Ashby v. Haugh

152 N.W.2d 228, 260 Iowa 1047, 1967 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 826
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedJuly 11, 1967
Docket52526
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 152 N.W.2d 228 (Ashby v. Haugh) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ashby v. Haugh, 152 N.W.2d 228, 260 Iowa 1047, 1967 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 826 (iowa 1967).

Opinion

*1049 Garfield, C. J.

This is a habeas corpus action against the warden of the men’s state reformatory where it is alleged plaintiff is illegally restrained. Following a hearing, the district court ruled plaintiff should have been referred to the juvenile court of Ringgold County and ordered him remanded to such court within one week for further proceedings. Defendant has appealed. We reverse the decision.

On the night of October 7, 1965, an armed robbery was committed upon an attendant at a gasoline filling station in Mount Ayr, Ringgold County. About an hour later plaintiff and three companions were apprehended and taken into custody in northern Missouri, approximately 50 miles south of Mount Ayr. Plaintiff and one of the other three had entered the station and plaintiff, while masked, held.the gun on the victim. Upon being apprehended and at all times subsequent thereto until about two weeks after he was admitted to the reformatory plaintiff gave his age as 19.

After plaintiff was sentenced to the reformatory on his plea of guilty to robbery with aggravation in violation of section 711.2, Code 1962, it developed he was in fact only .17. This action followed.

Relief was asked on two grounds. First, that since plaintiff was in fact under 18 it was mandatory under what is now section 232.61, Code 1966, that he be referred to the juvenile court of Ringgold County before the district court could sentence him under the county attorney’s information filed against him therein. Second, that plaintiff was denied effective representation by counsel at the preliminary hearing before the justice of the peace (which hearing was waived) ; plaintiff was interrogated at length by the county attorney when plaintiff was ■without counsel, in violation of his constitutional right against self-incrimination and to due process of law; and the whole atmosphere surrounding plaintiff’s conviction and sentencing was such that he was denied due process.

The trial court’s ruling is based solely on the first of these two grounds. The second ground on which the action is based is ignored except as stated in Division III hereof. No attempt was made to have the court’s findings enlarged or amended under *1050 rule 179, Rules of Civil Procedure, to include reference to the second ground of the action to which virtually all the evidence was directed.

I. Two procedural questions are presented. Copy of the mittimus (legal process) by virtue of which plaintiff was restrained in the reformatory was not annexed to the petition nor was satisfactory reason given for its absence, as required by Code section 663.1, subsection 2. Based on this omission defendant unsuccessfully moved to dismiss the petition at the outset of the hearing and again at the close of plaintiff’s evidence and the evidence as a whole.

We have held the requirements of section 663.1 as to what the petition must contain are mandatory and failure of compliance is ground for dismissal of the action. Farrant v. Bennett, 255 Iowa 704, 708, 123 N.W.2d 888, 891, and citations, certiorari denied 375 U. S. 977, 84 S. Ct. 498, 11 L. Ed.2d 422.

However, since the mittimus was received in evidence at the commencement of the hearing and plaintiff, by amendment to the petition dictated into the record at the close of his evidence, tendered the exhibit as part of the petition, we do not reverse because of this omission from the petition.

II. More serious is the fact plaintiff had appealed to this court from the judgment of conviction in the district court and the appeal was never dismissed. So far as the record before us shows, it was still pending at the time of the hearing on plaintiff’s petition although plaintiff’s attorneys said it was their intention to abandon it.

“* * * a court has no power to grant a writ of habeas corpus pending an appeal to another court from a conviction in a criminal prosecution.” 25 Am. Jur., Habeas Corpus, section 108, page 223.

To like effect is 39 C. J. S., Habeas Corpus, section 53, page 596, which states the rule is of wide application and there is no conflict of authorities on it.

Peff v. Doolittle, 235 Iowa 443, 447, 15 N.W.2d 913, 915, quotes both 25 Am. Jur. and 39 C. J. S., supra, with approval and cites many decisions supporting the rule. See also McFarland v. State, 172 Neb. 251, 109 N.W.2d 397, 402, and cita *1051 tions; Rhodes v. Sigler, 172 Neb. 439, 109 N.W.2d 731, 733; France v. Superior Court, 201 Cal. 122, 255 P. 815, 52 A. L. R. 869, and annotation, 876.

Although defendant’s motion to dismiss on this ground was good, we prefer not to rest our decision on this somewhat technical ground.

III. As stated, sole basis of the relief granted was the trial court’s opinion that what is now section 232.61, Code 1966, is mandatory and required the justice of the peace to initially refer plaintiff to the juvenile court of Ringgold County; since this was not done his detention in the reformatory was illegal. Other issues were ignored except as stated in the next paragraph, hereof. The ruling (filed the day the evidence was concluded and the case argued) makes no mention of section 232.62, infra.

The ruling states four times, in effect, that the fact plaintiff was not treated as a juvenile was of his own making in wilfully falsifying his age and that his true age was not discovered until after he was sentenced in district court. Also that “the juvenile court may choose to review the other matters raised in this action.” This must refer to defendant’s contention that in consciously misrepresenting his age plaintiff waived any alleged right to have his ease initially considered by the juvenile court and plaintiff’s claim he was denied effective representation of counsel and in other ways deprived of due process.

We know of no authority, statutory or otherwise, to support the view that the juvenile court could properly and effectively review such other matters.

The court’s decision is contrary to our holding in State v. Stueve, 260 Iowa 1023, 150 N.W.2d 597, filed about nine months after the decision here. It must be assumed the decision would not have been rendered if our Stueve opinion had been filed before the trial court acted.

Although the cited case is conclusive against plaintiff on the first ground of his action, it is perhaps well to quote sections 232.61 and 232.62, Code 1966. The former provides:

“Mandatory transfer from justice court. Any child taken before any justice of the peace or police court charged with a public offense shall, together with the case, be at .once trans-' *1052 ferred by said court to tbe juvenile court.”

Section 232.62 states:

“Concurrent jurisdiction of criminal offenses.

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Bluebook (online)
152 N.W.2d 228, 260 Iowa 1047, 1967 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 826, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ashby-v-haugh-iowa-1967.