132 N.W. 662 | N.D. | 1911
Petition for a writ of habeas corpus based, upon the following facts, as shown by the petition and the sheriff’s return to the writ: Petitioner was regularly informed against for the crime of robbery, and placed on trial before the district court of Foster county. The issue of guilt was submitted to the jury, and after considering the evidence they came into court and announced that they were unable to agree upon a verdict. s Thereupon the court discharged the jury from further consideration of the case. The petitioner was not present in court at the time of the discharge of the jury. His absence was an enforced one; he being at the time confined in the county jail. His counsel was not present in court at the time, and neither the petitioner nor his counsel in any way consented to the discharge of the jury. It is also set forth in the petition that an application was made for a writ of habeas corpus to the district court, and denied. These are the facts set forth and relied on by the petitioner in his application for the writ in this court. The sheriff of Foster county, having custody of the petitioner, files a return, wherein he denies that the jury was wrongfully discharged, and denies that the petitioner’s confinement is unlawful, or without legal authority. In disposing of the writ, we will deem it shown, for the purposes of this proceeding only, that the jury was wrongfully discharged in the petitioner’s enforced absence, although the sheriff denies that such discharge was irregular and erroneous.
It is elementary law that in habeas corpus proceedings jurisdictional questions only are reviewable or to be considered. The writ cannot be invoked for the purpose of reviewing the acts of courts or officers, where they acted within their jurisdiction, nor for the purpose of correcting irregularities or errors, or as a substitute for an appeal or writ of error. Before the writ is available as a means of release from confinement, it must appear that the court issuing the process, or the officer or person who keeps the applicant in confinement, has acted entirely without jurisdiction. Our statute particularly lays down the grounds on which the writ will issue, and the substance of the statute is embodied in the statement given above. Bev. Codes 1905, § 10,482.
It appears from the record before us that the petitioner was before the district court on trial under an information charging him with the crime of robbery, and that said court had jurisdiction of that offense,,
In this case it is not contended by the petitioner that the jury was wrongfully discharged by reason of the fact that the jury was discharged before sufficient time had elapsed for a due consideration of the verdict. The sole contention is that the jury was discharged without his knowledge or consent, while he was in jail. We do not decide, in this case, whether the discharge of the jury under the circumstances are erroneous or not. It is not necessary to say more than that the order discharging the jury was not made without jurisdiction. If merely made erroneously, it cannot be attacked collaterally by habeas corpus. The error, if any, must be reviewed in the regular way of reviewing errors occurring at the trial; that is, by motion or appeal. There was no loss of jurisdiction, so that another trial cannot be proceeded with. If the petitioner has been once in jeopardy, the statute provides the procedure, if he wishes to raise that question. If a plea of prior jeopardy should be presented and sustained, it must be based on error- by the trial court, which cannot be reviewed by habea's corpus. That fact, however, must be shown, if it exists, in the same way as any other defense must be shown on the trial.
Church on Habeas Corpus discusses this question, and in § 255 says: “And conceding that the court erred in discharging the jury, . . . it could not be reviewed without the record in the cause was properly before the court of review in such a way as to give it a revisory power under its appellate jurisdiction. But such an error is a mere irregularity, and should not be reviewed under this writ. It does not effect the question of jurisdiction, and where a court-has jurisdiction it is within its power and authority, and is clearly its duty, to entertain, hear, and determine every question that may possi
In Gillespie v. Rump, 163 Ind. 457, 72 N. E. 138, the' question of presenting a plea of former jeopardy under habeas corpus proceedings ■was under consideration, and the court said: “The jurisdiction of the Ohio circuit court over the subject of the action and the person ■of the petitioner at the time he was brought into court to answer the Indictment, and a jury was first impaneled to try him and his codefendants upon it, is not questioned. That indictment is still pending ■•against the petitioner, and no final judgment has been rendered in the ■cause. If it should be conceded that the appellant is correct in his contention that he has been once in jeopardy upon the charge contained in the indictment, and that the setting aside of the submission after the .jury had been sworn to try tE cause, the discharge of one of the jurors upon a peremptory challenge by the state, and the impaneling of a second jury — all without his c< nsent and over his objections, duly presented — was equivalent to an a quittal, still the facts of such jeopardy and ■acquittal would, at most, c nstitute a defense in bar of the action, and would require proof upon e second trial, as any other fact or facts which might entitle the defendant to a verdict of ‘not guilty.’ Even if the joroceedings of the court in setting aside the submission and discharging the juror were unauthorized and illegal, they were errors only, which, if proved upon subsequent trial of the cause, might or might not •amount to a defense to the action. But these supposed errors did not ■deprive the court of i'B jurisdiction over the subject of the action, or the person of the defeid-mt. Certainly they were not such as to render nil further proceedin i in the cause void.”
The following are principles, where tin few of the authorities that sustain the foregoing acts were like these, or arose under similar circumstances: State ex rel. Styles v. Beaverstad, 12 N. D. 527, 97 N.
Our conclusion, therefore, is that the District Court did not lose ■jurisdiction, and that the writ must be quashed.