In re Kim

21 Haw. 295, 1912 Haw. LEXIS 42
CourtHawaii Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 25, 1912
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 21 Haw. 295 (In re Kim) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Hawaii Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re Kim, 21 Haw. 295, 1912 Haw. LEXIS 42 (haw 1912).

Opinions

OPINION OP THE COURT BY

PERRY, J.

(Robertson, C.J., Dissenting.)

This is a petition for a writ of habeas corpus. On April 28, 1911, five separate charges were entered in the district court of Honolulu charging the petitioner with obtaining money under false pretenses. The offenses were charged to have been committed on five separate days and against five persons and involve five distinct sums of money. The petitioner appeared [296]*296in person and pleaded guilty to each charge. Each case upon the entry of the plea was continued until the following day for sentence. There is no objection now to the sufficiency of any of the charges as entered. In each instance all the essential elements of the offense appear to have been set forth. In volume 23 of the criminal records of the district magistrate on pages 411, 412, under date of April 28, 1911, the five charges were entered in succession, no record of any other case intervening. At the end of the entry of each charge appear the words “Defendant pleads guilty. Imposition of sentence by the court deferred until April 29, 1911.” In the same volume on page 413, under date of April 29, 1911, the following entries appear:

“M. S. Kim” “Erom April 28, 1911. “Defendant was sentenced to be imprisoned for a term of Eight (8) Months, and to pay costs of Court, $1.00.”
“M. S. Kim” “Erom April 28, 1911. “Defendant was sentenced to be imprisoned for a term of Seven (7) Months, and to pay costs of court $1.00. This sentence shall begin immediately after the expiration of the term of sentence in the preceding case.”
“M. S. Kim” “Erom April 28, 1911. Defendant in Person. “Defendant was sentenced to be imprisoned for a term of Seven (7) Months, and to pay costs of court $1.00. This sentence shall begin immediately after the expiration of the term of sentence defendant may then be serving.”
“M. S. Kim” “Erom April 28, 1911. Defendant in Person. “Defendant was sentenced to be imprisoned for a term of Seven (7) Months, and to pay costs of court $1.00. This sentence shall begin immediately after the expiration of the term of sentence he may then be serving.”
“M. S. Kim” “Erom April 28, 1911. Defendant in Person. “Defendant was sentenced to be imprisoned for a term of Seven (7) Months, and to pay costs of court $1.00. This sentence shall begin im[297]*297mediately after the expiration of the term of sentence he may then be serving.”

No other entry relating to the judgment, sentence or other proceedings in the eases appears in the magistrate’s record. On April 29, 1911, the date on which the sentences were imposed, five mittimuses were issued respectively bearing the numbers 9640, 9641, 9642, 9643, 9644, number 9640 being for the offense named in the charge first entered in the record for April 28 and the others corresponding in the order of their numbers with the order of the charges as entered on that day. Each mittimus recites in full the charge made under the particular case. Number 9640 simply recites a sentence of eight months imprisonment. Number 9641 contains the declaration “This sentence to take effect at the expiration of his former sentence of even date under Mittimus No. 9640.” Each of the succeeding mittimuses similarly declares that the sentence thereby imposed is to take effect at the expiration of the former sentence, giving the number of the last preceding mittimus.

The grounds urged by the petitioner for his discharge from custody are the following: that the sentences are void because no judgments were rendered or entered; that the sentences are by their terms concurrent and not cumulative and that the one prescribing the longest period of imprisonment has expired; that the district magistrate had no authority to impose cumulative sentences; that the sentences are uncertain and that it is impossible to. ascertain from the entries in the magistrate’s docket in which case each one was imposed; that the mittimuses cannot be resorted to in aid of the defective record of the sentences; and that oral evidence was inadmissible to add to or explain the entries concerning the sentences.

The case, then, is that of a prisoner who has appeared in person in answer to five charges presented against him with all thfe essential formalities required by law and has confessed his guilt in each one of the five cases and upon whom by reason of the pleas of guilty have been imposed five sentences, each of them [298]*298within the power of the magistrate to impose, and who now asks release from those sentences. There is no room for the contention, and none is made, that the petitioner is innocent or that any of the substantial requirements of a fair trial have been denied him or that any of the sentences was rendered in excess of the jurisdiction of the court, but merely that the magistrate was guilty of technical errors or omissions in entering the sentences in his docket. The contentions advanced are purely technical and not substantial. In the language of the supreme court of Missouri “it is not justice that the petitioner seeks but an escape from it.” Ex parte Kayser, 47 Mo. 253, 255. We are unwilling to release him from custody unless the law imperatively requires it and we think that it does not.

It is well settled that upon a plea of guilty an independent adjudication of guilt by the court is not necessary. The defendant confessing the truth of the charge against him there is nothing left for the court to find and it may without further intervening steps proceed to sentence the accused. The plea of guilty operates as a conviction just as effectually as does the verdict of a jury or the judgment of the court in a jury-waived case. It may be that a strictly formal procedure would suggest a recital in connection with the imposition of sentence of the fact of the entry of the plea of guilty or other conviction, as the case may be, but this is not essential when it otherwise appears from the record that the accused was duly convicted; and particularly js this true of our district courts which are not courts of record and in which the procedure is and always has been more or less informal.

“We think that the objection is hypercritical. After a plea of guilty, there is nothing further for a court to do than to pronounce sentence. The plea of guilty is like the verdict of guilty. * * * There is no duty in the court to 'convict’ but only to sentence. If the prisoner pleaded not guilty and if he were tried without a jury, then the court would find him guilty or not guilty; but when he pleads guilty, there is nothing for the [299]*299court to find.” People v. McEwen, 67 How. Pr. 105, 112. “If the plea” of nolo contendere “is accepted, it is not necessary or proper that the court should adjudge the party to be guilty, for that follows as a legal inference from the implied confession, but the court proceeds thereupon to pass the sentence of the law.” Com. v. Ingersoll, 145 Mass. 381, 382. “If he pleads guilty upon his first arraignment and this plea is received by the court and recorded it is an admission of all facts well charged in the indictment or complaint and a waiver of his right of trial by jury thereon, and, unless withdrawn by special leave of court, * * * leaves nothing to be done but to pass sentence.” Com. v. Mahoney, 115 Mass. 151, 152. See also Bishop Statutory Crimes, Sec. 348; People v. Goldstein, 32 Cal. 432, 433; Com. v. Horton, 9 Pick. 206, 207; West

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Bluebook (online)
21 Haw. 295, 1912 Haw. LEXIS 42, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-kim-haw-1912.