Rice vs. Carey, 4 Ga. 558, which-was in relation to a bill of .review, that after a final determination by a court of last resort upon writ of error, there can be no reconsideration to find out whether the judgment was erroneous or not. After a judgment of conviction for felony has been affirmed by the Supreme Court on writ of error brought by the convict^ the legality of his conviction cannot be drawn in question by a writ of habeas corpus, sued out by him or by another person in his behalf, save for the want of jurisdiction appearing on the face of the record as brought from the court below to the Supreme Court. Such affirmance implies that he was tried by a court of competent jurisdiction, legally constituted, and nothing to the contrary can be shown otherwise than by inspection of the record.
It is not pretended that the record brought to this court on the conviction for burglary gave any intimation of the now alleged special grounds of incompetency, either as to judge or jury. If they existed, why were they not then disclosed and presented for direct adjudication?
We do not think that this general law upon the subject needs any aid from the act of 1878-9, (acts 1878-9, p. 149-50,) or from the act of 1884-5, (acts 1884-5,108,) the former providing for a dual superior court presided over in one section by one judge, and in another section by another judge; the latter of the two acts creating the Stone Mountain circuit and containing something special and express with reference to the powers of the judge of that circuit to preside in the Atlanta circuit. We do not think that the general law, in order to uphold this judgment, needs any aid from either of these acts. The former act was amended, after this trial and judgment, by the act of 1886; but as we do not invoke the original act, it is needless to consider anything about the effect of the amendment as a guide to construction. We rest the case upon the general rule that, after a judge of the superior court has presided in any case in the superior court of any county, and the judgment rendered at the trial has been affirmed by this court, it is to be taken for all purposes that it was a legal trial and judgment, and cannot be questioned for anything but the want of jurisdiction appearing upon the face of the proceedings as ruled upon
Any judge of the superior court is competent to preside in the trial of any case, civil or criminal, in the superior court of any county.
Judgment affirmed.