State Ex Rel. Price v. Stone

175 So. 229, 128 Fla. 637, 1937 Fla. LEXIS 1300
CourtSupreme Court of Florida
DecidedJune 16, 1937
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 175 So. 229 (State Ex Rel. Price v. Stone) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State Ex Rel. Price v. Stone, 175 So. 229, 128 Fla. 637, 1937 Fla. LEXIS 1300 (Fla. 1937).

Opinions

Per 'Curiam.-

On the 10th of February, 1937, upon petition to this Court a writ of habeas corpus was issued to Honorable S. E. Stone, Sheriff of Volusia County, Florida, commanding him to produce the body of one L. C. Price, imprisoned and detained, so it was alleged, in the county jail of Volusia County under and by virtue of a certain capias issued by the Circuit Court of Volusia County, Florida, upon an information filed by the State’s Attorney charging the said Price with knowingly and wilfully resisting, obstructing and opposing one D. W. Whitehurst, a Deputy Sheriff of Volusia County, Florida, in the lawful execution' of his legal duty as such Deputy Sheriff in conserving the peace and preventing a breach thereof, which was threatened at a mixed meeting of white and negro people being held in the night time .in a negro fraternal hall or building within the city limits of the City of Ormond, by white people not participating in said meeting who were then and there present, by offering and doing violence to the person of said officer from behind, while he, the said officer, was descending the stairway of said negro fraternal *640 hall or building, and by placing his arm around the neck of the said officer D. W. Whitehurst from the back and forcibly and violently choking and restraining him contrary-to the statute in such case made and provided. See Section 5385 R. G. S.', 7524 C. G. L.

The writ of habeas corpus was applied for and issued upon the authority of McLeod v. Chase, 95 Fla. 736a, 116 Sou. Rep. 858, wherein it was decided by this Court that a person held in unlawful imprisonment under a state of facts which constitutes no criminal offense may be discharged from confinement on a writ of habeas corpus even though the process upon which he is held be found good upon its face as a cause of detention of the prisoner. Following a return to the writ of habeas corpus so issued, an application was made to this Court for the appointment of a' special commissioner to take testimony in this cause, the object of the application being to have this Court inquire into the sufficiency of the facts to make out a criminal offense under the law within the purview of the statute upon which the information against the accused was filed.

The writ of habeas corpus has been used in this state to release a person held under a commitment issued on a preliminary hearing before a County Judge acting as a committing magistrate where the evidence wholly failed to sustain the charge on which the commitment was made. See: Ex Parte Brandau, 26 Fla. 142, 7 Sou. Rep. 528; Ex parte Eagan, 18 Fla. 194; Ex parte Harfourd, 16 Fla. 283. And, as stated in the special concurring opinion of Mr. Justice Brown in the case of McLeod v. Chase, supra:

“The weight of authority appears to support the rule that on habeas corpus the Court may inquire whether there is any legal evidence before, the committing magistrate to sustain the charge for which he was committed; that is, whether there is any evidence upon which the magistrate *641 might reasonably find the existence of 'good ground’ (which means ‘probable cause’) for holding the accused for trial. This is in a sense jurisdictional, as to commitments by Justices of the Peace. If there is no such evidence,-as was the case here, the prisoner should be discharged. If there is such evidence, although controverted, the Court will not endeavor to determine whether the magistrate exercised his jurisdiction erroneously in deciding as to the weight and credibility of the conflicting testimony, but will remand thé prisoner.”

With this proposition of law we agree. And in an appropriate case requiring it, this Court will not hesitate to enter upon a proper inquiry to determine whether or not a prisoner should be released on habeas corpus within the foregoing rule.

The writ of habeas corpus is designed as a speedy method of affording a judicial inquiry into the cause of an alleged unlawful deprivation of personal liberty, and the rights of a person claiming to be unlawfully deprived of his liberty are not to be defeated by the mere form under which such deprivation is being accomplished. It is therefore permissible, as we have just pointed out, for a court having authority to issue and determine writs of habeas corpus, to inquire into the actual facts relied on to support a charge of violation of the criminal law and thereupon either to dis-. charge, admit to bail, or remand to custody “as the law and the evidence shall require.” Section 3527 R. G. S. 1920. McLeod v. Chase, supra. This rule, however, is subject to the limitation which we have repeatedly announced to the effect that while on habeas corpus the court will examine the legal sufficiency of the alleged facts to make out a crime, it will not determine the probative force of conflicting or controverted testimony upon which the charge is based, nor undertake to decide the legal sufficiency of a mere *642 matter of defense, except perhaps matters of defense as•serted on constitutional grounds as an avoidance of the particular charge set up as cause of detention.

Section 7524 C. G. L., 5385 R. G. S., under which the prisoner in this case is being held, reads as follows:

“Whoever knowingly and wilfully resists, obstructs or opposes any Sheriff, deputy sheriff, constable or other person legally authorized to execute process, in the execution of legal process or in the lawful execution of any legal duty, by offering or doing violence to the person of such officer or legally authorized person, shall be punished by imprisonment in the State prison not exceeding two years, or by imprisonment in the county jail not exceeding one year, or by fine not exceeding one thousand dollars.”

The capias upon which the return shows the prisoner is being confined in jail is predicated upon an information, the substance of’which'is that the prisoner did knowingly and wilfully obstruct and oppose one D. W. Whitehurst, a deputy sheriff of Volusia County, Florida, and a police officer of the City of Ormond, in the lawful execution of his legal duty as such deputy sheriff and police officer in conserving the peace and preventing a breach thereof, etc.

A perusal of Section 7524 C. G. L., supra, will disclose that the section in question, does ’ not apply to municipal police officers but only to a “sheriff, or deputy sheriff, constable pr other person legally authorized to execute process.” Under the rule noscitur a sociis the phrase “or other person authorized to execute process” must be held to mean an officer of similar character to a sheriff or constable, such as an elisor, or a justice of the peace when acting in lieu of the sheriff in serving process (such as is provided for under Section 4238 C. G. L., 2598 R. G. S., when the sheriff is disqualified), and not to ordinary municipal policemen who are rarely, if ever, authorized to *643

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Bluebook (online)
175 So. 229, 128 Fla. 637, 1937 Fla. LEXIS 1300, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-price-v-stone-fla-1937.