18 S.E. 249 | N.C. | 1893
The petitioners thereafter applied to the judge for a writ of habeascorpus, upon a petition which sets out that they had been committed to jail by virtue of a mittimus from a justice of the peace (670) (annexing a copy), but averring that there was no evidence before the justice that any crime had been committed in said county, and that the committal was made through the ignorance or malpractice of the justice.
Upon the return the sheriff produced the petitioners and made his return, setting forth the mittimus as the cause of the detention. The court continued the cause till next morning, that the solicitor might have some time to examine into the matter, the petitioners giving bond in the sum of one hundred dollars each for their appearance. To this continuance the petitioners, through their counsel, excepted. On the return, it appearing that the detention was upon a mittimus from a justice of the peace for the failure to give bond on a charge for unlawfully disposing of mortgaged property, the court ruled that the burden was on the petitioners to show that they were illegally restrained of their liberty. To this the petitioners excepted and appealed. The petitioners refusing to proceed with their evidence the court refused to discharge them, and they were permitted to go upon their bond already given. The learned counsel for the petitioners properly and frankly admitted that this was a case of "novel impression." The continuance of the hearing till the next morning was not subject to exception. It is difficult to see how it injured the petitioners who were admitted to bail, or how, if injurious, this could be remedied by an appeal. It is res acta and cannot be undone. Besides, the delay was to give the solicitor opportunity to examine into the case, and was expressly authorized by The Code, sec. 1635.
Upon the return of the sheriff it appeared that the petitioners (671) were in custody upon a mittimus (which, indeed, was also set out in the application for habeas corpus), regular in every way, from *490
a justice of the peace, for failure to give bond for their appearance at the next term of the Superior Court to answer a criminal charge of which that court had jurisdiction. Nothing else appearing, the detention was clearly legal. The court thereupon called upon the petitioners to show wherein it was illegal. They declined to furnish him any evidence, but contended that the burden was upon the State to show that they were lawfully in custody. The State had already done so. It was not called upon to go further till testimony to the contrary was offered. The sheriff knew probably nothing whatever of the detention, except the mittimus. He was not called upon to bring up the witnesses, to show what they testified to, or to prove that the petitioners were guilty of the charge. That fact will be inquired into by a grand jury, and afterwards by a petit jury, if a true bill should be found, at the next term of the court. The presumption of innocence applies only upon such trial, and does not avail to furnish a presumption that the detention of a party upon regular process, when the committing officer has jurisdiction, is illegal, and to call upon the State in a proceeding like this to show that the defendant is guilty in order to justify the detention. The detention is to give opportunity for a jury to pass upon the question of the defendant's guilt. In S. v. Herndon,
There may arise cases where the court, ex mero motu, as it has power to do, may issue the writ (The Code, sec. 1632), and of course it may in all cases summon witnesses and investigate whether the prima facie case of legal detention is not rebutted. But the present case does not *491 raise a question of the power to do this. The petitioners are in court. There is nothing that indicates that they are weak, helpless or ignorant of their rights. Indeed, they are represented by counsel. The judge does not refuse to hear testimony. He calls upon the State to show the cause of the detention. This it does satisfactorily by the sheriff's return. The court then asks the petitioners for their evidence. They refuse to give any. The court could do no otherwise than to refuse to discharge them. (The Code, sec. 1645.) It seems, indeed, that the petitioners in fact, are not even in custody, but are now out on bail. They have no ground to complain in any particular.
Petition dismissed.
(673)