83 Ga. 499 | Ga. | 1889
1. To come at once to the essence of this case, the
All the citations of authority by counsel going to show that no party or witness can be required to answer questions tending to criminate himself, we recognize as sound law, such as thé cases of Ex parte Fisk, 113 U. S. 713, and Holman v. The Mayor, 34 Tex. 668. If the present- case came within the letter or principle of such authorities, we should entertain no question of the right of the plaintiff in error to a discharge. But how will surrendering the assets of one bank tend to convict the party of embezzling or stealing the assets of another bank ? Or supposing them to be the same assets and therefore the assets of both banks, how would his surrender of them tend any more to convict
2. It certainly does not appear that there was any want of jurisdiction of the court over the subject-matter or the person, or any want of power to make the order for turning over the assets to the receiver, or the order for the imprisonment of the plaintiff in error until he should comply therewith. This being so, the validity of that order is to be taken for granted in this proceeding, and whether it was erroneous or not is not open to inquiry. Cooley Const. Lim. *347, 348; Sennott’s case; 146 Mass. 489; s. c. 4 Am. St. Rep. 344, Church
. The order being valid, the imprisonment under it was not unlawful, and the remedy of the party to purge himself of contempt is not by habeas corpus, but by application to the court by whose order he was in confinement. If the contempt is to be purged without compliance with the order of that court, it is there and there alone that the purging can take place. Certainly it could not take place before Judge Clarke sitting as a habeas corpus court, although he is judge also of the court by which the commitment was ordered. The two courts are entirely separate and distinct.
The order to remand the petitioner to the former custody being the only judgment that could be properly rendered on the petition, the return thereto and the evidence submitted, the inadvertence of quashing the Writ also was of no consequence, and is' not cause for reversing a judgment otherwise correct. As the case was fully heard before the writ was quashed, and as the petitioner was not entitled to his discharge, the mere quashing of the writ was a harmless error.
Judgment affirmed.