Ex Parte Howland

104 P. 927 | Okla. Crim. App. | 1909

There is no contention in this case that a judgment was not rendered against the petitioner. The contention is, as appears in the original petition, that at the time the petition was filed in this case there was no "judgment roll of record against the petitioner." It appears from the record that after the original petition was filed in this court, the Attorney General and J.B.A. Robertson, former county attorney of Lincoln county, filed with the district court of Lincoln county a petition asking for an order nunc pro tunc, correcting the record in the case of Territory of Oklahoma v. Lyda Howland. That petition was heard on the 10th day of August, 1909. The relator here, Lyda Howland, being present in person and by counsel, the district court heard the testimony, and found as a fact that the relator, Lyda Howland, was tried and convicted in the district court of Lincoln county, territory of Oklahoma, March term, 1902, and on the 11th day of April, 1902, was sentenced to imprisonment in the territorial prison at hard labor for life, and that by inadvertence of the clerk of the district court the judgment and sentence of the court was not entered on the records in said court in the manner provided by law; and, after hearing the testimony and finding as a fact that said judgment was rendered and the defendant sentenced on the *145 11th day of April, 1902, the court did, on August 10, 1909, order that the judgment as pronounced in that court on the 11th day of April, 1902, be entered nunc pro tunc.

Counsel for relator, in the brief filed in this case and in the oral argument, insist that the court was without authority to enter the order nunc pro tunc; that such an order could not be entered, for the reason that it would be "an ex post facto judgment, and affect the right of this petitioner." The power of making an entry nunc pro tunc seems to have been possessed and exercised by courts of law and in equity from the earliest times. The period through which this right could be successfully invoked has never been limited. The power has been confined to those cases in which some hardship would be visited upon one of the parties without any fault of his, unless the judgment was entered. The power to enter judgments and orders nunc pro tunc is inherent in the courts, both at law and in equity, and is not dependent for its existence upon any statute. It is a power which courts have and liberally exercise to make their records speak the truth; and, if a clerk has omitted to make an entry, whether before or after final judgment, the court may require him to supply this omission nunc pro tunc. When the entry is amended, it is nothing more than perfected evidence of what, in contemplation of law, existed from the time the judgment was rendered, and this amended judgment should be given effect as if no error had occurred in the original entry. There might be conditions, of course, under which judgments nunc pro tunc should not be entered; for instance, if the rights of individuals would be prejudiced, or where the conditions of persons had been changed by reason of their relying on a judgment as originally entered. But no such condition arises here. In this instance it appears from the records, and from the findings of the district court of Lincoln county, that the relator was tried and convicted in the district court of Lincoln county, territory of Oklahoma, and was sentenced to serve the term of her natural life in the territorial penitentiary at hard labor. It cannot be said that she was deprived *146 of any right by the inadvertence of the clerk to record the judgment of the court. The state had a right to have the judgment of the court entered of record. The entering of the judgment nuncpro tunc could not possibly work a hardship on the relator. It in no way affects the term of her imprisonment, or changes her relation to society. The state had a perfect right to have the evidence of her conviction and sentence perpetuated, and the judgment nunc pro tunc does no more than this. Courts have a continuing power over their records not affected by the lapse of time. Should the record in any case be lost or destroyed, the court whose record it was possesses the undoubted power, at any time afterwards, to make a new record.

The amendment to the original petition also alleges that the "alleged judgment and sentence recorded by an order nunc protunc, and now made a part of the return, thus to change the issues as joined in this case, is false, untrue, and is set up in the return for fraudulent purposes." There is no contention made by counsel for relator that the findings of the court, on which the nunc pro tunc order is based, were made without legal evidence. There bieng no contention of that kind, the presumption prevails that the court acted on sufficient competent testimony. It is not for this court to question the evidence on which the district court of Lincoln county made this order nunc pro tunc. The court on the evidence there introduced found, as a fact that the judgment and sentence was entered on the 11th day of April, 1902, and that finding is conclusive on this court. The court having found that it was a mere error of the clerk, and it being clearly within the province of the court to correct such error, and the corection having been made, the order stands as originally made and intended, and must be given effect accordingly. 1 Freeman on Judgments, 74; Bobo v. State,40 Ark. 224; Ward v. Magness, 75 Ark. 12, 86 S.W. 822; Jones v. Lewis,30 N.C. 70, 47 Am. Dec. 338.

Counsel for petitioner insist that, even though the district court of Lincoln county, territory of Oklahoma, could have made the order nunc pro tunc, the district court of Lincoln county, state of Oklahoma, was not authorized to make the order, for the *147 reason, they alleged, that so far as this case is concerned, the state court is not the legal successor of the territorial court, and that the case against Lyda Howland was not a "pending" case in the sense in which that term is used in Act Cong. March 4, 1907, c. 2911, § 20, 34 Stat. 1286, being an amendment to the Enabling Act (Bunn's Const. p. 160). It is conceded that the Enabling Act and the acceptance of the provisions of the same in the Constitution of the state transfers to the state courts all causes, proceedings, and matters, civil or criminal, pending in the district courts of Oklahoma Territory. The question to be determined is, Is this case pending in the sense as used in the Enabling Act. An action is "pending" until a judgment is fully satisfied, according to Words and Phrases, vol. 6, p. 5277, citing the following cases: State v. Tugwell, 19 Wash. 238,52 P. 1056, 43 L.R.A. 717; Ulshafer v. Stewart, 71 Pa. 170;Holland v. Fox, 3 El. Bl. 37; Wegman v. Childs, 41 N.Y. 159;Gates v. Newman 18 Ind. App. 392, 46 N.E. 654.

In the case of United States v. Taylor (C.C.) 44 F. 2, the United States Circuit Court, defining the word "pending" under the Enabling Act of the territory of Washington, used the following language:

"It is contended that, because a final decree had been previously rendered, the case had terminated, and was not a pending case at the time the territorial court passed out of existence upon the admission of the state of Washington into the Union; and, therefore, in respect to this case, this court is not the successor of the territorial court. The decision upon this point involves simply a definition of the word `pending' as used in the twenty-third section of what is commonly called the `Enabling Act.' Act Feb. 22, 1889, c. 180, 25 Stat. 683.

"In my opinion this act, when all its provisions are considered, manifestly shows that Congress intended to fully protect and preserve, not merely the rights of parties in a few select and especially favored ones of the cases commenced in the territorial courts, but every right of every party in every case which at any time had been or should be commenced in those courts during their existence; and the words `all cases, proceedings, and matters * * * pending,' used in the act, must be construed to embrace all cases, *148 proceedings, and matters initiated in the territorial courts, and in which, at the time of the actual transformation of the territorial judicial system into the state and national systems, there should be yet any vitality, force, or virtue. I have heretofore decided, in a case which had proceeded to judgment in a territorial court, that the court, which, as to that case, was successor to the territorial court, should proceed with it, from the precise point to which it had already progressed, exactly as if the case had been commenced and proceeded with to the same point in that court. This view is supported by the Court of Appeals of New York in the case of Wegman v. Childs, 41 N.Y. 159, and in that case other decisions are cited and followed. Certainly rights established by a final judgment ought not to be held to have been forfeited or sacrificed by this statute, if by any reasonable or fair construction of its terms a different conclusion can be arrived at. The construction I have given to the act does lead to a different and more satisfactory conclusion. The construction contended for by counsel for the respondent does not, for the word `pending' is used in the clause descriptive of the class of cases and proceedings to be transferred to the state courts, and bears exactly the same relation to those cases that it does to the cases and proceedings which are transferable to the national courts, and it is not possible to exclude this court from taking jurisdiction of a case on the ground that, because it had proceeded to judgment in a territorial court, it then ceased to be a pending case, and yet hold that by virtue of this act of Congress the courts of this state could take cognizance of the same case. I hold, therefore, that the case has been lawfully transferred to this court, and also that, being so transferred, this court, of necessity, must adopt as its own all the proceedings and orders of its predecessor in the case, including the judgment, and must exercise the same powers which that court would now have if it had continued to be, including the power to punish a violation of the injunction. The motion to discharge the rule is therefore denied."

Even though it be said that the case against Lyda Howland would not be included in the restricted meaning of the term "pending," yet the district court of Lincoln county would have jurisdiction of the case under the rule of implied jurisdiction, as announced by the Supreme Court of this state in the case of Exparte Curlee, 1 Okla. Crim. 145, 95 P. 414, Williams C.J., in rendering the opinion of the court, quotes with approval from the *149 Merchants' Nat. Bank v. Braithwaite, 7 N.D. 358, 75 N.W. 246, 66 Am. St. Rep. 653, as follows:

"Considering the provisions of the Enabling Act in connection with the failure of Congress to vest jurisdiction over territorial judgments in the federal courts, and the fact that Congress in passing the act must have contemplated that the state Constitution would create state courts having jurisdiction similar to that possessed by the territorial courts, and that these would be the better fitted to enforce judgments throughout the different counties in the state, we must infer an implied assent by Congress that jurisdiction over cases not pending should vest in state courts exclusively. Otherwise we must assume that those cases were to be left without any court possessing jurisdiction over them for any purpose whatever; for it is clear that no jurisdiction over them is vested by the Enabling Act in the federal courts."

Justice Williams, after quoting from the above case, says:

"In line with this decision, cases, not of a federal character, not pending, involving offenses committed prior to the admission of the state into the Union, should vest in the state courts. Of course nonpending actions of a federal character would necessarily vest in the United States Courts in the state erected out of said territories just as they do in the United States Courts in the other states. We had not found this case at the time the opinion was written in the case of Ex parte Buchanen,20 Okla. 831, 94 P. 943, with which it is in harmony. The provisions of the Oklahoma Enabling Act being substantially those as contained in the Enabling Act for North and South Dakota, it is presumed that Congress in adopting the same for Oklahoma did it with a view of the construction that had been had thereon in North Dakota. Under the authority of the Buchanen Case, which is supported by the case just cited from North Dakota, the writ ofhabeas corpus is denied."

As to whether the criminal procedure act was adopted and was in force April 11, 1902, at the time the relator was tried in the district court of Lincoln county, territory of Oklahoma, we find, on investigation of the records of the clerk of this court, that question was raised on an application of Thomas P. Queenan, for writ of habeas corpus, filed in the Supreme Court, territory of Oklahoma, on September 10, 1901. The relator there alleged that his confinement was illegal for the reason that the criminal *150 procedure act had never been adopted and was not in force. The Supreme Court heard the evidence as to whether the act had been properly adopted, and found that it had been, and denied the writ. For some reason it seems that this opinion of the Supreme Court was never published, although it is a matter of record in the office of the clerk. From the record in that case we are of the opinion that the criminal procedure act was in full force and effect on April 11, 1902, at the time the petitioner was tried in the district court of Lincoln county.

Counsel further insist that relator should be released for the reason that she was sentenced to the territorial penitentiary, but for a time was confined in the Kansas penitentiary at Lansing, Kan., under a contract purporting to have been made by representatives of the state of Kansas and the territory of Oklahoma, which contract, they allege, was void. Her detention in the Kansas penitentiary is not a matter before this court. The return in this case shows that she is now being retained in the state penitentiary of Oklahoma, under a judgment and sentence as above set forth.

The writ in this case will be denied, and the petitioner remanded to the custody of the warden of the state penitentiary at McAlester.

FURMAN, PRESIDING JUDGE, and DOYLE, JUDGE, concur. *151