In the Matter of Helen Marteles

38 Haw. 479, 1950 Haw. LEXIS 26
CourtHawaii Supreme Court
DecidedApril 20, 1950
Docket2756
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 38 Haw. 479 (In the Matter of Helen Marteles) 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 the Matter of Helen Marteles, 38 Haw. 479, 1950 Haw. LEXIS 26 (haw 1950).

Opinion

OPINION OE THE COURT BY

LE BARON, J.

This is an application for a writ of habeas corpus to the supreme court for the discharge of the petitioner from further imprisonment in the city jail by the respondent. *480 Tbe ground therefor is that such imprisonment constitutes an illegal restraint resulting from an unlawful and void increase of punishment pursuant to a circuit court’s sentence which aggravated a distinct magistrate’s sentenc • on appeal for mitigation and thereby exceeded the jurisdiction of the circuit court.

The facts are not in dispute. The petitioner was charged in the district court with being a common prostitute. She pled guilty and was sentenced to serve thirty days in jail. She appealed to the circuit court for mitigation of sentence. The circuit court sentenced her to pay a fine of one hundred dollars and to serve a year in jail, but suspended execution of jail sentence and placed the petitioner as to that sentence on probation for a period of five years, one of the conditions being that she pay the fine. The petitioner paid the fine and thereby warded off immediate imprisonment for a year. More than seven months thereafter she was apprehended in acts of prostitution. Probation thereupon was revoked and the suspension of execution of jail sentence terminated. The circuit court in doing so, however, reduced the jail sentence from a year to four months. At that juncture the petitioner made an abortive attempt to have the order of revocation reviewed on writ of error. (See Territory v. Harteles, 38 Haw. 305, for additional facts.) Mittimus issued and the petitioner was committed to jail. While in jail she applied for the instant writ. After serving fifteen days, the writ was issued and the petitioner placed by this court in the special custody of her attorney pending the outcome of these proceedings, which, are to test the validity of the-balance of the circuit court’s jail sentence remaining unexecuted.

Appeals to the circuit court for mitigation of sentence from district magistrates have long been the recognized and consistent practice in this jurisdiction. (The King v. *481 Makai, 6 Haw. 145; The Queen v. Fernandez, 8 Haw. 273; Prov. Gov’t, v. Mura, 9 Haw. 428; Rep. Haw. v. Ah Cheon, 10 Haw. 469; Territory v. Soffra, 38 Haw. 256.) Although " Avithout statutory authority, the right of such appeal and on exercise thereof the power of the circuit court to mitigate an excessive sentence of the district magistrate have been “fixed by Hawaiian judicial precedent” within the meaning of section 1 of Revised Laws of Hawaii 1945 as demonstrated in the above cited cases, and therefore have the force of a statutory right and power under “the laAATs of HaAvaii” Avithin the meaning of the Hawaiian Organic Act, section 6. (See Kahanamoku v. Advertiser, 25 Haw. 701, 708, citing The Schooner Robert Lewers v. Kekauoha, 114 Fed. 849.)

Upon entertaining an appeal for mitigation, the circuit court sits as an appellate tribunal to determine the requirements of justice Avith respect to an appropriate punishment under the particular circumstances of the case, to review the sentence of the district magistrate and, if found excessive, to reduce it. The same considerations apply to the circuit court on appeal for mitigation of sentence as those applying to this court on Avrit of error to review a sentence specified to be excessive. Hence as is the case on writ of error, the exercise of the power of mitigation where deemed proper becomes an imperative aAvard of justice and must not be denied. It differs from the exercise of the executive power of commutation Avhich is an act of grace and may be refused. (See Ter. v. Kunimoto, 37 Haw. 591.) Nevertheless, the circuit court may deny mitigation within its judicial discretion and refuse to exercise the power Avhere such exercise is deemed improper. It may do so by either affirmance of sentence or entry of a new one coextensive with that of the district magistrate. But when it enters a new sentence of greater punishment it exceeds its jurisdiction. Mitigation is the *482 very antithesis of aggravation. Authority for the former generates none for the latter. Aggravation of a sentence on appeal for mitigation, therefore, is not authorized by the power of mitigation and not compatible with the principles of fair dealing which have been the philosophy of this nation since inception. It creates an unlawful and void increase of punishment. The pai*t of the circuit court’s sentence imposing such increase is invalid and subject to being stricken on writ of error or bill of exceptions. (See Territory v. Poloaiea, 13 Haw. 335; Ter. of Haw. v. Savidge, 14 Haw. 286.) Where such increase itself is added imprisonment or causes imprisonment which otherwise would not have been suffered, such additional or resultant imprisonment constitutes an illegal restraint for Avhich a writ of habeas corpus may issue although not demandable of right. (See R. L. H. 1945, §§ 10351, 10352 [2], 10353.)

The circuit court in this case denied mitigation. But it neither affirmed the sentence of the district magistrate, nor entered a new one coextensive with his. On the contrary, it entered a more comprehensive sentence of its OAvn. It sentenced the petitioner to pay a fine of one hundred dollars and to serve a year in jail, which obviously aggravated the district magistrate’s sentence to serve thirty days in jail. It thus excéeded its jurisdiction, entered an invalid sentence in part and created thereby an unlaAVful and void increase of punishment.

The petitioner took no timely and appropriate appeal from the sentence of the circuit court but immediately paid the fine in full and ultimately served fifteen days in jail as partial execution of the sentence. Long before the petitioner was committed to jail, the time for .any appeal from the sentence had expired and at the time of issuance the instant writ Avas and now is the only effective remedy available to prevent illegal restraint. The ex- *483 edition of jail sentence having been interrupted by order of this court, the question is whether or not further imprisonment thereunder would constitute an illegal restraint resulting from the circuit court’s unlawful and void increase of punishment. The answer to that question is in the affirmative if the actual punishment, suffered under the circuit court’s entire sentence, equals or exceeds the severity of the punishment that would have been suffered under the district magistrate’s sentence had no appeal therefrom been taken. But if it does not and falls short thereof, the answer is in the negative. In such case additional time in jail must he served and the jail sentence further executed until at least a state of equality is reached between the severities of the two punishments in order for a Avrit of habeas corpus to be efficacious.

The actual punishment exacted a fine of one hundred dollars and imprisoned the petitioner for fifteen days.

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Related

In re Balucan
353 P.2d 631 (Hawaii Supreme Court, 1960)
Re Habeas Corpus, Balucan
353 P.2d 631 (Hawaii Supreme Court, 1960)

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Bluebook (online)
38 Haw. 479, 1950 Haw. LEXIS 26, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-the-matter-of-helen-marteles-haw-1950.