delivered the opinion of the Court.
Wе granted the application of the Superintendent of the Maryland State Reformatory for Males for leave to appeal from an order discharging the appellee on habeas corpus primarily because the case involves an important question as to the scope of the writ of habeas corpus.
In June, 1951, when he was fourteen yeаrs old, Wallace Caiman was committed as a delinquent boy to Boys’ Village of Maryland, by Judge Moylan sitting in the Circuit Court of Baltimore City, Division of Juvenile Causes. The following March he ran away from Boys’ Village, using no weapons or violence, and committing no offense after he left the institution. He was apprehended and indicted for the crime of escape under Article 27, Section 164 of the Annotated Code of Maryland (1951), jurisdiction having been waived by the Magistrate for Juvenile Causes in Prince George’s County, as permitted by Article 26, Section 53, 1951 Code. The applicable portion of the statute alleged to have been violated is: “If any offender or person legally detained and confined in the Penitentiary, or Jail, or House of Correction, or Reformatory, or Station House, or any other place of confinement, in this State, shall escape, he shall, on conviction thereof by the Criminal Court of Baltimore City or by the Circuit Court of the County in which the escape takes place, be sentenced to confinement in the Penitentiary, Jail or House of Correction for such additional period, not exceeding ten years, as the Court may adjudge.” Article 27, Section 164, 1951 Code.
When arraigned in the Circuit Court, Caiman pleaded guilty. At a subsequent hearing he was represented by a court-appointed lawyеr and convicted by the Court sitting without a jury, and sentenced to five years in the Maryland House of Correction, but on recommendation of the Court was transferred to the Maryland State Reformatory for Males. He petitioned the Baltimore City Court for a writ of habeas corpus, and after *418 a hearing was ordered released in April, 1953, by Judges Moylan and Carter. In its opinion the Court held the appellee’s conviction and sentence “an unconstitutional deprivation of his liberty for the elementary reason that his commitment to Boys’ Village did not constitute him a prisoner being detained in a penal institution in connection with a criminal matter.” In the argument of this appeal the contention was made that under Article 27, Section 164, Boys’ Village is not a “place of confinement” within the meaning of the statute, as the appellant maintains it is. Briefly stated, the appellee’s contention is that when the statute enumerates particular types of institutions, escape from which shall be punishable, and then adds the words “or аny other place of confinement”, these general words must be construed to embrace only places similar in nature to those specifically enumerated; that under the doctrine of ejusdem generis, when the specific enumeration does not exhaust the class, the general words which follow must be construed to amplify the class by including only those unspecified places which fall within the same genus as those specifically enumerated. Further it is urged that such a construction is all the more required because a criminal statute is to be interpreted as narrowly as the language will reasonably permit. Applying these principles of statutory interpretation, it is maintained that Boys’ Village is not one of the places escape from which is made a criminal offense and the commitment is an utter nullity, from which the appellee is entitled to relief on habeas corpus.
The appellant, however, insists that Boys’ Village falls within the description “reformatory”, or at least is within the same genus as “reformatory” and thus clearly falls within the meaning of the phrase “any other place of confinement”, and that the whole statutory scheme indicates a legislative intent that Boys’ Village be considered a place of confinement within the meaning of the section. Both sides seek to gather support for their respective сontentions by referring' to
*419
the Juvenile Court law, Article 26, Sections 57-70, 1951 Code, and the history of Boys’ Village and similar institutions.
Roth v. House of Refuge,
At the threshold of our consideration of the case, before we reach the question of the correct interpretation of Article 27, Section 164, is the problem whether such a question as that raised by the appеllee may properly be considered on habeas corpus.
The scope of habeas corpus is not the same in all states. Differences have arisen through variant statutory and other historic developments, affected in some instances by the existence or non-existence in these jurisdictions of remedies by way of appeal or otherwise for the correctiоn of alleged errors resulting in convictions.
This Court has undertaken in a recent
per curiam
opinion a comprehensive statement of the proper scope of
habeas corpus
in reviewing the detention of sentenced prisoners.
Loughran v. Warden,
It is to be noted that Caiman did not in the trial court and does not here actually put in question the constitutionality of Article 27, Section 164, but in essence the issue he raises is only whether the facts shown meet the requirements of that section.
Shortly after the
Loughran
case,
Winegard, v. Warden,
Still more recently Judge Henderson had occasion to say for this Court in
State ex rel. Tabor v. Swenson,
Judge Markell in a recent article published in the University of Pennsylvania Law Review, Vol. 101, page 1154, discusses fully the proper function of the writ of
habeas corpus
in Maryland when resorted to by sentenced prisoners who complain of irregularities in the trial, or invalidity of the indictment, or the unconstitutionality of the statute upon which the indictment was based. He points out that the review of convictions is limited to exceptional cases in which violation of fundamental rights has occurred, and the writ of
habeas corpus
is the only effective means of preserving such rights, as where such unfairness has entered the trial proceedings as to cause the court to “lose its jurisdiction”,
Johnson v. Zerbst,
In some states, it is true, a broader right of review upon
habeas corpus
is permitted. 167 A. L. R. 522 (Annotation). Generally, decisions so holding rely upon
Ex parte Siebold,
Maryland adopted this rule in
Bell v. State,
In the Glasgow case the language was even more emрhatic: “The principle of the cases is the simple one that if a court has jurisdiction of the case the writ of habeas corpus cannot be employed to retry the issues, whether of law, constitutional or other, or of fact.” (p. 429)
It is well to note that even under the rule of the
Siebold
and
Yarbrough
cases,
habeas corpus
could not be used to attack an indictment as failing to state an offense within the terms of a statute.
Ex parte Parks,
In the face of the clear holdings of this court and the above explanation of the federal cases upon which
Price v. Clawns,
One other group of Maryland cases needs to be mentioned — those in which the convictions under attack were judgments not of superior courts of general jurisdiction, but of justices of the peace. A justice of the peace does, of course, pass on his jurisdiction, but if he is in error correction can be made on
habeas corpus
because he had in fact no jurisdiction of the subject matter.
Day v. Sheriff,
Prior to 1945, there were no appeals either by petitioners or respondents from a court’s action on habeas corpus, еxcept in the narrow class of cases provided for in the Act of 1880. Some judges at times treated habeas corpus as allowing a general review of convictions, and although there was no legal justification for this there was no means of correction. The Acts of 1945, Chapter 702, created a right of appeal in habeas corpus cases, and by Chaрter 625 of the Acts of 1947 such appeal was made subject to leave granted by the Court of Appeals on application of the aggrieved party. Nowhere has the *425 legislature of Maryland evidenced - a purpose to make habeas corpus a substitute or supplementary form of review of criminal convictions.
Habeas corpus has an effective and time honored function to test the legality of the detention of persons, but this is not the same as the correction of errors which may be committed in criminal trials. For this purpose appeal and not habeas corpus remains the normal method. It does not impair the venerable writ of habeas corpus, which antedates Magna Charta and is protected in the constitutions of state and nation, to confine its use within its рroper sphere. The alternative course would confuse habeas corpus, which is in the nature of a collateral inquiry, with appeal, which is direct. The indiscriminate employment of habeas corpus in place of appeal would do nothing to safeguard liberty, but would do much to complicate and defeat orderly procedure.
One other сontention of the appellee should also be mentioned. The Juvenile Court, in determining whether or not jurisdiction can be waived under Article 26, Section 53, must determine whether the act or acts with which the child is charged with committing would amount to a misdemeanor or felony if committed by an adult. Appellee submits that no crime could have been committed in this case even if the accused were an adult; that the Juvenile Court, therefore, could not waive jurisdiction; and that the Circuit Court for Prince George’s County did not acquire jurisdiction. The answer is the simple one already indicated: the question of the effectiveness of a waiver of jurisdiction by the Juvenile Court under Article 26, Section 53, is within the power of a court of general criminal jurisdiction to decide. Its determination can be appealed directly, but may not be attacked collaterally.
We conclude that the court below committed error in assuming to review on habeas corpus the alleged error of the Circuit Court for Prince Geоrge’s County in misinterpreting Section 164 of Article 27,
*426 We express no opinion as to the correct interpretation of Article 27, Section 164; but if error or injustice has been committed which cannot be corrected because no appeal was taken, authority to make correction and to redress injustice is in the Board of Parole and in the Governor, and not this Court.
Order reversed.
