52 Kan. 29 | Kan. | 1893
The opinion of the court was delivered by
An indictment was returned by the grand1 jury of Payne county, Oklahoma territory, charging Ira N. Terrill with the offense of murder, and at the trial, held September 26,1892, he was convicted of the offense charged, and the punishment fixed by the jury was imprisonment in the penitentiary at hard labor for life. Subsequently the sentence of the court was pronounced, adjudging that Terrill be confined in the territorial penitentiary at Lansing, Kas., for the term of his natural life, where he was conveyed, and is now held in custody by the warden of that prison. He seeks release here by a proceeding in habeas corpus, and in his application he-alleges several grounds why his imprisonment is illegal, only one of which it will be necessary to notice. He asserts that the trial was had and the judgment rendered at a time not authorized by law; that the court was then without jurisdiction to take any proceedings against him, and hence the sentence and judgment of the court are absolutely void.'
In pursuance of law, the terms of the district courts of Oklahoma were fixed by order of the supreme court, and the-terms are required to be ■ held in the county of Payne commencing on the third Tuesday in April and the first Tuesday of November of each year. The petitioner was tried in 1892, and during the time within which the April term might have been held; but it appears that the judge of that court was not present at the time and place when the April term of court should have begun, nor was he present .in person for several days afterward. The court should have been opened on April 19, but the judge did not appear until the 26th of that month, when he opened and held court until April 30, 1892. Several adjournments were made by the court, one of which was to June 14,1892, but the judge of the court again failed to appear, when the clerk attempted to adjourn the court un
“After the 23d, for want of a judge, no legal business could have been transacted, and for that reason the court stood adjourned. The judge who opened court might no doubt have adjourned to a specified day, had the business of the court required it, and business might have been regularly resumed at that time. The judge had no power to authorize the ministerial officers of the court to exercise judicial powers, even in opening and adjourning the court. They not having such authority, and the court not having been opened on the 24th by a judge authorized to exercise the jurisdiction of the court, it stood adjourned after the 23d, and that must be regarded as the last day of the term.” (See, also, In re Millington, 24 Kas. 214; Lewis v. Hoboken, 42 N. J. L. 379; Hoye v. The State, 39 Ga. 718; Wightman v. Karsner, 20 Ala. 446; Brumley v. The State, 20 Ark. 77; Thomas v. Fogarty, 19 Cal. 644.)
While the petitioner must be released from imprisonment at the penitentiary, and from the custody of the warden, our judgment will not operate as an unqualified discharge. So far as appears here, he was regularly indicted; and, as the proceedings had against him were without jurisdiction and void, it is possible there was no jeopardy, and that another trial may be had. The warden will, therefore, be directed to release the petitioner from imprisonment in the penitentiary, and deliver him to the custody of the sheriff of Payne county, Oklahoma territory, and for such further proceedings as the prosecuting officers may desire to take.