Court Opinion

ID: 6582428
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-07-20 19:39:22.082901+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T15:57:20.126488
License: Public Domain

The opinion of the court was delivered by
Royce, Ch. J.
The right of a justice of the peace to compel a person to disclose the place where, and the person of whom, he has obtained the intoxicating liquor, is conferred by R. L. s. 3816, and the right is limited to the class of persons' specified in s. 3814. They are there described as persons found in such a state of intoxication as to disturb the public or domestic peace and tranquillity. So that, to authorize a justice to demand that such a disclosure be made, and order a party to be committed to jail if he refuses to make one, the justice must first find that he was found in such a state of' intoxication. Unless that fact is found the justice has no right to make any inquiry upon the subject; his authority is limited to the inquiry as to the place where and the person of whom the liquor so producing intoxication was obtained.
The complaint upon which this writ was awarded was verified by the oath of the relator; and in it he alleges that when he was required by the justice to disclose, after having been duly sworn, he did disclose that he was not intoxicated and had not drunk any intoxicating liquor on the day of his arrest; and that he offered to show to said court by other testimony than his own that he was not so intoxicated at the time of his arrest; which testimony the said justice refused and neglected to hear. It was competent for the State to dispute these allegations under sec. 1363, but it has elected to submit the case upon the record alone; hence, all that is stated in the record must be considered as true.
It being admitted that the relator swore, before his commitment, that he was not intoxicated at the time of his *103arrest, and the justice having refused to hear the other testimony offered by him to prove the fact, was his subsequent imprisonment under the mittimus, which is a part of the record, legal?
We are aware that the general rule is, that upon the hearing of a habeas corpus the court will not review the rulings or findings of the court under whose authority the alleged imprisonment is justified; and that the rights of the relator are dependent upon the return of the officer and the copies which are made a part thereof; but that such return is not conclusive, is evident. Sec. 1363 provides, that the prisoner may deny any of the facts set forth in the return, and may allege other material facts; and the court or judge may in a summary manner examine into the cause of the imprisonment or restraint, and hear the evidence of any person interested; and by sec. 1364 the court or judge is required, if no legal cause is shown for the imprisonment or restraint, to discharge the prisoner therefrom.
The only evidence before us upon which a finding as to the legality of the relator’s imprisonment can be predicated, is the complaint sworn to by him, the copies of record, and the return of the officer. The testimony offered by the relator before the justice was not of an uncertain character, nor offered as tending to show a fact, but to prove that he was not in fact intoxicated at the time of his arrest. When testimony is offered to prove a fact, and is for any reason excluded, in deciding the question of its admissibility the fact that it was offered to prove is considered as having been proved. The fact, then, that the testimony was offered to prove must be treated as having been proved; so the relator was ordered to be committed to jail, when in fact he was not intoxicated at the time of his arrest. It was an abuse of authority by the justice; and it requires no ai'gument to convince that such an imprisonment was illegal.
Can the relator be relieved from such imprisonment upon a writ of habeas corpus? The only doubt that can be enter*104tained upon the question results from the generality of the language used by courts in the promulgation of the rule above referred to. That the rule is not to he regarded as one of universal application, is evident from the fact that by R. L., s. 13(33, the relator is allowed to allege other material facts, and that the court may hear the evidence produced by any person interested. What fact could be more material than that the justice ordering the imprisonment did not have any jurisdiction to make such an order?. What evidence extrinsic of the record may be used upon the hearing of a writ of habeas corpus has always been a doubtful question. We are not aware that any rule upon the subject, of universal application, has been formulated. The authorities are conflicting. Considering the nature of the writ, and the purposes that it is designed to accomplish, the rules of evidence to be observed cannot be arbitrarily prescribed, but must necessarily be varied to meet the exigencies of individual cases. In in re Powers, 25 Vt. 261, the principal question considered was as to the constitutionality of what is now R. L. s. 3816. It appeared in that case that the relator was very thoroughly intoxicated at the time of his arrest; and that, upon his examination in regard to the person of whom he obtained the liquor by which he became intoxicated, and the manner of his obtaining it, his answers were not satisfactory to the justice; and he was committed upon a mittimus commanding his detention until he should make disclosure. It does not appear that any evidence was offered before the justice tending to show that he was not so intoxicated; and in the Supreme Court evidence was received bearing upon the question of his intoxication; so the record and return were not treated as conclusive in that case. In Tracy, ex parte, 25 Vt. 93, Redfielu, Ch. J., says that it may still be regarded as .unsettled how far it is competent for this court to revise the proceedings of an inferior court upon habeas corpus.
*105Treating the return of the officer upon the question of the relator’s intoxication as prima facie evidence of the fact, it was the right of the relator to meet that evidence by contradictory proof; and it was the duty of the justice to hear such proof when offered. It is no answer to say that the justice might have come to the same conclusion if he had heard it; it was his duty to hear it before coming to any conclusion.
In Hathaway v. Holmes, 1 Vt. 405, in the opinion delivered by Judge Prentiss, it is said that where a party is in execution by the judgment of another court having competent jurisdiction, the court will not examine into the merits of the judgment, nor discharge him, if the execution is regular, unless some matter is presented extrinsic of the judgment which entitles him to be discharged. Prom what is there said, the fair inference is that the jurisdictional question is open to inquiry.
The chief excellence of this writ consists in the easy, prompt, and efficient remedy afforded by it for all unlawful imprisonment. To deny the relator relief under it in this case would defeat the purpose for which it was . designed, and circumscribe the benefits secured by it to those who are deprived of their personal liberty within such narrow limits as to deprive it of the principal value we have been educated to ascribe to it.
It is adjudged that the relator is illegally imprisoned, and it is ordered that he be discharged.