Application for leave to file a petition for a writ of habeas
corpus will be denied if it be apparent that the only result, if
the writ were issued, would be the remanding of the petitioner.
The action of a circuit court in refusing an appeal from a final
order dismissing a petition for habeas corpus and denying the writ
cannot be revised by this Court on habeas corpus.
The fact that, when an appeal from a final order of a circuit
court, denying a writ of habeas corpus and dismissing the petition
therefor of a person confined under state authority, has been
prosecuted to this Court and the order affirmed, the state court
proceeds to direct sentence of death to be enforced before the
issue of the mandate from this Court, does not justify the
interposition of this Court by the writ of habeas corpus.
Where the statutes of a state provide that execution under a
sentence of death shall not be stayed by an appeal to the highest
tribunal of the state unless a certificate of probable cause be
granted as provided, and such certificate has been refused, and
application for supersedeas denied, this Court cannot interfere on
habeas corpus on the ground, if federal questions were raised on
such appeal, that thereby the party condemned is deprived of the
privilege or immunity of suing out a writ of error from this
Court.
The case is stated in the opinion.
Page 169 U. S. 40
MR. CHIEF JUSTICE FULLER delivered the opinion of the Court.
Application was made on behalf of Durrant, held in custody by
the warden of the state's prison at San Quentin, California, for
execution today, under sentence of death, for leave to file a
petition for the writ of habeas corpus.
The petition, in support of general allegations that Durrant was
confined under proceedings in contravention of the Constitution and
laws of the United States, set forth
in haec verba two
petitions for the writ, presented on Durrant's behalf to the
Circuit Court of the United States for the Ninth Circuit and
Northern District of California on November 11 and December 31,
1897, respectively, and the action of that court in respect
thereof.
The averments of these petitions must be considered in the light
of sections 1227 and 1243 of the Penal Code of California, which
reads as follows:
"§ 1227. If for any reason a judgment of death has not been
executed, and it remains in force, the court in which the
conviction is had, on the application of the district attorney of
the county in which the conviction is had, must order the defendant
to be brought before it, or if he is at large, a warrant for
apprehension may be issued. Upon the defendant's being brought
before the court, it must inquire into the facts, and if no legal
reasons exist against the execution of the judgment, must make an
order that the warden of the state prison to whom the sheriff is
directed to deliver the defendant shall execute the judgment at a
specified time. The warden must execute the judgment
accordingly."
"§ 1243. An appeal to the supreme court from a judgment of
conviction, stays the execution of the judgment in all capital
cases, and in all other cases upon filing with the clerk of the
court in which the conviction was had, a certificate of the judge
of such court, or of a justice of the supreme court,
Page 169 U. S. 41
that in his opinion there is probable cause for the appeal, but
not otherwise."
It was alleged in the petition of November 11 that theretofore
Durrant had been found guilty of murder in the first degree in the
Superior Court of the City and County of San Francisco. That
judgment had been rendered on the verdict, and he had been
sentenced to death. That an appeal had been taken from that
judgment to the Supreme Court of California, and the judgment
affirmed.
See 48 P. 75.
That on April 10, 1897, the superior court rendered a second
judgment against Durrant, from which he took an appeal to the state
supreme court, raising federal questions thereon, and that that
appeal was still pending and undetermined.
That on June 2, 1897, application had been made by Durrant to
said circuit court of the United States for a writ of habeas
corpus, which application was denied, and from that order an appeal
was duly taken and perfected to the Supreme Court of the United
States, but that no mandate showing the determination of that
appeal had been filed in the circuit court, yet, nevertheless,
judgment was entered by the superior court, November 10th,
sentencing Durrant to be executed Friday, November 12, though that
court was without authentic or official information that said
appeal had been considered or determined in the Supreme Court of
the United States. Hence it was charged that the judgment of the
superior court of November 10 was null and void, and also because
of the pendency of the appeal from the alleged judgment of April
10, 1897.
It was further averred that the circuit court on the eleventh of
November denied the writ and dismissed the petition; that from this
order petitioner prayed an appeal, presenting a notice of appeal,
assignment of errors, citation, and bond for costs, and that the
circuit court refused to allow an appeal, or to permit the papers
to be filed, and neither of its judges would approve the bond or
sign the citation.
The petition of December 31 reiterated, in substance, the
allegations of the previous application, and insisted that by
Page 169 U. S. 42
reason thereof an appeal from the final order of the circuit
court of November eleventh was actually pending in the Supreme
Court of the United States, and suspended further proceedings
against Durrant, but that, nevertheless, the superior court on
December 15, 1897, though without authority, and contrary to the
Constitution and laws of the United States, entered an order
directing the execution of Durrant on January 7, 1898. That from
this order Durrant had prosecuted an appeal to the Supreme Court of
California, which was still pending and undetermined, and that the
judge of the superior court and the justices of the supreme court
had refused to grant a certificate of probable cause, so that the
proceedings below were not stayed by said appeal.
That federal questions had been raised before the superior
court, and that the disposition thereof was brought under review by
the appeal to the supreme court, and that, if the order of December
15 were carried into effect, petitioner would be deprived of the
right to prosecute a writ of error from the Supreme Court of the
United States to the final judgment of the Supreme Court of
California in respect of such federal questions, as was true, also,
of the appeal from the judgment of April 10, 1897.
Some other matters were put forward in the petitions, but these
were not insisted on at the bar, and were so evidently destitute of
merit as to require no observations.
The contention here practically rested on these grounds:
First. That the judgment of the superior court on the tenth of
November was void because the mandate of this Court on the appeal
from the final order of the circuit court of June 2 had not been
sent down, and that although the circuit court denied an appeal
from its final order refusing the writ and dismissing the petition
of November eleventh, still the appeal should be regarded as duly
perfected, and that for that reason, or because the circuit court
could not arbitrarily defeat such appeal, petitioner was entitled,
through the interposition of this Court by the issue of the writ
applied for, to be placed in the same position as if the appeal had
been granted.
Second. That as the appeals from the judgments of April
Page 169 U. S. 43
tenth and of December fifteenth involved federal questions, and
were still pending in the state supreme court, the execution of the
sentence in accordance with the state statutes would deprive
petitioner of the right, privilege, and immunity of suing out writs
of error from this Court to revise the final judgments of that
court when entered on those appeals.
The rule was laid down in
Spies v. Illinois,
123 U. S. 131,
that when application is made to this Court for the allowance of a
writ of error to the highest court of a state, the writ will not be
allowed if it appear from the face of the record that the decision
of the federal question which is complained of was so clearly right
as not to require argument. And the same rule governs an
application to us for the writ of habeas corpus, which must be
denied if it be apparent that the only result if the writ were
issued would be the remanding of the petitioner to custody, for the
object of the writ is to ascertain whether the prisoner applying
for it can legally be detained, and it is the duty of the court,
justice, or judge, granting the writ, on hearing, "to dispose of
the party as law and justice may require." Rev.Stat. § 761;
Iasigi v. Van De Carr, 166 U. S. 391;
Ekiu v. United States, 142 U. S.
631.
The action of the circuit court in refusing to grant the appeal
from its final order of the eleventh of November, on the petition
then presented, and in declining to entertain the petition of
December 31, cannot be revised on this application, and the inquiry
really is whether these petitions furnish any ground for the
conclusion that, if the writ were granted, the prisoner's detention
would be found illegal.
As it appears on the face of the record that the judgment of
November tenth was superseded, and that petitioner is held for
execution under the judgment of December fifteenth, it manifestly
follows that we could not enlarge the prisoner, as unlawfully
detained, on the ground that if the circuit court had allowed an
appeal from its final order of November eleventh, further
proceedings below would have been stayed until that appeal was
disposed of.
Nor could we hold that that final order was erroneous because
the judgment of November tenth was entered in the
Page 169 U. S. 44
absence of our mandate on the affirmance of the final order of
the circuit court of June 2, 1897. The judgment of this Court
affirming that order was rendered, as we know from our own records,
November 8 (
see 168 U.S. 705), and we have decided that,
if the state court after judgment here proceeds before our mandate
issues, its action, though not to be commended, is not void.
In
re Jugiro, 140 U. S. 291.
In this instance, the state trial court did so proceed, but, in
the due and orderly administration of justice, its judgment was
superseded by the supreme court of the state, which, it is proper
to note, granted the certificate of probable cause on the principal
ground that the lower court could not exercise jurisdiction to fix
a day for the execution of sentence against defendant in the
absence of authentic and official evidence of the disposal of the
appeal to this Court.
People v. Durrant, 50 P. 1070.
In respect of the alleged abridgment of petitioner's privilege
or immunity to sue out writs of error from this Court to revise the
final judgments of the state supreme court on appeals therein
pending, and particularly the appeal from the judgment of the
superior court of December fifteenth, which, it was argued, raised
federal questions, it is sufficient to say that it was for the
trial judge, or the Supreme Court of California, to determine
whether or not the judgments complained of should be stayed or
superseded, and with such determination it is not our province,
through this writ, to interfere, nor do the statutory provisions in
that behalf, in themselves, involve any infraction of the
Constitution or laws of the United States.
Kohl v.
Lehlback, 160 U. S. 293;
Bergemann v. Backer, 157 U. S. 655;
Andrews v. Swartz, 156 U. S. 272.
All the averments in the papers, as well as a petition for a
writ of error which had been previously presented to some of our
number and denied, as was admitted, and the suggestions urged at
the bar, have been duly considered, with the result that the court
is unanimously of opinion that if the writ should be awarded, it
would be its duty, on the return thereto, to remand the petitioner.
The application is therefore
Denied.