99 Wis. 123 | Wis. | 1898
Several important questions are presented for decision by the briefs of counsel, that it would promote the due administration of justice to determine, most of which must remain for further consideration, however, because of fhe conclusion reached as to the jurisdiction of the commissioner. "Whether a person can be tried on one offense while he is serving a sentence for another, and whether, if he makes no objection to such trial by proper plea in abatement or otherwise, he can thereafter raise the question, and whether the court commissioner can act as a court of review and vacate final orders and judgments of trial courts, and, if the power exists, whether, in any case, a wise administration of the duties of the position requires that it should not be exercised except in cases of necessity growing out of the inability of the judge to act, or inconvenience in reaching him in a particular case, are all important questions, a solution of which might serve well the orderly and safe administration of justice; but they must go unanswered for the present for reasons disclosed in what follows.
Under sec. 4637, R. S. 1878, all offenses punishable by imprisonment in the state prison are felonies. By sec. 3409, R. S. 1878, the exclusive jurisdiction to issue writs of habeas corpus, to inquire into the legality of the detention of persons confined in the state prison, is vested in the supreme court and the justices thereof. The constitution conferred jurisdiction to issue the writ upon the supreme court and the
The mere fact that the offender may be sent to the house of correction, instead of the state prison at Waupun, does not affect in any way the grade of the offense. All the rea
True, there is reason for saying the construction we give to sec. 3409, E. S. 1878, conflicts with the literal sense of words in which there is no obscurity, but, as said in effect by an eminent writer on statutory construction, uncertainty of sense, requiring judicial construction, does not always spring from uncertainty of expression. Words may be plain, yet their literal meaning lead to such consequences that courts must, necessarily, violate the letter in order to reach the real spirit of the law and give effect to the legislative-will. The legislative idea, if it can be gathered from the language used, by all the light to which the judicial mind may properly resort, is as much within and a part of the law as if it were literally expressed. People ex rel. Ally Gen. v. Utica Ins. Co. 15 Johns. 379; Indianapolis & St. L. R. Co. v. Horst, 93 U. S. 300. Vattel says: “It is not allowable to interpret what has no need of interpretation. When the meaning is evident and-leads to no absurd conclusion, there can be no reason for refusing to admit the meaning which the words naturally represent. To go elsewhere in
While the meaning of the words “confined in the state prison,” generally speaking, is evident, to hold to the literal meaning of the term would lead to a most absurd conclusion; so we are not only permitted, but required, to search for some other meaning which is reasonable in order to avoid that result and give that effect to the law obviously intended. No serious difficulty in that regard is encountered when we •apply that other rule, laid down in Harrington v. Smith, 28 Wis. 43, and so often referred to and applied by this court: “ The true rule for the construction of a statute is to look to the whole and every part of it, to the apparent intention derived from the whole, to the subject matter, to the effect and ■consequences, the reason and spirit of the law, and thereby ascertain the true meaning of the legislature, though the meaning so ascertained conflict with the literal sense of the words.” (
By the Court.— The order of the commissioner is reversed, and the proceedings remanded with directions to dismiss the writ of habeas corpus as improvidently granted.