A petition stating that Charles Schubert was confined in the Kings County Penitentiary, and asking that a writ of habeas corpus issue, directed to the warden of the Kings County Penitentiary, commanding him to produce the body of Schubert before him, was presented to the honorable G-eorge G. Reyrolds, one of the judges of the City Court of the city of Brooklyn. The writ was allowed by the judge in the usual form, commanding the keeper of the penitentiary to have the body of Schubert, with the time and cause of his imprisonment, before the judge at a time therein mentioned. The deputy warden made a return to the same judge that he retained the within named defendant, Charles Schaffer, by virtue of a commitment issued by Herman L. Guck, a justice of the peace of the city of Brooklyn, the original of which was annexed, and for no other reason, and that the facts stated in the commitment were true as believed. The
The return to the writ of habeas corpus showed that the prisoner was held under a commitment for a criminal offense, of which he had been convicted by a court of Special Sessions. It is not claimed that that commitment is invalid by reason of anything which appears therein. Nor does the case show that the facts stated in the return were denied. In strictness, therefore, the proceedings should be deemed the same as if the prisoner had demurred to the return. (3 Hill, 658, Appendix note 28; Bennac v. The People, 4 Barb., 31; In re Da Costa, 1 Parker Cr., 129.) But a copy of the record of the conviction aforesaid forms a part of the case. It is but reasonable to infer, therefore, that it was admitted upon an allegation that the imprisonment was unlawful, pursuant to the forty-eighth section of the Habeas Corpus Act, 2 R. S., 569. The only question that arose upon that evidence, was whether the court of Special Sessions had jurisdiction to issue the commitment. If the prisoner failed to impeach the record for want of jurisdiction, it was the duty of the respondent to remand him to custody. Error, irregularity, or want of form, does not warrant his discharge. (3 Hill, 661, Appenix note 31; People v. Nevins, 1 id., 154; People v. Cassels, 5 id., 164; People v. Cavanagh, 2 Park., 650; People v. Shea, 3 id., 562; In re Lagrave, 45 How. Pr., 301.) The respondent had not power to re-examine on habeas corpus the proceeding before the court of Special Sessions. (2 R. S., 568, § 42.) The only legitimate inquiry was whether such court had jurisdiction of the person and of the offense. The record of conviction and the commitment both show that it had. That being so, no insufficiency of the record, in point of form, justified the discharge of the pris-
The order discharging the prisoner must be reversed.
Order discharging prisoner reversed.
