In Re Holley

69 S.E. 872, 154 N.C. 163, 1910 N.C. LEXIS 177
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedDecember 23, 1910
StatusPublished
Cited by28 cases

This text of 69 S.E. 872 (In Re Holley) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of North Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re Holley, 69 S.E. 872, 154 N.C. 163, 1910 N.C. LEXIS 177 (N.C. 1910).

Opinions

Our statute law has made no provision for appeal from a judgment in habeas corpus proceedings, except in cases concerning the care and custody of children. Revisal, sec. 1854. Therefore it is, that when on such a hearing a question of law or legal inference is presented, and the judgment therein involves the denial of a legal right, it may be reviewed by certiorari, under and by virtue of the power conferred on this Court by the last clause of section 8, Article IV, of our Constitution: "And the Court shall have power to issue any remedial writs necessary to give it general supervision and control over the proceedings of the inferior courts. " This has been expressly held with us in several decisions, as in S. v. Herndon, 107 N.C. 934; S. v.Miller, 97 N.C. 451; S. v. Lawrence, 81 N.C. 522, and the procedure in the present case has been very properly made to conform to this ruling. The cause, then, being regularly before us, our statute onhabeas corpus contains, among others, the following provisions, (167) as more directly relevant to the question presented:

"Sec. 1822. Application to prosecute the writ shall be denied in the following cases (subsec. 2): Where persons are committed or detained by virtue of the final order, judgment, or decree of a competent tribunal of civil or criminal jurisdiction or by virtue of an execution issued upon such final order, judgment, or decree, etc. "

"Sec. 1827. Any court or judge, empowered to grant the writ, to whom such application may be presented, shall grant the writ without delay, unless it appear from the application itself or from the documents annexed that the person applying or for whose benefit it is intended, is by this chapter prohibited from prosecuting the writ. "

"Sec. 1848. It shall be the duty of the court or judge forthwith to remand the party, if it appear that he is detained in custody, either . . . (subsec. 2): By virtue of the final judgment or decree of any competent court of civil or criminal jurisdiction or of execution issued upon such judgment or decree.

A perusal of these sections quoted will show that where it appears from *Page 132 the application itself or the documents annexed thereto, that the petitioner is held under a final judgment of a competent tribunal, the writ will be denied, and when such fact is disclosed on the hearing, the petitioner must be remanded. In construing this term, "final judgment or decree of a competent tribunal," it has come to be well understood that the exception refers only to judgments warranted by the law applicable to the case in hand, and where it appears from an inspection of the record proper and the judgment itself that the court had no jurisdiction of the cause and was manifestly without power to enter the judgment or impose the sentence in question, in such case there would be no final sentence of a competent tribunal, and the exception established by the statute does not obtain. S. v. Queen, 91 N.C. 659; People v. Lipscomb,60 N.Y. 559; In re Swan, 150 U.S. 637; Ex parte Lange, 85 U.S. 163; In re Lackey, 6 S. Dakota, 526. To hold otherwise (168) would in effect subject this great writ — the most important, perhaps, in our system of government, having its origin long prior to Magna Charta — to a question of form and procedure and render it of little avail for the relief of a citizen imprisoned contrary to the law of the land. The lawmakers no doubt had this interpretation in view when they used the words "competent tribunal," and if they had intended otherwise the provision would have been unconstitutional, for the writ of habeas corpus, as understood and acted on, has prominent place in our organic law. Article I, section 18. In recognition of this principle, it has been frequently held that where a convicted criminal is detained under a sentence not authorized by law, he is entitled to be heard, and when, though authorized in kind, it extends in duration beyond what the law expressly permits, after serving the lawful portion of the sentence, he may be relieved from further punishment, the excess being considered and dealt with as void. U.S. v. Pridgen, 153 U.S. 48; Ex parte Erdman, 88 Cal. 579.

While the right to relief in the cases indicated is clear, it is well recognized that in a hearing on habeas corpus in the proper acceptation of the term, the Court is not permitted to act as one of errors and appeals, but the right to afford relief arises only when there is manifestly a lack of power to impose the sentence complained of. As held in Pridgen's case,supra, "Upon a writ of habeas corpus, the inquiry is not addressed to errors, but to the question whether the proceedings and judgment are nullities, and unless it appears that the judgment or sentence under which the prisoner is confined is void, he is not entitled to his discharge; and in People v. Lipscomb, supra, Allen, J., delivering the principal opinion, said: "If there was no legal power to enter the judgment or decree or issue the process, there was no competent court, and consequently no judgment or process. All is coram non judice and void. " And again, "In other words, upon the writ of habeas *Page 133 corpus the court could not go behind the judgment, but upon the whole record the question was whether the judgment was warranted by the law and within the jurisdiction of the court. " Except in the exercise of appellate power of some supervising tribunal, this position is (169) uniformly observed. It would produce inextricable confusion to permit one judge of equal and concurrent jurisdiction to question and interfere with the final judgments of another or to deal with such hearings on any other principle. And in determining this question of power the Court is confined, as heretofore stated, to the record proper and the judgment itself. It is not permitted that the testimony or the rulings thereon should be examined into nor that matters fairly in the discretion of the presiding judge should be reviewed or that judgments erroneous in the ordinary acceptation of the term should be questioned. The hearing is confined to the record, and judgment and relief may be afforded only when on the record itself the judgment is one clearly and manifestly beyond the power of the court, a statement of the doctrine supported in numerous and authoritative decisions here and elsewhere. Ex parte McCown, 139 N.C. 95;In re Schenck, 74 N.C. 607; In re Swan, 150 U.S. 637; In re Coy,127 N.C. 731.

Applying the principle, and under our decisions directly relevant to the charge contained in the bill of indictment, the judgment of AssociateJustice Walker remanding the prisoner was clearly correct.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
69 S.E. 872, 154 N.C. 163, 1910 N.C. LEXIS 177, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-holley-nc-1910.