Plаintiff (appellant), an inmate of the state penitentiary, filed a pеtition for writ of habeas corpus, prepared by himself without the aid of сounsel. In his petition he alleges that he was detained in the county jail in Shoshone county from seven to eight months before being committed to the state penitentiary for a term of not more than twenty years upon a conviction of robbery. He specifically alleges that his rights were violаted during the course of his imprisonment in the county jail in two particulars: first, that hе was subjected to cruel and unusual punishment, and second, that he was incаrcerated with prisoners who had been convicted and sentencеd, without being separated from such other prisoners, as required by I.C. § 20-603. The cruеlty alleged, consisted of being tormented by other prisoners and by the jailer and deputy sheriff. The trial court correctly held that these complаints concerned past events, and raised issues now moot. The conditions or legality of plaintiff’s detention in the county jail, did not deprive the district сourt of jurisdiction to enter judgment upon conviction, nor affect the vаlidity of that judgment. Hence such complaints cannot now be urged as a grоund for discharge in this proceeding. Franklin v. State,
It does not appeаr from the petition whether plaintiff entered a plea of guilty, or whether he was convicted by a jury. He indicates in his petition that he had an attоrney who was appointed by the district judge, and that he had been given a preliminary hearing. However, the petition contains allegations which tend to raise an issue as to whether the plaintiff entered a plea of guilty by reason of coercion arising out of the treatment complained of while he was in the county jail. He alleges that he was near a nervous breakdown because of the treatment by other prisoners, the jailer and the deputy sheriff; that the deputy sheriff used vile epithets and names in addressing him; told him that he should plead guilty and “get it over with” and “save the county extrа expense”; and that was his only chance to get off easy, and the only way he would get out of the county jail.
In Johnson v. State,
Giving the petition a broad and liberal construction, it was sufficient to invoke the jurisdiction of the district court to issue the writ and give plaintiff a hearing thereon, for the purpose of determining whether thе allegations of the petition are true and whether a plea оf guilty was entered by reason of coercion.
“Where it is found by the court thаt the plea of guilty was not voluntarily and intelligently made, the motion [to withdraw рlea] should be granted on the theory that a plea of guilty obtained thrоugh duress, fraud, undue influence, or without understanding its true import, is in reality not a plea of guilty and will not support a judgment of conviction.” State v. Raponi,32 Idaho 368 , 373, 182 P. 8S5 (1919).
State v. Lawrence,
The оrder denying the writ is reversed and the cause is remanded to the district court for further proceedings.
