Sterling v. Drake

29 Ohio St. 457
CourtOhio Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 15, 1876
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 29 Ohio St. 457 (Sterling v. Drake) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sterling v. Drake, 29 Ohio St. 457 (Ohio 1876).

Opinion

Gilmore, J.

The only points made in this case are these:

1. That the governor had no power to reprieve Sterling without his assent thereto.

2. That the governor had no authority to order the execution of the sentence of death after the day fixed by the court for the execution of the sentence had passed.

I have been unable to find a single decided case relative-[460]*460to executive reprieves by virtue of the constitutional provisions of any state in the Union, or relative to reprieves in England by virtue of this prerogative of the crown, that has the slightest bearing upon either of the points stated. There is one precedent in this state that will be noticed hereafter.

The terms “pardon” and “reprieve” have been adopted into the constitution of this state without defining or explaining them. The substance of the provisions of our ■constitution relative to pardons and reprieves has been borrowed and adopted from the laws of England, and the •construction or effect that is there given to them was .adopted with and must be given to them here.

By virtue of his prerogative in this respect, the king of England has from time immemorial exercised the power of pardon in criminal cases. “ His (the king’s) power of pardoning was said by our Saxon ancestors to be derived ■a lege suce dignitatis; and it is declared in parliament, by stat. 27 Hen. VIII, c. 24, that no other person hath porver to pardon or remit any treason or felonies whatsoever', but that the king hath the whole and sole power thereof united and knit to the imperial crown of this realm.” 4 Black. Com. 397.

“ This power belongs only to a king de facto, and not to .a king de jure, during the time of usurpation.” Bro. Abr. t, Charter de Pardon, 22.

I have thus alluded to the power of the king to grant pardons by virtue of this prerogative, in order to show the source and extent of the power, as no writer whom I have •consulted has undertaken to look for the source of the power to reprieve with which the sovereign is clothed.

There is no doubt anywhere expressed, however, but that the king’s power to reprieve is as ample as his power to pardon.

I will first look to what some of the English text-books teach in reference to reprieves.

Sir W. Blackstone, 4 Com. 394, says that, “ A reprieve, from reprendre, to take back, is the withdrawing of a sen[461]*461tence for an interval of time, whereby the execution is suspended.”

It operates only in capital cases, and is granted either by the 'favor of his majesty himself, or the judge or justices before whom the prisoner was tried, in his behalf, or from the regular operation of law, in circumstances which render an immediate execution inconsistent with humanity or justice. Chitty’s Cr. L. 757.

' Reprieves are of three kinds:

1. Ex mandatio regís, from the mere pleasure of the-crown.

2. Ex arbitrio judiéis. Sometimes the judge reprieves before judgment, as where he is not satisfied with the verdict,, or the evidence is uncertain, or the indictment defective; and sometimes after judgment, if it be a small felony,, though out of clergy, or in order to a pardon or transportation. The power of granting' this1 respite belongs of common right to every tribunal which is invested with authority to award execution. The justices of assize may, by long practice, either grant arbitrary reprieves, or take them away, after the termination of their sessions; though this seems rather to stand on ancient usage than any express authority or recognized principle. 2 Hale, 412 ; 1 Ch. Cr. L. 758, 759.

8. Ex necessitate legis. There are'some cases in which the judge is bound to reprieve. Thus: 1. When a woman is convicted either of treason of felony she may allege pregnancy of a quick child in delay of execution. 2. When a prisoner has become insane between the time of sentence and the time fixed for execution. 1 Chitty Cr. L. 761.

Erom the above it will be seen that the power to reprieve persons under sentence of death was one of the prerogatives of the king himself, and the justices before whom the' prisoner was tried, acting in behalf of the king, might either grant arbitrary .reprieves or take them away even after the termination of their sessions. If those acting in behalf of the king, by long usage, had become authorized to thus grant or take away reprieves, it must be conclusively inferred that they were acting within the scope of the [462]*462powers with which the sovereign, on whose behalf they .acted, was clothed by virtue of this prerogative. ‘ In fact, the power, of the sovereign iu this respect seems never to have been questioned.

It will now be my object to show that we have substantially adopted in our constitution the principles of the doctrine of reprieves, as understood in England, and if this be ■so, then it will follow that the powers with which the ■executive of this state is clothed by virtue of these constitutional provisions, will be the same after conviction as those with which the executive of the nation whose laws we have adopted is clothed. Article 3, section 11, of the •constitution, among other things, ordains that: “ He (the governor) shall have power after conviction to grant reprieves, commutations, and pardons for all crimes and offenses except treason and cases of impeachment, upon such conditions as he may think proper.”

This language is broad enough to clothe the executive with all the powers in reference to pardons and reprieves, .after conviction, that the king of England is clothed with by virtue of his prerogatives, except that the king may pardon, after conviction, even in cases of impeachment. Eollowing the order in which the subject is treated by English-text writers: ,

1. The governor, by virtue of the language of the constitution, has power tq grant a reprieve for an interval of time, to one under sentence of death, of his own motion or volition, though it is scarcely supposable that he would do so without the solicitation of the prisoner or his friends.

2. In Ohio, the judges have no power to grant arbitrary reprieves; but the court before whom the conviction is had, ■on notice that the person convicted intends to apply for a writ of error, may suspend the execution of the sentence-until the next term of the court. Criminal Code, sec. 172. In cases of conviction where the punishment shall be capital, the judges or court allowing a writ of error shall order a suspension of the execution until such writ of ■error shall be heard and determined; and upon hearing such [463]*463writ of error they shall order the prisoner to be discharged, a new trial to be had, or appoint a day certain for the execution of the sentence. Criminal' Code, sec. 200, These ¡are substantially the equivalents of the power of English justices to reprieve.

3. If a female convict sentenced to the punishment of -death appear to be pregnant, a jury of six persons shall be summoned to try the fact; and if, by the finding, it shall ¡appear that such female convict is with child, the sheriff •shall suspend the execution of her sentence, and transmit -the finding to the governor, who, on being satisfied that such woman is no longer pregnant, shall issue a warrant appointing a day for her execution. Criminal Code, secs. 190, 191.

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Bluebook (online)
29 Ohio St. 457, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sterling-v-drake-ohio-1876.