— This was an action of habeas corpus brought by the appellant against the sheriff of Starke county, Indiana. The petition alleged that appellant was unlawfully detained in the county jail, and that he believed it was under a warrant of commitment issued by the clerk upon the affidavit of a physician in the form prescribed by §3723 Burns 1914, §2862 R. S. 1881, charging that appellant had once been adjudged insane and was an inmate of an insane hospital for a time, and that he was now insane, as appeared from certain symptoms enumerated. As to these alleged symptoms it is enough to say that, if what was charged in the affidavit was true, the petitioner was a proper subject for restraint, either as insane or for criminal misconduct. Appellant’s petition did not allege that he was then sane or that he had recovered, but he seems to have relied on a presumption of soundness of mind.
There is no bill of exceptions in the record, and the
There is nothing in the transcript, aside from the recital in the judgment that “evidence as to the sanity or insanity of the petitioner will not be heard,” to suggest that the petitioner had any witnesses in court or offered to introduce any evidence. If it were shown by a proper bill of exceptions that a competent witness was called by the appellant for examination, and that an offer was made to prove certain facts by him, but that the trial court refused to permit him to be examined, or that he was asked a question which the court would not permit him to answer, and that in either case an exception was reserved by the appellant to such act of the court, some question might possibly be presented for decision. But nothing of the kind was done.
The judgment is affirmed.