The district court sustained the motion of appellee made before return day of the writ of habeas corpus to quash it on the ground that the petitiоn for the writ did not state facts sufficient to justify its allowance. The writ was dissolved. This appeal is from that adjudication.
The sufficiency of the petition of the relator to support a writ of habeas corpus allowed by virtue thereof may be tested before making return thereto by a motion to quash. It is the right аnd duty of the court to set aside the writ, if the facts well pleaded therein when accepted as true are insufficient to entitle the relator to thе relief 'sought. In re Application of Dunn,
Appellant states in his petition that his imprisonment and restraint are because of a judgment and sentence
rendered by and entered in the district court for Saline County on February 21, 1947, to the effect that he be confined in the State Penitentiary
It was also pleaded that the judgment, because of-which appellant is confined in custody, is void for the reason that it is based on a crime claimed to have been committed by him when hе was^ mentally incompetent to commit the crime, insanity is Recognized as a defense in this state in a criminal case, 'if at the time of the commission of the offense the accused does not know right from wrong with respect to the particular act involved in the offense. Evidence of insanity existing at the time of the offense may be presented in defense of the accused at the trial of the offense charged. It is not
available as a ground of habeas corpus, after conviction, for discharge of the accused from the sentence for the obvious reason that it would be the substitution of the remedy of habeas corpus for error proceedings. In re Carbino,
Each of the specifications in the petition of invalidity of the sentеnce of the accused — that the district court for Saline County was biased and prejudiced against appellant, refused him a change of venuе for the trial of the offense charged against him, conducted the trial in a county “seething with prejudice and passion” against him, ordered him held under arrеst at the trial for burglary; that the information under which he was tried did not charge an offense under the laws of Nebraska; and that the form of the sentence is сontrary to law — would have been proper for review and determination in an error proceeding in this court. They may not be considered by this cоurt in this proceeding. It has frequently been determined, and recently repeated by this court, that habeas corpus is á collateral and not a direct proceeding when regarded as a method of attack of a judgment imposing a sentence for crime; that facts as distinguished from legal conclusions are required to negative the legal force and effect of a judicial record of a court of general jurisdiction; that the remedy оf habeas corpus may not be substituted for error proceedings; and that release from confinement in accordance with a sentencе in a criminal case may be had by habeas corpus only when the judgment is void. Swanson v. Jones,
The conclusions in the petition — that appellant is unlawfully imрrisoned and restrained of his liberty by appellee; that his confinement in the State Penitentiary violates the provisions of the federal Constitution prоhibiting the deprivation of liberty without due process of law and guaranteeing equal protection of the laws;
and that the courts of Nebraska have not accorded him a full and fair “adjudication of the Federal questions raised” — are immaterial in this case. An individual convicted of a crime for which he is committed
Aрpellant alleges in his petition that after he was committed and was detained in the State Penitentiary he was found to be insane by the prison physiciаn, the medical board thereof, and the insanity commission, and that he was sent to one of the Nebraska state hospitals. This is not important in this case. The remedy of habeas corpus is not available in the absence bf a statute authorizing it for the purpose of inquiring into the legality of a particular form, manner, or place of confinement executively or administratively imposed upon a prisoner lawfully in custody in an authorized placе under a valid sentence and commitment. Swanson v. Jones, supra.
The petition recites that the record of the trial resulting in the conviction of appеllant of burglary was destroyed and that he could not since his conviction secure a transcript thereof. He also complains that the district court for Lancaster County refused his application to grant and fix bail in this proceeding permitting him to have his liberty during the pendency of the habeas corpus case. The record does not show that the trial court considered or acted upon-the application for bail. Neither of these matters is discussed in the brief of appellant. They do not merit further consideration. Sedlacek v. Greenholtz, supra.
Appellant has failed to allege any fact impeaching the jurisdiction of the district court for Saline County of the offense for which he was convicted or the jurisdiction of that court over his person or that the sentence imposed was without the power of the court.
The judgment of the district court should be and it is affirmed.
Affirmed.
