111 Ala. 99 | Ala. | 1895
It is admitted that the writ of attachment under which petitioner was arrested and held in custody was regular in form. It was addressed to any sheriff of the State, and was issued by the circuit court of Calhoun county in term time. It recites :
It can not be denied, that a witness who has been duly subpoenaed by a competent court to give his evidence in a cause therein pending, is guilty of a contempt of court if he refuses or fails to attend without excuse for his delinquency. — 24 Am. & Eng. Encyc. of Law, 171, and authorities, note 2; 3 Ib. 783.
Section 4784 of the Code provides, that “no court, chancellor, or judge, on the return of a writ of habeas corpus has authority to inquire into the regularity or justice-of any order, judgment, decree or process of any court legally constituted, or into the justice or propriety of any commitment for contempt'made by a court, officer or body, according to law, and charged in such commitment.”
In Ex parte John Hardy, 68 Ala. 315, it was said : “It can not be denied, that every court is the exclusive judge of a contempt committed in its presence or against its process, and that the exercise of such power by a court of competent jurisdiction can not be revised on error, nor assailed collaterally by a resort to a writ of habeas corpus. But where there is either a want or excess of jurisdiction in the committing court, a writ of habeas corpus is then the appropriate remedy of the prisoner.” Where the court adjudging the contempt has jurisdiction of the subject matter and the person, there must be a total want, or an excess, of jurisdiction, in order that the writ of habeas corpus may be invoked as an appro
In the case before us, the court had jurisdiction of the subject-matter and the person against whom the contempt was adjudged and the attachment issued. The attachment is regular on its face, shows no want or excess of jurisdiction by the court in its issuance. It sets out the facts upon which it was issued, which, it recites were made known to the court “by competent evidence,” and thereupon adjudges that the petitioner “has willfully refused to testify as by said'subpoena he was required, and willfully and without good excuse refuses to appear in obedience to said order,” wherefore he was ordered attached for such disobedience. The judge of the city court of Montgomery very properly refused, on habeas corpus before him, to discharge the petitioner, and left the matter where it belongs ; to the circuit court of Calhoun county.
It is S’-iid, the subpoena was served on Sunday, and that petitioner lived over one hundred miles from the county seat of Calhoun county ; that no affidavit, such as is required by section 2793 of the Code, appears to have been made, authorizing á subpoena in such cases. But all these questions are for the circuit court issuing the attachment, on a return thereof to that court, and
Affirmed.