227 P. 37 | Mont. | 1924
delivered the opinion of the court.
Upon petition filed on behalf of George Shaffer by one Frank Stewart, a writ of habeas cc>rpus was issued directed to the
It appears that by information filed in the district court of Big Horn county on March 5, 1924, George Shaffer was charged with the crime of rape alleged to have been committed in Big Horn county on or about January 14, 1924, upon one Minnie Watt, of the age of fifteen years. On the day the information was filed, the accused was arrested and taken before the court, where he was then and there duly arraigned upon the information and advised of his right to have counsel appear for him. He stated that he did not desire to employ counsel, and thereupon entered a plea of guilty to the information, waived time for sentence, and was by the court sentenced to an indeterminate term of not less than twelve nor more than twenty-four years in the state prison at Deer Lodge. The commitment is entirely regular, and no question is raised with respect to either the form or substance thereof.
It is urged in this proceeding that the district court was wholly without jurisdiction of the offense for which Shaffer was committed, and that therefore the judgment rendered is null and void. Such contention is based upon the following facts alleged in the petition for the writ, viz.: That the prisoner, George Shaffer, is a full-blooded Crow Indian, of the age of nineteen years, residing upon the Crow Indian Reservation in Big Horn county, maintaining tribal rights and immunities, and a ward of the government of the United States; that Minnie Watt, upon whom the crime of rape was committed, is also a Crow Indian of like status; and that the offense was.committed within the confines of the Crow Indian Reservation.
If the prisoner is illegally held in custody as a prisoner, he must be discharged (sec. 12376, Rev. Codes 1921), and if the court exceeded its jurisdiction in committing him, he will be released on habeas corpus (Id., sec. 12362), and so, also, where no legal cause is shown for the imprisonment, it becomes the court’s duty to discharge him. (Id., sec. 12360.) If he is not entitled to his discharge, he must be remanded to custody. (Id., sec. 12367.) However, the court is presumed to have acted in the lawful exercise of jurisdiction. (Id., sec. 10606.)
“Where the detention is under the judgment of a court of general jurisdiction, the generally prevailing rule is that the presumption in support of jurisdiction is conclusive unless a want of jurisdiction appears on the face of the record; this presumption, and, a fortiori, express recitals of jurisdictional facts, cannot be rebutted by evidence dehors the record.1 (29 C. J. 170.)
“The office of the habeas corpus is to bring up the body only, and the court or judge will upon the return in this proceeding judge of the illegality of the imprisonment upon the commitment. If this be irregular merely, or it does not appear therefrom that the inferior court was without jurisdiction, the complainant will be remanded. If, however, it is the purpose of the complainant to have the proceedings # =» # reviewed, and the judgment or order therein annulled, on the ground of want or excess of jurisdiction, then certiorari may issue * * * to bring up the record, to enable the superior court or its judge to take such action therein as may be proper.” (State ex rel. Jackson v. Kennie, 24 Mont. 45, 60 Pac. 589.)
“The office of the writ of habeas corpus is not that of an appeal or writ of error. Its only office is to present the. inquiry whether the court a quo had jurisdiction of the subject matter and the defendant, and rendered such a judgment as the law authorizes in the particular case. When it appears that
In State v. District Court, 35 Mont. 321, 89 Pac. 63, this court said: “While there is some conflict 'between the early and later decisions as to the scope of the meaning of the term ‘jurisdiction’ as applied to a ease of this character, the decided weight of authority now supports the view that, in order for the judgment to be proof against an attack made by habeas corpus proceedings, the court rendering it must have had jurisdiction of the person and of the subject matter, and, in addition thereto, must have possessed the power or authority to render the particular judgment which it did pronounce; and the absence of any one of these factors renders the judgment void, and, consequently, open to collateral attack. [Citing cases.] ”
“Jurisdiction of the person, place, and subject matter, at least, must exist in order to make a valid judgment, and if either is wanting, the judgment is void, and the imprisonment without authority of law. The question of jurisdiction over the subject matter is one of fact, to be proved or admitted, as any other fact alleged. Ordinarily, in criminal trials, the jurisdiction of the court over the place where the offense is alleged to have been committed is assumed. If admitted by by pleading over, that ends the matter. If traversed, and the jury find that the prisoner committed the offense within the jurisdiction of the court, as alleged, the defendant cannot impeach that finding on habeas corpus by showing that the place where the offense was committed is without the said territorial limits. In courts of general jurisdiction, though the record fails to show jurisdiction of the person and subject matter, their jurisdiction will be presumed where the imprisonment is under process valid on its face, and the prisoner must assume the burden of proving its invalidity by showing a want of jurisdiction. If the record be challenged, the examination, of
From the record the court appears to have had jurisdiction of the person of the prisoner and of the crime with which he was charged, and in addition full authority to pronounce the judgment which it did, so that it is now impervious to collateral attack such as is here attempted.
As the commitment is regular upon its face and made by a court of competent jurisdiction, in our opinion it is conclusive against the prisoner. (In re Lybarger, 2 Wash. 131, 25 Pac. 1075; Ex parte Russell, 40 Wash. 244, 111 Am. St. Rep. 910, 82 Pac. 290.)
The information shows the offense to have been committed in Big Horn county, and that it is one within the court’s jurisdiction. If facts existed which divested the court of jurisdiction, the law ’afforded the prisoner ample opportunity to make them known in his defense, and not having done so, he will not now be heard to complain. There is nothing in the information of the judgment to indicate the offense was committed on an Indian reservation or that either prisoner or the prosecutrix, or both, were tribal Indians-, it being simply disclosed therefrom that the crime was committed in Big Horn county and that it is one ordinarily within the court’s jurisdiction.
The question of where in Big Horn county the crime was committed, or whether it was committed therein at all, were issues of fact to be determined by a jury, had the prisoner elected to go to trial. We are limited here solely to a determination of whether the facts charged constituted an offense and whether the sentence imposed is within the limits fixed by the statute, both of which are resolved against the prisoner.
On a trial of the offense with which the prisoner was charged, he might have defended on the grounds now asserted as reasons for lack of jurisdiction on the part of the trial court; but having pleaded guilty, he waived such defense and placed himself in the same position he would have occupied had he been
It appearing- to the court that the prisoner is not entitled to be released from custody, the writ of habeas corpus issued herein will be discharged, and the prisoner remanded to the custody of the warden of the state prison. It is so ordered.
Writ discharged.