Gavin v. Langlois

167 A.2d 747, 92 R.I. 203, 1961 R.I. LEXIS 17
CourtSupreme Court of Rhode Island
DecidedFebruary 15, 1961
StatusPublished

This text of 167 A.2d 747 (Gavin v. Langlois) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Rhode Island primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Gavin v. Langlois, 167 A.2d 747, 92 R.I. 203, 1961 R.I. LEXIS 17 (R.I. 1961).

Opinions

Roberts, J.

This is a petition for a writ of habeas corpus brought by the petitioner to obtain his discharge from the allegedly unlawful custody of the respondent warden. The petitioner has been held in custody by the respondent pursuant to a sentence of thirty years imposed on June 10, 1955 by a justice of the superior court in the case of State v. George Marion Gavin, Indictment No. 25287.

In that indictment the defendant George Marion Gavin, hereinafter referred to as Gavin, was charged with the commission of the crime of murder. The indictment followed the apprehension of Gavin after the fatal shooting of Charles Kimatian in Providence on April 19, 1950 during ■the perpetration of a robbery. Along with other defendants Gavin went to trial under this indictment in October 1950 and was found guilty of murder in the first degree by [205]*205the jury. On November 6, 1950 the trial justice sentenced Gavin to imprisonment for life.

While Gavin was in custody pursuant to the life sentence so imposed, he filed in the superior court a petition for habeas corpus which was heard by a justice of that court on April 15, 1953. Thereafter, on October 9, 1953, the said justice granted the petition for the writ and entered an order which in substance directed that Gavin be discharged from further custody pursuant to the sentence imposed by reason of his conviction for murder in the first degree.

Gavin was not discharged from actual custody, however, being further detained by reason of the pendency of other charges against him which arose out of the same criminal action. Gavin does not dispute the legality of this detention. It appears that thereafter counsel for Gavin and the attorney general engaged in a series of conferences concerning the disposition to be made of the various charges pending against Gavin. The record does not disclose the nature of the conclusions or agreements reached at these conferences, but it does appear that on June 3, 1955 a justice of the superior court granted a motion “to vacate the record of conviction of murder in the 1st degree,” ordered the cause reinstated for trial, and permitted Gavin to file certain special pleas.

Thereafter, on June 10, 1955, Gavin appeared before the superior court and pleaded nolo contendere to a charge of murder in the second degree and was given the sentence pursuant to which he is now held in the custody of the respondent warden. The docket entry concerning this proceeding is as follows: “1955, June 10, Jalbert, J. Murder, nol prossed as to deft. Gavin. Deft. Gavin arraigned on charge of Murder in 2nd Degree, pleads nolo contendere and sentence [sic] to Mens Reformatory for 30 years and committed.”

The ground upon which Gavin relies primarily for the issuance of the writ here is that having been discharged pursu[206]*206ant to such writ from the life sentence imposed under the instant indictment he could not again lawfully 'be imprisoned under that indictment. He concludes that since his present detention is the result of the sentence imposed under the instant indictment subsequent to his discharge from prior custody, it is unlawful, and in support thereof he directs our attention to G. L. 1956, §10-9-29. That statute in pertinent part reads as follows: “No person who has been discharged upon a writ of habeas corpus shall be again imprisoned or restrained for the same cause, unless he shall be indicted therefor or convicted thereof * *

The generally accepted rule is that a discharge from custody upon a writ of habeas corpus precludes any further detention or imprisonment under the same process or in the same proceeding but that such a discharge does not bar a subsequent prosecution with consequent arrest and detention in a new proceeding or under new process. In many jurisdictions this rule has been given legislative sanction by statutory enactment. The rule has been aptly stated in State ex rel. Cacciatore v. Drumbright, 116 Fla. 496, as follows: “* * * the general rule in most jurisdictions is that an order or judgment discharging a person in such proceedings is conclusive in his favor that he is illegally held in custody and is res judicata of all issues of law and fact necessarily involved in that result, and he cannot be again arrested for the same cause; that is, upon the same warrant, indictment or information which was therein held illegal. While it usually terminates the pending proceeding against the petitioner, it does not necessarily prevent the institution of a subsequent prosecution against him under proceedings which are legal and sufficient and which remove the illegalities, or supply the defects, on account of which the order of discharge was granted.”

Similar judicial declarations that a discharge from custody by a writ of habeas corpus in effect vitiates the process pursuant to which the questioned detention was effected [207]*207may be found in Day v. Smith, 172 Ga. 467, In re Crandall, 59 Kan. 671, State ex rel. Zugschwerd v. Holm, 37 Minn. 405, and McConologue’s Case, 107 Mass. 154. These decisions, in our opinion, reflect judicial recognition of a basic principle of justice, that is, that one who has been discharged from unlawful detention by habeas corpus should not be further detained or again imprisoned under that legal process pursuant to which he was found to. have been unlawfully detained. In our opinion G. L. 1956, §10-9-29, constitutes legislative recognition and endorsement of that principle.

This court, when confronted with a question in In re Deslovers, 35 R. I. 256, which involved the effect of a discharge from custody on a writ of habeas corpus, appears to have held that one who had been in custody under an indictment charging him with the crime of murder and who' pursuant to a writ of habeas corpus was discharged from that custody may not again ibe deprived of his liberty under that indictment. It does not appear from an examination of the opinion, however, that in reaching this conclusion the court considered the statutory provisions now invoked by Gavin which were then in effect in G. L. 1909, chap. 305, sec. 28.

Deslovers had been indicted for murder on September 16, 1912 and thereafter on his petition for habeas corpus was discharged from custody on the ground that, having been held without being bailed or tried within six months after the indictment, his statutory rights had been violated and he was entitled to a discharge from custody on the writ. See G. L. 1956, §12-13-7. After the opinion was filed in In re Deslovers, 35 R. I. 248, the state moved for permission to reargue certain issues. We have examined the mem-' orandum of law filed by the state in support of that motion and conclude therefrom that, among other things, the. state was contending that, conceding a violation of this particular statutory right of the prisoner, he was being lawfully detained pursuant to a valid indictment and therefore: [208]*208was not entitled to a discharge from that detention.

The court, however, was of the opinion that the detention of Deslovers became illegal when he was held in violation of the statute and that he thereupon became entitled to foe discharged not from responsibility for the crime, if any, but from detention under the process pursuant to which the detention had been effected. In the Deslovers case, 35 R. I.

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Related

State Ex Rel. Cacciatore v. Drumbright
156 So. 721 (Supreme Court of Florida, 1934)
Day v. Smith
157 S.E. 639 (Supreme Court of Georgia, 1931)
McConologue's case
107 Mass. 154 (Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court, 1871)
In re Crandall
54 P. 686 (Supreme Court of Kansas, 1898)
State ex rel. Zugschwerd v. Holm
34 N.W. 748 (Supreme Court of Minnesota, 1887)

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Bluebook (online)
167 A.2d 747, 92 R.I. 203, 1961 R.I. LEXIS 17, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gavin-v-langlois-ri-1961.