We are constrained to hold that this case is not properly before us. A petition for a writ of habeas corpus was filed in the Superior Court. The judge has attempted to report the case without decision “on the substitute petition, the return and answer.” 1
It is provided by G. L. (Ter. Ed.) c. 213, § IB, inserted by St. 1939, c. 257, § 1, that questions of law arising in any type of proceeding of which concurrent jurisdiction is vested in the Superior Court by the preceding section (including habeas corpus) may be reserved and reported for the consideration of the full court in the manner provided in G. L. (Ter. Ed.) c. 231, § 111, if such proceedings are at law. A petition for a writ of habeas corpus is a proceeding at law.
Chambers’s Case,
It follows that the report must be discharged.
Atlantic Maritime Co.
v.
Gloucester,
Notwithstanding what has been said, the record and the briefs disclose a substantial probability that upon a new trial certain facts will be proved. We think it proper to indicate now what the result should be if such facts are proved. These facts are the following. On November 3, 1934, the petitioner, who was twenty years of age and feeble minded and had no attorney, pleaded guilty in the First District Court of Essex to the charge of using a motor vehicle without authority. In open court he was notified that his case was being continued until November 9 for his mental examination, and for want of bail was committed to jail in the interval. His father was in court with him on November 3 and knew that the petitioner was to be examined mentally “under this continuance.” On November 9, upon application of the probation officer under G. L. (Ter. Ed.) c. 123, § 113 (see now said section as appearing in St. 1947, c. 684, § 1, as amended by St. 1948, c. 310, § 28), bearing date that same day, and after the filing of a certificate by two qualified physicians that the present petitioner was mentally defective (§ 115), the court so found 1 and found *268 that the petitioner had within three years been found guilty of an offence such as is described in § 113, but the court did not make the finding required by § 113, as appearing in St. 1928, c. 333, that the petitioner was a defective delinquent. Thereupon the court ordered the petitioner committed to the department for defective delinquents at Bridgewater. On that day the petitioner was in court alone. No notice was given to the petitioner or to his father of the filing by the probation officer of the application for the petitioner’s commitment as a defective delinquent. Although the petitioner’s father knew that the petitioner would be examined mentally during the continuance, it seems probable that neither the petitioner nor anyone in his behalf had proper notice that on November 9 a hearing would be held on the issue of defective delinquency.
If the facts outlined above, or their substantial equivalent, should appear, the case would fall within the authority of the recent decision in
O’Leary, petitioner,
Report discharged.
Notes
It is not wholly clear what is meant by “the return and .answer.” No return appears in the record, and it seems probable that the case was heard upon the petition without the issuance of any writ to which a return could be made; See
Chambers’s Case,
The findings do not include all of those required by § 113, as appearing in St. 1928, c. 333, and do include findings provided for when the section was in the form appearing in St. 1922, c. 535, § 7.
