Court Opinion

ID: 7812617
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-09-07 17:14:33.565379+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:28:31.053584
License: Public Domain

"Wood, J., (dissenting). In classifying the rights of persons, next to the right to enjoy life and to have one’s body secure from injury, is the right of the personal liberty of individuals. 1 Blackstone’s Comm., star joages 128-133. “This personal liberty,” says Blackstone, “consists in the power of locomotion, of changing situations, or moving" one’s ’person to whatever place one’s own inclination may direct, without imprisonment or restraint, unless by due course of law.” I Blk. Comm., p. 131, § 2. This liberty of the individual — freedom of the person— is the bedrock of all the highest and best civilizations of the earth. Without it there can be no progress in the arts and sciences, no worthwhile development in government, no health, happiness or prosperity, and life itself would be an unendurable burden. The peculiar form of the writ or instrument, which has been devised and resorted to in times of peace through all the ages since its origin, to preserve this freedom of the person, is known in our law as habeas'corpus — technically, “habeas corpus ad subjiciendum et recipiendum.” It .is a high prerogative writ, a writ of right upon proper application, which existed at the common law independent of statute, and which is issued by a court, judge or tribunal having authority to issue it, and “directed to the person detaining another, and commanding him to produce the body of the prisoner with the day and cause of capture and detention {ad faciendum, subjiciendum, et recipiendum) to do, submit to, and receive, whatsoever the judge, court, or tribunal awarding such writ, should consider in that behalf.” 3 Blackstone, Comm. 131. By the common law it issued out of the Court of King’s Bench, corresponding to our State courts of last resort, not only in term time, but also durin g the vacation, by a fiat from the Chief Justice or any other of the judges. When issued in vacation, it was usually returnable before the judge himself who awarded it, who proceeded thereon, unless the term intervened, when it was returned into court. 3 Blk. Comm.., star page 131; 4 Bacon’s Abr. 364. So important has been this writ to the rights and happiness of individuals in particular and the civilization of mankind in general, commentators on the laws of England and this country have written of it at length. Several law writers have made it the exclusive subject of large volumes; historians and encyclopedists have made it the subject of special themes and given it the extensive treatment its place in history demands. Some of them, seemingly with crusader’s zeal, have endeavored to trace the history of the writ to its origin, but, as yet, no one has been able to find it. It is treated by historians and law writers as a primordial fact of history, but its origin is hidden in the depths of antiquity. See ‘‘Story of Habeas Corpus,” 18 Law Quarterly ¿Review, p. 64; 29 C. J., p. 9, § 2. Since the love of freedom is a natural emotion deeply implanted in every sentient intelligent human being, it is safe to say that some peaceful legal method for securing the liberty of the individual, of the same purport as that of our present writ of habeas corpus, must have been coeval with organized society and established government. One writer says: “In the interdict De libero homine ex habendo the origin of the English habeas corpus may be traced. Such, in the ¿Roman law, was the name' of the writ founded on the perpetual edict of the praetor: “Ait praetor: quern liberum dolo malo retines exhibeas — the praetor declares: Produce the freeman whom you unlawfully “detain.” This edict was compiled and is found in the Pandects of Justinian, and the comments of the celebrated Roman lawyers thereon show that the application -of the edict and the writ involved the same principles as in our habeas corpus ad subjiciendum of the English law, and the latter most probably was therefore borrowed from the civil law. Lane v. Cotton, 12 Mod. R. 482; Acton v. Blundell, 12 Meeson & Welsby, 353; Bechervaise v. Lewis, L. R. 7 Common Pleas 372; Agnew v. Belfast Banking Co., 2 Irish Reports 204, collated in Howe’s Studies of the Civil Law, p. 128-129. Glanvil, Coke and Blackstone all mention ancient writs which were in existence long before Magna Charta for liberating persons who had been unjustly imprisoned on criminal charges. Church on Habeas Corpus, p. 3, § 3; Coke’s Institutes, 3rd Part, p. 209; 4th Part, p. 182; 2 Blk. Comm., star pp. 128-129. Mr. Blackstone says: “The great charter of liberties which was obtained, sword in hand, from King John, and afterwards, with some alteration, confirmed in Parliament by King Henry Third, his son, contained very few new grants, but, as Sir Edward Coke observes, was for the most part declaratory of the principal grounds of the fundamental laws of England.” “The Great Charter,” he says, “was afterwards confirmed by the statute of the 25th of Edward I and directed to be allowed as the common law, and sentence of excommunication was directed to be denounced against all those that by word, deed, or counsel act contrary thereto, or in any degree infringe it.” I Blk. Comm., star pp. 127-129. The 36th chapter of the Great 'Charter provides: “Nothing shall be given or taken for the future for the writ of inquisition of life or limb; but it shall be given without charge, and not denied.” The 39th chapter of the Great Charter declares: “No freeman’s body shall be taken, nor imprisoned, nor disseised, nor outlawed, nor banished, nor in any way be damaged, nor shall the King send him to prison by force, excepting by the legal judgment of his peers, and by the laws of the land. ’ ’ And chapter 10 declares: 4 4 To none will we sell, to none will we deny, to none will we delay right or justice.” These declarations of the Great Charter were intended to conserve-personal liberty, to protect the person of the individual against illegal imprisonment. They contained the most rigorous restraint upon arbitrary power that the world hitherto had known; they furnished the germ of that individual liberty protected by law which henceforth was t'o be the archetype for all written constitutions, especially of the English-speaking race, preserving the liberty of the individual and the freedom of the person against illegal restraint of every character and from the encroachments of arbitrary power in government. These declarations do not expressly mention the-ancient writs, “ de odio et atia,” “de homine replegiando,” spoken of by Glanvil, Coke and Blackstone, but they were intended to preserve and enlarge to Englishmen for all time all. the rights that had obtained under these ancient writs, and more. One of the most sacred of these rights was to prevent any person remaining in prison until the arrival of the justices in Eyre, when he should be tried. See Richard Thompson’s Essay on Magna Charta, p. 218. Therefore the above declarations of the Great Charter, it would seem, were sufficient of themselves, if duly enforced, to have forever guaranteed the personal liberty of Englishmen. However, notwithstanding the Great Charter had been declared and put in force as the common law, and had been confirmed and enlarged in other charters, notably by those of Henry III and Edward I, and although it was corroborated by a multitude of subsequent statutes, which Sir Edward Coke reckons at thirty-two from the first Edward to Henry IY (2 Inst. Proem.), nevertheless the royal prerogative was still bold and strong. It continued so throughout the reigns of the Plantagenets, the Tudors and the Stuarts. During this long period there was a constant struggle to advance arbitrary power in defiance of the rights and liberties secured to the people of England by the Great Charter. Although the charter of liberties was declared to be the 'common law, and had not been repealed, nevertheless a tribunal called' the Star Chamber flourished, which did not proceed according to the common law. * This .tribunal dispensed with trial by jury, proceeded on rumor, applied any torture, and inflicted any punishment short of death. It, with the “high commissioner” and the “privy council,” were powerful auxiliaries of cruel and rapacious rulers to force the nobility, the gentry and the yeomanry alike to bow in servile obedience to the will of the crown. The cruel and unusual punishments, horrible tortures, excessive fines, and outrageous exactions inflicted and imposed, often without any opposition from, and with the warrant of, the judges themselves, during the reigns of such tyrannical rulers as Henry VII, Henry VIII, and Bloody Mary, of the Tudors, and James I, Charles I, Charles II, and James II of the Stuarts, finally brought forth from Parliament the Petition of Right of Charles I, the Habeas Corpus Act o-f Charles II, and the Bill of Rights of James II. These were indeed all fresh charters of liberty, and the most famous was the Habeas Corpus Act of the 31st of Charles II, .which, Macaulay says, was “the most stringent curb that ever legislation imposed on tyranny.” '2 Macaulay, Hist. England, 3. Such is the history of the writ of habeas corpus, so far as it is necessary to trace it in England, an account of which may be found in any of the standard English 'histories, such as Hallam’s Const. History, Hume, Macaulay, and Green. This history, as we shall now see, enters into the very warp and woof of the fabric of 'the jurisprudence of our own country and judicial system.- A knowledge of this history is absolutely necessary to the proper construction of our own Constitution and statutes concerning habeas corpus. Our forefathers inherited all the ancient rights and liberties that had been guaranteed to Englishmen under the free Constitution of Great Britain, as declared in Magna Charta, the Petition of Right, and the Bill of Rights, which three, Lord Chatham, the great commoner of that day, pronounced the “Bible .of the English Constitution.” These were declaratory of, and intended to secure, personal rights which the freemen of Great Britain contended were a part of .their birthright under the common law long before Magna Charta. In these great documents our ancestors, the American colonists, found the prototype for their Declaration of Independence from the mother country, and, after it had been achieved by Revolution, for the Constitution of the United States. “It was,” says Judge Story, “under the consciousness of the full possession of the rights, liberties and immunities of British subjects, that the colonists, in almost all the early legislation of their respective assemblies, insisted upon a declaratory act acknowledging and confirming them.” 1 Story’s Const., § 165; Hurd on Habeas Corpus, chp. 5; Ex parte Yerger, 8 Wallace 85-95. See Ex parte Holman, 28 Ia. 125; People ex rel. Tweed v. Liscombe, 60 N. Y. 559; also “Magna Charta in America,” 17 Columbia Law Review, p. 1; “Origin of Magna Charta,” 1 Canada Law Journal, pp. 202-5. The Constitution of the United States and .of all the States of the Union recognize the privilege of the writ of habeas corpus as one which every person in the United States is entitled to as a co-heir of all the rights, liberties and immunities of the free and natural-born 'subjects of Great Britain, as those rights were declared and enforced under the free constitution of that realm. The right of personal liberty, after Magna Charta, was ever a favorite object of the English law, and the most celebrated of the numerous acts of Parliament which, were intended to protect and preserve that liberty is the statute of the 31st of Charles II, “which,” Blackstone says, “is frequently considered as another Magna Charta of the Kingdom.” 3 Blackstone, Comm., star p. 136. Mr. Iiurd quotes an elegant philosophical writer as saying of the-Habeas Corpus Act of the 31st of Chas. II, “we must admire it as the keystone of civil liberty, the statute which forces the secrets of every prison to be revealed, the cause of every commitment to be declared, and the person of the accused to be produced, that he may claim his enlargement, or his trial within a limited time. No wiser form was ever opposed to the abuses of power.” Hurd on Habeas Corpus, 99. Mr. Hallara says before the enactment of this Habeas Corpus Act “it was also a question whether a single judge of the Court of King’s Bench could issue the writ in vacation. The statute therefore enacts that, where any person other than persons convicted, or in execution upon legal process, stands committed for any crime except for treason or felony plainly expressed in the warrant of commitment, he may, during the vacation, complain to the chancellor, or any of the twelve judges, who, upon sight of a copy of the warrant, or an affidavit that the warrant has been denied, shall award a habeas corpus.” 3 Hallam’s Const. Hist., p. 20. Hume says, “the Great Charter had laid the foundation for this valuable part of liberty; the Petition of Bight had renewed and extended it, but some provisions were still wanting to render it complete and prevent all evasion or dplay from ministers and judges.” 2 Hume’s Hist, of England, 568. Those provisions were supplied by the Habeas Corpus Act, which has as its dominant note the issuance of the ivrit, in vacation. “Every prisoner,” says Green, “committed for any crime, save treason or forgery, was declared entitled to his writ, even in the vacations of the court, and heavy penalties were enforced on judges or jailers who refused him this right.” 2 Green’s England, p. 431. “The Habeas Corpus Act,” the statute of the 31st of Charles II, says Chancellor Kent, “restored the writ of habeas corpus to all the efficacy to which it was entitled at common law and which was requisite for the due protection of the liberty of the subject. That statute has been reenacted or adopted, if not in terms, yet in substance and effect, in all the United States. * * The substance of 'the provisions on the ^subject of the writ of habeas corpus may be found in the statute of the 31st of Chas. II, clip. 2, which is the basis of all the American statutes on the subject.” 2 Kent’s Comm., p. 9, 43-44. Our habeas corpus act, as found in the Revised Statutes, p. 433 (ch. 79, Crawford & Moses’ Digest), is referred to in a note to Judge Kent’s text as being modeled after the statute of 31st of Chas. II. That -statute, among other things, provides that it shall be the duty of any court of record, or the judge of any court of record, in vacation, to issue the writ of habeas corpus whenever “there is evidence, from any judicial proceeding had before them, that such person is illegally confined or restrained of his liberty within the jurisdiction of such -court or judge.” Sections 7 and 9, ch. 73, Revised Statutes, and §§ 5084 and 5090, Crawford.& Moses’ Digest. The provisions of our Habeas Corpus Act, supra, were a part of the laws of the Territory of Arkansas, and were brought into the Revised Statutes of the State soon after the State was admitted into the Union under an act for a revision of the statute laws of the State, approved Oct. 6, 1836, which statutes, as revised, were adopted*by the General Assembly of the State in the year 1837. In the -Constitutions of the State of 1836,1861,1864 and 1868,' it is expressly declared that “the privilege of the writ of habeas corpus shall not be suspended unless when, in cases of rebellion or invasion, the public safety will require,” and the provision of our present Constitution is that “the privilege of the writ of habeas corpus shall not be suspended, except by the General Assembly in case of rebellion, insurrection or invasion, as the public safety may require it.” Article 2, § 11. Our present Constitution also contains the - following provision: “In the absence of the circuit judge from the county, the county judge shall have power to issue orders for injunctions and other provisional Writs in their counties, returnable to the court having jurisdiction, provided that either party may have such order reviewed by any superior judge in vacation in such manne'r as shall be provided by law. The county judge shall have power, in the absence of the circuit judge from the county, to issue, hear and determine writs of habeas corpus under such regulations and restrictions as shall be'provided by law.” Article 7, § 37. All the constitutions adopted from 1836 to 1874, inclusive, contained the following provisions: “The Supreme Court, except in cases otherwise provided by this Constitution, shall have appellate jurisdiction only, which shall be coextensive with the State, under such restrictions as may from time to time be prescribed by law. It shall have a general superintending control over all inferior courts of law and equity; and, in aid of its appellate and supervisory judisdiction, it shall have power to issue writs of error and supersedeas, certiorari, habeas corpus, prohibition, mandamus, and quo warranto, and other remedial writs, and to hea;r and determine the same. Its judges shall be conservators of the peace throughout the State, and shall severally have power to issue any of the aforesaid writs.” Article 7, § 4, Const, of 1874. Now, some of the members of the Convention of ■1874 which framed our present Constitution were very able lawyers. They were familiar with the provisions of prior, constitutions and with the provisions of the habeas corpus act as contained in the Revised Statutes, and, as some of them also were learned men and students of history, they had a thorough knowledge of the history of the writ of habeas corpus as I have traced it above and of the common law and statutes of Great Britain providing for the privileges of this writ and for their enlargement and enforcement. Having this history in mind, it cannot be doubted that the framers of onr present Constitution intended by the various provisions concerning the writ of habeas corpus, to which I have referred, to give this writ a unique and distinctive place in our jurisprudence and judicial system. They intended to give it that preeminent place commensurate withits-glorious history in the civilization of mankind. For arbitrary power in government and personal liberty — the freedom of the person — have always been “deadly foes, ever at dagger’s point in endless feud,” and this great writ of right, through all the centuries, has been, in times of peace, the the most powerful instrument in the hands of the individual to thwart the will of cruel and despotic rulers in their efforts to repress and restrain personal freedom. It is the constitutional bulwark erected by the Anglo-Saxon race to protect the individual against illegal imprisonmnent and to guarantee the liberty of his person against unlawful restraint of every character. Keeping in mind the history of this writ, as it comes to us from the remotest antiquity and as it obtained under the common law, and as it has been enforced since Magna Charta under the acts of Parliament in Great Britain for hundreds of years, especially since the enactment of what is known as the Habeas Corpus Act of the 31st of Chas. II, ch. 2, supra, I have not the slightest doubt that it was the intention of the framers of our organic law, Federal and State, to make it impossible in this country for an individual to be unlawfully restrained of his liberty for any longer time than is absolutely necessary to apply to some court, or some judge in vacation, having jurisdiction, for the writ of habeas corpus to have the cause of his imprisonment inquired into.- It would be a travesty upon our jurisprudence and a reproach to our judicial system if it were otherwise. But it is not. The purpose of the framers of our Constitution in article 7, § 37, supra, is to give the county judge precisely the same jurisdiction, in the absence of the circuit judge from the county, to issue, hear, and determine the writ of habeas corpus, that the circuit judge has. In the absence of the circuit judge from the county, the county judge takes his place. He is, for the purpose named, in the absence of the circuit judge, a circuit judge in jurisdiction, and his order in the judicial proceeding-before him is not to be reviewed by the circuit court or judge, but is to be reviewed by the only tribunal that has appellate and supervisory jurisdiction over the circuit court and circuit judge, to-wit, the Supreme Court, or one or more of its judges in vacation, in aid of the appellate jurisdiction of the Supreme Court. According to the express language of article 7, § 37, supra, a county judge, in the absence of the circuit judge from the county, has the power to issue orders for injunctions and other provisional writs in their counties, returnable to the court having- jurisdiction of those writs, and the order issuing such provisional writs (such as injunction, mandamus, etc), may be reviewed by any superior judge in vacation in such manner as may be provided by law. But not so with the order of the county judge, acting in the absence of the circuit judge, in the writ of habeas corpus proceeding. The orders of the county judge in habeas corpus proceedings, in the absence of the circuit judge, are not subject to review by the circuit judge or circuit court for the very reason that, for this time and this purpose, he is, by the Constitution, substituted for the circuit judge. He is ad hoc the circuit judge, with the same judicial power as the circuit judge, and there is no judge or court above him except the Supreme Court or the judges thereof. The statute, § 5084, C. & M. Digest, was passed in conformity with art. 7, § 37 of the Constitution, supra, and gives the county judge jurisdiction “coextensive with his county, in the absence of the circuit judge therefrom, to issue, hear and determine writs of habeas corpus' on proper application of parties entitled thereto, in all cases and with lilce powers in which the circuit judge mav issue and determine such writ. ’ ’ ' When the county judge has exercised these powers, under the Constitution and statute, Ms final order in the proceeding must be reviewed by the same method and in the same manner that the order of the circuit judge is reviewed, which manner and method are pointed out in Ex parte Hart, 39 Ark. 126; Ex parte Goode, 19 Ark. 410; Ex parte Kittrell, 20 Ark. 499; Ex parte Jackson, 45 Ark. 158; State ex rel. Ark. Industrial Co. v. Neal, 48 Ark. 283; Skate ex rel. Attorney General v. Williams, 97 Ark. 243. It is quite certain that, if the framers of the Constitution had intended to give the circuit judge or the circuit court the power to review the order of the county judge in habeas corpus proceedings, in the absence of the circuit judge from the county, they would have expressly granted such jurisdiction to the circuit court, or circuit judge in vacation, just as they did in eases of injunctions and other provisional writs. The fact that they did not do so shows that it was their intention that the county judge, acting in the absence of the circuit judge from the county, in issuing, hearing and determining writs of habeas corpus, should be substituted for the circuit judge, and that his order in the proceeding should be subject to review only as the circuit judge’s order could be reviewed. Expressio unius est exclusio alterius applies. This court has often ruled that proceedings in habeas corpus before a circuit judge or chancellor at chambers is judicial, and subject to review by the Supreme Court on certiorari issued by this court, to bring up the record of such proceedings. Ex parte Jackson, 45 Ark. 158; State v. Neal, 48 Ark. 283; State ex rel. v. Williams, 97 Ark. 243, and cases there cited. It is said in the majority opinion that the obvious purpose of § 27, art. 7, of the Constitution, conferring power on county judges to issue orders for injunctions and other provisional writs, in the absence of circuit judges, subject to review in vacation by circuit judges, “was to authorize superior judges to review in vacation the orders of county judges granting injunctions or other provisional writs, so that such orders should not necessarily remain in force until the superior court should convene to review them in term time; but that there is no such authority, under the above constitutional provision, for reviewing habeas corpus proceedings before a county judge in the absence of a circuit judge, except by the circuit court. In other words, it is argued that habeas corpus proceedings before a county judge, in the absence of the circuit judge from the county, cannot be reviewed by the Supreme Court, nor even by a circuit judge or chancellor in vacation, but can only be reviewed by the circuit court. Such a construction gives these injunctions, and the other provisional writs which have reference merely to the protection of property rights, a greater importance and higher dignity, under our judicial system, than the writ of habeas corpus, which protects and preserves the freedom of the person — the personal liberty of the ixidividual. It is unbelievable that the framers of our Constitution would have provided a method for reviewing the vacation orders of county judges granting injunctions or other provisional writs for the protection of property rights, in order that the same might not remain in force and the rights of property delayed until the superior court could review them in term time, and yet not have made some provision for the review of the orders of county judges in habeas corpus proceedings in order that the sacred rights of personal liberty might not be delayed until a superior court should convene to review them. In the minds of the framers, of our Constitution, personal freedom — the liberty of the person — • was of far greater importance than all other personal or property rights. Next to life itself, the right of personal liberty is sacrosanct; and the framers of the Constitution, instead of making the writ of habeas corpus, which is intended to preserve and protect the liberty of the person, subordinate and inferior to injunctions and other provisional writs designed to protect mere propety rights, have exalted it to a preeminent place, as we have seen, in our judicial system. In view of its ancient origin, its glorious history, and its sacred purpose to’ preserve the personal liberty of individuals against illegal imprisonment, the framers of our Constitution intended, in art., 7, § 37, supra, that orders of the county judge, in the absence of the circuit judge from the county, in habeas corpus proceedings, should be reviewed by this court in the same manner as such proceedings by the circuit judg’e or chancellor in vacation are reviewed. The framers of the Constitution conferred upon county judges the power, in the absence of circuit judges from the county, to issue, hear, and determine writs of habeas corpus, under such regulations and restrictions as shall • be provided by law. The framers of our habeas corpus act in conformity with both the spirit and letter of the Constitution, provided that “the county judge shall have power coextensive with his county, in the absence of the circuit judge therefrom, to issue, hear, and determine writs of habeas corpus, on proper application of parties entitled thereto, in all cases and with like powers in which the circuit judge may issue and determine such writs.” Section 5084, C. & M. Digest. Writs of habeas corpus may be issued by a circuit judge in vacation, and his order may be reviewed by this court. Likewise, writs of habeas corpus may be issued by county judges, in the absence of circuit judges from the county, with like powers in which the circuit judge may issue and determine such writs, and the orders of the county judges in such cases are also reviewable by this court. Were it otherwise, it would be entirety possible to illegally imprison an individual, who was justly entitled to his liberty, for many days, and even months, awaiting a term of the circuit court, before the orders of the county judge refusing* to allow him bail could be reviewed. To illustrate: In most of the circuit courts of the State there is a period of at least six months between the terms of court. Section 2207, C. & M. Digest. The circuit judge, during vacation, is usually not present in any of the counties in the circuit except that one in which be resides. If one who is illegally imprisoned should apply to a county judge for writ of habeas corpus, and the comity judge, after li earing the writ, should make an order refusing to discharge him or to grant him bail, then the prisoner, under the construction which the majority has given the Constitution and habeas corpus act, would have to remain in prison until the circuit court convened before the order of the county judge could be reviewed. In such ease the unfortunate victim of the erroneous order of the county judge would be unlawfully deprived of liis liberty during all this time. If the county judge remanded him, and he should thereafter apply for a second writ to a circuit judge or chancellor, and it appeared that he had been once remanded for an offense not bailable, he would have to' be again remanded without further proceedings. Section 5083, C. & M. Digest. In the language of Judge Eakin, speaking for the court in Ex parte Jackson, 45 Ark. 158, at page 161: “It would be a disgrace to any government if the decision of such matters were left to the arbitrary will of one man, without appeal or means of correction.” With all due deference, it occurs to me that it is a deplorable misapprehension of our Constitution and habeas corpus act to so construe them as to make possible such results as I have indicated. I feel sure that such was not the intention of our lawmakers in framing our Constitution and habeas corpus act. There is certainly nothing in the language of either to justify such construction. Such an interpretation, instead of preserving the harmony of our judicial system, absolutely destroys it and thwarts the will, both of the framers of the Constitution and habeas corpus act, which were intended by them to embody in enduring form the sacred privileges of the writ of habeas corpus, and the procedure under it, which obtained in England hundreds of years before our forefathers transplanted them into the organic law of this great republic under the all-embracing provision, “The privilege of the writ of habeas corpus shall not be suspended unless when, in cases of rebellion or invasion, the public safety'- may require it.” In reaching my conclusion I have not overlooked those decisions of our court to the effect that the Supreme Court has no power to supervise and control the action of courts inferior to the circuit court except by reaching back through the decisions of that court. I am well aware of the decisions of our court to the effect that, "under our judicial system, appeals from all tribunals inferior to the circuit courts go to the circuit courts, and from the circuit courts to this court;” and that "this court has no original jurisdiction to control or supervise vany proceedings of courts inferior to the circuit courts, except through the circuit courts. ’ ’ See Featherstone v. Folbre, 75 Ark. 510; Jones v. Coffin, 96 Ark. 332-336. It was my lot to express the opinion of the court in those cases. The court did not have under consideration article 7, §■ 37, :of the Constitution and our habeas corpus act, supra, and I did not consciously express anything in those oases that has the remotest connection, even by analogy, to the question now under consideration. Those cases are cited as authority for the argument made in the opinion of the majority to the effect that the county judge, in the absence of the circuit judge from the county, in issuing, hearing and determining habeas corpus proceedings under the Constitution and habeas corpus act, is an inferior court to the circuit judge or circuit court, and hence the decision of 'the county judge in such proceedings can only be reviewed by the circuit court. This argument begs the question, is based upon a false premise, and is wholly unsound. It assumes, that the jurisdiction conferred upon the county judge-under the Constitution and habeas corpus act is but the exercise of similar or equal jurisdiction as that of the county court, that the county judge, in habeas corpus proceedings, is as the county court. Such is not the case at all, as I have shown. The county court has no jurisdiction in habeas corpus proceedings. The framers of the Constitution could have vested this same judicial power in some other officer or tribunal than the county judge, and, if they had done so, could it be said that the jurisdiction thus conferred was inferior to the jurisdiction conferred upon the circuit judge in habeas corpus proceedings'? Certainly not. The jurisdiction conferred upon the county judge, under the above provision of the Constitution, is concurrent and equal in dignity to the jurisdiction of the circuit judge. In exercising this jurisdiction he is not the county court at all, but the specially designated tribunal to meet the exigencies of the situation caused by the absence of the circuit judge from the county and to prevent the delay that might be incident to waiting his return or in applying to other tribunals having power to issue the writ. If I am correct in my conclusion that the jurisdiction of the county judge under the Constitution and habeas corpus act is not inferior to, but the same ás, that of the circuit judge, and that it was the intention to substitute him for the circuit judge ' in the absence of the latter from the county, then it is obvious that the doctrine of Featherstone v. Folbre and Jones v. Coffin have not the slightest application to the question. Certainly nothing that was said in the opinions in those cases conflicts with the views I am now expressing. I am also aware of the decision of this court in Carr v. State, 93 Ark. 585. In that case Carr was accused of, arrested, and imprisoned for murder in the first deg*ree. He applied to Judge Lea, during vacation, for bail, which was refused. He then applied to me during vacation of the Supreme Court, for certiorari to bring up the record before the circuit judge, and a writ’of habeas corpus to admit him to bail until the Supreme Court, in term time, could review the action of the circuit judge denying him bail. Acting under what I conceived to be the power of the judges of the Supreme Court under art. 7, § 4, supra, I issued the writ of habeas corpus, and, on reviewing the record of the proceedings before Judge Lea, I was of the opinion that the prisoner was clearly entitled to bail, making my decision in the premises returnable to the Supreme Court for its review. The court held that I, as an associate justice, had no jurisdiction in the premises, and that my action in admitting the prisoner to temporary bail until the decision of the Supreme Court could, be had was of no authority or effect. I dissented in that case, and have always regretted that I did not write out my dissent. I am still dissenting. For it is my firm conviction that article 7, § 4, of the Constitution, conferring upon the judges of this court power to issue writs of habeas corpus in aid of the appellate and supervisory jurisdiction of the Supreme Court, was intended to cover just such cases as that presented to me as associate justice in the Carr case. It is well known that at that time the vacations of the Supreme Court .lasted for a period of three months, and if-an associate justice did not have the power to issue the yvrit pf habeas corpus in aid of the appellate jurisdiction of the Supreme Court, and to admit to bail the prisoner until the order, of the circuit judge in vacation could be reviewed by the . highest court, then Carr, who, in my opinion, was justly entitled to bail (and who was afterwards either acquitted or convicted of only a lower grade of homicide than murder in the first degree), would have been compelled to remain in unlawful imprisonment until the vacation of the Supreme -Court was over. If a judge of this court could not, in vacation, issue a writ of habeas corpus and admit to bail a prisoner who was entitled thereto, under the above -circumstances, then the provision of art. 7, § 4, of the Constitution is rendered absolutely nugatory. The writ of habeas.corpus is a writ whose, only function is to inquire into the illegal imprisonment of a person, ■and if a judge of this court, could not issue such a writ, under the above circumstances, then it could never be issued at all, for he has no original jurisdiction to issue it, and the -constitutional provision would thus be wholly without effect. By statute, § 1432, C. & M. Digest, the common law of England, so far as the same is applicable and of a general nature, not local to that Kingdom and not inconsistent with the Constitution and the laws of this State, shall be the rule of decision in this State. By act of Parliament, as we have seen, Magna Charta was to be allowed as the common law. Mr. Hurd, in his excellent work on Habeas Corpus, pages 102 and 103, tells us that, about the year 1757, a bill was pending in the House of Lords to extend the power of granting writs of habeas corpus to all judges of His Majesty’s courts in vacation time, in all cases not within the statute of the 31st of Chas. II. Lord Mansfield, he says, “spoke two and a half hours on the bill, and said, among other things, that ‘the writ of habeas corpus at common law was a sufficient remedy against all those abuses the bill was supposed to . rectify.’ ” A majority of judges of England, during the pendency of the bill, declared in favor of the exercise of the powers, regardless of the passage of the bill. The judges of the King’s Bench, after the passage of the habeas corpus act, were accustomed to issue the writ, during the vacation, in all cases whatsoever. Lord Denman, Chief Justice of the Queen’s Bench, in Watson’s Case, 36 Com. L. Rep. at p. 261, shows that at that time the practice had prevailed for the judges to issue the writs in vacation for at least one hundred and sixty years. We have the common law; we have Magna Charta; we have the Constitution of the Hnited States; we have our own Constitution and our habeas corpus act — all recognizing and guaranteeing the privileges of the writ of habeas corpus to preserve and protect the liberty of the person against illegal imprisonment, with all the liberal procedure thereunder. With all these safeguards, as practiced in Great Britain for centuries, “to procure and complete to every individual that sense of independence which is the noblest advantage attending personal liberty,” it is indeed unfortunate that our court should have so construed our Constitution and habeas corpus act as to make it possible for one to be unlawfully restrained of his liberty for a longer period than is absolutely required to make proper application to some judg'd or tribunal given, under our Constitution and laws, the jurisdiction to issue, hear and determine writs of habeas corpus. My conclusion of the whole matter is that, under our Constitution and habeas corpus act, any one unlawfully deprived of his personal liberty may apply to the circuit judge or chancellor in vacation, and, in the absence of the circuit judge from the county, to the county judge, before indictment; and if any of these judges deny him the liberty to which he believes himself entitled, he may appeal directly from their decision to the Supreme Court, and, if the Supreme Court is in vacation, he may apply to one or more of its judges for certiorari and habeas corpus in aid of the appellate jurisdiction of the Supreme Court, to be granted bail, if entitled thereto, until the Supreme Court can review the ruling of the judge refusing' him bail. Such was the doctrine intended to be announced in. State ex rel. Attorney General v. Williams, supra, where we said: “This court has jurisdiction to review the proceedings of inferior courts and of judges and chancellors at chambers, upon application for writs of habeas corpus, and to review, revise and correct the action of the inferior court or judge. * * * Where there is no subordinate court competent to issue the writ, the Supreme Court will award it, as held in Ex parte Robins, supra. Thus it will be seen our law guard's carefully the rights of the accused throughout, and provides an orderly administration of justice; the chancellors and judges named in the habeas corpus act to issue writs and grant bail in accordance with its terms, except after indictment for capital offenses not expressly made bailable ; after such indictment the circuit court wherein the same is pending, or the judge thereof in vacation, to grant bail 'without interference from any other court or judge, with the Supreme Court over all to review, revise and correct the action of the lower-court or judge, and grant relief itself where, because of unavoidable accident or casualty, no inferior court is competent to do so.” See also State ex rel. v. Neal, supra. If the Constitution and habeas corpus act be so construed, it makes a perfect system, complete and harmonious in every detail,' relating to habeas corpus, which is not in conflict with any other part of onr judicial system. But the construction of the majority leaves a break in our judicial system and harks back, it seems to me, to those dark and cruel days when, by the word of the despot and the decree of the Star Chamber, men were thrown in jail and allowed to linger for months, and even years, because the King’s judges suspended the sacred privileges of the writ of habeas corpus. 2 Hallam’s Constitutional History, p. 39 et seq. 44; 3 Hallam’s, p. 18; 3 Blk. Comm., star p. 136. Mr. Justice Humphreys authorizes me to say that he concurs fully in the above opinion.   There needed but this one court in any government to put a-n end to all regular, legal, and exact plans of liberty, for who durst set himself in opposition to the crown and ministry, or aspire to the character of being a patron of freedom, while exposed to so arbitrary a jurisdiction. 2 Hume, 119.