20 Fla. 438 | Fla. | 1884
delivered the opinion of the court.
Under the English practice it was only to judgments in causes where issues might be joined and tried, or where judgments might be had upon demurrer, that a writ of error would lie. To habeas corpus proceedings, therefore, where no such Issues could be taken, or judgments upon demurrer had, no writ of error would He. Under the American practice, even where the strict rules as to the acceptance of the truth of the return prevailing in England did not obtain, writs of error did not lie to such proceedings because they were held not to be final judgments. Neither of these reasons are now applicable to proceedings in habeas corpus under our statute. Evidence in contradiction oí the return may be now received and the judgments rendered are final in their character in most cases. The habeas corpus proceeding cannot he again invoked. The reasons why the writ did not lie, therefore, have here ceased to exist. But we are not left to doubt upon the subject. The statute itself provides that the judgment, if it be one remanding the petitioner to the custody and control from which he came, can be changed or affected in no other direct way
The question hei’e is, has the prosecutor, whether it be the State or any political' sub-division thereof, the right to a writ of error in case the prisoner is discharged.
: The clear effect of the 11th section is to enact that a judgment remanding a prisoner may be the subject of a writ of error, and may be thus directly reversed and set aside, but that a judgment discharging a person confined in such manner as was the prisoner here can never be directly affected in any proceeding by writ of error in the same case or prosecution. He may he afterwards confined by the order or judgment of a court of competent jurisdiction “ for the same cause,” but this confinement must be such an one as is consistent with the nature of the other judgment. Such as would perhaps be the case of the subsequent confinement or imprisonment of the party for the same cause, but upon new and additional evidence or after other and legal proceedings of a tribunal authorized to present an indictment, such as a grand jury.
Should this court reverse this judgment upon a writ of error, and such must be its.course if a writ of error lies and we think there is error, we must set aside the judgment of discharge in the same case, which we think the statute does not contemplate. The Legislature never here
In the State of Ohio, an early statute provided that the proceedings on any writ of habeas corpas should be recorded by the clerks and may be reviewed on writs of error and certiorari as in other cases now provided by law, and at the
We think ihat section 12 must be so construed as to limit the writs of error therein authorized to cases of habeas corpus other than those in which a prisoner held for conviction of alleged crime has been discharged by the Circuit Court; that this is the only construction which can be given this section of the act consistent with the other sections and the manifest purpose of the Legislature to afford
As to the costs: Under the statute the costs may be awarded in favor of the prisoner, and if this he so, the other party to the record is the only one against whom they can be taxed.
Writ of error dismissed.