119 Minn. 368 | Minn. | 1912
On June 23, 1910, one Kelly was convicted, in the district court of Hennepin county, of the crime of forgery in the second degree, and was then and there sentenced to imprisonment in the state reformatory until he should “thence be discharged by due course of law or by competent authority.” On February 23, 1912, by order of the state board of control, made pursuant to the authority vested in them by R. L. 1905, § 5455, the said Kelly was transferred to the state prison. On July 22, 1912, a writ of habeas corpus in his behalf was sued out of the district court of Washington county—the petition therefor alleging that his imprisonment was illegal and without authority of law, in that (1) there was an agreement between the prisoner and the trial judge, prior to the former’s conviction, which was upon a plea of guilty, that his imprisonment under such conviction should not exceed eighteen months, and that the plea of guilty was entered in reliance upon such agreement, and in order
1. The appellant complains here of certain rulings below; but it is not necessary either to state or decide the questions thus sought to be raised, for under R. L. 1905, § 4602, an appeal in habeas corpus proceedings is tried in this court in the same manner, to quote the statute, “as if the writ had originally issued out of ” this court. See 1 Dunnell, Minn. Dig. § 4142; State v. Riley, 116 Minn. 1, 133 N. W. 86. In view, however, of the fact that the case was submitted to this court upon the record made in the proceedings below, and precisely as if the trial here were upon an ordinary appeal, we will consider the point most earnestly urged by the relator in this connection, namely, that the bill of exceptions states that the original “writ, warrant, or other written authority” under which the prisoner was detained was not produced and exhibited to the trial court, to the extent of saying that the record does not bear him out in this contention.
2. Coming, then, to the first and second grounds of discharge alleged in the petition, as above stated, we find that neither of them can be sustained. When one is confined under the final judgment of a court, he can be released -on habeas corpus only for jurisdictional defects. Such writ cannot be allowed to perform the function of a writ of error or appeal. If the court has jurisdiction of the person and the subject-matter, and could render a judgment upon a showing of any sufficient state of facts, any judgment which it may render, however erroneous, irregular, or unsupported by evidence, will be sustained as against an attack by habeas corpus. 1 Dunnell,
Furthermore, in regard to the second of these contentions, the records show that the prisoner was examined by the court on oath concerning his age before imposing sentence, and that he stated it to be twenty-nine years. The relator contends that this cannot be considered, or is at least open to contradiction by evidence introduced by him below to the effect that there was no such testimony;, the basis of such contention being that the minutes of the court which showed such testimony were not signed by the judge. All that is necessary, however, to prove the minutes of a court, is a copy thereof, attested by the clerk and under the seal of the court, and this is what we find the record in the instant case.
And again, with regard to this second ground for a discharge alleged by the relator, we think that the customary presumption in favor of the regularity of a judgment must here prevail. See Ex parte Marlow, 75 N. J. L. 400, 68 Atl. 171; Ex parte Wilson, 114 U. S. 417, 5 Sup. Ct. 935, 29 L. ed. 89. See, also, In Matter of Gregory, 219 U. S. 218, 31 Sup. Ct. 143, 55 L. ed. 184. We have no statute in this state requiring that the judgment shall contain anything whatever concerning the age of the prisoner, and in the ab'sence of such a statute we do not think any recital in this regard is necessary in order to validate a sentence to the reformatory. One might as well argue that, because our statutes forbid the sentence of a minor under a certain age to the state prison, every judgment of conviction for a crime punishable by confinement in such prison must show that the prisoner is over that age. There is nothing that militates against our conclusion in this regard in the cases cited and relied upon by the relator, namely, State v. Whittier, 108 Minn. 447, 122 N. W. 319; State v. Billings, 55 Minn. 467, 57 N. W. 206, 794, 43 Am. St. 525; State v. Kinmore, 54 Minn. 135, 55 N. W. 830, 40 Am. St. 305, and some others. None of these cases are in point, for all of them bear upon the question of jurisdiction of the proceedings. Here there was unquestionably jurisdiction of the person and the subject-matter, and if the sentence of the prisoner to the re
3. The relator’s last contention is that the statute, R. L. 1905, § 5455, authorizing the board of control to transfer prisoners from the reformatory to the state prison, is invalid under Const. Art. 3, § 1, as being a legislative attempt to authorize purely ministerial officers to exercise judicial functions. The generic question raised by this contention is not a novel one. It is long since that criminology gave us our modern conception of criminality, from which has arisen an ever-increasing tendency to regard “punishment” for crime as being not so much compensatory as reformatory, and from this tendency, in turn, have sprung laws greatly amplifying and extending the administrative functions incident to the execution of the penalties prescribed by law for crime and imposed by the courts upon those who have incurred the same. It is not at all strange then that, in the course of legislative attempts in the various states of the Union to meet the requirements of this extended administrative system, laws should sometimes be passed which at least seem to attempt to vest administrative officers with powers properly appertaining to the judicial or executive departments of the government. Bitter attacks have been made upon some of these laws, most notably upon the so-called indeterminate sentence system, with its credits for good behavior, upon the parole system, and upon the prison transfer system; such attacks being grounded variously upon the contentions that the legislation assathed attempts to vest administrative officers with the judicial power of sentence or the executive power of pardon, or else is an unauthorized delegation of legislative powers. See Murphy v. Com. 172 Mass. 264, 52 N. E. 505, 43 L.R.A. 154, 70 Am. St. 266; Com. v. Brown, 167 Mass. 144, 45 N. E. 1; Ex parte Marlow, supra; Miller v. State, 149 Ind. 607, 49 N. E. 894, 40 L.R.A. 109. In each of these cases the indeterminate sentence system was sustained, though not without serious consideration, and, in Indiana, some dissent. See, also, Fite v. State, 114 Tenn. 646, 88 S. W. 941, 1 L.R.A.(N.S.) 520, 4 An. Cas. 1108, where the credit system
Coming, then, to the matter immediately before us, the argument against the validity of the law in question is, in substance, as follows : That the legislature has no power to vest a ministerial body with judicial functions; that the imposing of a statutory penalty for a crime is a judicial function, and where the statute prescribes alternate penalties the selection of the penalty which is to be imposed in a particular case is also a judicial function; that the Minnesota statutes under consideration authorize confinement either in the reformatory or the state prison, it being within the discretion of the court which punishment shall be inflicted; but that the statute assathed authorizes the board of control subsequently to transfer from the reformatory to the state prison, and hence the final choice between the two penalties provided by statute is left to such board, who, in effect, are thus authorized either to review the action of the court in choosing the reformatory, instead of the state prison, as the-place of the prisoner’s confinement, or else to impose a new criminal penalty without judicial trial, for matters occurring subsequently to-the original commitment. We think, however, that this argument is fallacious.
R. L. 1905, § 5052, provides: “Forgery in the second degree shall be punished by imprisonment in the state prison for not more than ten years.” Under this statute alone—Laws 1911, p. 412, c. 298, providing for indeterminate sentences, not being in force at the time of the conviction in the present case—it would have been the
These two statutes, taken together, purport to authorize the court, in its discretion, to sentence the prisoner either to the reformatory -or the state prison for a nominally indefinite term, not to exceed ten years, for the crime here involved; such term, however, being legally considered to be ten years, subject to a prior termination upon certain contingencies not necessary here to mention. See Murphy v. Com. supra; Miller v. State, supra. Under the three statutes which we have cited, therefore, it appears that the penalty provided by law for the crime here involved was, to a certain extent, in the alternative, thus calling for the exercise of judicial discretion in determining which should be imposed.
But these statutes must be' read in connection with still another statute, namely, R. L. 1905, § 5455. This section, as it stood at the time of the prisoner’s conviction, and also as amended by Laws 1911, p. 80, c. 61, is as follows: “The board of control may transfer from the reformatory to the state prison, from the state prison to the reformatory, and from the state training school to the reformatory whenever, in its judgment, such transfer will be advantageous to the person transferred, or to the institution from which such transfer is made”—with certain other provisions not here material.
Therefore, by reading this section into the sentence of the court, which must be done (Miller v. State, supra; Rich v. Chamberlain, 107 Mich. 381, 65 N. W. 235; In re Murphy, supra), the only alternative feature of the penalty prescribed by the statutes lies in the
But it is this power of transfer that is attacked as involving an •exercise of judicial functions, and if it really does call for the exercise of judicial, as distinguished from merely administrative or regulatory, functions, it cannot, of course, be sustained. We think, however, that the power of transfer thus conferred upon the board is purely administrative.
As we have already indicated, one of the principal aims, if, indeed, not the predominant one, of our penal system, is reform, and such is the policy which controls the conduct and management of the state prison no less than of the reformatory. Practically every law enacted in this state for many years, relative to sentence and imprisonment for crime, evidences this aim; and this conception of “punishment” of necessity involves an extension of the administrative side of the penal system, and imperatively demands greater freedom and wider powers on the part of the executive and administrative officers in carrying out the sentences of the courts. This new conception of “punishment”—new in the history of jurisprudence, but old and well established in this state—likewise has a direct bearing upon the office of a judicial sentence, ’ which is now and always has been merely to direct that the punishment provided by the law be administered to the person convicted of the crime. Anciently, when, under the barbarous doctrine of an eye for an eye and a tooth for a tooth, '“punishment” was deemed to be, as the word implies, largely compensatory, the natural and logical conception of a sentence for a ■crime was that the “punishment” should be nicely graduated to the nature and circumstances of the offense; this idea being reflected in ■the Constitutions of some of the states by a provision that the punish.ment shall be proportionate to the offense, and this provision like
Obviously, then, the office of a judicial sentence for crime cannot, under this conception of “punishment,” be altogether the same as-when society demanded payment, complete and more or less in kind, for infractions of its laws. No longer is proportionate punishment to be meted out to the criminal, measure for measure; but the unfortunate offender is to be committed to the charge of the officers of the state, as a sort of penitential ward, to be restrained so far as necessary to protect the public from recurrent manifestations of his criminal tendencies, with the incidental warning to others who may be criminally inclined or tempted, but, if possible, to be reformed, cured of his criminality, and finally released, a normal man, and a rehabilitated citizen.
• Such is the province of judicial sentence for crime in many of the-states, and it should be the same, we think, in all of them. In any event, we are satisfied that this conception of a sentence is the only one that can obtain in this state. Neither in our Constitution nor in our statute law do we find any remnant of the compensatory idea of' punishment. Our Constitution does not contain any provision which, by any process of construction, requires penalties to be-weighed in the balance with crime. It follows, then, that a muck
Failure to heed these weighty words would necessarily result in* political and social stagnation. The changes in the conceptions of “punishment” and of sentence for crime, to which we have adverted' at some length, necessarily require that the constitutional division of the governTneut. into three departments should receive, so far as the-question here under consideration is concerned, a more liberal construction than might have been logically possible when this provision was inserted in the first American Constitution, at which time the law had not, perhaps, abandoned the compensatory conception of punishment. We hold, therefore, that R. L. 1905, § 5455, authorizing the board of control to transfer to the state prison a prisoner originally sentenced to the reformatory, or vice versa, does not violateConst. Art. 3, § 1; for we consider this power to be a mere matter-of administration and control, in thorough keeping with the broad and humane policy underlying our penal system. In support of this, conclusion we might refer to the provisions of our statutes which indicate that the reformatory and the state prison are merely branches of one great institution, from which it might be argued that, as between the two, the place of confinement is not a judicial matter (see In re Murphy, supra; Rich v. Chamberlain, supra; O’Brien v. Barr, 83 Iowa, 51, 49 N. W. 68); and likewise we might,,
It appears from the record that the prisoner in this case was transferred to the state prison upon his own request; but we have not allowed this fact in any way to influence our determination of the case, and the conclusion which we have reached is in no wise based thereon.
Order affirmed.