Defendant, having been tried for a misdemeanor before on federal
judge and having consented to the substitution of another who
received the verdict and imposed sentence of imprisonment, sought
habeas corpus upon the ground that the substitution was contrary to
the constitutional provision for trial of all crimes by jury.
Held, that the error, if any, did not go to the
jurisdiction of the court, or render the judgment void, and that
review should have been sought by writ of error. P.
264 U. S.
564.
Reversed.
Appeal from an order of the district court discharging the
appellee from custody in a habeas corpus proceeding.
MR. JUSTICE SANFORD delivered the opinion of the Court.
This is an appeal from an order sustaining a writ of habeas
corpus and discharging Valante from custody.
He was tried in the district court upon a criminal information
charging him with misdemeanors under the National Prohibition Act.
The judge of another federal district presided. The testimony was
heard, and the jury was charged and retired to deliberate. Not
having agreed upon a verdict by the time that the judge was to
return to his home, it was stipulated by the district attorney and
Valante's counsel that any other federal judge might receive the
verdict and impose sentence, if necessary. The
Page 264 U. S. 564
jury later returned a verdict of "guilty." A judge of the
district then presiding received the verdict, and, although his
authority so to do was at that time challenged, sentenced Valante
to thirty days' imprisonment in the city prison. There was no
motion for a new trial or application for a writ of error. Valante
was surrendered to the marshal and delivered into the custody of
the warden of the prison for the purpose of serving the sentence.
He thereupon presented a petition for a writ of habeas corpus,
alleging that he had been illegally sentenced in violation of his
"constitutional rights and privileges" in that the verdict was
received and sentence imposed by a judge having no jurisdiction.
The writ was issued, and upon a hearing on the petition and the
return made by the warden, the writ was sustained and Valante was
discharged from custody. The United States has appealed directly to
this Court. Judicial Code, § 238;
McCarthy v
Arndstein, 262 U. S. 355.
Valante's contention is that the constitutional provision that
the trial of all crimes shall be by jury (Art. III, § 2, cl.
3) requires the continuous presence of the same judge throughout
the trial until the final judgment, and that, although this was a
misdemeanor case, the substitution of another judge before the
verdict was received and the sentence imposed was not a mere
irregularity which could be waived by his consent, but a violation
of the constitutional provision for a jury trial. Without
intimating that there is anything of substance in this contention,
it is clear that the error, if any was committed, did not go to the
jurisdiction of the court or render the judgment void, but was at
the most, one which could have been corrected on a review by writ
of error. It is "the well established general rule that a writ of
habeas corpus cannot be utilized for the purpose of proceedings in
error."
Craig v. Hecht, 263 U. S. 255,
263 U. S. 277,
and cases there cited.
And see Riddle v. Dyche,
262 U. S. 333,
262 U. S. 335.
There are no
Page 264 U. S. 565
circumstances in the present case sufficiently extraordinary to
bring it within any class of "exceptional cases" or make "the
general rules of procedure" inapplicable.
Craig v. Hecht,
supra, p.
263 U. S.
277.
The writ of habeas corpus could not be used in this case as a
substitute for a writ of error. The order sustaining the writ and
discharging Valante from custody is accordingly reversed, and the
cause will be remanded to the district court with instructions to
vacate the order, discharge the writ, and remand Valante to the
custody of the warden.
Reversed and remanded.