This is a habeas corpus proceeding touching the confinement of the petitioner, Edward Boulanger, in the Ionia State hospital. An ancillary writ of certiorari was issued to the judge by whom petitioner was committed.
On June 17, 1937, petitioner pleaded guilty in the recorder’s court of Detroit to a charge of gross indecency. Passing of sentence was deferred and, on orаl request of defendant’s counsel, a sanity commission was appointed by the trial judge. See Act No. 88, Pub. Acts 1935, as amended by Act No. 196, Pub. Acts 1937 (Stat. Ann. § 28.1073 et seq.). After making an investigation, including an examination of petitioner, the three members of the commission on July 7, 1937, testified at a session of court and a written finding made by the members of the commission was received in evidence. The commission did not find petitioner an insane person,* but it did find him to be “psychopathic or a sex degenerate or sex pervert and dangerous tо public safety.” No objection was made by defendant’s attorney who was present at this session of court and had an oр *154 portunity to cross-examine the witnesses. The trial court thereupon stated:
“I find the defendant psychopathic and his tendencies are a menace to public society and a menace to public safety, and send you to the Detroit house of correction (colloquy between court and counsel). I sentence you to six months to one year in the Detroit house of correction. After the expiration of the minimum term to be transferred to Ionia State hospital at Ionia to remain in such State hospital until this court shall adjudge you cease to be a menace to public safety.”
Nothing apрears in this record which in any way impairs the regularity of petitioner’s conviction on the charge of gross indecency. The maximum penalty provided by statute is “imprisonment in the State prison for not more than five years or by a fine of not more than twо thousand five hundred dollars.” Act No. 328, § 338, Pub. Acts 1931 (Stat. Ann. § 28.570).
In the formal record of sentence and the disposition of the case the trial judgе included the following :
“And the court recommends and orders that upon the expiration of said prison term, or upon dischargе from prison through the exercise of executive clemency or through the operation of any law relating to pardons and paroles, that said defendant shall be removed and committed to the Ionia State hospital at Ionia, Michigan, or such other institution as may be provided by the State of Michigan for the care and custody of the class of persons designated in Act No. 88, chap. 9, § la, Pub. Acts 1935, between the date of this sentence and the date of discharge; said defendant to rеmain in such State *155 hospital until he shall, upon hearing given, he adjudged no longer a menace to the public safety becаuse of such mental condition with which he is afflicted.”
The substance of the above quotation was embodied in the mittimus under which petitioner was committed to the Detroit house of correction. Substantially upon the expiration of his minimum sentence, Deсember 16, 1937, petitioner was paroled under the following order of the parole board:
“It having been made to apрear to the Michigan parole board that Edward Boulanger, Beg. No. 6,315, an inmate of the Detroit house of correction, is eligible to be paroled; and that said board, after deliberate consideration of all the facts and circumstanсes, including the inmate’s mental and social attitudes, is reasonably assured that the release of this inmate will not be incompatible with the welfare of society nor will said inmate be a menace to society, nor the public safety if paroled; and that the inmate will have satisfactory employment or care.
“Therefore, it is ordered by the said Michigan parole bоard that the said inmate be paroled from the said prison on December 16, 1937, into the custody of the superintendent under the сonditions below set forth, or until other action is taken according to the authority vested in said parole board or the burеau of pardons and paroles.”
On the same date petitioner was paroled the trial court issued an ex parte order as follows:
“The abovе-named defendant having heretofore been committed to the Detroit house of correction for a period оf not less than six months nor more than one year, and at the expiration of sentence to be transferred to the Ionia Stаte hospital, at Ionia, until cured and until further order of the court, it is thereupon ordered by the court that the said superintendent of the Detroit house of correction be and *156 lie is hereby directed therewith to return through the sheriff of Wayne county to thе superintendent of the Michigan State hospital at Ionia, the above-named defendant, Edward Boulanger, upon delivery of (to) him of a certified copy of this order, so that defendant may from this day thereto remain until he is cured or otherwise dischаrged by the court, in accordance with Act No. 88, Pub. Acts 1935, as amended.”
In accordance with the foregoing order of the court petitioner was committed to the Ionia State hospital December 18, 1937, and he is still detained and confined therein. Pеtitioner, asserting that his commitment and detention were and are without authority in law, instituted this habeas corpus proceeding.
The merits of petitioner’s application for writ of habeas corpus are controlled by the following. At the time the trial judgе committed petitioner to the Ionia State hospital upon a determination that petitioner was “psychopаthic” and “a menace to public society and a menace to public safety” there was no statutory authority in this State for committing a sane person who was determined to be in that condition or of that type. In
People
v.
Frontczak,
“Hospitalization, with curative treatment and measures, may be desirable but, until the law makes a sane person amenable to compulsory restraint as а sex deviator, it falls short of due process in merely providing procedure. ’ ’
It must be held that petitioner’s commitment was without warrant in law. He is entitled to be discharged. It is so ordered.
