The writ of error presents the question of whether or not the crime of sodomy as defined by the laws of Georgia includes the unnatural copulation between a man and a woman per linguam in vagina.
“Sodomy is the carnal knowledge and connection against the order of nature, by man with man, or in the same unnatural manner with woman.”
Code
§ 26-5901. In
Herring v. State,
We have not found a decision of this court which is squarely on point with the facts of the case sub judice. However, the case of
Comer v. State,
The majority judges of the Court of Appeals in the
Comer
case erred and the dissenting judge was correct because
Code
§ 26-5901 is fairly and reasonably subject to either the construction given it by the majority judges or the construction given it by the dissenting judge and the rule is that when a criminal statute fairly and reasonably is subject to two constructions, one which would render an act criminal, the other which would not, the statute must be construed strictly against the State and in favor of the accused.
Gibson v. State,
Defendants in error raise several questions as to whether or not plaintiff in- error has pursued the proper remedy to raise the question decided in Division 1 of this opinion and, if so, whether he has pursued that remedy effectively. They do not contend that mandamus will not lie to compel members of the State Board of Pardons and Paroles to consider and pass- upon the application for parole of a prisoner who has served less than the minimum term of his indeterminate sentence but more than the term required by the rules of the board in order to be eligible for consideration for parole. Indeed, such a contention would not be valid.
Matthews v. Everett,
The case of
Strickland v. Thompson,
supra, relied upon by defendants in error, is disapproved in the particulars hereinafter discussed because in those particulars it is unsound and in conflict with previous full bench decisions of this court. We intend to express no disapproval of the principle relied upon in the
Strickland
case that habeas corpus is not a substitute for writ of error or other remedial process. That principle is sound and is supported by a long line 'of decisions both within and without this State.
Yancy v. Harris,
Closely analagous to the case at bar, wherein the legislature has not made the act in question criminal, are those cases in which the prisoner attacks his judgment of conviction by habeas corpus on the ground that the statute under which he was indicted, tried, and convicted is unconstitutional,
Moore v. Wheeler,
The rule that the writ of habeas corpus is not a substitute for a writ of error will be understood when the diverse purposes of' the two types of writs are understood. The function of the writ of error is to correct errors of law.
Kelly v. Strouse & Brothers,
Habeas corpus is not an available remedy in the ease at bar because the petitioner is a State’s prisoner under a valid judgment of conviction under count 1 of the indictment.
Bennett v. Lowry,
Defendants in error insist that the present petition for
*352
mandamus does not state a cause of action because mandamus will not lie unless the act commanded to be done is legally possible before the application for the writ is made; that at the time the application for the writ was made the judgment of conviction under count 2 stood unreversed and, since the Board of Pardons and Paroles was without power to approve or disapprove that judgment, the board was justified under the laws and its rules in refusing to consider and pass upon the application for parole on the basis presented until the judgment was judicially determined to be void. The cases of
McGill v. Osborne,
(a) Defendants in error next complain that the petition is insufficient to collaterally attack the judgment of conviction in count 2 because it does not allege how and in what manner the sentence is null and void, nor that count 2 of the indictment fails to set forth a crime under the laws of the State of Georgia,
*353
nor does it pray that the judgment of conviction be declared null and void. We must agree that the petition is not drawn with particularity. However, we disagree that the defects are serious enough that the petition fails to state a cause of action. “Though a bill be not framed with accurate precision, yet, the allegations will be sufficient, if they clearly and distinctly apprise the defendant of what he is called on to defend.”
Black v. Black,
(b) Code § 110-709 provides that: “The judgment of a court having no jurisdiction of the person or subject-matter, or void for any other cause, is a mere nullity, and may be so held in any court when it becomes material to the interest of the parties to consider it.” That provision of the Code dispenses with the necessity of a prayer that the judgment of conviction be declared void.
The petition states a cause of action for the relief sought.
Judgment reversed.
