Peltier v. Pennington
Peltier v. Pennington
Opinion of the Court
After giving this case all the consideration which the summary nature of the proceeding will admit of, and under all the light which the numerous cases cited, and the very able arguments of counsel have shed upon the subject, I find myself bound by law to remand the prisoner. In doing so, it is not my intention to intimate any opinion, upon the various points that have been discussed respecting the legality and regularity of the proceedings on the part of the plaintiffs. I wish to leave the defendant at liberty, without prejudice by any thing now said, to apply at bar, if he thinks proper to do so, for his enlargement on those grounds. But in my opinion, this is not a proper case for the discharge of a defendant out of custody, upon a writ of habeas corpus. Whether this defendant is lawfully or unlawfully imprisoned, does not depend upon any settled and fundamental principles of law; but upon rules and questions of practice that have arisen in the progress of an ordinary suit at law, which are under the control, and ought only to be settled at the bar of the court in which the suit is depending. The doctrine contended for by the defendant’s counsel, if once established, would soon draw into discussion and decision upon habeas corpus at chambers, a very great proportion of the ordinary litigation in civil suits. Every man conceiving
That the defendant may have to remain in custody until the next, or even to a subsequent term, proves nothing. His detention will be a lawful one until it can be decided by the proper tribunal, whether the plaintiffs have a right to detain him or not. His case is not an uncommon one; but like a great many others in which defendants are arrested and detained in custody, either of the sheriff or their bail, until by some interlocuto
If a judge, at chambers, upon a habeas corpus, is to inquire into and decide upon the right of a plaintiff to arrest a defendant, and hold him to bail in a civil suit, in which, upon general principles, the plaintiff is entitled to bail, where shall he stop ? Shall he limit himself to the inquiry, whether the proceedings are technically correct; or may he go further and enquire into the merits of the case, the honesty and justice of the plaintiff’s demand ? A defendant may be as unjustly and oppressively arrested on a regular, as on an irregular writ. So there may be a regular arrest without a just cause of action, and an irregular arrest where there is a just cause of action. In either case, the defendant in the general sense of the term, is unlawfully arrested. Where then shall the judge at chambers, terminate his inquiries ? If he substitutes himself, in the place of the court out of which the process has issued, I do not see where the practice is to end.
I am not a little strengthened in my opinion against entertaining this application by the singular and striking fact, that not a single case has been cited, which, either upon facts or principle, sustains the doctrine contended for. If the important and beneficial writ of habeas corpus ad subjiciendum, was designed for, or was in its nature susceptible of such a use, it is hardly conceivable that the love of liberty, and the ingenuity of counsel, would not, long before this late period of our legal history, have brought it into constant and familiar use. Although Congress has never passed any law similar to the celebrated habeas corpus act of 31 Car. II, or any act prescribing the cases in which writs of habeas corpus ad subjiciendum may be issued; yet, under a just construction of the constitution, and of the judiciary act, the Supreme Court of the United States have decided, that the federal courts and judges have as full jurisdiction and powers upon this subject, as the courts
The habeas corpus act of New-York, is more extensive than the British statute. The latter, like our statute, Rev. Laws 193, is confined to commitments for crimes and criminal matters. The former extends to and gives the judges in vacation, cognizance in all cases of imprisonment generally. It is co-extensive with the common law. Per Spencer, Just, in Cable v. Cooper, 15 Johns. Rep. 152; 2 Kent’s Com. 1 Ed. 25. Yet the courts or judges in New-York, have never gone so far as I am called upon to do on this occasion ; but on the contrary, it has been expressly decided there, that a judge at chambers, has no power to discharge on habeas corpus from imprisonment, on an execution out of a court of record. Yeates’ case, 4 Johns. Rep. 318; 2 Kent’s Com. 1 Ed. 28; Cable v. Cooper, 15 Johns. Rep. 152. In the last mentioned case, Van Ness, Justice, who delivered the opinion of the court, says, “ It may well be doubted, whether the statute gives to a judge in vacation, a right to discharge a party imprisoned on civil process. If it were necessary to decide that question in this case, and for the first time, I should say it does not.”
In the ease of the Bank, &c. v. Jenkins, 18 Johns. Rep. 305, it was admitted, that the ca. sa. under which the defendant was
The case of Hecker v. Jarrett, 1 Bin. Rep. 374, was an action for a penalty for re-committing a party who had been discharged from confinement on a ca. sa. by a judge at chambers on a writ of habeas corpus. But the judge in that case, had acted under the broad and extensive provisions of the act of Pennsylvania ; whether correctly or not, the court did not directly decide, and it is the only instance I have been able to find of such a proceeding in the reports of that state.
I do not intend by anything I have said, to interfere with the decision of Mr. Justice Ford, in the case of The State v. Ward, in 3 Halst. 120. The prisoner, in that case, had been committed on an execution out of a court for the trial of small causes. The imprisonment was not, perhaps, unlawful in such a sense as to render the plaintiff or the officer liable in an action for false imprisonment ; yet he was manifestly in confinement, contrary to the spirit and intention of the law, and under circumstances that entitled him to his liberation by some legal authority. If relief could not be extended to him upon habeas corpus, he was probably without remedy. At any rate, it will be time enough to question the correctness of that decision, when it shall be brought into review upon certiorari, or upon a proper state of pleadings in some action growing out of that, or some other such proceeding. Without committing myself at present, I will only say, the decision of Justice Ford does not really conflict with my views upon this subject, nor with the principles expressed by Spencer, chief justice, and Kent, chief justice, in the cases above cited. The court for the trial of small causes, is a statute tribunal of limited and specific jurisdiction; and
Let the defendant be remanded.
Cited in State v. Sheriff of Middlesex, 3 Gr. 69.
Reference
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- FELIX PELTIER ads. A. S. PENNINGTON AND OTHERS
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