Opinion op the Court by
Reversing.
This is an appeal from a judgment of the Lyon County Court rendered in this habeas corpus proceeding discharging the appellee and petitioner from serving a life sentence in the penitentiary, rendered by the Whitley circuit court on October 21, 1943, the petition being against the appellant, Dewey A. Ward, Warden of the Eddyville penitentiary.
The indictment at the trial, at which the life sentence was imposed, charged petitioner with having escaped from the jail of Whitley County while being confined therein upon a felony charge, and with bеing a habitual criminal. The facts as charged in the petition— and as recited in the judgment of the court appealed from — were and are: That on May 7, 1940, petitioner was indicted, tried and convicted in the Whitley circuit court of breaking into a railroad depot аnd sentenced to confinement in the state penitentiary for five years. On May 29, 1940, he was indicted, tried ,and convicted under a charge of sodomy committed on May 8th of that year and for which he was sentenced to confinement in the penitentiary for two years, the indiсtment charging him with being a habitual criminal. On September 22, 1942, *466 he was indicted for grand larceny which also charged him with being a habitual criminal, and he was convicted under that indictment on October 1, 1942. While confined in the county jail awaiting transportation by the sheriff to the penitentiary hе escaped jail and, as we have stated, it was upon the trial of the latter indictment that he was given the life sentence. After petitioner’s conviction under the first two indictments he was paroled and it was after then that he committed the other two felonies indicаted.
It will be perceived that each of the crimes committed by petitioner were felonies, and it would seem to be near to cruelty to deprive him of enjoying the goal which he had so persistently sought. Nevertheless he is entitled to all constitutional guaranties that go to make up “due process of law. ’ ’
At each of petitioner’s trials he entered a plea of guilty and one of the grounds alleged in his petition for the writ is that the court at the trial of the last indictment, whereat petitioner received his life sentence, in its instruсtion to the jury — after reciting his former convictions — said: “You will, therefore, find the defendant, Junior Hurst, guilty as charged in the indictment of being an habitual criminal and punished — only one punishment you can give him — at confinement in the state penitentiary for life.” It is alleged in appellee’s petition, and relied on in brief filed in this court by petitioner’s counsel that in giving that instruction to the jury the court deprived him of the benefits of a trial by jury in violation of section 7 of our Constitution which is a part of our Bill of Rights, and that contention will first be disposed of.
We have held in cases — so numerous that it would be a waste of time and space to list them in this opinion ■ — -that a plea of guilty made by defendant in open court to .an indictment charging either a felony or misdemeanor, dispenses with the necessity of the court trying the case to submit the issue of guilt оr innocence to the jury, and that a failure to do so does not deprive defendant on trial to his constitutional right to a jury trial. The same rule of practice is also approved by the courts of other states, as is pointed out in the text of
But it is equally as strongly urged that while the rule is as stated above, as applicable to the issue of guilt or innocence, it does not apply to the fixing of defendant’s punishment, and that the court erred in not submitting that question to the jury at the trial at which the life imprisonment sentence was pronounced. But the law appears to be overwhelming, with none to the contrary, that section 7 of our Constitution guaranteeing trial by jury applies only to
the issue of guilt or innocence
under a plea of not guilty, and that the mandatory provision for a jury trial has no reference to the amount of punishment that should be inflicted upon conviction, and which is clearly pointed out in the text of
The court in the case of Mack v. State,
Another ground relied on by petitioner, and argued by counsel to procure the writ prayed for, is that all of the indictments following the conviction of the first felony by petitioner failed to state a public offense and that they were so irregularly drafted as nоt to support a conviction thereunder. Each of them stated the particular offense charged therein, and that defendant was an habitual criminal. However, the draftsman of the last three indictments inserted therein verbatim all previous indictments of petitioner, which was wholly unnecessary and pure surplusage, since the inserted indictments were evidentiary only of petitioner’s prior convictions, and since it is not necessary to insert in an indictment the evidence of the prosecution, a nonobservance of that well-known rule will not render an indictment defective.
Counsel also argues that because succeeding indictments, following the first one, incorporated therein all prior indictments against petitioner, he was placed in jeopardy at the trial of succeeding indictments. But in view оf the fact that such insertions were unnecessarily made and can be considered only as surplusage, as above pointed out, the argument of counsel as to former-jeopardy is without merit even if it had been made at the trial of petitioner’s last indictment in which he was-given a life sentence, but which was not done. Moreover, we held in the cases of Herndon v. Commonwealth,
It is furthermore argued, as sustaining grounds for the habeas corpus writ prayed for, that (a) the court at the trial of the last indictment against petitioner failed to appoint сounsel for him, and (b) that the court improperly overruled his motion to prosecute an appeal in forma pauperis to this court from the judgment fixing his punishment at life imprisonment. However, we have in a number of cases determined both arguments (a) and (b) against the petitioner.
Two of the later cases so determining argument (a) are, Hamlin v. Commonwealth,
Like adverse determinations with reference to argument (b) were made by us in the case of Marcum et al. v. Wallace,
“A party desiring to prosecute an appeal in forma pauperis should, of course, first make application to that end in the circuit court. If his aрplication there be denied, he should file in this court a certified copy of the judgment from which he desires to appeal, a certified copy of the order of the circuit court overruling his motion to prosecute that appeal in forma pauрeris, such affidavits as he may deem necessary to establish his right to appeal in forma pauperis, and a motion for a rule against the clerk and/or official stenographer to show cause why they or either of them should not furnish without cost to the appellant such parts of the record on *470 appeal as is their duty to prepare and furnish for appeals.
“When this is done, a rule or rules will issue as requested. On the response of these officers being filed, the case will be submitted for such action as this court thinks proper on the showing’ made. No such procedure was followed here.”
Other cases to the same effect are: McIntosh v. Armour & Co. of Illinois,
It is furthermorе argued by counsel for petitioner that the court erred at the trial of the second indictment in giving any effect to the Habitual Criminal statute affecting his punishment since the first two indictments were tried at the same term of the court, and it did not appear that the second offense was committed
after
the conviction of the first one, as was held to be necessary in the cases of Cobb v. Commonwealth,
We have up to this point determined all of the grounds relied on by petitioner in his application in this habeas corpus proceeding. But there is another all-sufficient reason why the application should have been denied and which is: That petitioner relied on practically the same grounds in his motion for a new trial of his last conviction with attached life imprisonment, or could have been relied on, but which the court overruled and from which he prosеcuted no appeal to this court. The grounds relied on in this collateral attack of the judgment convicting* petitioner and sentencing him to life imprisonment, if error — even to the extent of total invalidity of some of the trial court’s rulings — would have availed petitionеr on his appeal. But he failed to prosecute one, and also failed to take the necessary steps to perfect his appeal as hereinbefore pointed out. The due process clause of our Constitution does not guarantee tо the citizen more than one hearing in a court of competent jurisdiction for the protection of his rights growing out of the same facts. Hence we held in conformity there
*471
with, in the case of Stonefield v. Buchanan,
“1. "Where petitioner for writ of habeas corpus failed to set up any ground which could not hаve been considered by the Court of Appeals on petitioner’s appeal from conviction, writ of habeas corpus was properly denied.
“2. A writ of habeas corpus does not lie to grant remedies available on appeal.”
The same rulе of practice with reference to habeas corpus proceedings was also .approved by us in the prior case of Department of Public Welfare v. Polsgrove, County Judge,
It is also urged that petitioner was denied due process of law at the trial of this case contrary to the rights guaranteed him by the Federal Constitution. Amend. 14, but we have searched the record in vain to find any fact or action on the pаrt of the court sustaining that argument and which we now declare to be without merit.
Having determined all of the questions raised in support of the judgment appealed from and having found them to be without merit, it follows that the judgment should be and it is reversed with directions to the trial court to set it aside and then dismiss the application.
