92 Ind. 444 | Ind. | 1883
This was an application to the judge of the Hancock. Circuit Court, at chambers, for a writ of habeas corpus. An affidavit and information had been filed against the appellant in that court charging him with an unlawful sale of intoxicating liquor without license. A warrant was duly issued by the clerk, by virtue of which the appellee, as the sheriff of that county, arrested the appellant; and this was the custody from which the latter desired to relieve himself by the writ of habeas corpus. The judge, on hearing the evidence, declined to discharge the appellant, but remanded him to the custody of the sheriff.
There is no conflict in the evidence, it consisting of an agreed statement of facts. Counsel for the appellant argue, with much force and ability, that the evidence conclusively shows that the appellant was not guilty of the crime charged, and that there was therefore error in refusing his discharge. Under the view we take of the case, it would be improper for us now to express an opinion as to whether the evidence would or would not warrant a conviction.
There is nothing in the appellant’s petition, in the officer’s return to the writ, or in the evidence, showing, or tending to show, that there was any defect in the affidavit or information, or in the warrant under which the arrest was made; nor was there any showing, or attempt to show, that bail was refused, or that excessive bail was required. The sole
Section 1119, R. S. 1881, prohibits, in proceedings on this writ, the court or judge from inquiring into the validity of process issued from the circuit court upon an indictment or information.
In speaking of the jurisdiction of courts in granting this writ, Mr. Hurd, in his work on Habeas Corpus, says on page 326:
“Where the return shows a detainer under legal process, the only proper points for examination are the existence, validity and present legal force of the process; ex’cept where, in commitments for criminal or supposed criminal matters, the court or officer hearing the habeas corpus is invested with a revisory or corrective jurisdiction over the court or officer commanding the imprisonment, and with jurisdiction also over the offence or subject-matter of the commitment, in which case the facts constituting the grounds of the commitment may be reviewed.”
The jurisdiction above referred to as existing in courts having a revisory or corrective jurisdiction over inferior tribunals, was recognized by this court in Stewart v. Jessup, 51 Ind. 413 (19 Am. R. 739). In that case the prisoner had been committed by a justice of the peace, for want of bail, to answer in the next term of the circuit court a charge of a felony. On being brought before the circuit court on a writ of habeas corpus, the proof was that the allegedf-crime was committed in another State. It was held that he should have been discharged, as there could be no conviction. But in Wright v. State, 5 Ind. 290, an indictment was pending against the prisoner for murder. He asked for his discharge, on the ground that under
Judge Cooley, in his work on Constitutional Limitations, at marginal pages 347 and 348, says: “In the great anxiety on the part of our legislatures to make the most ample provision for speedy relief from unlawful confinement, authority to issue the writ of habeas corpus has been conferred upon inferior judicial officers, who-make use of it sometimes as if it were a writ of error, under which they might correct the errors and irregularities of other judges and courts, whatever their relative jurisdiction and dignity. Any such employment of the writ is an abuse. Where a party who is in confinement under judicial process is brought up on habeas corpus, the court or judge before whom he is returned will inquire: 1. Whether the court or officer issuing the process under which he is detained had jurisdiction of the case, and has acted within that jurisdiction in issuing speh process. If so, mere irregularities or errors of judgment in the exercise of that jurisdiction must be disregarded on this writ, and must be corrected either
Our conclusion is that the guilt or innocence of a prisoner, with the view to his discharge if innocent, can not be enquired into upon the writ of habeas corpus, when he has been committed upon a warrant issued upon an affidavit and information filed against him in the circuit court in a case of which that court has jurisdiction of the subject-matter of the charge. It follows that there was no error in refusing to discharge the-appellant.
Affirmed, at appellant’s costs. -