Court Opinion

ID: 9825519
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2023-09-01 13:17:34.606596+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T07:40:56.528919
License: Public Domain

On Rehearing.
[1] Under the common law the writ of habeas corpus was used by our ancestors as the great “key of liberty to uhlock the prison doors of tyranny”; it was written in the blood of freemen and came to us as a part of our inheritance from those who won it and preserved it, through the centuries, even antedating Magna Charta. It is a part of our civilization preserved to the citizens of this state under section 17 of the Constitution, that it xpay be used by those who are illegally restrained of their liberty. It cannot be bound down by the thongs of technical pleading, or its swift and effective relief hindered by captious objection or “finespun” theories of procedure. A substantial compliance with section 7010 of the Code of 1907 and its corollary statutes is all that is necessary in order to obtain the issuance of the writ, and, when issued, brings before the judge the petitioner and the cause of his detention. Under section 7027 of the Code, the judge is not confined in his examination either to the case made by the petition or the return, but may “examine in a summary way into the cause of the imprisonment or detention” basing his action on such investigation.
[2] The only statutory limitations placed upon the power of a judge before whom a proceeding in habeas corpus is brought, are found in section 7033 of the Code of 1907, and those limitations are based upon “process from any court legally constituted. * * * ”
The petition in the case at bar alleges that the judgment of the court under which petitioner is being held is void, and that he is being held without warrant and authority of law. The state concedes this to be a fact, but introduces in evidence an indictment charging defendant with murder in the first degree, purporting to have been returned by a grand jury at a special adjourned term of the circuit court of' Elmore county on November 28, 1903, and asks that the defendant be taken from the place of his illegal confinement and remanded to the custody of the sheriff of Elmore county to await trial before a legally constituted court. And, if the indictment had been returned by a court legally constituted (Code, § 7033), such would have been the proper order, xxnless one of the exceptions prescribed by section 7033 existed. White v. State, 134 Ala. 197, 32 South. 320.
[3] Mere irregularities in judgments or process not going to the jurisdiction cannot be reviewed on habeas corpus (Ex parte Chandler, 114 Ala. 8, 22 South. 285), and where the illegality of a court rendering judgment or from which process issues is relied upon for the discharge of a person from custody, such illegality must appear on the face of the proceedings (Ex parte Bizzell, 112 Ala. 210, 21 South. 371).
[4] It appears upon the face of these proceedings, after admitting the void judgment of March, 1904, that there was no regular or legal term of the circuit court of Elmore county on October 14, 1903, and hence there could be no adjourned term of that term of the circuit court. Of this fact this court must take judicial notice. There was no legislative act fixing a term of the circuit court for Elmore county on November 16, 1903, at which time the indictment in this case was returned.
[5] The term of the court held November 16, 1903, must, therefore, depend for its legality upon sections 914 and 915 of the Code of Alabama, 1896. It affirmatively appears from this record that the term of the court at which this indictment was returned was not called in conformity to those statutes, and therefore it was no court, and its judgments and processes were not voidable, but void, and as if they had never been. Garlick v. Dunn, 42 Ala. 404; Rawlinson v. State, 154 Ala. 64, 45 South. 891; Gordy v. State, 154 Ala. 52, 45 South. 901; McMillan v. City of Gadsden (Sup.) 39 South. 569.
*659[6] Therefore this court knows that there is no' indictment pending against the petitioner, issued or returned by a court legally constituted.
[7] It may be, as insisted by the state, that this hearing was had before the judge upon the theory that, as the judgment convicting defendant in March, 1904, was void; and defendant was not agqin put upon trial, there was a discontinuance of the prosecution. This seems to have been the determining point in the mind of the'trial judge in ordering the petitioner discharged, and upon this proposition this court is not agreed. But it is agreed to the effect that if the trial court rendered a correct judgment, even if in doing so a wrong reason was given, the judgment should be upheld. Travelers’ Ins. Co. v. Lazenby, 16 Ala. App. 549, 80 South. 25, 26 (opinion); Flowers & Peagler v. W. T. Smith Lbr. Co., 157 Ala. 510-512, 47 South. 1022; Johnson v. Coosa Mfg. Co., 16 Ala. App. 649, 81 South. 141; Holloway v. Henderson Lbr. Co., ante, p. 89, 81 South. 867.
[8] In habeas corpus proceedings, where petitioner alleges that he is illegally restrained of his liberty, the burden is on the state to show a legal restraint, and this burden is discharged when the state introduces in evidence a judgment or process from a legally constituted court acting within its jurisdiction in rendering the judgment or issuing the process. If the judgment or process is irregular, and voidable only, the petitioner would not for that reason be entitled to his discharge; but if the court was not legally in session, or was withqut jurisdiction to render the judgment or issue the process, it would be void and the petitioner entitled to his discharge. Ex parte Hardy, 68 Ala. 303.
We see no good reason for changing the decision heretofore rendered, and the application for rehearing is denied.
Application denied.