132 Ind. 248 | Ind. | 1892
— The appellant prosecutes this appeal from a judgment rendered upon a petition for a habeas corpus filed
We may say, at the outset, that we do not deem it necessary to decide the question as to the right of an accused to have a change of justices in such a case as this, and we direct our decision to other questions.
The petition charges that the restraint is illegal because of the refusal of the justice to grant the change asked by the petitioner. The question presented is one of jurisdiction. If the filing of the affidavit and the request for the change completely defeated jurisdiction, the commitment was void, and the petitioner entitled to the writ. If, however, there was jurisdiction, the petitioner was not entitled to the writ, no matter how flagrant or palpable the error of the justice of the peace in denying the change for which the petitioner applied.- The rule everywhere prevailing is that if there is jurisdiction to adjudge a petitioner to the custody from which he seeks to be released, the writ will not issue. Holderman v. Thompson, 105 Ind. 112; Lowery v. Howard, 103 Ind. 440; Smith v. Hess, 91 Ind. 424; In re Luis Oteizay Cortes, 136 U. S. 330; Stevens v. Fuller, 136 U. S. 468; People, ex rel., v. Liscomb, 60 N. Y. 559 (19 Am. R. 211); Ex parte Miller, 82 Cal. 454. In the case of Willis v. Bayles, 105 Ind. 363, this general doctrine was applied to the judgment of a a justice of the peace. The cases of In re Luis Oteizay Cortes, supra, Stevens v. Fuller, supra, involved the validity of proceedings before a United States commissioner,
If the judgment indirectly assailed by the petition had been a final one, there could be no doubt that if there was jurisdiction to enter it the assault would fail, since, as the cases all agree, where the inferior tribunal has jurisdiction, its judgments can not be collaterally assailed. We can conceive no reason why a different rule should apply to a case where the authority of the inferior tribunal is to hold an accused to bail and in default of bail commit him to the custody of the proper officer of the law. It can make no difference so far as the mere question of holding in custody is concerned whether the judgment is a final one entered upon a regular trial or isa judgment rendered upon a preliminary examination, for if thei’e is power to give the judgment directing the restraint the judgment can not be void.
The statute invests justices of the peace with general authority to conduct preliminary examinations and to recognize accused persons to the court clothed with criminal jurisdiction. The authority is extended over a general subject, and in this instance the assumption of jurisdiction was legal, and there was no judgment beyond that jurisdiction; that is, there was no excess of jurisdiction. Our decisions affirm that where there is general jurisdiction of a subject, although that jurisdiction is vested in an inferior tribunal, there can be no collateral attack. Jackson v. Smith, 120 Ind. 520, and cases cited; Alexander v. Gill, 130 Ind. 485. Chicago, etc., R. W. Co. v. Sutton, 130 Ind. 405, and cases cited. See, also, authorities cited in Elliott’s App. Proc. sections 501, 503. The presence of authority to proceed in the particular case is jurisdiction. Elliott’s App. Proc. sections 12, 499. The record in the case before us shows that there was power to proceed, for the law invested the inferior trib
We have given this case a more extended consideration than we should have felt it necessary to do if it were not for the decision in the case of Smelzer v. Lockhart, 97 Ind. 315, which asserts a doctrine different from that here laid down. There is not a single authority adduced in support of the conclusion there declared, nor is there any extended line of reasoning. The question is disposed of in a few sentences. The reason given for the conclusion there asserted is that the duty to grant a change is an imperative one. This we should not regard as a sufficient reason if there were no opposing decisions, although if .there were no such decisions we might feel bound to yield to the case referred to under the rule stare decisis. There are, however, such decisions, and either these decisions or that under immediate mention must fall. It is true of every case where a justice of the peace is called on to rule upon a sufficient affidavit for a
Judgment reversed.