Clarke v. McDade

165 U.S. 168, 17 S. Ct. 284, 41 L. Ed. 673, 1897 U.S. LEXIS 1958
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedJanuary 25, 1897
DocketNos. 158 , 159, 165, 160, 161
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 165 U.S. 168 (Clarke v. McDade) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of the United States primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Clarke v. McDade, 165 U.S. 168, 17 S. Ct. 284, 41 L. Ed. 673, 1897 U.S. LEXIS 1958 (1897).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Peckham

delivered the opinion of the court.

The records in the above numbers, 158 and 159, relate to proceedings in habeas corpus. Those records are printed. Numbers 161 and 165 also relate to proceedings in habeas corpus. The records in those cases are not printed. Number 160 relates to a writ of error in what is termed in the record “a»-action.”

All the records now before us, both printed and unprinted, are such a mass of confusion as to render it difficult to determine what has been done in the court below. The records relating to the proceedings taken upon habeas corpus show applications for that writ to' various judges of the Superior Court of the city and county of San Francisco, State of California. From a perusal of the series of papers variously denominated orders, objections, demurrers, motions to vacate, answers, specifications of errors and petitions for reversal, which are mixed up in inextricable confusion, we are able to gather that the plaintiff in error, Clarke, was proceeded against in the Superior Court of San Francisco as an alleged insolvent, and that such court after a hearing adjudged that he wás insolvent; that he appealed from the adjudication and his appeal' was heard in the Supreme Court of California, which court affirmed the adjudication and remitted the record to the Superior Court of San Francisco. These facts are discovered from the perusal of a paper appearing to be an order signed by one of the judges of the Superior Court, which shows that there had been an appeal, and that the remittitur had come down to that court affirming .its judgment.adjudging Clarke an insolvent.

*170 The order containing such. recitals then directs the insolvent to file an inventory of his property, and it is signed by -one of the judges of the court. An appeal was taken from the order, but no disposition of it appears to have been iripde, so far as .the record shows. He failed to obey the order by filing the inventory as directed, and an order to show cause why he should not be punished for contempt having been made, he appeared and offered various objections to such adjudication. He was finally adjudged guilty of the contempt charged, and was committed to the jail in San Francisco until he should obey the order of the court and file an inventory as directed. After his commitment to the jail he commenced a series of proceedings by habeas corpus to obtain his release. It is the decision of the judge'rendered in each proceeding of which he complains. He applied to one judge.'of the .Superior Court after another for the writ which was granted him, and when the writ was served and the petitioner produced in obedience to the writ, after a hearing, the writ was discharged and the petitioner was remanded by the judge who granted the writ. This was repeated three or four times before different judges with the same result. He also applied to Judge Morrow, United States District Judge for a writ of habeas corpus, and that writ was applied for-after he had applied to the state judge for the same kind of a writ' which had been allowed, but before a decision was given by the state judge in that particular proceeding, and upon a hearing before the state judge upon the return of the writ sued out by himself, he objected that the judge had no right to hear the case, as he had applied to a United States District Judge for a writ of habeas corpus, and that under the provisions of Rev. Stat. §§ 763, 766, there was no power in the state judge to proceed with the hearing upon a return of the writ.

^ It does not appear what (if any) action was taken by the Federal judge on the application for the habeas corpus, and it is upon the decisions made by the state judges on these various applications for writs of habeas corpus that the questions arise which plaintiff in error claims that this court has the jurisdiction to decide.

*171 All bis objections to the proceedings are to be found in documents set forth in the records. signed by himself, and which he describes as specifications of error and prayers for reversal. In these specifications he sets up numerous objections to the order adjudging him an insolvent and to the order adjudging him in contempt, and to the alleged refusal of the various judges to admit him to bail pending an examination of his case under the writs issued. ■ What these various decisions were can only be determined from these specifications of error and other descriptions and allegations contained in affidavits and alleged answers to petitions signed by the plaintiff in error.

He objects that the order adjudging him an insolvent, as well as various of the other orders made by the court, were not signed by the clerk and sealed with the seal of the court assuming to grant them; that they were not served by the sheriff; that he was denied a trial by jury upon the question of insolvency and upon the question of contempt; that he wás denied bail; and, generally, that the Fourteenth Amendment was violated in his person, and that all of the various orders' were made in violation of the Revised Statutes, §§ 1979, 763, 766.

There is not one judgment of any court to be found in the. record. There is a statement in each of the records relating to the habeas corpus proceedings following the writ and return thereto, as f ollows: “ Court order, October 26,1893. Writ dismissed ; prisoner remanded. ..Register 2 of Departments 1 to 10, page 249.” ’

In one of the records four petitions for writs of habeas cor-, pus are contained .one after the other, and no action shown in regard to any petition excepting at the end of the fourth, there is a statement similar to that which is above set forth as to the dismissal of the writ.

There is no record of any appeal being taken to any state appellate tribunal or of any review being had or attempted of the various so called court orders’remanding the prisoner after a hearing upon the returns to the various writs, but the writs of error from this court are directed to the judges of the SÚ- *172 perior Court of the city and county of San Francisco, and they have been allowed by one of the judges of that court.

The fatal objection appears in each case that the so called court-orders made upon the returns to the several writs of habeas corpus, which were granted-by a judge and returnable before him, do. not constitute that final judgment or decree in a suit in the highest court of a State in which a decision in the suit could be had which may be reviewed on writ of error from this court under section 709 of the Revised Statutes of the United States. If these various orders did constitute such a final judgment, it does not appear in the record that any question' arose in such a manner as would give this co'urt jurisdiction to review the same under the above named section,

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Bluebook (online)
165 U.S. 168, 17 S. Ct. 284, 41 L. Ed. 673, 1897 U.S. LEXIS 1958, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/clarke-v-mcdade-scotus-1897.