Ex Parte Jackson

171 So. 545, 177 Miss. 509, 1937 Miss. LEXIS 138
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 4, 1937
DocketNo. 32403.
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 171 So. 545 (Ex Parte Jackson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Mississippi Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ex Parte Jackson, 171 So. 545, 177 Miss. 509, 1937 Miss. LEXIS 138 (Mich. 1937).

Opinions

*513 Griffith., J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

The petitioner was convicted in the circuit court of Adams county of an assault and battery, and was sentenced to serve thirty days in jail and to pay a fine of one hundred dollars and costs, which costs were twenty-three dollars and fifteen cents. The petitioner was put in jail on November 27, 1935, in said county, and there continuously remained. On June 2, 1936, he filed his petition in habeas corpus, alleging that he had then been in jail for more than a sufficient number of days, not including the thirty-day sentence of imprisonment, to pay his fine and costs at one dollar per day; that he had not been given work by the county, as required by law, and was and is unable to pay his fine, except by such work. He averred that he was entitled to the credit provided by statute on his fine and costs, which, as said, if allowed, would be more than sufficient to pay all of his fine and costs, and that he was, therefore, entitled to a discharge from further confinement. The case was heard by the chancellor on an agreed statement of facts, wherein those above stated were admitted to be true, and *514 that the board of supervisors of the county “has failed to provide a means or method by which a county convict is given an opportunity to work,” the agreement stating no reason why the board had so failed. The chancellor sustained the petition and ordered the convict discharged from custody, from which judgment an appeal is brought to this court.

Section 4059, Code 1930, amended by chapter 269, sec. 1, Laws 1936, in a particular not here involved, provides as follows: “It is the imperative duty of the board of supervisors in each county in this state to require each convict sentenced to imprisonment in the county jail and the payment of a fine and costs, or to imprisonment and payment of costs, or to payment of fine and costs, to work out the sentence on the county convict farm or on the public roads or other public works of the county, or in a contiguous county, as herein provided.” Sections 4060 and 4061 authorize and direct the board of supervisors, in order to carry out the provisions of section 4059, to purchase or lease a county convict farm, and to improve and equip the same, and to place a foreman in charge thereof, and to employ free labor to aid in the cultivation and gathering of the crops. Section 4062, as amended by said chapter 269, sec. 2, Laws 1936, provides an alternative plan for the joint ownership of a convict farm with a contiguous county, or with a municipality in the county; and a further alternative that the board may lease the convicts to another county, there to he worked as convicts are authorized to be worked by the lessor county. And section 4063 provides a still further alternative for the working of the convicts on the public roads of the county, or other works of the county, exclusively public in their character.

Section 4064 provides that when a convict is physically ' unable to work he may be excused therefrom upon a certificate to that effect by the county health officer; but that “all convicts shall be required each day to do *515 and perform such work as they are physically able to do and perform and which will not impair the health of such convict, or as is not inhumane to require of him.” And section 4065 provides that “every convict for each day’s work he is required to do shall receive credit on his fine and costs assessed against him of one dollar, until such fine and costs are fully paid.”

It is therefore seen that the statute, in the most imperative language, made it the mandatory duty of the board of supervisors to require each convict, sentenced and imprisoned for the payment of a fine and costs, to work; and the statutes go on and authorize, and prescribe, the several means by which the convicts shall be worked. When a statute imposes a mandatory duty upon public officers to do a certain thing which beneficially concerns the interests or rights of persons under their charge, and gives authority to those officers to procure certain facilities or means with which the thing enjoined may be performed, the statute is mandatory also that they shall procure or avail of those means. See cases cited in notes, 59 C. J. 1076, 1077. It is immaterial, therefore, as to why the board of supervisors failed to furnish the facilities or means pointed out by the statute; it is enough that they admit that they did fail of their mandatory statutory duty.

The statute, in the plainest terms, as already shown, also requires each convict to work if physically able, and requires him to work each day that he is physically able so to dó; and the statute further provides, in the plainest terms, that he shall receive a credit of a dollar a day for each day’s work that he is required to do. And since he is required to work each day that he is able to work, the statute is, in consequence, equally plain that he is entitled to a dollar a day for each day he is physically able and willing to work. And it is no answer to this that no work was furnished him. Since he was by law expressly required to work, and the law mandatorily *516 required that he be furnished the means therefor, he had the corresponding right both to work and to have furnished to him the means therefor; and although no work was furnished him, he was and is as much entitled to the lawful credit therefor, as would a servant, who had made a contract with a master to do a certain number of days’ work for a dollar a day, be entitled to that dollar a day for the contract period when willing and able and ready to do the work, although the employer failed or refused to furnish the place or means or opportunity by which the work might be done. Let us suppose that the county had furnished and was operating a county convict farm, or some other public work, and by order of the board, the sheriff refused to take this particular convict, or any other particular convict, out of the jail to work, refused to let him work, or by oversight neglected to do so although the convict was willing and anxious to work, and to work obediently, would it be for a moment contended that the convict, because “not required to work,” would not be entitled to his. credit? And what is the difference, we would ask, where, as here, no means or opportunity is furnished him, as the law directs must he done ?

All of the above would have been clear enough, as we see it, had not another section of the Code, section 4067, Code 1930, provided as follows: “No convict shall be credited with any wages during the time he remains in the jail, and not at work.” In adopting the several Code sections to which we have heretofore referred, the Legislature had the right to assume that every county would, comply with the mandatory statutory provisions in regard to furnishing the means by which convicts could work out their fines, and that every convict able to work, and fit therefor by disposition and willingness, would work; hence the insertion of the last-quoted provision, which may he termed as cautionary in its nature, and without which all those in jail, although unfit or unwill- *517 dug to work, might possibly have been deemed to be entitled under the law to credit for each day therein.

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Related

Prentiss County v. Crouch
2 So. 2d 553 (Mississippi Supreme Court, 1941)

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Bluebook (online)
171 So. 545, 177 Miss. 509, 1937 Miss. LEXIS 138, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ex-parte-jackson-miss-1937.