80 Iowa 30 | Iowa | 1890
It cannot be said the court was not acting in a lawful “manner,” in the sense in which the word “manner” should be understood. If it is to be understood that a court is acting in an unlawful manner, within the meaning of the statute, when it commits a reversible error, then the restrictions as to questioning the actions of the court are of no avail, for habeas corpus would lie for errors in the admission of testimony, or in giving or refusing instructions, and the word “manner,” if given its most comprehensive meaning, would include such actions. But we well know that such is not the design of the law. “Manner” has reference to the method or mode of acting, more than to the degree of perfection or correctness in the conclusion or results arrived at. The statute seems to have a reference to the methods or means of obtaining results, and if a court observes such methods or means it may be said to be acting in a lawful manner, although it may err in the application of legal principles to such an extent as to involve reversible error. It is not, of course, to be understood that a court has acted in a lawful manner when the judgment it pronounces is absolutely void, for such a judgment has no support in the law. Neither the law in its substance nor “ manner or form” can aid it. But if it is merely voidable it has support until set aside in a proper proceeding. The court in that proceeding had jurisdiction of the subject-matter and of the person. It had the right to impose a fine, and provide for imprisonment until the fine was paid. In so doing it could not make the imprisonment exceed one day for each three and one-third dollars. If the judgment' exceeded the limit of the law, it would be void as to the excess, but not as to the remainder. People v. Jacobs, 66 N. Y. 8; People v. Baker, 89 N. Y. 460. Conceding that the court could, under the language of the statute, make
It is said the judgment of imprisonment, by not fixing a limit, is indefinite; but the law itself defeats such a claim, for beyond its limits the judgment is void, and this proceeding is available for protection against illegal imprisonment. If it should be said that the court might have made the term of imprisonment less than the extent permitted by the law, and the plaintiff was entitled to the court’s judgment specifically fixing the time, it can only be said that the failure to do so made the judgment erroneous, but not void, and the law on appeal afforded the plaintiff ample protection.
There could be no claim in this case, as is urged in the dissenting views in Turney v. Barr, 75 Iowa, 758, that an appeal would be unavailable, because, the judgment being regular on its face, the error could not be known; for in this case, i. e., the criminal case, the error is manifest on the face of the record. In Jackson v. Boyd, 58 Iowa, 536, it is expressly stated that a failure to fix the time in the judgment “ would not render it void;” and also “the extent of the imprisonment is fixed and declared by the statute ; and when the defendant has been'imprisoned the required length of time he is entitled to be discharged.” Without attaching to this language a broader signification than is required by the facts considered,v it sustains the view that the law is a limitation as to the extent of the imprisonment, when no time is fixed in the judgment, and is against the view that the judgment is ■ void because under it the imprisonment might be “indefinite;” that is, to the time of the actual payment of the judgment. We reach the conclusion that habeas corpus is not available to question the correctness of the proceedings of the district court with reference to the judgment in question.