68 N.Y.S. 59 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1901
This case presents a question of right upon a writ of habeas • corpus, which is well .termed the greatest writ of the common law,
This is an appeal from an order of the Special Term dismissing a writ of habeas corpus issued to the sheriff of Suffolk county to inquire into the cause of the imprisonment of Wright, and from the order and decision of said court overnling the demurrer of the relator to the return of said sheriff to the writ and from the decision and order of said court then made sustaining the demurrer of the said sheriff to the traverse and answer of said relator to said return.
When the defendant is brought before the magistrate, he is entitled to be informed of the charge, the depositions taken are to be read, the deponents may be examined, and other witnesses may be called. ■The testimony taken must be reduced to writing and preserved. After hearing the proofs, if it appear that a crime has been comrnitted, and there, is sufficient cause to believe the defendant guilty,
In People ex rel. Danziger v. P. E. House of Mercy (128 N. Y. 180), cited by' the learned district attorney, the traverse, was made in a case which dealt with a prisoner held by final judgment. And the court say that, if thereby it was intended to bring in ques- , tian the sufficiency or competency of the evidence offered in support of the conviction, a writ of certiorari for review should have been
Allen, J., in People ex rel. Tweed v. Liscomb (60 N. Y. 565), says that the history of this writ was lost in antiquity, that the relief afforded by it is not the creature of any statute, and that it was . in use before Magna Charta. “ The statutes of parliament that ■ were passed from time to time,” says 3 Hallara (Chap. XIH), “ introduced no new principle, nor conferred any right upon the subject.” And yet men are accustomed to laud- the statutes rather than the., great principle of the common law. It is natural that both Englishmen and Americans should do this, for the statutes of Parliament were aimed at encroachments upon the province of the writ in the assertion of the king’s prerogative or the king’s privileges above the law,.or the assumption of power by the judges, and though remedial and perfecting (Hallara, chap. XIII; People ex rel. Tweed v. Liscomb, supra; People ex rel. Tappan v. Porter, 1 Duer, 714), were brave- assertions against the king and his camerilla or his council, or his servile -or his cowed judges.. The statutes marked the independence of the Legislature, and its stubborn devotion to the law of the-land and to the freedom of the subjects -thereof. Thus, acts done in vindication and assertion of the common law have been heralded as statutory declarations of new principles.
I do not propose to review the history of this writ, and it might smack of pedantry to do it. It has been written by far abler hands, than mine.- Parnell’s case, the asserted privilege of the return - therein, the sturdy struggle of the -commons-against the dough-faced judges- and the long line of precedents arrayed in the conference between commons and peers are interesting to the student. "W hether the speech of Jenkes in Guildhall and his commitment by the king in council resulted in .the famous statute 31 Charles, chapter 2, as Blackstone asserts, or whether it had little to do. with it, as Hallam contends, whether the Habeas Corpus Act was passed to-affront
In 1807, in Ex parte Bollman & Swartwout (4 Cranch, 75), Marshall, Oh. J., said : “ I understand the clear opinion of the court to be (if I mistake it my brethren will correct me) that it is unimportant whether the commitment be regular in point of form or not; for this court, having gone into an examination of the evidence upon which the commitment was grounded, will proceed to do that which the court below ought to have done.” In Ex parte Watkins (3 Pet. 202), Marshall, Oh. J., said: “This writ is, as has been said, in the nature of a writ of error which brings up the body of the prisoner with the cause of commitment. The court can undoubtedly inquire into the sufficiency of that cause; but if it be the judgment of a court of competent jurisdiction, especially a judgment withdrawn by law from the revision of, this court, is not that judgment in itself sufficient cause ? ” In People v. McLeod (25 Wend. 568) Cower, J., said: “Nothing is better settled on English authority than that on habeas corpus the examination as to guilt or innocence cannot, under any circumstances, extend beyond the depositions or proofs upon which the prisoner was committed. This would be so even on habeas corpus before an indictment found, however loosely the charge might be expressed in the warrant of commitment.” Until 1787 the English habeas corpus was in force as part of our common law. (People ex rel. Tappan v. Porter, supra; People ex rel. Tweed v. Liscomb, supra.) Our statute of 1787 (Chap. 39) was a literal transcript of the original English statute, and was substantially re-enacted by chapter 65, Laws of 1801, and by chapter 57, Revised Laws of 1813. Chapter 277 of the Laws of 1818 added efficiency. So that Kent, in speaking of the last-named statute, said: “By the New York Revised Statutes, which went into operation on 1st January, 1830, all the statute provisions on the subject of the writ of habeas corpus were redigested; ” and speaking of the statute of 1818, he says it “ enlarged the extent of the application of the writ. * * * It gave to the officer before whom the writ was returned authority to revise the cause of commitment and to examine into the truth of the facts alleged in
If the mere commitment were conclusive, then the writ-would be
In 1825, in Ex parte Tayloe (5 Cow. 50), Savage, Ch. J., said: “ But in all cases on habeas corpus, previous to indictment, the court will look into the depositions before the magistrate or before the coroner’s inquest; and though the commitment be full and in due form, yet, if the testimony proves no crime, the court will discharge or bail; and though the commitment be defective, yet, if the depositions contain evidence of an offence not bailable, the prisoner will be remanded.” Such was the decision of the court in People v. Martin (1 Park. Cr. Rep. 187); in People v. Tompkins (Id. 224); in People v. Richardson (4 id. 656); in Matter of Prime (1 Barb. 349); in Matter of Henry (13 Misc. Rep. 735); in People ex rel. Peterson v. McFarline (25 App. Div. 629), and in Matter of Martin (5 Blatchf. 308.) In Matter of Simon (13 N. Y. Supp. 399) it was held that, when the traverse denied the proof of any material facts,
The cases cited contra are distinguishable. In Bennac v. People (4 Barb. 31) there was no traverse, and there had been a conviction. In People v. Cassels (5 Hill, 164), Bbonson, J., said that a contempt was specially and plainly charged in the commitment, and, therefore, • it was the duty of the judge to remand. (2 R. S. 567, § 40.) For the statute expressly forbids the inquiry. (Id. 568, § 42.) People v. Johnson (Supra) was a trial for murder committed while in prison. ’ There was objection to the admission in evidence of the commitments on the ground of their non-compliance with the Code of Crimi- : nal Procedure, and that the justice had no right to issue them. The ' Court of Appeals said it presumed that the objection was taken with ■ the purpose of raising the question that the defendant was not lawfully confined in jail. It said that the commitment was a mere protec- ' tioñ to the jailer as showing his authority, and held that it was not incumbent on the People,- in order to make out a prima facie case " that the defendant was lawfully in jail, to put in evidence the proceedings taken on the examination, inasmuch as it was shown that he was arrested on a valid warrant, issued by competent authority, examined before an authorized magistrate upon a charge and held to answer, and that a commitment was then made. The court further said that no affirmative evidence had been given that the ' magistrate had omitted any act, and concluded that as the jurisdiction of the magistrate over the subject of the éxamiiiatión and
I am of opinion that if, upon review, it appear that there was any evidence before the magistrate that the crime was committed by the defendant, jurisdiction is-established. (People ex rel. Danziger v. P. E. House of Mercy, supra ; Matter of Prime, supra; Matter of Henry, supra; Church Habeas Corpus [2d ed.], 236.) The function of the court is not to review the preliminary examination in order to decide the question anew, or to supplant the examination of the magistrate by its own examination, but to ascertain whether the magistrate had jurisdiction to commit the prisoner.
The writ of certiorari provided for in the Habeas Corpus Act is statutory, and is not a writ of review. It should not be confounded with the common-law writ, which we have adopted by statute, whose purpose is to review the decision of inferior courts, bodies and tribunals. The final section of chapter 16, title 2, article 7 of the Code of Civil Procedure (§ 2148), reads: “ This article is not applicable to a writ of certiorari brought to review a determination made in any criminal matter, except a criminal contempt of court.” The writ of certiorari in the Habeas Corpus Act calls for the same return as the writ of habeas corpus, save that the body of the defendant need not be brought up. It is obtained on the same petition and on the same facts as a writ of habeas corpus (Code Civ. Proc. § 2019), and is subject to the same proceedings. (Id. § 2042.) This subject is thoroughly and ably discussed by, Walter Lloyd Smith, J., in People ex rel. Taylor v. Seaman (8 Misc. Rep. 152), with whose reasoning and conclusions we entirely concur. Further discussion is, therefore, unnecessary. (See, however, Hurd Habeas Corpus [2d ed.], 351; Church Habeas Corpus [2d ed.], 322, note.) It is contended that by section 515 of the Code of Criminal Procedure, writs of certiorari are abolished. But in People ex rel.
I have striven to show that the principle upon which the writ rests, the statutes which declare the principle and perfect the remedy,, and the precedents which affirm the principle or apply the remedy,, expound the common law or interpret the statutes, all secure to the-defendant the right that was denied to him. It has seemed proper to declare this at some length for the reason that the courts cannot too often assert the perennial power .and the searching force that. • are the attributes of the habeas corpus. Eten that Englishman, who-let nothing escape his shafts of wit, thought it well to write: “ When a, nation becomes free, it is extremely difficult to persuade them that their freedom is only to be preserved by perpetual and minute jealousy.”' Order reversed, and prisoner discharged.
All concurred, except Sewell, J., taking no part.
Order reversed, and prisoner discharged.