65 So. 840 | Ala. | 1914
“The writ of habeas corpus has been defined, or rather described, as That legal process which is employed for the summary vindication of the right of personal liberty when illegally restrained.’— Hurd on Habeas Corpus, 129. It is a common-law writ, employed by the courts of common law, of superior ju
“A superior court, in the exercise of its common-law jurisdiction, may employ the writ of habeas corpus to bring before it the body of a person illegally imprisoned,. and, if the imprisonment is under legal process, or the judgment or sentence of a court of inferior jurisdiction, may award a writ of certiorari, removing the record. The proceeding is then in its nature appellate, and there may be an inquiry into the regularity of the process, judgment, or sentence. When, however, the writ is sued out under the statute, and the jurisdiction conferred by the statute on a single magistrate is to be exercised in vacation, the proceeding is not in its nature appellate, but rather original, and the validity of the process, judgment, or sentence is drawn in question collaterally. The general principle, then, prevails that,
The writ in the present case was issued under the ■statute, by the circuit judge, and the jurisdiction thereby conferred on him to hear the petition was original, and not appellate; and he was only authorized to determine the validity of the process under which the petitioner Avas held, and could not inquire into any errors or irregularities. The statute (section 7032 of the ■Code of 1907) expressly provides that:
“No court, chancellor, or judge, on the return of the writ of habeas corpus, has authority to inquire into the regularity or justice of any order, judgment, decree, or process, of any court legally constituted, or into the jus
The petition for habeas corpus, being under the statute, was in the nature of a collateral attack upon the judgment or order of tint law and equity court, a court with powers equal to those of the circuit court, and whose judge has co-ordinate powers, in Morgan county, with the circuit judge. This being true, the-said D. W. Speake had no power or authority to question the orders or judgments of the law and equity court upon habeas corpus, except in the event that the said law and equity court, or the judge thereof, had no jurisdiction to act in the premises, or to render the judgment or issue the order in question.—Fourment v. State, 155 Ala. 109, 46 South. 266; Sneed v. State, 157 Ala. 8, 47 South. 1028.
It cannot be successfully contended that the law and', equity court did not have jurisdiction to impose the sentence mentioned in the amended petition for habeas, corpus; nor does said amended petition charge that the petitioner was entitled to a discharge, by reason of some-act, omission, or event subsequent to the sentence.
Section 7014 provides for the issuance of the writ unless it appears from the petition itself, or from the documents thereto annexed, that the person imprisoned or restrained is not, under the provisions of the chapter,, entitled to the benefit of the Avrit. In other words, if' the petition shows upon its face that the petitioner is not entitled to the writ, the officer to whom the petition, is addressed should not issue the writ or direct the precept to the sheriff or constable.
The amended petition showing upon its face that the-petitioner was sentenced by the law and equity court,.
Let the writ of prohibition he awarded.
Petition granted.