Ex Parte Parks

93 U.S. 18, 23 L. Ed. 787, 3 Otto 18, 1876 U.S. LEXIS 1343
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedOctober 23, 1876
StatusPublished
Cited by267 cases

This text of 93 U.S. 18 (Ex Parte Parks) 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
Ex Parte Parks, 93 U.S. 18, 23 L. Ed. 787, 3 Otto 18, 1876 U.S. LEXIS 1343 (1876).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Bradley

delivered the opinion of the court.

The petitioner for Jabeas corpus in this case was convicted of forgery in the District Court of the United States for the Western District of Virginia, and is in custody by-virtue of a commitment under sentence tif imprisonment in the penitentiary for said offence. Complaining, that his conviction was illegal, by reason that the act for which he was. convicted was not a crime against the laws of the United. States, he applied to the circuit judge for a habeas corpus, and, after a hearing thereon, was remanded into custody. Not being satisfied with this decision, he now applies to this court for a habeas corpus.' His petition is as follows: —

To the Honorable Morrison R. Waite, Chief Justice, and his Associates, Justices of the Supreme Court of the United States:
“ The petition of Richard S- Parks respectfully represents, that your petitioner is illegally confined in jail, at Harrisonburg, in Vir *19 ginia, being in the custody of A. S. Gray, as Marshal of the United. States for the Western District of Virginia, by virtue of a commitment under an illegal sentence of the District Court of the United States for the said district, the same (sentence) being void and in law a nullity, for want of jurisdiction in the said court to pass it upon and against your petitioner, which said sentence was pronounced in a case of the United States against your petitioner, a transcript of the record whereof is herewith presented. That your petitioner heretofore made application to the honorable judge of Circuit Court of the United States for the said district, that he would order the discharge of your petitioner upon a writ of habeas .corpus sued out for that object; but his honor, the said judge of the Circuit Court, instead of discharging, remanded him to the custody of the said marshal, as will appear from a transcript of his order in the said matter, which transcript is likewise herewith presented. And that your petitioner therefore prays at your honors’ hands the benefit of the writ of habeas corpus, to be directed to the said marshal, commanding him to have before your honors, at a daysand place to be named therein, the body of your petitioner, ‘together with the cause of his capture and detention, to undergo and receive whatsoever your honors shall then and there consider of him in that behalf.
“ And y.our petitioner will ever pray, &c.
“Rich’d S. Parks.”

The transcript of the record of conviction, whicli accompanies the petition, shows that the petitioner was indicted for forging the signature of O. Douglass Gray, register in bankruptcy, to the following receipt: —

“(Harrisonburg, July 30, 1872.
“ Received of J. D. Martin, by R: S. Parks, his attorney, the application, with necessary papers, fqr adjudication in bankruptcy of said Martin; also, $50, amount of required deposit.
“C. Douglass Gray, Register.”

One count, of the indictment charges that Parks committed the forgery for the purpose of authenticating the., commencement of proceedings in bankruptcy in the case of J.' D. Martin. Another count alleges the purpose to have been to authenticate a proceeding in the said case; namely, the filing of the paper with the register. There was a third count, which did not state the purpose.

*20 The petitioner contends that the forging of this receipt is not a crime by any act of Congress, and that, as the courts of the United States have no.common-law jurisdiction of crimes, the -District Court had no jurisdiction to try him for the offence. The. indictment is founded on the forty-sixth section of the Bankrupt Act (re-enacted and made more general in sect; 5419 of the Revised Statutes), which declares, that “if any person shall forge the signature of a judge, register, or other officer of the court, or knowingly concur in using any such forged or counterfeited signature . . . for the purpose of authenticating any proceeding or document, . . . such person shall be guilty of felony,” &c. The petitioner insists that the paper whose forgery is charged is not a document which could be used in evidence in any proceeding,’by reason of its being authenticated by the official signature of the register. This proposition may be questioned. But suppose it were true, the receipt could, be used in evidence, if genuine, for the' purpose of showing, the fact stated therein as against the signer in his official as well as private capacity. At all events, it‘is not .clekr and free from all doubt that the forgery is not within the terms of the statute.

But the question whether it was or was not a crime within the statute was one which the District Court was competent to .decide. It was before the court, and within its jurisdiction.No other court, except the Circuit Court for the same district, having concurrent jurisdiction, was.as competent to decide the question as -the District Court.

Whether an act charged in an indictment is or is not a crime by the law which the court administers (in this case the statute law of the United States), is a question which ffias to.<be' met at almost every.stage of criminal proceedings; on motions to quash the indictment, on demurrers, on motions to arrest judgment, &c. The court may err, but it has jurisdiction of the question. • If it' errs, there is no remedy after final judgment, unless a v. rit of error lies to some Superior Court; and no such writ lies in this case. It would' be an assumption of authority for this, court, by méans of the writ- of habeas cor pus, to review every case in which the defendant attempts to controvert the criminality of the offénce charged in the indict *21 ment. It having been held that the regulation of the appellate power of this court was conferred upon Congress, and Congress having given an appeal or writ of error in' only certain specified cases, the implication is irresistible,' that those errors and irregularities, which can only be reviewed by appeal or writ of error, cannot be reviewed in this court in any other cases than those in which- those processes are given. Now, it has always been held that a. mere error in point of law, committed by a court in -a case properly subject to its cognizance, can only be reviewed by the' ordinary methods of appeal or writ of error; but that where the proceedings are not only er.roneous, but entirely .void, —as where-the court is without juris-, diction of the person or of the cause, and a party is subjected to illegal imprisonment in consequence,.,— the Superior Court, or judge invested with the prerogative power of issuing a habeas corpus, may review the proceedings by that writ, and discharge from illegal imprisonment. This is one of the'modes in which this court exercises supervisory power over interior courts and tribunals; but it is a special mode, and confined to a limited class of cases.

The general principles upon which the writ of habeas corpus

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
93 U.S. 18, 23 L. Ed. 787, 3 Otto 18, 1876 U.S. LEXIS 1343, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ex-parte-parks-scotus-1876.