61 A. 631 | Md. | 1905
The record now before us has been brought into this Court by petition as upon writ of error. It appears that the plaintiff in error was indicted by the grand jury for Baltimore City on October the seventh, nineteen hundred and four upon the charge of having made an assault upon one Henry A. Le Cron with intent to kill and murder. Before being brought to trial on this indictment he was convicted of felony in the Circuit Court for Baltimore County on November 20th, 1904, and the same day was sentenced to be confined in the penitentiary for a term of years which has not yet expired. He *467 was in execution of that sentence committed to the penitentiary and to the custody of the warden thereof. On the eighth of December following, the case pending against him in the Criminal Court of Baltimore City was called for trial, and upon a writ ofhabeas corpus issued at the instance of the State's Attorney, the plaintiff in error was brought into the Criminal Court in the custody of the warden of the penitentiary to answer the indictment accusing him of an assault with intent to murder. He thereupon filed a motion in the words following: "The defendant represents to the Court that on the 29th day of November, 1904, he was duly convicted of felony by the Circuit Court for Baltimore County, and thereupon on the 29th day of November, 1904, by said Court sentenced to imprisonment in the Maryland penitentiary, and is now a prisoner convicted of felony in the custody of the warden of said prison, under the authority and jurisdiction of said Circuit Court by virtue of said sentence. Wherefore he prays that he be not now required to plead to the above indictment, nor put on trial." To the legal sufficiency of this motion the State's Attorney excepted; the Court sustained the exception and overruled the motion. On the twelfth of December a writ of habeas corpus was again issued directing the warden of the penitentiary to produce the plaintiff in error before the Criminal Court on the following day for trial on the indictment pending in that Court against him for an assault with intent to murder. On the return of the writ the plaintiff in error moved to quash the writ, first, because at the time the writ was issued he was, and upon the return thereof still continued to be, lawfully in the custody of the warden of the prison in execution of the sentence imposed by the Circuit Court for Baltimore County; secondly, because being convicted and imprisoned he could not properly prepare for trial; thirdly, because, by reason of his said situation he could not be required to answer or plead to the indictment. These reasons and the motion to quash the writ of habeas corpus were overruled; and thereupon a plea of not guilty was entered and the plaintiff in error went to trial before the Court without a jury. He was adjudged guilty *468 and was sentenced by the Criminal Court of Baltimore City on December 28th, 1904, to be confined in the Maryland penitentiary for the term of nine years to begin immediately on the expiration of the five years imposed upon him by the Circuit Court for Baltimore County, in the case of the State of Maryland against him and Lee R. Mooney, case No. 5621 docket of said Court, September Term, 1904, folio 178, of Criminal Docket No. 12 of said Court. On the same day there was filed a petition asking that the record be removed into this Court as upon writ of error, and in that petition the errors of which the plaintiff in error complains were assigned in the following words:
"1. This defendant having on the 29th day of November, 1904, during the pendency of the indictment in this case and after the time of the alleged commission of the offences therein averred, been duly convicted by the Circuit Court for Baltimore County of felony and on the same day sentenced by said Court to imprisonment in the Maryland penitentiary, and being at the time of calling the above entitled case for trial convicted and legally held in the custody of the warden of said prison in execution of said sentence, which is and remains unexpired prayed that he be not now required to plead to the above indictment nor put on trial but the Court, having brought the defendant before it in the custody of the warden of the said prison by means of a writ of habeas corpus, proceeded to trial and sentence.
2. That the Court overruled the motion of the defendant to quash the writ of habeas corpus and remand him to the custody in which brought up and also the petition of the defendant that he be not required to plead nor be put on trial, and determined that the matters above set forth as grounds for said motion and said petition are not sufficient in law.
3. That the Court decided that, notwithstanding the matters above set forth it had jurisdiction to hear and determine this case, and thereupon proceeded to conviction and sentence."
The alleged errors consist in the refusal of the Criminal Court to quash the writ of habeas corpus under which the plaintiff *469 in error was brought into that Court for trial on the indictment there pending against him; and the further refusal of the Court to grant the prayer of the petition which asked that the accused be not required to plead to the indictment and be not put upon trial during the period he continued to be confined in the penitentiary in execution of the sentence imposed by the Circuit Court for Baltimore County. A motion has been made in behalf of the State to quash the assignments of error, upon the ground that they are too vague and indefinite. As the questions involved are of some importance in the administration of the criminal law we will proceed to consider them without regard for the moment to the motion filed by the Attorney-General. Before doing this, however, we will notice a matter to which considerable parts of the oral argument, and the brief for the plaintiff in error were devoted; though the question thus discussed is not presented by the petition assigning errors.
The matter just indicated concerns the sentence imposed by the Criminal Court. It has been objected to the sentence, first, that it is cumulative, that is to say, by its terms it was not to begin until the expiration of a prior sentence imposed by another and a different tribunal; and secondly, that it does not appear and has not been shown that the Judge of the Criminal Court had before him any record from the Circuit Court for Baltimore County to guide him in fixing the date for the beginning of the sentence which he pronounced. In 25 Am. Eng. Ency. L. (2 ed.), 303, it is said: "When a defendant is already in execution on a former sentence, sentence of imprisonment may be given against him to commence from the expiration of the term of imprisonment which he is, at the time, serving;" and in support of the text the subjoined cases are cited in note 11. Wilkes v. Rex, 4 B.P.C. (Toml. ed.) 360, 4 Burr. 2575; Wallace v. State,
But it has been objected that there is nothing to show that the Criminal Court had the record of the case in the Circuit Court for Baltimore County before it in such a way as to justify it in imposing the cumulative sentence. We need only say that the record in the case at bar is entirely silent on the subject. For aught that appears the full record of the proceedings, conviction and sentence in the Circuit Court for Baltimore County was before the Criminal Court of Baltimore City. In the absence of appropriate averments that it was not it must be assumed that it was. It will never be presumed that a Court of original and general jurisdiction acted *471 without adequate grounds to support its action. The sentence was more minute than was necessary. As the warden of the penitentiary is required by law (Code, 1904, Art. 27, § 627) to keep a record of the terms for which all convicts are sentenced, it would have been sufficient if the Judge of the Criminal Court in imposing the sentence had directed that it should begin upon the expiration of the sentence inflicted by the Circuit Court for Baltimore County without further reference to the prior case. The motion filed by the plaintiff in error on December 8th, in the Criminal Court asked the latter Court not to proceed with the trial because he, the plaintiff in error, was, at that time, serving in the penitentiary, a sentence imposed by the Circuit Court for Baltimore County for felony of which he had been duly convicted. That statement, sworn to by the plaintiff in error, was all that was needed to apprise the Criminal Court of the former conviction, and it could well have made its sentence commence upon the termination of the one named in the motion. The fact that the Judge referred more particularly to the prior conviction is no ground for interfering with the sentence.
We now come to the grounds of error assigned, or intended to be assigned, in the petition upon which the record was transmitted to this Court. It is contended that a writ of habeas corpus
cannot be used to bring a convict from the penitentiary into the Criminal Court for trial upon an indictment there pending against him, while he is serving a sentence of imprisonment under a conviction of felony entered against him in another Court of the State; and the error complained of is that the Criminal Court refused to quash the writ of habeas corpus. Assuming, for the moment, that this Court has authority to review the ruling thus made, there can be no doubt as to the correctness of the Court's action. A writ of habeas corpus will bring a convict from the penitentiary into Court, not for the purpose of having the cause of his detention inquired into, but either because he may be needed as a witness, or because a pending indictment against him ought to be heard and determined. The penitentiary is not a place of *472
sanctuary; and an incarcerated convict ought not to enjoy an immunity from trial merely because he is undergoing punishment on some earlier judgment of guilt. Why should there be a delay in bringing to trial, on an indictment pending against him, a convict who has not yet completed the service of a previous sentence? No reason can be suggested for such a delay in the case of a convict adjudged guilty of some other offense and actually in execution of a sentence thereunder, that does not apply equally to an individual who has been indicted but has not yet been tried. The situation of the two is identical except for the single circumstance that in the first instance the criminal who has more frequently violated the law has been tried and convicted for some of his offenses, whilst the other has not. It is not the policy of the law to encourage the commission of crime. Delay in administering the criminal law and in inflicting punishment promotes crimes as observation and common experience abundantly demonstrate. And if the Courts should hold that one already convicted and actually incarcerated under sentence, could not be brought before the Court on a writ of habeas corpus and tried for some other offense, until the expiration of the first sentence, a temptation to commit a crime for the express purpose of escaping altogether or at least of deferring punishment for a previous one, would be held out to the evil minded and depraved. Suppose, for instance, that a homicide had been committed and the assassin has escaped and that for the time being a suspicion does not point to him but is directed towards another. Suppose that the real criminal returns to the scene of the murder and in the vicinity commits a larceny and is arrested therefor and pleads guilty and is sentenced to confinement for eight or ten years in the penitentiary; and that after beginning to serve out that sentence, evidence is discovered which indicates that he was the murderer. Suppose further he should, when confronted with the evidence inculpating him, confess his guilt, and that he should then be indicted for the crime of murder. Would any Court hesitate to issue a writ of habeas corpus directed to the warden of the penitentiary requiring him to produce the convict so that *473
the latter might be put upon trial for the capital offense? Can it be possible that the Court would be so hopelessly impotent, in such circumstances, as to be unable to do anything until the expiration of the sentence of eight or ten years; by which time the main witnesses might be dead, and the ends of justice might be defeated? And yet, if the contention made in the case at bar is sound, the arm of the criminal law would be paralyzed — not a step could be taken towards prosecuting him so long as the convict remained sheltered within the walls of the penitentiary. That is not the law. The Criminal Court had jurisdiction to bring the plaintiff in error before it under a writ of habeas corpus
and to place him on trial under the indictment there pending against him. Re Wetton, 1 Cromp. Jarvis, 459. In Regina v.Day, 3 F. F. 526, it was held that the Court will not grant an application for a habeas corpus to remove a prisoner from gaol, where he is undergoing sentence, in order to take him before a magistrate in another county, to prefer another charge against him; but will grant a habeas corpus to bring him up for trial on a true bill being found against him at the assizes on that charge. State v. Wilson,
But there is another obstacle in the path of the plaintiff in error. After final judgment of conviction the jurisdiction of the Court cannot be questioned by an inquiry into the manner in which the accused was brought before it; and this is true even though the prisoner had been kidnapped and forcibly brought before the Court from a foreign jurisdiction. 77 Cal., supra. So inMahon v. Justice,
Much reliance was placed on the case of The State v. Boyle,
With respect to the other or remaining alleged error, namely, that the prisoner ought not to have been tried in the Criminal Court until the expiration of the sentence imposed upon him by the Circuit Court for Baltimore County, nothing further need be said. We have disposed of that objection in discussing the prior one.
Whilst some of the alleged errors are strictly speaking not properly before this Court for review, we have deemed it advisable to consider them fully; and though the writ of error might be quashed we prefer to affirm the judgment.
Judgment and sentence affirmed.
(Decided June 21st, 1905.) *476