delivered the opinion of the court.
These appeals are from judgments rendered in the Circuit Court of the United States for the Northern District of Florida, discharging a writ of habeas corpus and remanding the prisoners to the custody of the United States marshal.
The petitioners in the original habeas corpus proceedings, appellants here, were convicted in the United States Circuit Court for the Northern District of Florida of conspiring to hold, arrest and return one Rudolph Lan-ninger to a .condition of peonage, in violation of § 5440 *444 of the Revised Statutes of the United States. The offense of returning to a condition of peonage is defined by § 5526 of the Revised Statutes.. Petitioners were sentenced to imprisonment for different terms. and to pay pecuniary fines.
The. record discloses that the original cases in which appellants were convicted and sentenced were taken to the Circuit Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit upon writs of error, and the judgments of conviction affirmed. Afterwards petitions for writs of certiorari to bring the cases to this court from the Circuit Court of Appeals were denied in this court,
From this statement it will appear that the appellants were convicted in a court of competent jurisdiction of the alleged offense charged in the indictment; that a trial was had before a court and jury, which was reviewed by proper proceedings in error in the Circuit Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit, and that this court declined to grant a writ of certiorari to review the judgment of the latter court.
The cases have been earnestly and elaborately argued here by counsel for appellants, upon the theory that in a proceeding of this character the court may inquire into the facts put in evidence at the trial, at least so far as is necessary to determine whether there was any inculpating testimony, and for that purpose may examine the bill of exceptions, which is appended to. the petition, and which, was originally taken for the purpose of bringing the voluminous testimony in the eases into the record in ordér that a review might be had by the appellate court. *445 It is contended that an examination of the bill of exceptions will disclose that the alleged conspiracy was not formed in the Northern District of Florida as laid in the indictment; that there is a total lack of evidence to connect the petitioners, with any such conspiracy; that the petitioners (notably the petitioner Harlan) are not shown by any competent testimony to have been concerned in any overt act for the carrying out of the alleged conspiracy; that it is not shown that there is any condition of peonage in which Lanninger had been detained and to which he could be returned, in violation of § 5526 of the Revised Statutes of the United States. In other words, in this feature of the case this cóurt is asked to review the testimony adduced at the trial, with a view to determining the lack of evidence in the record to support the verdict and judgment, although such matters were properly, réviewable, and were in fact reviewed, in the error proceedings already referred to.
It is the settled doctrine of this court, often affirmed, that the writ of
habeas corpus
cannot be used for the purpose of proceedings. in error, and that the jurisdiction under that writ is confined to an examination of the record, with a view to determining whether the person restrained of his liberty is detained without authority of law.
Gonzales
v.
Cunningham,
But it is contended that two recent cases in this court are authority for the proposition that in a collateral attack by a
habeas corpus
proceeding, while the weight of testimony cannot be examined into, the record may be investigated with a view of determining whether there is
any
testimony to support the accusation, and where there is an entire lack of evidence the court may order a discharge, and language to this effect is referred to in the
*446
opinion in
Hyde
v.
Shine,
That case was a proceeding in
habeas corpus
to attack the validity of an order made under § 1014 of the Revised Statutes of the United States for the removal of the petitioner from the State of California to the District of Columbia for trial upon an indictment found in the District. In that case it was contended that inasmuch as § 1014 requires proceedings for the removal of persons from one district to another to be agreeable to the .usual mode of process against defendants in such State, and as in the State of California where the prisoner was arrested, the Supreme Court had held that the question of probable cause of the prisoner's guilt might be -considered upon the writ'of
habeas corpus
it necessarily followed that such should be the course of procedure in the Federal courts. In answer to this contention the language above quoted was used. In so stating, the learned justice, speaking for the court, was but affirming the rule well established under . § 1014, that there must be some testimony before the commissioner to support the accusation in order to lay the basis for an order of removal, otherwise the accused could be discharged upon
habeas .corpus,
although the court' would not weigh the evidence where the record shows that some evidence was taken. This was the construction of § 1014 in
Greene
v.
Henkel,
So in the other case relied upon,
Tinsley'
v.
Treat,
The learned counsel for appellants rely upon a number of "eases which are said to warrant the court in
habeas corpus
proceedings in examining the bill of exceptions with a view to determining such matters as are herein presented. But an examination of these cases will show that where collateral attacks have been sustained through the medium of a writ of
habeas corpus,
the grounds were such as attacked the validity of the judgments, and .the objections sustained were such as rendered the judgment not merely erroneous, but void. In
Ex parte Lange,
If such would be its effect then this court could readily be converted into an appellate court in criminal proceedings, a'jurisdiction denied to it by the statute. No attack can be successfully made upon the right and authority of the Circuit Court of the United States to take jurisdiction of the offense charged in the indictment. No objection is made to the constitutionality of the statute or the right and authority of the court to consider and determine the guilt or innocence of the accused, and for that purpose to weigh and determine the effect of the testimony offered. The contention is that in the respects pointed out the testimony wholly fails to support the charge. The attack is thus not upon the jurisdiction and authority of the court to proceed to investigate and determine the truth of the charge, but upon the sufficiency of the evidence to show the guilt of the accused; This has never been held to be within the province of a writ of
habeas corpus.
Upon
habeas corpus
the court examines only the power and authority of the court to act, not the correctness of its conclusions. See, among other cases in this court,
Ex parte Kearney, 7
Wheat. 38;
Ex parte Terry,
We.will proceed then to examine such of the objections as go to the authority of the court to try and sentence the accused. It is insisted that the trial in the Circuit Court of the United States at Pensacola, Florida, was without jurisdiction, because' the trial took place when the court had no lawful authority to sit, as it was not held at any legal term of court. It is contended that the right to hold a term at Pensacola because of the proceedings disclosed in the record had ended before the accused were tried at the session beginning in November, 1906. It appears that the regular term of court at Pensacola commenced on March 3, 1906, continued in session until May 12, 1906; The clerk of the court testified that the court was in session in Tallahassee, held by the same judge as held the ©curt at Pensacola, on May 13, 14, 15 and 16, 1906. It appeal’s that the clerk was in the habit of using a rubber stamp for the purpose of evidencing the adjournments of the court, and also the adjournments from day to day when the court was. not present. These adjournments appear to have been in accordance with a rule of the court, which provides that during the temporary absence of the judge the court shall be deemed open daily at each of the clerk’s offices in the district for the transaction of business on the equity side of the court, and also for the filing of papers, and the transaction of business of a general character in court, and the clerk shall be present, in person or by deputy, and the record of the same shall be entered upon the minutes of the court.
Such adjournments were had from June 6, 1906, the last day the judge was present at Pensacola, until he returned to the Circuit Court for the Northern District of Florida in November, 1906, subsequent to which time the indictment, trial and conviction of the appellants took place. The argument of the appellants comes to this — *450 that as there was. no legal adjournment of the term at Pénsacola to a day certain when the court proceeded to hold the term at Tallahassee there was no legal authority to resume the sitting of the court at Pensacola in November, and consequently there was no legal term of the court at which the proceeding resulting in the conviction of the accused could be had.'
But we cannot agree to this contention. The statutes of the United States provide for two terms of the United States Circuit, Court for the Northern District of Florida, the Pne beginning on the first Monday of February at Tallahassee, the other the first Monday in March at Pensacola. 1 U. S. Comp. Stats. 531. Section 612 of the Revised Statutes provides that .the Circuit Courts of the United States can be held at the same time in .different districts of the same circuit. Section 672 provides that if neither of the judges of the Circuit Court be present to open and adjourn any regular or adjourned special session, either óf them may, by a written order, directed alternatively to the marshal, and in his absence, to the clerk, adjourn the court from time to time, as the case may require, to any time before the next regular term. Wé think the purpose of the law was to provide for statutory terms of court for the Northern District of Florida, beginning on the first Monday of February - and March respectively, which term should continue until the beginning of the next term, unless finally adjourned in the meantime. Such is the general and recognized practice in the Circuit Courts of the United States. East Tenn. Iron & Coal Co. v. Wiggin, 68 Fed. Rep. 446.
There was certainly no adjournment of the court for the term when the judge was absent holding court at Tallahassee, or was out of the State. There was an attempt at least to keep the court open pending the absence of the presiding judge by the-adjournments in pursuance of Rule XIII.
*451 Nor do we find anything in the objections made to the manner in which the record of the sessions was kept, which it is unnecessary to examine in further detail, it being sufficient to say that we think the court that sat in November, 1906, was, legally in session, with authority to proceed against the accused.
It is next objected that the order for the impanelling of the grand jury was made by a judge of the Circuit Court for the Fifth Circuit, who, although within his circuit, was not within the district where the court was located when the trial was had. If there were otherwise merit in this objection, it certainly could not be made on
habeas corpus.
Such objections must be made by proper pleas filed in the court of original jurisdiction.
Kaizo
v.
Henry;
It is contended that competent testimony was adduced to show that the indictments were not properly presented by the grand jury, in that the one under which the accused was tried was not regularly found by the grand jury nor voted upon by them.- Testimony was introduced to the effect that after the. presentation of the original indictment the grand jury were informed by the district attorney that the indictment needed amendment in some particular, this amendment was read over in the presence of the grand jury, was incorporated into an indictment, the indictment was regularly returned into court, where it was produced with the consent of all,the grand jurors. No objection was taken at the trial to the indictment for this reason, and upon proper pleas a trial and conviction were had; certainly an objection of that kind, if ever available, cannot be,made for the first time in a habeas corpus proceeding.
It was objected in the court below that the original sentence.exceeded the authority of the court, in that it required service at hard labor. Upon motion of the Government’s counsel that much of the sentence was stricken
*452
out. There is no contention that hard labor has been, or will be, imposed upon the. appellants, and, at most, only that part of the sentence in excess of the law will be void.
United States
v.
Pridgeon,
We find no error in the judgments of the Circuit Court in refusing, to release the petitioners upon the writs of habeas corpus, and the same will be affirmed.
Affirmed.
