Gardner v. Jones

59 P. 126, 126 Cal. 614, 1899 Cal. LEXIS 773
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 9, 1899
DocketS.F. No. 1764.
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 59 P. 126 (Gardner v. Jones) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Gardner v. Jones, 59 P. 126, 126 Cal. 614, 1899 Cal. LEXIS 773 (Cal. 1899).

Opinions

CHIPMAN, C.

—Application for a writ to prohibit defendant from entertaining jurisdiction in a certain habeas corpus case. One Buchanan was duly committed to the Napa State Hospital for the Insane by the superior court of Yuba county pending his trial upon the charge of murder. A friend of Buchanan, one Muller, presented his petition to the Hon. E. D. Ham, judge of the superior court of' Napa county, setting forth, among other things, that Buchanan has recovered his sanity and is entitled to be discharged from the state hospital and redelivered to the sheriff of said Yuba county to be dealt with as provided by chapter VI of the Penal Code, and that his detention in said hospital, as an insane patient, has become and now is illegal. Judge Ham issued the writ, returnable “before the acting judge of said superior court,” in the courtroom of the superior court of Napa county. At the request of Judge Ham, defendant, who was then judge of the superior court of Contra Costa county, proceeded to hold the superior court of Napa county, and while so doing assumed jurisdiction in this habeas corpus case. The petitioner in this present proceeding, the medical superintendent of the Napa State Hospital, made return to the writ, showing the legal commitment of Buchanan to the asylum, and alleging that he has not recovered his sanity. He claims that Buchanan cannot be delivered to the sheriff of Yuba county except upon the certificate of plaintiff that Buchanan has recovered his sanity, approved by the judge of the superior court of that county; and that the superior court of Napa county is without jurisdiction or authority to order plaintiff to so redeliver Buchanan.

1. It is contended that section 13, article III, of the insanity law, approved March 31, 1897 (Stats. 1897, p. 311), does not apply to insane persons of Buchanan’s class. The question is an important one, inasmuch as it involves the right of an inmate of a state hospital, who happens at the time to be resting under a criminal charge and is committed pending trial for his crime, to have his alleged insanity made the subject of judicial *616 inquiry by the writ of habeas corpus. It is claimed that “the medical superintendent is the only person or tribunal vested by law with authority to determine whether or not an insane patient of this class has recovered.”

Section 13, article III, of the insanity law provides as follows: “Anyone in custody as an insane person is entitled to a writ of habeas corpus upon a proper application made by a relative or some friends in his behalf to the superior judge of the county in which the hospital is located. Upon the return of such writ the fact of his insanity shall be inquired into and determined. The medical history of the patient, as it'appears in the clinical records, shall be given in evidence, and the superintendent in charge of the state hospital wherein such person is held in custody, and any other persons, shall be sworn touching the mental condition of such person.”

That part of section 14, article III, relied upon reads as follows: “A patient committed to a hospital under the provisions of chapter VI, title X, part II, of the Penal Code of this state, shall, upon the certificate of the superintendent that such person has recovered, approved by the superior judge of the county from which the patient was committed, be redelivered to the sheriff of such county and dealt with as provided for by said chapter VI of the Penal Code.”

The provisions of the Penal Code regulating the commitment of persons charged with crime are found in sections 1367 to 1373. Xo question arises as to the regularity of Buchanan’s commitment under these provisions. Section 1372 provides as follows: “If the defendant is received into the asylum, he must be detained there until he becomes sane. When he becomes sane, the superintendent must give notice of that fact to the sheriff and district attorney of the county. The sheriff must thereupon, without delay, bring the defendant from the asylum and place him in proper custody until he is brought to'trial or judgment, as the case may be, or is legally.discharged.”

Section 1473 of the Penal Code provides as follows: “Every person unlawfully imprisoned or restrained of Ms liberty, under any.pretense whatever, may prosecute a writ of habeas corpus to inquire into the cause of such imprisonment or restraint.”

Section 5, article I, of the constitution reads: “The privilege *617 of the writ of habeas carpus shall not be suspended unless when, in eases of rebellion or invasion, the public safety may require its suspension.”

We find in the statute no authority for making two classes of insane—one civil and the other criminal—and by any such ■ classification to take the latter out of the operation of the statute as to the right of habeas corpus. Section 13, article III, of the insanity law makes no- such distinction. But plaintiff contends that section 14 of article III in terms confers authority upon the medical superintendent to determine when the patient of the criminal class is restored to sanity, and, as the authority is not conferred upon any other person or tribunal, it is necessarily exclusive, and also proves that the law recognizes the two mentioned classes of insane. We cannot believe that the legislature intended to enact a law so entirely out of harmony with the spirit and letter of the constitution and the statute to which attention has been called. It is our duty to harmonize sections 13 and 14, article III, of the insanity law, so as to conform to the constitution and to the statutes quoted, if we can, rather than resort to the more extreme necessity of holding section 14 to be unconstitutional, as defendant claims it to be, if given the construction placed upon it by plaintiff. We think it was intended by section 14 to provide means by which a patient of Buchanan’s class, whose reason has become restored, could be at once remanded to the sheriff of the proper county for trial; but it was not intended that the arbitrary power should rest with the medical superintendent to deprive the patient of. the right to be so returned, nor was it intended that the medical superintendent should be the exclusive judge of the patient’s restoration. The commitment is made under section 1370 of the Penal Code, which provides “that upon his becoming sane he be redelivered to the sheriff”; and section 1372 provides that “if the defendant is received into the asylum he must be detained there until he becomes sane. When he becomes sane, the superintendent must give notice of that fact to the sheriff and district attorney of the county. The sheriff must thereupon, without delay, bring the defendant from the asylum and place him in proper custody until he is brought to trial or judgment, as the case may be, or is legally discharged.” The law *618 does not justify the detention: 1. If there he not a legal commitment; and 2. If the patient has recovered his sanity. If there be no legal commitment) or if the patient has become restored to sanity, there is lack of authority to detain him, and the question may be inquired into by habeas corpus.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
59 P. 126, 126 Cal. 614, 1899 Cal. LEXIS 773, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gardner-v-jones-cal-1899.