26 N.M. 449 | N.M. | 1920
OPINION OP THE COURT.
The petitioners in this proceeding are persons commonly known and designated as “the Yillistas. ’ ’ They derived this designation from the commonly reputed fact that they were members of a marauding band of Mexicans, who, under the leadership of one Francisco Villa, the notorious bandit of Mexico, crossed the international boundary line on March 9, 1916, and attacked the town of Columbus, in Luna county, in this state, and killed a number of our citizens without any conceivable cause or provocation. Had the petitioners been members of the army of any recognized government in Mexico, the episode would undoubtedly have- furnished ample ground for war with our neighboring republic. They were, however, according to current historical report, members of a company of bandits, under the leadership of Villa, and as such were entitled to none of the considerations or protection from criminal prasecutions accorded to members of a. recognized military organization.
The petitioners and their associates, after their dastardly attack, retreated into Mexico, and were pursued by our troops under the command of Gen. Pershing, and were there captured and returned into the United States. They were indicted for the crime of murder in Luna county, and all but one of them pleaded guilty to murder in the second degree and received life sentences in the penitentiary. One of the petitioners was tried and convicted of murder in the first degree and sentenced to death, but his sentence was subsequently commuted to life imprisonment. All of the petitioners were confined in the penitentiary at Santa Fe under their respective sentences, until on November 22d, 1920, Hon. O. A. Lar-razolo, governor of the state, issued to each of them an unconditional pardon for their said crimes. On November 24, 1920, there was filed in the district court of the first judicial district, sitting in and for Santa Fe county, a complaint for an injunction against the superintendent of the penitentiary restraining him from liberating the petitioners by reason of the said pardons. That cause came on for hearing, on the 6th day of December and resulted in a judgment restraining said superintendent of the penitentiary from releasing or discharging the petitioners until after the applications for pardons shall have been submitted to the board of penitentiary commissioners, and until said commissioners shall have recommended their pardons to the Governor, and until the Governor shall have weighed and considered such recommendation and shall have thereafter granted the pardons to the petitioners. From this judgment an appeal has been allowed to this court, but the case is not before us for consideration, the record not having been perfected in this court. After the issuance of said pardons, the Governor left the state, and the Lieutenant Governor, Hon. Benjamin F. Pankey, acting as Governor, ordered the superintendent of the penitentiary to hold the said prisoners until further orders of the executive of the .state, or of the courts.
The petition for the writ recites upon information and belief that the superintendent of the penitentiary was refusing to give the petitioners their liberty on account of the decree in the injunction suit. The return to the writ recites that the petitioners are held and restrained of their liberty by reason of commitments issued by the district court of Luna county in pursuance of tbe sentence of the court as to all of the petitioners except one, and as to him by virtue of an executive order commuting his sentence from that of death to life imprisonment. It further justifies the restraint by virtue of the injunction order. It further attacks the validity of the pardons upon the ground that the Governor has no power, to pardon, except, with the concurrence of the board of penitentiary commissioners. It further justifies the restraint of the petitioners by reason of the executive order of Hon. Benjamin F. Pankey, as acting Governor. It further justifies the restraint of the petitioners by virtue of a certain order for safe-keeping of the petitioners, which was delivered to the superintendent of the penitentiary by the sheriff of Luna county, said sheriff having arres’ted said prisoners on the charge ol murder of a person other than that fpr which the petitioners were convicted and imprisoned, said charge being still pending in the county of Luna undisposed of.
The petitioners answered the return to the writ, most of which answer consists of conclusions of law, but they admit the service of the new warrants upon them by the sheriff of Luna county, and that the sheriff has committed them to the custody of the superintendent of the penitentiary for safe-keeping, but they deny the power of the sheriff so to do.’
* The case was very carefully and ably argued from all standpoints and submitted to the court. On account of the importance of discussing the executive power of pardon under the Constitution, the case deserves extended examination, -which has been given by us with the result as appears following:
Without such, a power reposed in some officer or body, no government in this day and age could be considered as politically moral. By this power the unfortunate defendant may make his last appeal, sometimes with partial and sometimes with complete success. It is necessary that this be so to meet the requirements of modern and enlightened civilization, as there may be at times circumstances which ought to be controlling, but which the strict law will not recognize.
The power of pardon in England was not an unrestricted power. Many statutes were there enacted restricting and regulating the exercise^ of the power. See 4 Black. Com. pp. 398, 399; Ex parte Wells, 18 How. 307, 15 L, Ed. 421, where most of the limitations on the power in England are enumerated.
In this country, however, while the power is present under both the federal and state governments, it is not an inherent attribute of the executive department, but rests solely in a grant by the people. 20 R. C. L. “ Pardon, etc.,” § 24; Laird v. Sims, 16 Ariz. 521, 147 Pac. 738, L. R. A. 1915F, 519. This proposition is fundamental and in consonance of the general principle that in America the sovereignty resides in the people, and all governmental power is a result of a grant from them.
“Subject to such regulations as may be prescribed by law, the Governor shall have power to grant reprieves and pardons, after conviction for all offenses except treason and in cases of impeachment,” Article 5, § 6, State Const.
Under this provision, there is a plain and clear grant of the pardoning power. There may be regulations by law of the manner of its exercise, but the ultimate power and right to pardon is granted, unrestrained by any consideration other than the conscience and wisdom and the sense of public duty of the Governor. No other board or person is to be consulted, nor is their approval to be obtained. The decision rests solely- with the executive.
Many of the state Constitutions have similar provisions, expressed in somewhat varying terms. But the general trend of opinion of the people, as expressed in the various Constitutions, is the same as here.
Just what regulations might be provided governing the exercise of the power it would be improper for us to attempt at this time to enumerate. But that the exercise of the power may be regulated by law is not to be questioned, so long as the prescribed regulation does not impair the ultimate power granted.
“All applications for the pardon or commutation of any sentence of any convict confined in the penitentiary shall be first submitted to the board of penitentiary commissioners, with all the facts connected with the conviction and sentence of such convicts, and any such other facts as may be thought proper, and said board of penitentiary commissioners shall examine into the same and make such recommendation on the same as to them may appear proper; but no convict, who shall have been sentenced to the penitentiary, shall be pardoned before the expiration of his time, or have his time commuted by the Governor, unless the same be first recommended by the board of penitentiary commissioners, and it shall be the duty of the Governor to weigh and consider all recommendations for pardon or commutation made by said board, and if he finds them reasonably well founded, to grant the'pardon or commutation as recommended, or such commutation of time as he may deem proper.”
It is argued, that, by virtue of section 4, art. 22,. of the Constitution, section 5087, Code 1915, was, in a sense, enacted with all other territorial laws in force at the time. That section of the Constitution is as follows :
“All laws of the territory of New Mexico in force at the time of its admission into the Union as a state, not inconsistent with this Constitution, shall be and remain in force as the laws of the state until they expire by their own limitation, or are altered or repealed; and all rights, actions, claims, contracts, liabilities and obligations, shall continue and remain unaffected by the change in the form of government.”
It will be necessary in this connection to examine the history of section 5087. It appears that this section was section 53 of chapter 76, Laws 1889. The act provides for a board of penitentiary commissioners, makes detailed provision for the maintenance, government, and police of the penitentiary, good time allowance to prisoners in case of nonviolation of the rules of the prison, pardon and restoration to citizenship upon the completion of the term of the sentence, and other matters, including section 5087, Code 1915.
At the time of the passage of this act, we had the territorial form of government, and the powers of the territorial Governor were prescribed by the act of Congress under which the territory was orgánized. That act (9 Stat. 447, c. 49) was approved September 30, 1850, and section 3 thereof provides, among other things, that the Governor “may grant pardons for offenses against the laws of said territory, and reprieves for offenses against the laws of the United States, until the decision of the President can be made known thereon. ’ ’ Here was a grant of absolute power of pardon for offenses against the laws of the territory, unrestrained by any limitation or regulation whatever, and the act of the Legislature of 1889 (section 5087, Code 1915) was necessarily unconstitutional and inoperative to restrain the power of the Governor. The act was considered and treated as a dead letter by all the departments of the territorial government so long as that remained in existence.
It is argued, however, that while the act may have been 'unconstitutional and inoperative, nevertheless it had never been so determined by any court of competent jurisidiction, it had not been disapproved by Congress, and it had never been repealed, and consequently it was “in force” within the meaning of the Constitution, which continued in force the territorial legislation. Without stopping to discuss the real nature and character of an unconstitutional act, it is sufficient to say that, when a statute is adjudged to be unconstitutional, it is as if it had never been. Cooley, Const. Lim. (7th Ed.) p. 259. We are now determining that the act was unconstitutional when enacted and thereafter during the territorial existence, and therefore it could from no standpoint be said to have been “in force" at the time of the adoption of the Constitution. A specific application of this reasoning is to be found in some of the cases. Thus in Re McFarland’s Estate, 10 -Mont. 445, 26 Pac. 185, the question was whether certain sections of the territorial laws had been continued as laws of the state of Montana under a constitutional provision as follows:
“All laws enacted by the Legislative Assembly of the territory of Montana-, and in force at the time the state shall be admitted into the Union * * * shall be arid remain in full force as the laws of the state, until altered or repealed, or until they expire by their own limitation.”
The territorial Legislature of Montana had passed an act providing for an appeal directly from the probate courts of that state to the Supreme Court, but the Organic Act of the territory of Montana provided only for an appeal from the district courts to the Supreme Court of the territory. The Supreme Court of Montana held that the territorial statute providing for such ap-. peals was null and void as being in contravention of the Organic Act of that territory, and that the same were not carried forward so as to become laws of the state of Montana by the constitutional provision above mentioned. In De Lamar v. Dollar, 128 Ga. 57, 57 S. D, 85, the question was as to whether an act which violated the right of trial by jury and which antagonized the constitutional guaranties as to jury trial, was carried forward by á new constitutional provision in the Constitution of 1877, which provided that all laws then of force in the state not inconsistent with the Constitution and ordinances of the convention should remain in force until modified or repealed by the General Assembly. The court said:
“Any law upon the statute books which was repugnant to the Constitution of 1868 was not of force in this state at the date of the Constitution of 1877, and hence the provisions in the county court act of 1872 above referred to were not saved by the provision in the Constitution of 1877 preserving existing laws.”
We therefore hold that section 5087, Code 1915, was not in force in the territory when we came into statehood, and was consequently not made a law of the state by section 4, art. 22, of the Constitution.
“The provisions of the foregoing sections taken or adopted from existing statutes, shall be construed as continuations thereof and not as new enactments.”
'Under these circumstances, then, the question is as to the effect of the act of codification upon sections like 5087, which, as we have seen, were inoperative by reason of being unconstitutional at the time of adoption and at all times thereafter until codified by the act under consideration. If the interpretative provision above referred to was absent from the act, there could be no doubt of its scope and meaning. There is the general enacting clause at the beginning of the act, and, under all rules of construction and interpretation, every section from the first to the last is to be held to be enacted by the act. It will be immaterial as to the source of the matter included in the act, whether coming from old statutes, decisions of the court, or whether the matter be entirely new. 11 C. J. p. 940; Code, § 1; Lewis v. Dunne 134 Cal. 291, 66 Pac. 478, 55 L. R. A. 833, 86 Am. St. Rep. 257; Central Ga. R. Co. v. State, 104 Ga. 831, 31 S. E. 531, 42 L. R. A. 518. . In speaking of the codification of the laws of Georgia, the court said:
“Its general object is to embody as nearly as practicable all the law of a state, from whatever source derived. When properly adopted by the law-making power of a state, it has the same effect as one general act • of the Legislature containing all the provisions embraced in the volume that is thus adopted. It is more than evidentiary of the law; it is the law itself.”
See, also, State v. Barnes, 108 Minn. 230, 122 N. W. 11; Daniel v. State, 114 Ga. 533, 40 S. E. 805; Bates v. State, 63 Ala. 30; State v. Towery, 143 Ala. 48, 39 South. 309.
The interpretative clause, however, introduces into the consideration an element of uncertainty which must be cleared up. It is to be remembered that, as we have seen, the legislative intent was to enact every section appearing in the Code, except, of course, certain local and special acts which are compiled for convenience merely. There is no declaration in the clause that all the laws appearing in the Code have been taken or adopted from existing statutes. The clause merely puts forward a rule of construction to the effect that in all cases where provisions have been taken o-r adopted from an existing statute it shall be construed as a continuation thereof, and not as a new enactment. This view is confirmed by the further provisions in the interpretative section to the effect that, in ease of conflict between sections of the Code, resort may be had to the dates of the passage of the original act from which such sections were taken. So it appears the Legislature intended that old existing statutes taken or adopted and enacted into the Code should maintain the same relative status in the body of the law of the state as when originally enacted, and should acquire no new or controlling importance by reason of their present enactment into the section of the Code.
In regard to section 5087, it was enacted into the Code along with the other sections. Whether it was an existing statute” has been the subject of argument in the ease. While, as we have seen, it was inoperative because it was unconstitutional, it might be said to be an “existing statute ’ ’ because it was enacted by the Legislature and had never been repealed, qualified, or disapproved by any controlling authority. In this sense it was an “existing statute” and was adopted and enacted into the Code. On the other hand, if it was not an existing statute by reason of its unconstitutionality, it was enacted into the Clode as new matter which, as. we have seen, was entirely allowable. In either event it became a component part of the laws' of the state.
“If a statute attempts to accomplish two or more objects, and is void as to one, it may still be in every respect com-píete and valid as to the other. But if its purpose is to accomplish a single object only, and some of its provisions are void, the whole must fail unless sufficient remains to effect the object without the aid of the invalid portion. And if they are so mutually connected with and dependent on each other, as conditions, considerations, or compensations for each other, as to warrant the belief that the Legislature intended them as a whole, and, if all could mot be carried into effect, the Legislature would not pass the residue independently, then, if some parts are unconstitutional, all the provisions which are thus dependent, conditional, or connected must fall with them.” Cooley, Const. Lim. (7th Ed-.) pp. 247, 248.
See, also, Black, Int. Laws (2d Ed.) p. 116; 1 Lewis’ Sutherland, Stat. Con. (2d Ed.) § 297; Skagit Co. v. Stiles, 10 Wash. 388, 39 Pac. 116.
The power granted is of such a nature as to require no regulation. It is simply a one-man power, depending for its execution upon nothing more than the stroke of the pen of the Governor. Under such circumstances the constitutional provision is clearly self-executing and requires no Legislature to make it effective. See Delgado v. Romero, 17 N. M. 81, 124 Pac. 649, Ann. Cas. 1914C, 3114; Lanigan v. Gallup, 17 N. M. 627, 131 Pac. 997; Woodward v. Murdock, 124 Ind. 439, 24 N. E. 1047; Finlen v. Heinze, 27 Mont. 107, 69 Pac. 829, 70 Pac. 517. The Indiana case supra is directly in point.
Thus in U. S. v. Marrin (D. C.) 227 Fed. 3.14, the petitioner applied to the federal court for release on .habeas corpus because he had been sentenced to the penitentiary in the state of New York by a state court, and was taken by the federal authorities while he was under parole, but by the terms of the parole he was not released from the custody of the state authorities, nor from the sentence. The federal authorities removed him from the state, and he sought his release on the same ground urged here, that is, that he was not subject to arrest because he was serving a sentence under commitment from another' court. The federal court held that only the state of New York could raise the question of its jurisdiction over the petitioner, and said:
“The position of the United States here is that the doctrine is applied wholly and solely out of the deference paid by one court to another, and if that court which under the rule mentioned would be accorded full and free sway for the assertion of its power yields to the exercise of the jurisdiction of the other court, no right of the individual defendant concerned is involved. In other words, the court which has the possession of the person of a defendant who is also subject to the control of another court will exercise its power in accordance with a discretion which is governed in its exercise by the rule of comity, to which reference has been made. This is the principle which has been heretofore applied in the case of the present defendant, and which has sufficient supporting authority in Mahon v. Justice, 3 27 U. S. 700, 8 Sup. Gt. 1204,'32 L. Ed. 283.”
But in this case no such question could arise. The petitioners were sentenced to the penitentiary by the district court of Luna county, and it was this same court that issued the warrants for their subsequent arrest. The petitioners, if they were legally confined, were serving a sentence under commitment of the court which issued the subsequent warrants, and that court had the power to take control of the petitioners under the new warrants, even though they were at such time legally serving the original sentence. If, on the other hand, as we have held,- the pardons issued to the petitioner were valid, then they were being illegally held by the superintendent of the penitentiary, and he was at liberty to submit them at any time to the lawful arrest of the sheriff of Luna county. The validity of the arrests by the sheriff is not impaired by reason of the fact that the petitioners were at the time restrained illegally of their liberty by the superintendent of the penitentiary. Mahon v. Justice, 127 U. S. 700, 8 Sup. Ct. 1204, 32 L. Ed. 283. See, also, Voorhees on the Law of Arrest (2d Ed.) § 219, where the author says:
"Upon an extradition charge where an arrest is illegally made on a telegram, without a warrant, it is not necessary first to discharge the prisoner from illegal custody before rearresting him on a legal process subsequently issued in a criminal mattey”
From all of the foregoing it appears that the petitioners, notwithstanding the pardons issued by the Governor are not now entitled to be discharged from custody by reason of their subsequent arrest and commitment to the custody of the superintendent of the penitentiary, and that the writ of habeas corpus should be discharged and the petitioners remanded to custody; and it is so ordered.