State v. Cahill

196 Iowa 486
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedJune 22, 1923
StatusPublished
Cited by26 cases

This text of 196 Iowa 486 (State v. Cahill) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Cahill, 196 Iowa 486 (iowa 1923).

Opinion

Stevens, J.

-The argument of counsel invites academic discussion of a large number and variety of subjects; but, as the decision must be controlled by the statute, we shall consider only such matters as are pertinently involved.

While serving a sentence in the penitentiary at Fort Madison, appellant was placed in solitary confinement by order of the deputy warden, for the infraction of a rule of the prison prohibiting prisoners from fighting. While thus confined, he escaped from the cell, and was apprehended on top of the wall by a guard, while he was attempting to escape from the inclosure. The indictment is based upon Section 4897-a of the Supplement to the Code, 1913, which, so far as material, is as follows:

“If any person committed to the penitentiary or reformatory shall break such prison and escape therefrom or shall escape from or leave without due authority any building, camp, farm, garden, city, town, road, street, or any place whatsoever in which he is placed or to which he is directed to go or in which he is allowed to be by the warden or any officer or employee of the prison whether inside or outside of the prison walls, he shall be deemed guilty of an escape from said penitentiary or reformatory and shall be punished by imprisonment in said penitentiary or reformatory for a term not to exceed five years, to commence from and after the expiration of the term of his previous sentence. In order to constitute an escape under the provisions of this act it is not necessary that the prisoner be within any walls or inclosure nor that there shall be any actual breaking nor that he be .in the presence or actual custody of any officer or other person. If any person having been paroled from the state penitentiary or state reformatory as provided by law, shall thereafter depart without the written consent of the [488]*488board of parole from the territory within which by the terms of said parole he is restricted, # * * he shall be deemed to have escaped from the custody within the meaning of Section 1 of this act and shall be punished as therein provided. ’ ’

I. Among the several grounds of a motion in arrest of judgment, the appellant alleged that the language of the indictment is insufficient to charge the offense defined by the statute, for the reason that it failed to allege that he escaped from the custody of the warden of the penitentiary. It is true that he was, at the time, in the constructive custody of the warden; and if the crime of escape was consummated, there is a technical sense in which his escape was from the custody of the warden. The indictment, however, fully and fairly apprised the defendant of the essential acts constituting the crime, and it is not void because it did not specifically charge that he escaped from the custody of the warden. He was charged with having escaped from the cell in which he was confined by the order of the deputy warden, without the permission or authority of any officer of the prison. The indictment meets all the requirements of the statute.

II. One of the principal contentions of the appellant is that the acts charged and proved are not consummated acts, and constitute only “an attempt to escape,” which is not made a crime by the statute. The specific language of Section 4897-a makes the crime complete if a person committed to the perdtentiary "break such prison and escape therefrom,” or “escape from or leave without due authority any building * * * or any place whatsoever in which he is placed” or “to which he is directed to go” or “in which he is allowed to be by the warden or any officer or employee of the prison, whether inside or outside of the prison walls. ’ ’

The evidence was undisputed that appellant escaped from solitary confinement by opening the door of his cell, which, because of the failure of an automatic lock to work, was unintentionally left unlocked; and his escape from the prison walls, as stated above, was prevented by the timely interposition of a guard. He did not, therefore, escape from the prison; and if [489]*489this is necessary to the consummation of the offense, then an acquittal should have been directed by the court. The escape was complete, however, when he opened the unlocked door of the cell, and went, as he claimed to have done, to another part of the prison. The statute is disciplinary in its nature, and the severe penalty for its violation was evidently designed to deter prisoners from breaking the rules of the prison, and.to aid the authorities in the enforcement of reasonable and necessary prison rules. Appellant in his testimony admitted that he violated the rule of the prison against fighting, and his confinement in the solitary cell upon a diet of bread and water was intended as a punishment for this infraction, and as a warning to others that order and discipline would be rigorously enforced by the prison authorities.

The acts charged are within the plain provisions of the statute, and no other construction or interpretation is either reasonable or possible. Appellant escaped, without permission or authority of any officer of the penitentiary, from the cell in which he had been placed by the order of the deputy warden. While it is true that he was, when apprehended by the guard, attempting to effectuate his escape from the prison inclosure, and, had he succeeded, the crime would, of course, have been complete, still, under the statute quoted, escape from the inelosure is not necessary. The statute may appear to be somewhat harsh; but it is a valid and enforeible one, and its reasonableness is for the legislature, and not for the court. The legislature saw fit to define the crime of escape as something less than going beyond and outside of the prison walls. In doing so, it acted within its legislative power:, and the court, cannot, by interpretation, deprive the statute of its proper scope and effect.

III. It is next urged by appellant that the punishment by solitary confinement upon bread and water, under the circumstances disclosed in the evidence, was a violation of Article 1, Section 17, of the Constitution of Iowa, which 1 provides that “cruel and unusual punishment shall not be inflicted,” and that he therefore had a defend himself by escaping therefrom. Section 5675 of the Code authorizes solitary imprisonment as a prison discipline and for the government and good order of the [490]*490convicts. Appellant claims that the cell was infested with bugs, worms, and vermin; that the toilet was so out of repair that, when it was flushed, the water ran out upon the floor; that the cell was without a chair, bed, or other reasonable comforts. He further claims that he had been suffering’ from lung trouble, and that the cell was rendered unhealthful by the conditions existing apd the manner in which it was kept. The evidence on the part of the State was to the effect that the toilet was completely repaired.

However interesting a discussion of this subject might be, it seems to us that the right of the legislature to provide for the punishment of prisoners by solitary confinement is too clear to justify a review of the many authorities cited by counsel, none of which hold to the contrary. If the cell in which appellant was confined was not kept clean and healthful and the toilet in good working order, it should have been given immediate attention by those in charge, and all of the matters complained of entirely corrected.

Appellant was sent to the penitentiary from Pottawattamie County, upon a conviction of the crime of larceny from the person.

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Bluebook (online)
196 Iowa 486, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-cahill-iowa-1923.