Ex Parte Garland Brown
This text of 1911 OK CR 266 (Ex Parte Garland Brown) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Criminal Appeals of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
The petitioner, Garland Brown, was tried
and convicted upon an information filed in the district court of the Twenty-third judicial district, sitting in and for Ottawa county, charging the -crime of selling intoxicating liquor to a minor, and sentenced to be imprisoned in the state reformatory at Granite for a term of one year. Judgment and sentence was pronounced and entered on April 20, ,1911, and was executed by delivering the petitioner to the warden of 1he state reformatory at Granite, where he lias beeiji and is now confined.
Petitioner avers that said imprisonment is illegal and unauthorized, because the act of the Legislature, approved March 9, 1909 (Session Laws 1909, p. 164), under which said proceedings were had, is unconstitutional and void, and petitioner prays for a writ of habeas corpus that he may be discharged without delay from said unlawful imprisonment. The Attorney General appearing for the respondent, Clyde A. Reed, warden of the state reformatory at Granite, confesses on the part of the state that a writ of habeas corpus be allowed as prayed for.
In the case of Nowakowski v. State, infra, 116 Pac. 351, it was held by this court that the statute in question is unconstitutional and void, and the offense charged in the information is only a misdemeanor, of which a district court has no jurisdiction.
In the case of Wychoff v. State, infra, 116 Pac. 355, it was held that the district court has no power to receive, file, or take cognizance of an information charging a misdemeanor; and an information charging a misdemeanor, filed in the district court, cannot be transferred to the county court, but must be dismissed. See, also, Evans v. State, infra, 116 Pac. 356; Kester v. State, infra, 116 Pac. 356; Meek v. State, infra, 116 Pac. 356.
Under the foregoing decisions of this court, the district court of Ottawa county did not upon the information filed in said case *136 acquire jurisdiction to try, convict, 'and - sentence the petitioner for a felony under the statute in question. It therefore follows that petitioner is unlawfully imprisoned under said judgment of conviction and commitment at the state reformatory at Granite.
Wherefore a 'writ of habeas corpus is allowed, and it is ordered that the petitioner, Garland Brown, be discharged from said judgment and commitment, and that respondent, the warden of the state reformatory, upon receipt of a certified copy of this opinion from the clerk of this court, immediately discharge said petitioner.
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
1911 OK CR 266, 116 P. 1113, 6 Okla. Crim. 134, 1911 Okla. Crim. App. LEXIS 316, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ex-parte-garland-brown-oklacrimapp-1911.