PHYLE v. DUFFY, WARDEN
No. 655
Supreme Court of the United States
Decided June 7, 1948
334 U.S. 431
If aliens, as I think they can, may be excluded by a state from fishing privileges, I see no reason why the classification established by California excluding only aliens ineligible to citizenship is prohibited by the Constitution. Terrace v. Thompson, 263 U. S. 197, 220. Whatever we may think of the wisdom of California‘s statute, we should intervene only when we conclude the state statute passes constitutional limits.
MR. JUSTICE JACKSON joins in this dissent.
PHYLE v. DUFFY, WARDEN.
No. 655. Argued April 20-21, 1948.-Decided June 7, 1948.
Clarence A. Linn, Deputy Attorney General of California, argued the cause for respondent. With him on the brief was Fred N. Howser, Attorney General.
MR. JUSTICE BLACK delivered the opinion of the Court.
The petitioner is under sentence of death for murder in the first degree imposed by a California superior court and affirmed by the State Supreme Court. 28 Cal. 2d 671, 171 P. 2d 428. The validity of that sentence is
It is petitioner‘s contention that, though having been pronounced insane in a judicial proceeding after his conviction, and though he in fact is still insane, he is about to be executed because a state doctor, acting under authority of state statutes, has declared him restored to sanity. The doctor reached his determination without notice or hearings, and without any opportunity on petitioner‘s part to obtain an original court hearing and adjudication of his sanity, or even to obtain a court review of the doctor‘s conclusion that he is sane. This procedure it is argued constitutes a denial to petitioner of
This contention was urged upon the California Supreme Court in habeas corpus proceedings there instituted. That court entertained and considered the petition, but, with two judges dissenting, denied relief, sustaining the validity of the power of the state‘s executive agents to follow the prescribed statutory procedures. 30 Cal. 2d 838, 186 P. 2d 134. We granted certiorari because of the serious nature of the due process contentions presented in the petition. 333 U. S. 841. Here the California attorney general, while supporting the State Supreme Court‘s denial of habeas corpus, asserts that California affords petitioner an adequate judicial remedy by way of mandamus, a procedure which has not yet been sought by petitioner.
The California procedure may perhaps be better understood by explaining the application of the controlling California statutes to petitioner‘s case. While he was in prison awaiting execution of the death sentence a question arose concerning the petitioner‘s sanity at that time.
After adjudication of insanity the petitioner was taken to a state hospital for the insane in compliance with the trial court‘s order of commitment. In accordance with
The medical superintendent‘s determination of petitioner‘s sanity was based on his own ex parte investigation, no notice or hearings having been afforded petitioner or any person on his behalf. It is thus clear that the California statutory scheme here challenged provides neither an administrative nor a judicial hearing as a prerequisite to a determination that a condemned defendant judicially adjudicated to be insane has been restored to sanity; one man in an ex parte investigation decides the question upon which hangs the defendant‘s life, in the absence of a later request by the prison warden for
The holding of the State Supreme Court in the habeas corpus proceeding was:
“There is no authority . . . for the proposition that defendant has a right to habeas corpus or other judicial proceeding to determine the question of his sanity after his release from the state hospital. In fact,
section 3700 of the Penal Code 6 expressly prohibits such a proceeding. Once the superintendent certifies that defendant is sane, he is remanded to the custody of the warden for execution and ‘No judge, court or other officer other than the Governor’ can then suspend the execution of the judgment, ‘except the warden of the State Prison to whom he is delivered. . . .‘” In re Phyle, 30 Cal. 2d at 842-843, 186 P. 2d at 137.
For the statements in its opinion that the due process clause of the
The Georgia law under scrutiny in the Nobles case provided that the sanity of a person previously condemned to death should be determined by a tribunal formed in the following manner: “The sheriff of the
The Nobles case does stand for the proposition that a condemned defendant has no “absolute right” to a hearing on the question of his sanity on his mere “suggestion.” Such an absolute right, this Court thought, would make the punishment of a defendant “depend solely upon his fecundity in making suggestion after suggestion of insanity, to be followed by trial upon trial.” P. 406. For this reason, the Court in the Nobles opinion cited and quoted from legal commentators and from judicial opinions which emphasized, as the opinion in the Nobles case itself emphasized, the importance of leaving to the “discretion of a judge” the most appropriate procedure for determining
Reading this statement in its context and in relation to the Georgia procedure, we do not understand that the Court in the Nobles case passed upon the question here urged: whether a state which bars the execution of insane persons can submit to a single individual this question, crucial to life, to be decided by that individual ex parte, with or without notice and hearings as the individual may choose, and without any judicial supervision, control or review whatever. The Nobles case we do understand to be an authority for the principle that a condemned defendant cannot automatically block execution by suggestions of insanity, and that a state tribunal, particularly a judge, must be left free to exercise a reasonable discretion in determining whether the facts warrant a full inquiry and hearing upon the sanity of a person sentenced to death.7
What has been said previously indicates the gravity of the questions here raised under the due process clause as heretofore construed by this Court, both the contention that execution of an insane man is offensive to the fundamental principles of liberty and justice which lie at the base of all our civil and political institutions, Adamson v. California, 332 U. S. 46; Carter v. Illinois, 329 U. S. 173, and the different contention that life shall not be taken by a state as the result of the unreviewable ex parte determination of a crucial fact made by a single executive officer. See Ng Fung Ho v. White, 259 U. S. 276.8 It is not appropriate for us to pass on such constitutional questions in this habeas corpus case if, as the California attorney general contends, there is a state remedy by mandamus available to petitioner under which he can invoke judicial action to compel the warden to initiate judicial proceedings, and in which mandamus proceedings the court will hear and consider evidence to determine whether there is “reason to believe” that the petitioner is insane. New York ex rel. Whitman v. Wilson, Warden, 318 U. S. 688; Woods v. Nierstheimer, 328 U. S. 211; Carter v. Illinois, 329 U. S. 173. See also Simon v. Craft, 182 U. S. 427, 437.
The State Supreme Court in denying habeas corpus said that the state statutes made “no provision for a judicial determination of the question of the sanity of a defendant delivered to the warden of a state prison for execution except as set forth in”
The jurisdiction of California courts to issue mandamus has its source in
Petitioner contends, however, that mandamus would not be available under California law if there is another adequate remedy, see Kahn v. Smith, 23 Cal. 2d 12, 142 P. 2d 13, that here habeas corpus is available, and hence mandamus is not. This contention is fully answered by the State Supreme Court‘s opinion in this case, holding that neither habeas corpus nor any other remedy is available to test sanity of a condemned defendant, except that remedy under
Petitioner contends that this remedy is inadequate because under California law no relief could be hoped for in a mandamus proceeding without a showing that the warden‘s non-action was arbitrary and capricious. We cannot know, of course, just what precise standards the State Supreme Court may hold must be met by petitioner in order to obtain the judicial inquiry provided in
In considering what the issues may be in a mandamus proceeding, it must be borne in mind that the warden is under a mandatory duty to initiate judicial proceedings, not when a defendant is insane, but when “there is good reason to believe” he is insane. We cannot say at this time that California‘s remedy by mandamus will be less than a substantial equivalent11 of one which authorized him to apply directly to a court for a full hearing. For this Court held in Nobles v. Georgia, supra, that in the absence of sufficient reasons for holding a full hearing into the sanity of a defendant sentenced to death, a state judge may deny such a hearing consistently with due process. As previously pointed out, the decision in the Nobles case emphasized that due process of law had never necessarily envisioned a full court hearing every time the insanity of a condemned defendant was suggested. Applications for inquiries into sanity made by a defendant sentenced to death, unsupported by facts, and buttressed by no good reasons for believing that the defendant has lost his sanity, cannot, with any appropriate regard for society and for the judicial process, call for the delays in execution incident to full judicial inquiry. And a court can just as satisfac-
In this situation we find no federal constitutional question presented which is ripe for decision here. So here, as in Woods v. Nierstheimer, supra, being unable to say that the judgment denying habeas corpus may not rest on an adequate non-federal ground, the writ of certiorari is
Dismissed.
MR. JUSTICE FRANKFURTER, whom MR. JUSTICE DOUGLAS, MR. JUSTICE MURPHY, and MR. JUSTICE RUTLEDGE join, concurring.
Where life is at stake one cannot be too careful. I‘s had better be dotted and t‘s crossed. And so I deem it proper to state my understanding of the opinion of the Court, on the basis of which I concur in it.
We granted certiorari to review a decision of the Supreme Court of California which dismissed habeas corpus proceedings brought in that court. We did so on the assumption that the case raised questions under the
Of course I recognize the weight to be attached to the Attorney General‘s views regarding the law of California. But the controlling voice on California law is that of the Supreme Court of California. Whatever may be the elegancies of procedure by which the matter is to be determined, our decision declining to consider the grave constitutional issues which we thought we had before us, is contingent upon a determination by the Supreme Court of California that the law of that State is what our decision presupposes it to be, namely, that California by a remedy which California chooses to call mandamus enables the present petitioner to secure a judicial determination of his present sanity. This means, of course, not the very restricted scope of relief which is normally associated with the traditional remedy of mandamus. It presupposes that California affords petitioner the means of challenging in a substantial way the ex parte finding of the Superintendent of the State Hospital for the Insane and enables him to secure judicial determination of the claims he has made in his petition for habeas corpus which, so the Court now holds, is not the proper way to proceed.
Upon this view I concur in the decision and opinion of the Court.
