221 Wis. 188 | Wis. | 1936
Lawrence O. Larson, as sheriff of Dane county, sued out this writ of error to review an order of the circuit court for Dane county (Judge Cowie presiding) which discharged the defendant in error, Cornelia Bennett, from his custody, after hearing had on a writ of habeas corpus, granted by August C. PIoppmann, circuit judge. The facts are not in dispute. On May 24, 1934, a judgment of divorce
The principal question argued is whether the circuit court, hereafter called Judge Cowie, erred in holding that the circuit court, hereafter called Judge Hoppmann, acted without jurisdiction in ordering Mrs. Bennett to pay to Mr. Bennett the sum of $871.70 to indemnify him for the costs and expenses incurred by him in attempting to' recover the custody of John and to bring him within the jurisdiction of the circuit court for Dane county, and in committing her to the county jail of Dane county upon her failure to pay said indemnity. The statutes, pursuant to which Judge Hoppmann acted, are secs. 295.13 and 295.14.
Mrs. Bennett contends that Judge Hoppmann was without jurisdiction to order her to pay an indemnity to Mr. Bennett because the expenditures made by him did not constitute “an actual loss or injury” produced by her misconduct, as that language was construed by this court in In re Ida Louisa Pierce, supra. In that case it was said:
“It is very clear that the ‘loss or injury’ of the statute is a pecuniary loss, or injury to rights for which compensation may be made in money; a loss or injury which would entitle the injured party to maintain an action against the offender to recover damages for his misconduct. This is made apparent by the last clause of section 21, which renders the payment of the indemnity a bar to such an action.”
The court was of the opinion that no pecuniary loss or injury had been shown which would entitle Mr. Alter to
Which contention is sound, we do not now decide for the reason that at the very outset we are confronted with the question whether habeas corpus proceedings properly should have been invoked to review the contempt order and commitment here considered. It is contended by Mrs. Bennett that that question is ruled in her favor by the Pierce Case, supra. That case was also a Iwbeas corpus proceeding brought in this court to test the legality of an order committing Ida Louisa Pierce to the county jail of La Crosse county for alleged contempt of court in removing to the state of Illinois, contrary to the judgment of the court rendered in a divorce action, a child of the parties which had theretofore been awarded to Mr. Alter. Although its original jurisdiction and the propriety of using the writ of habeas corpus for such a purpose were both questioned, this court held (Mr. Chief Justice Ryan dissenting) that the court below exceeded its jurisdiction in imposing both a fine upon the petitioner and imprisoning her until she should deliver the child to Mr. Alter. The court construed the word “fine” to mean “indemnity,” and held that it was improper and illegal to award indemnity to a party and also imprison the
That ruling, which was assailed at the time by Mr. Chief Justice Ryan with characteristic vigor and great clarity, was then in our opinion contrary to the established law and is now completely out of harmony with the law of numerous cases, since determined, which dealt with the office, purpose, and function of the. writ of habeas corpus.
In an early case it was said:
“And at the outset it may be observed, that the principle is well settled, that a writ of habeas corpus does not have the scope, nor is it intended to perform the office, of a writ of error or appeal. This doctrine is almost elementary in the law. The writ, then, cannot be resorted to for the purpose of reviewing and correcting orders and judgments which are erroneous merely. It deals with more radical defects, which go to the jurisdiction of the court or officer, and which render the proceeding or judgment void. A distinction between a proceeding or judgment which is void, and one that is voidable only for error, is recognized in the cases, and must be observed. Says Dixon, C. J., in Petition of Crandall, 34 Wis. 177: ‘It is conceded that for mere error, no matter how flagrant, the remedy is not by writ of habeas corpus. For error, the party imprisoned must prosecute his writ of error or certiorari. Nothing will be investigated on habeas corpus except jurisdictional defects, or illegality, as some courts and authors term it; by which is meant the want of any legal authority for the detention or imprisonment.’ ” Petition of Semler, 41 Wis. 517, 523.
To the same effect were two other cases: In re Blair, 4 Wis. *522; In re Perry, 30 Wis. 268. In his dissenting opinion in the Pierce Case, supra, Mr. Chief Justice Ryan pointed out the distinction between “mere error in the commitment of a prisoner, and want of jurisdiction to commit
“For mere error, no matter how flagrant, the remedy is not by habeas corpus. The law is well settled in this court that on habeas corpus only jurisdictional defects are inquired into. The writ does not raise questions of errors in law or irregularities in the proceedings.” In re Graham, 74 Wis. 450, 43 N. W. 148. See also, In re Pikulik, 81 Wis. 158, 51 N. W. 261; In re Stittgen, 110 Wis. 625, 86 N. W. 563; In re Carlson, 176 Wis. 538, 186 N. W. 722; In re Elliott, 200 Wis. 326, 228 N. W. 592; In re Cash, 215 Wis. 148, 253 N. W. 788. Compare John F. Jelke Co. v. Beck, 208 Wis. 650, 242 N. W. 576.
The rule stated in In re Ida Louisa Pierce, supra, to the effect that habeas corpus may be invoked where a court, having jurisdiction of both the person and the subject matter, has entered an erroneous order or judgment, is now expressly overruled.
In this action it appears without question or doubt that Mrs. Bennett deliberately violated the order of the circuit court for Dane county as well as its specific instructions; that she deliberately took John to the state of Michigan and contumaciously opposed Mr. Bennett’s attempt to vindicate his right to have the custody of John and to bring him back within the jurisdiction of the circuit court for Dane county; that she was guilty of contempt of court; and that the court clearly had jurisdiction of both the subject matter and the person of Mrs. Bennett and the power to* punish her for such
By the Court. — The order of the circuit court for Dane county, which discharged the defendant in error from the custody of the sheriff of Dane county, is reversed, and the cause remanded with directions to remand the custody of the defendant in error to the plaintiff in error, as sheriff of Dane county.