The briefs discuss only the merits of the issues raised by the petition, but we do not reach such questions because the merits of the petition were not passed upon or considered by the trial court. The only proper issue on this appeal is whether or not the trial court was correct in dismissing the petition because the petitioner had escaped and was a fugitive from justice at the time he was to appear in court and give testimony on his petition. This issue is considered sua sponte as the basis for disposition because of its importance as a question of first impression in this state. We think the trial court properly dismissed the petition and, while the record does not show it was dismissed on its merits, we believe that is the proper effect of the dismissal.
In many cases, the question of the effect of an escape on pending litigation arises during appeal to an appellate court. In cases of the dismissal of the appeal, the result is generally put on the ground of mootness or waiver. An escape does not render moot a direct review of a conviction in the strict sense, whether by appeal or writ of error; but the matter may become moot because if the conviction is affirmed the accused is not likely to return to confinement voluntarily to submit to the sentence and
The hearing and the deciding of an appeal do not require the presence of the convict in court, but nevertheless some courts have required the defendant to be in custody and under the power of the court. In
Smith v. United States
(1876),
However, in its expression in 1970, the supreme court stated in
Molinaro v. New Jersey,
The difficulty with the ground of waiver is the element of knowledge of the collateral effect of an escape. True, an escapee knows he has become a fugitive from justice —this is a natural consequence of his act; but is it foreseeable as a natural result that all pending litigation will be dismissed? In
State ex rel. Ruetz v. LaGrange Circuit Court
(Ind. Sup. Ct. 1972),
Besides the theory of mootness and waiver, the ground of abandonment has been used. In
Allen v. Georgia
(1897),
In the instant case we have a narrower ground and perhaps a stronger one. Here, the convict was unavailable to give testimony on his own behalf on a petition in which he sought relief from the court. We understand John is now incarcerated in a prison in Illinois for an offense committed while a fugitive from justice; but this situation, if important, did not exist on the day of his hearing. In failing to respond to the subpoena and give testimony when he could have, John prevented the trial court from deciding the merits of his case and thus obstructed the administration of justice. A defendant or plaintiff who fails to produce evidence, when he is ordered to do so, is in default and the case may go against him on this ground. In
Hauer v. Christon
(1969),
Order affirmed.
