121 Ga. 737 | Ga. | 1905
A peace-warrant proceeding was instituted by Fannie May Young against Mrs. Julia A. Young, before J. G. Bloodworth, notary public and ex-officio justice of the peace of Fulton county, which resulted in the magistrate passing an order requiring that the defendant therein should give bond, in the sum of two hundred dollars, to keep the peace, and that in default thereof she should be committed to the common jail of the county until discharged by due process of law. Mrs. Young refused to give the required bond, and was, in compliance with the order of the magistrate, confined in the jail. For the purpose of securing her discharge, she applied to Judge Reid, of the city court of Atlanta, and obtained the issuance of the writ of habeas corpus directed to the jailer of the county. Upon the hearing of the writ the judge denied the relief prayed for, and remanded the applicant to the jail, in accordance with the order of the justice of the peace. Thereupon she sued out a writ of error and brought the case to this court. In the bill of exceptions, error is assigned upon the refusal of Judge Reid to permit the applicant to introduce in evidence before him the brief of the evidence heard by the magistrate upon the trial of the peace-warrant proceeding, certified to by him as being correct and filed by him in the office of the solicitor-general of the circuit, and upon the refusal of Judge Reid to even read this paper, or in any wise to consider it in the case. Error is also assigned upon his refusal to hear certain evidence, the purport of which was stated to him by counsel for the applicant and also set forth in the petition for the writ, which it was alleged, in the petition for the writ, the magistrate by an erroneous ruling prevented the defendant in the peace-warrant proceeding from introducing upon the hearing before him. The rulings complained of in the bill of exceptions were based upon the position taken by Judge Reid, that, in the hearing of the writ of habeas corpus, he could not go behind the judgment
The cases in other jurisdictions which the counsel for the plaintiff in error 'cites in support of his contention, that the habeas corpus court could “review the evidence introduced before the magistrate on the peace-warrant proceedings, and determine therefrom whether there was any reasonable or probable cause for the detention of the petitioner in the habeas corpus proceeding,” are not in point here. Still less applicable are the cases which he cites in support of his contention, that, “ In addition to examining the evidence produced before the magistrate on the commitment, trial, the court issuing the writ of habeas corpus may hear additional evidence in furtherance of the ends of justice.” The prohibitory- language, addressed to courts hearing writs of habeas, corpus, which we have quoted from the Penal Code, § 1235, clearly shows the rule in this State to be that lawful process, issued by a court of competent jurisdiction, is a bar to any investigation of the merits of the case behind such process, whether such investigation be confined strictly to the evidence before the court issuing the process or be given a broader range and include evidence newly introduced before the habeas corpus tribunal. It necessarily follows from this statute, that, in this State, the rule announced by the Supreme Court of Connecticut, In re Byon, 59 Conn. 372, prevails! There it was held: A writ of habeas corpus can not operate to bring in review mere irregularities or errors of procedure, or questions as to the sufficiency of evidence, in the case upon which the applicant was committed.” In that case, like this, the applicant sought, by the writ of habeas corpus, to secure his' release from the county jail, where he. was under commitment for non-compliance with an order of a justice of the peace requiring him to give bond to keep the peace. In the opinion Loomis, J., well said: “ Where one is commited to jail pursuant to a judgment valid on its face, by a court having jurisdiction, and by virtue of legal process valid on its face, the attack on the judgment under a writ of habeas corpus must necessarily be collateral, and subject to the rules restricting collateral attacks,
Affirmed.