92 Cal. 421 | Cal. | 1891
The defendant was convicted and sentenced to the state prison for the term of five years for the crime of assisting one Lee Yick, confined in the county jail of Alameda County, to escape therefrom. From this judgment, and an order denying his motion for a new trial, the defendant has appealed to this court.
Upon the trial, the defendant requested the court to give the following instruction, which was refused: “ It is not unlawful for one who is restrained unlawfully, and without authority and process of law, to withdraw from his place of confinement and depart therefrom. Such
It appears from the evidence that Lee Yick, whom the defendant is accused of assisting to escape, was, with the consent of a deputy sheriff in charge thereof, placed in the Alameda County jail by a deputy United States marshal for the southern district of California, and that the only authority of said deputy marshal consisted of a “finding ” made by a United States circuit court commissioner for the southern district of California, at San Diego, which, after reciting that said Lee Yick was charged with having unlawfully come within the United States from a foreign place, and had been examined before him on that charge, proceeded to state, as his conclusion from the evidence, that “Lee Yick is a Chinese person and laborer; that he came within the United States on the first day of August, A. D. 1890, in the county of San Diego, state of California, from the republic of Mexico. Now, therefore, from the foregoing facts I find that the said Lee Yick was found unlawfully within the United States, and that he is not lawfully entitled to he in or remain in the United States.” No formal judgment was ever made or given upon this “ finding,” nor order or direction given by the commissioner or any court that the said Lee Yick be removed from the southern district of California to some other place in the United States for the purpose of returning him to the country whence he came, and that he be restrained of his liberty for that purpose.
1. It is provided by section 1601 of the Penal Code, that “the sheriff must receive, and keep in the county jail, any prisoner committed thereto by process or order issued under the authority of the United States, until he is discharged according to law.”
Was the said Lee Yick committed to the county jail of Alameda under any process or order issued under the
2. It is contended by the attorney-general that the question whether Lee Yick was or was not lawfully confined in jail is immaterial, and that the offense of assisting a prisoner to escape from jail is made out when it is shown that a defendant has assisted a person unlawfully confined therein to free himself from the restraint of a prison. In support of this proposition, it is argued that the purpose of the law is to throw a protection around
We cannot accept this view. An escape is classed as a crime against public justice, and the law, in declaring it to be an offense, proceeds upon the theory that the citizen should yield obedience to the law; that when one has been, by its authority or command, confined in a prison, that it is his duty to submit to such confinement until delivered by due course of law, no matter whether he was committed to await a future trial, or as a punishment after judgment of conviction, or for any other purpose authorized by law. But when the imprisonment is unlawful, and is itself a crime, the reason which makes flight from prison an offense does not exist. In such a case the right to liberty is absolute, and he who regains it is not guilty of the technical offense of escape. And this view seems to be the one which is adopted by the courts, without dissent from any.
In the case of State v. Leach, 7 Conn. 452, the defendant was tried for an escape, and it appearing that his imprisonment was illegal, the court held that the act, instead of being a crime, was justifiable, and further said: “ It hence results that the keeper of the jail is vested with no authority; the building in which the prisoner was confined is not a jail, but as to him a mere private building, and hence he might regain his liberty, of • which he was unjustly deprived; and it is no part of the case, that he made use of more force than was necessary to accomplish this object.”
That there can be no escape, in the sense of the law, unless there was a lawful custody, is also held in Housh v. People, 75 Ill. 487; State v. Beebe, 13 Kan. 589; State v. Jones, 78 N. C. 420; 2 Bishop’s Crim. Law, sec. 1065.
The cases cited by the attorney-general are not in conflict with the conclusion we have reached, as an analysis of them will show. In Rex v. Waters, 12 Cox
Judgment and order reversed.
McFarland, J., Paterson, J., Sharpstein, J., Harrison, J., and Garoutte, J., concurred.