Hinrichs v. First Judicial District Court

283 P.2d 614, 71 Nev. 168, 1955 Nev. LEXIS 75
CourtNevada Supreme Court
DecidedMay 13, 1955
Docket3869
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 283 P.2d 614 (Hinrichs v. First Judicial District Court) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Nevada Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hinrichs v. First Judicial District Court, 283 P.2d 614, 71 Nev. 168, 1955 Nev. LEXIS 75 (Neb. 1955).

Opinion

*169 OPINION

By the Court,

Badt, J.:

Petitioners seek a writ of prohibition to prohibit the respondent court from proceeding with the trial of a criminal charge against petitioners. The petition attacks the constitutionality of our statute defining as first degree murder, with the death penalty, the death of a human being caused by an escape or attempted escape of persons lawfully imprisoned in the state prison. The specific points of this attack are dealt with in this opinion, in which we hold that there is no merit in any of the single points of the challenge or in the combination of all of them.

The statute in question is sec. 10499, N.C.L. 1929, which has its origin in 1866 Stats. 166, and reads as follows : “If one or more persons, lawfully imprisoned in the state prison, shall, separately or together, escape, or shall, separately or together, attempt to escape from such prison; and being so engaged, he, they, or either *170 of them, shall cause the death of any human being in making, or attempting to make, such escape, the prisoner or prisoners causing such death shall be deemed guilty of murder in the first degree, and, on conviction thereof, shall suffer death.” Under this section the district attorney of Ormsby County filed an information charging petitioners with the commission of murder in the first degree in the manner following: “That the said defendants did, on or about the 17th day of September, 1954 * * * while lawfully imprisoned in the said Nevada State Prison, did then and there conspire together, to, and did form the intentions and common purpose of escape from the Nevada State Prison, and did then and there escape from the Nevada State Prison and while so engaged in said escape did, willfully, unlawfully and feloniously, and without authority of law, kidnap, seize, take, hold and carry away another person, to-wit, George Everett Miller, a guard at said State Prison, and did force him to accompany them * * * out of the said Nevada State Prison and from a place of safety to a place known by them to be a place of great danger and did then and there expose him, the said George Everett Miller, to said danger from attack upon them * * * by guards of the said Nevada State Prison in preventing them from escaping and did cause the said George Everett Miller, a human being, while being so exposed, to have inflicted upon him, mortal wounds by a bullet fired by a guard in the said Nevada State Prison in an attempt to prevent [their] escape * * *; that from said mortal wounds the said George Everett Miller then and there died.”

The district court overruled a demurrer based upon virtually the same points presented to this court and set the case for trial, which has been delayed by our preliminary writ.

It is asserted by petitioners (1) that the act denies them the equal-protection of the laws; (2) that due process is lacking because the information is so ambiguous as to render it impossible for petitioners to ascertain the crime *171 with which they are charged; (3) that the act, because of its uncertainty, would deprive petitioners of their lives and liberty without due process of law; and (4) that it provides a cruel and unusual punishment disproportionate to the offense.

(1) The first contention, that the statute denies to petitioners the equal protection of the laws, is based upon the rule that .“classification” must always rest upon some difference which bears a reasonable and just relation to the act in respect to which the classification is proposed and can never be made arbitrarily and without any such basis. This rule, enunciated in Connolly v. Union Sewer Pipe Co., 184 U.S. 540, 22 S.Ct. 431, 443, 46 L.Ed. 679, is amply supported by Mr. Justice Harlan’s citations in that case, although it is there conceded that, generally speaking, the state when enacting laws may, in its discretion, make a classification of persons in order to subserve public objects. Mr. Justice McKenna dissented, but expressed some views in harmony with the majority opinion. He said: “Classification, therefore, is necessary, but what are its limits? They are not easily defined, but the purview of the legislation should be regarded. A line must not be drawn which includes arbitrarily some persons who do and some persons who do not stand in the same relation to the purpose of the legislation. But a wide latitude of selection must be left to the legislature.”

In view of the foregoing it is important to note that the statutory classification is attacked by petitioners not because of the persons included therein, or because of the persons excluded therefrom (as in Connolly v. Union Sewer Pipe Co., supra), but because the classification would include all participants in an escape or attempted escape resulting in the death of a person in any one of a series of recited hypothetical cases. Infirmity of the statute under the equal protection clause is not thus proved. The statute applies to all persons lawfully imprisoned in the state prison. The classification is clear. *172 In applying to all persons thus lawfully imprisoned, it excludes all other persons. Persons not there imprisoned could not escape or attempt to escape therefrom and could not come within the purview of the statute. Is then the classification based upon some reasonable ground — some difference which bears a just and proper relation to the classification? Petitioners rely on Ex Parte Mallon, 16 Ida. 737, 102 P. 374, 378, 22 L.R.A., N.S., 1123. The statute in that case provided a punishment for a prisoner escaping from the state prison as a term equal in length to the term he was serving at the time of the escape. This was held to be entirely unrelated to the crime for which he was being punished, namely, the escape, as a person escaping from confinement for a one-year term would then be sentenced to an additional term of one year, and a person escaping from confinement for a twenty-year term would then be sentenced to a further twenty-year term. The court there suggests, in what is frankly dictum, that the statute, to escape its infirmity, “could be made to apply to all persons who escape or attempt to escape from the state prison.” (Emphasis supplied.) That is precisely what the present statute does.

In People v. Finley, 153 Cal. 59, 94 P. 248, the defendant was found guilty of murder and the death penalty was imposed under a statute providing that every person undergoing a life sentence, who, with malice aforethought, commits an assault upon the person of another with a deadly weapon is punishable with death. The California court was interested in the genesis and origin of this then comparatively new statute and recognized, as a part of judicial as well as legislative knowledge, that convicts undergoing life sentences constitute a most desperate and dangerous class, reckless, without hope, and without bonds of restraint; that their acts of violence against fellow inmates, custodians, officers and guards and their savage attempts to escape formed a *173 part of the history of California.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
283 P.2d 614, 71 Nev. 168, 1955 Nev. LEXIS 75, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hinrichs-v-first-judicial-district-court-nev-1955.