State Ex Rel. Johnson, Dist. Atty. v. Alexander

49 P.2d 408, 87 Utah 376, 1935 Utah LEXIS 53
CourtUtah Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 6, 1935
DocketNo. 5706.
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 49 P.2d 408 (State Ex Rel. Johnson, Dist. Atty. v. Alexander) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Utah Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State Ex Rel. Johnson, Dist. Atty. v. Alexander, 49 P.2d 408, 87 Utah 376, 1935 Utah LEXIS 53 (Utah 1935).

Opinions

FOLLAND, Justice.

The purpose of this proceeding is to test the jurisdiction of the Third judicial district court in and for Salt Lake county to conduct an inquisition into the sanity of Delbert Green, an inmate of the Utah state prison located in Salt Lake county, under sentence of death from the district court of the Second judicial district in and for Davis county, and to suspend execution of the warrant of death pending such investigation. The petition for writ of prohibition shows that Delbert Green had theretofore been convicted of murder in the first degree and sentenced to death by the Honorable E. E. Pratt, one of the judges of the district court of Davis county. Thereafter an appeal was taken to this court and judgment of death was duly stayed pending such appeal. After remittitur had issued out of this court affirming the judgment, an order was duly made and entered by the district court of Davis county fixing June 26, 1935, as the time for the execution of the judgment, and a warrant of death was duly issued to the sheriff of Davis county directing him as sheriff, or his deputy or deputies, to execute such warrant of death on the 26th day of June, 1935. On June 24, 1935, Lillie May Alexander (the mother of Delbert Green) filed in the district court of Salt Lake *380 county a complaint alleging that Delbert Green is now insane and praying that court to fix a time for an examination into the sanity of said Green, to determine and adjudge him to be insane, to order him committed to the state hospital, and to order that all proceedings against said Delbert Green be suspended except the proceeding for the determination of his sanity. That thereupon Hon. Herbert M. Schiller, one of the judges of the Third judicial district court in and for Salt Lake county, made and entered an order suspending the judgment of death, restraining the warden of the state prison of Utah from permitting said judgment to be executed, ordering and requiring the applicant, Joseph Holbrook, as sheriff of Davis county, not to execute the said Delbert Green and not to suffer or permit the judgment to be executed during the pendency of said proceedings and until the further order of said court and until the said Delbert Green shall have become sane, if he be adjudged insane in said proceedings. He also made an order fixing a date for a hearing on the sanity of Delbert Green. The petition further recited that the Governor of the State of Utah on June 25, 1935, by virtue of the power vested in him by law, had suspended the execution of the judgment of death until the next meeting of the board of pardons. On presentation of the petition to this court, an alternative writ of prohibition was issued restraining the defendants from proceeding with the insanity inquisition and to show cause why the writ should not be made permanent. The defendant district judge filed a demurrer to the petition and motion to quash the alternative writ. The defendant Lillie May Alexander also filed a demurrer to the petition for writ of prohibition. The matter has been presented to this court on briefs and oral argument.

It is urged that the writ should not be made permanent and the alternative writ should be recalled for the following reasons: (1) That neither the district attorney of the Second judicial district nor the sheriff of Davis county, the applicants for the writ on relation of the state of Utah, are *381 competent to initiate or prosecute these proceedings; (2) the writ will not lie because an appeal is available to the state from any adverse decision in the proceedings in the district court of the Third judicial district; (3) the Honorable Herbert M. Schiller as judge of the Third judicial district court of Salt Lake county has and had jurisdiction to hear and determine the matter of the alleged insanity of Delbert Green and to suspend the execution of the judgment of death pending a determination of that matter under and pursuant to the provisions of chapter 134 of the Session Laws of Utah 1935.

The policy of this state as indicated by its statutes, in harmony with the principles of the common law, is that no person while insane shall be tried, adjudged to punishment, or punished for a public offense. The common law and the reasons therefore are well stated by Mr. Blackstone in his Commentary. We quote from Cooley’s Blackstone (4th Ed.) vol. II, p. 1231:

“Also if a man in his sound memory commits a capital offence, and before arraignment for it, he becomes mad, he ought not to be arraigned for it; because he is not able to plead to it with that advice and caution that he ought. And if, after he has pleaded, the prisoner becomes mad, he shall not be tried: for how can he make his defence? If, after he be tried and found guilty, he loses his senses before judgment, judgment shall not be pronounced; and if, after judgment, be becomes of non-sane memory, execution shall be stayed; for peradventure, says the humanity of the English law, had the prisoner been of sound memory, he might have alleged «something in stay of judgment or execution.”

To give effect to this humane policy provision was early made by the Legislature of the Territory of Utah and later by the Legislature of the State for a hearing touching the insanity of an accused or convicted person in every situation. The power to stay judgment and inquire into the sanity of a person under penalty of the law has been recognized, in the absence of statute, as inherent in the courts to be exercised so long as the lawmaking power should fail to *382 point out a method by which such questions could be heard and determined. The Legislature of Utah having acted in this respect, we are required only to determine whether the district court of the Third judicial district is proceeding regularly within its jurisdiction to exercise a power conferred by statute.

The decision on merits turns on which of two statutes is available to provide a means of determining the present sanity of a convict in the Utah state prison awaiting execution under judgment of death. Chapter 134, Laws of Utah 1935, the statute under which Judge Schiller assumed jurisdiction, is an amendment to sections 105-49-2 to 105-49-6 inclusive, Rev. St. Utah 1933. Section 105-49-1 and section 105-49-2 as amended, are as follows:

“105-49-1. No person while insane shall be tried, adjudged to punishment or punished for a public offense.”
“105-49-2. Whenever a person charged with a public offense shall have escaped information or indictment therefor, or shall have been acquitted thereof upon the ground of insanity, or whenever a person so charged either before or during trial, or before the time of passing judgment or while confined as a convict in the state prison or county jail or on parole is or shall become insane a complaint under oath must he made setting forth the facts in the case and the district court of the county in which such charge is pending or in which such prison or jail is located must proceed as in this chapter set out. Said complaint may be made directly or upon information and belief, by the person accused, by any other person acting for or in his behalf, by the district attorney, or by the keeper of the prison or jail. The judge of the district court having jurisdiction thereof may of his own motion direct the district attorney to make such complaint and fix a time for such examination and determination.”

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Bluebook (online)
49 P.2d 408, 87 Utah 376, 1935 Utah LEXIS 53, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-johnson-dist-atty-v-alexander-utah-1935.