Aaron v. State

40 Ala. 307
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedJanuary 15, 1867
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 40 Ala. 307 (Aaron v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Aaron v. State, 40 Ala. 307 (Ala. 1867).

Opinion

JUDGE, J.

It is provided by statute in this State, that, “whenever any person is sentenced to the punishment of death, the court must direct that he be hanged by the neck until he is dead” ; and that'“ such sentence must be executed by the proper executive officer of the law, on such day as the court may appoint, not less than four, nor more than eight weeks from the time of the sentence”; and further, that “when, from any cause, any convict sentenced to death has not been executed pursuant to such sentence, the same stands in full force, and the circuit court of the county in which such convict was tried, on the application of the solicitor of the circuit, must direct the convict to be brought before it, or, if necessary, must issue an order in writing to that effect; or if at large, may issue a warrant for his [309]*309apprehension; and upon such convict being brought before such court, it must inquire in the circumstances, and if no legal reason exists against the execution of such sentence, must sentence the convict to execution on a day to be by such court appointed.” — Code, § 3638 ; Penal Code, § 378.

Whilst in England, and in some of the States of the Union, it is not the practice, in cases of capital sentence, for the court to make the day upon which execution is to be done a part of the original sentence ; yet such is the practice in this State; and it has been -held by this court, that a sentence to capital punishment is defective, if it omit to specify the precise day upon which it is to be executed. — Russell v. The State, 33 Ala. 372.

It is also well settled, both in England and in this country, and such in effect is the provision of our statute before quoted, that if the day which has been fixed for the execution of the sentence has passed without its being executed, the court should fix another day; and the judgment remains good, though the time has elapsed, until its command is executed. — 1 Bish. Cr. Procedure, § 879. Hawkins, book 2, chapter 51, section 7, says : “ It is clear, that if a man, condemned to be hanged, come to life after he be hanged, he ought to be hanged again, for the judgment is not executed till he be dead.”

It is furthermore the law, that the repeal of a statute imposing a penalty, though after conviction, arrests the judgment. In such a case, the statute repealed “must be considered as a law that never existed, except for the purpose of those actions or suits which were commenced, prosecuted, and concluded, while it was an existing law.” — Sedg. Stat. & Con. Law, 130. But such a result may be prevented by making the repealing law prospective in its operation, or by the insertion of a saving clause therein to prevent the operation of the repeal, and continue the repealed law in force, as to all pending proceedings and prosecutions.

Whilst such is the effect of the repeal of a statute imposing a penalty, after conviction and before sentence, what is the effect if the repealing law intervenes between the judgment or sentence and the execution ? In such a case, in the absence of express statutory provision, the execution [310]*310of the sentence follows as a necessary consequence, because, after an adjournment of tbe term at which the sentence is pronounced, there is no prooess by which the court can regain possession of the cause, and arrest or modify the judgment; and the sheriff, having no discretion, must carry the sentence into execution. For this reason, the effect of a repeal, intervening between the conviction and the sentence, is not the same as when it intervenes between the sentence and the execution. In the latter event, if there be no statutory enactment controlling the question, executive clemency would be the only means of preventing the sentence from being carried into execution.

Was there any sufficient legal reason, within the meaning of section 378 of the Penal Code, before quoted, why the prisoner in this case, when last brought before the court, should not have been re-sentenced to capital punishment ? And if any such reason did exist, was the court below invested with the power, under said section, to discharge the prisoner ?

The conviction and sentence took place under the act of October 7, 1861, which affixed the punishment of death, or imprisonment in the penitentiary, at the discretion of the jury trying the case, for the larceny of any “horse, mare, gelding, colt, filly, or mule.” This act was repealed by the “Act to establish a new Penal Code,” which repealing act did not take effect until the Penal Code went into operation under the proclamation of the governor, which was on the 1st day of June, 1866. — Penal Code, pp. 7-8. Thus, between the first and last sentence of the prisoner to capital punishment, the law under which he was tried and convicted was repealed. This was a sufficient legal reason why the prisoner should not have been again sentenced to the punishment of death; for, as before stated, (and there is no conflict of authority upon the point,) if the repeal had occurred after conviction, and before sentence, it would have arrested the judgment.

If, when the court was called upon to sentence the prisoner a second time, its power was restricted to the simple duty of fixing another day for the execution, (an act not involving the exercise of such judicial power as would give [311]*311the court control over the judgment,) the intervening repeal could not have been regarded by the court. Such was held to be the law in Addington’s case, 2 Bailey, 516. But, under the operation of section 378 of the Penal Code, the power of the court was not thus restricted. By that section, it was made the duty of the court to “inquire into the circumstances, and if no legal reason existed against it,” to re-sentence the prisoner. But, if any such legal reason did exist, it was the duty of the court, within the meaning of the Code, to have discharged the prisoner. Otherwise, the ascertainment of any legal reason against the execution of the sentence would be a vain and nugatory act. The meaning of the provision that the original sentence is to “stand in full force,” is, that the convict is not to be discharged solely because of the day having passed which was fixed for his execution; nevertheless, the court must, in such a case, perform the duties enjoined upon it. But, in making the necessary inquiry, the court, within the meaning of the Code, is restricted to the consideration of legal reasons founded upon circumstances occurring subsequent to the original sentence. Therefore, its powers are not as extensive over the judgment, as were the powers of the court at the term at which the case was tried; and such is not our argument. To hold that a pardon would be the only legal reason which the court might consider and act upon, in such a case, would be doing violence to the plain language of the statute — would be to legislate under the guise of judicial interpretation.

If the intervening repeal of the law under which the prisoner was convicted and sentenced, was not a sufficient legal reason to authorize his discharge, the sentence of death would be executed, when there was no law in existence to authorize it —a proposition abhorrent to justice as well as to mercy.

If the repeal had intervened between the conviction and the sentence, that, as we have seen, would have been a sufficient legal reason for arresting the judgment.

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Bluebook (online)
40 Ala. 307, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/aaron-v-state-ala-1867.