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[ROBERT G. SCHIELDS v. JOSE MCMICKING](https://www.lawyerly.ph/juris/view/c9fc?user=fbGU2WFpmaitMVEVGZ2lBVW5xZ2RVdz09)
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23 Phil. 526

[ G. R. No. 6693, November 26, 1912 ]

ROBERT G. SCHIELDS, PLAINTIFF, VS. JOSE MCMICKING, DEFENDANT.

D E C I S I O N

MORELAND, J.:

This  is  a motion  for  a  rehearing,  presented by  the Solicitor-Gener representation of the Government.  The defendant was brought before the Court of First Instance of the city of  Manila for trial on a charge of l He demanded two days in which to prepare for trial.  It was refused him a he was forced to trial at once.  He was convicted and  sentenced.  He applied for a writ of habeas corpus upon the ground that the judgment was void as a matter of law  as he had been convicted without due process of law.   The writ was allowed, and after a hearing given, and argument of counsel, the defendant was discharged under the  decision of a majority o this  court, Johnson, J., dissenting.

Section 30  of  General Orders,  No.  58, provides that "after his plea t defendant shall be entitled, on demand, to at  least two days in which to prepare for trial."  The refusal  of the time in which to prepare for tri the consequent forcing of the defendant to  his defense on the instant  i under the provisions of our  law, equivalent, in our judgment, to the ref a legal hearing.  It amounts in effect to a denial of a trial.  It is an abrogation of that due process of law which is the country's embodied procedure,  without  which a  defendant has, in law, no trial at all.

The courts must be the first to follow the law.  Where the law is express therefore, clear, where it is  imperative, and,  therefore,  with no  dis lodged  anywhere, a court should never attempt to change it by interpretation or circumvent it by construction.  The lawmakers realized the necessity of time to prepare for trial. They  well knew that, without to prepare, a trial was   a mockery and a farce.  They were fully informer that if they left that question to  the discretion of the court, the trial would be  rather  a matter of favor than  of right.   It has never been t policy of constitutions or of statutes to permit the inalienable right of be left to the discretion of any man.  The makers  of  laws and of constitutions clearly foresaw the unbearable conditions which would ultimatum prevail if the right  to a  hearing should depend upon the discretion of judge  or of the court.   The precedent  sent out from this court that, u the Code of Criminal Procedure of these Islands, the right to prepare for depended upon the discretion of the court, would disrupt established practice would leave every person charged with crime in doubt as to  rights of which no one  can constitutionally deprive him.  It is true  that the trial  co these Islands,  following their usual custom of protecting the rights of persons before them, would use that discretion  with care and would  never intentionally deprive any person of those privileges necessary to his com defense.  But that is  not  quite the point.   The danger  lies in this, the court should, in the exercise of that  discretion, deprive the defend a hearing, his only remedy would be by appeal.   He would not be  able to take advantage of that quick and speedy remedy by habeas corpus which is the refuge of every  man who  is  denied  the  right of  hearing.   He would be  relegated to that slower and more tedious  process of appeal, with the corresponding loss of freedom.

There is  no  procedure known to the Philippine Islands wherein a defendant refused time to prepare for trial. There is no practice by which he is deprived of it.  There is no law  under which he  can  be  denied it On the contrary, the only procedure known to us  is one embodied in the  imperative law wherein  the accused is  expressly given two days in  which to prepare for trial.   The  only practice known  is that which grants  him  the time referred to.   But the recognized practice and  procedure of a country is due process of law  of that country.  It is because of that fact that the relative  to time in which to prepare for trial was made specific and imperative. Under that law no court has discretion.  It cannot exercise judgment It cannot  interpret or construe. It  can only obey.  To obey that law only way of giving the defendant a trial.  His rights  are not  satisfied the exercise of a discretion upon the  question;  he is entitled to the t

We are well aware that, if the court had been given the power to  determine, upon facts, whether the time in question should be granted or  not, that the court had been given discretion in the matter, a very different quest would have been presented.  In such case due process of  law would  have been conserved  whichever way  the judgment of the court might have gone; for,  in that event, the requirements of due process of law would have be satisfied with a decision either  way.  Due process of law includes a decision either way in a  case where discretion is lodged with the court.

While there is no case at  hand  precisely in point, there are many  anal It was held in the case of  Callan vs.  Wilson (127 U. ,S.,  540) trial of a defendant without a jury violates the  due  process clause of Constitution of the  United States,  and,  if  convicted,  he  is entitle the  benefit of the writ  of habeas corpus.  We are of the opinion that is just as much  a failure of due process of law to  deprive  a  defendant an opportunity  to  prepare for a trial as it is to  deprive him of the r to be tried before a jury.  To deprive one wholly of time to prepare for is  to  deny him a trial altogether as that trial is defined by the law o land.

In the case of Windsor vs.  McVeigh  (93  U.  S.,  274), which was action for condemnation based  on an alleged forfeiture, a summons  was issued  for the defendant and he was brought  into  court; but  the appearance of the owner, when made, was stricken out and his right to appear was denied.   In that case the court said, quoting Mr. Justice Swayne in 11 Wall, 267: 

"The order in effect denied the respondent a hearing.  It is alleged  he in the position  of an alien enemy,  and could have no locus standi  that forum.   If assailed there, he could defend there.  The liability  a are inseparable.   A different result would be  a blot upon  our jurisprudence and  civilization.   We cannot  hesitate  or doubt  on the subject.   It be contrary to the first principles  of  the social compact, and of the right administration of justice."

Continuing the court said: 

"Wherever one is assailed in his person or his property, there he may def for the liability  and the right  are inseparable.   This is a principle justice, recognized as such by the common intelligence and  conscience of nations.  A sentence of a court pronounced against a party without hearing him, or giving him an opportunity to be heard, is not a judicial determination of his rights, and is not entitled to respect in any other 

"That there must  be notice to a party of some kind, actual or constructive to a  valid judgment affecting his rights, is admitted.  Until notice  is the court  has no jurisdiction in any case to proceed to  judgment,  what its authority may be, by the  law of its organization, over the subject m But notice is only for the purpose of affording the party an opportunity being  heard upon the claim or the  charges made; it is a summons to to appear and speak,  if he has  anything to say, why the judgment sought  should not  be rendered.  A  denial to a party, of the benefit of notice would be in effect to deny that  he is entitled to notice at all, the  sham and deceptive proceeding had better be omitted altogether. It would be like saying to a party, 'Appear, and you shall be heard;'  and, he has appeared,  saying,  'Your  appearance shall not be  recognized,  a you shall not be heard.'  In the present case,  the  district court not o effect said this,  but immediately added  a  decree of condemnation, reciting that the default of all persons had been duly entered.  It is difficult t of a decree thus rendered with moderation; it was, in fact, a mere arbitrary edict, clothed in the form of a judicial sentence. 

"The law is, and always has been, that whenever notice or citation is re the  party cited has the right to appear and be heard; and when  the latter  is denied,  the former  is  ineffectual for any  purpose.   The to a party in such  a case of the right to  appear is in legal effect the recall of the citation to him.

*       *      *      *       *       *       *

"So  a departure from established modes of procedure will often the judgment  void;  thus, the  sentence of a  person charged  with felony upon conviction by  the court, without the  intervention  of a jury, would invalid for any purpose.  The decree  of a court  of equity upon oral allegations, without  written  pleadings, would  be  an idle act, of  no beyond that of an advisory proceeding of the chancellor.  And the reason is, that the courts are wot authorized to exert their power in way

"The doctrine stated by counsel is only correct when the court proceeds, acquiring jurisdiction  of the  cause, according  to  the established governing the  class to which the  case belongs, and  does not trans in the extent  or  character  of its  judgment, the  law which  is applicaple to  it.  The statement  of the doctrine by Mr. Justice Swayne, in the ca of Cornell vs.  Williams,  reported  in the 20th of Wallace,  is accurate.  'The jurisdiction,' says the  justice, 'having  attached in everything done within the power of that jurisdiction, when collaterally questioned, is  held conclusive of  the rights  of the parties,  unless impeached for fraud."   (20 Wall., 250.) 

"It was not within  the power of the jurisdiction of the district court proceed with the case, so as to affect the rights of the owner after his appearance had  been stricken out, and the  benefit of the citation to h thus denied. For jurisdiction  is the right  to hear and determine; not determine without hearing. And where, as in that case, no appearance w allowed, there  could be no hearing  or opportunity of being heard, and, therefore, could  be no exercise of jurisdiction.   By the a the court, the respondent was excluded from its jurisdiction."

In the case of Hovey vs. Elliott (167 U. S., 409) the court said; 

"The fundamental  conception  of  a court of justice is condemnation only after hearing.  To say that courts have inherent power to  deny all right defend an action  and to render decrees without any hearing whatever is, the very nature of things, to convert the court exercising such an authority into an instrument of wrong and oppression, and hence to strip it of that attribute of justice upon which the  exercise of judicial power necessary depends."

After quoting the case of McVeigh vs. United States  (78 U. S., 2 Windsor vs. McVeigh (93 U. S., 274),  above referred to, the court continued: 

"This language but expresses  the  most elementary conception of the judicial function.   At common law no man was condemned without being afforded opportunity  to be heard.  Thus,  Coke  (2  Ins.,  46), in commenting on  the twenty-ninth  chapter of Magna Charta, says.: 'No man shall be disseised, etc., unless it be by the lawful judgment; that is, his equals  (that is, of  men of his own condition), or by the law of the land (that is, to speak it once for all), by the due course  and process law.'

*       *       *      *       *       *       *

"Can it be  doubted that due process of law  signifies a right to be  he in  one's defense?  If the legislative  department  of the Government we to enact a statute conferring the right to  condemn  the  citizen without any opportunity whatever of being heard, would it be pretended that such an enactment would not be violative of the Constitution?  If this be true it undoubtedly is, how can it  be said that the judicial department,  the source and fountain of justice  itself, has yet the authority to render that  which if done under express  legislative sanction  would be viol of the Constitution.  If such power obtains, then the judicial department the  Government sitting to uphold and enforce the Constitution is the on one possessing a power to disregard it.  If such authority exists then i consequence of their establishment, to compel obedience to law and to enforce justice, courts possess the right  to inflict the very wrongs which were created to prevent."

In Capel vs. Child (2 Cromp. & J., 558) Lord Lyndhurst, C. B., at page 5 said:

"A  party has a right to be heard for  the purpose of explaining his conduct; he has a right to call witnesses for the purpose of removing impression made on the mind of  the bishop;  he  has  a right to  be heard  in  his  own defense.  On consideration, then, it appears to me t if the  requisition of the bishop is to  be  considered a judgment,  it against every  principle of justice that  that judgment should be pronoun not only without giving the party an opportunity of adducing evidence, but without  giving him notice of the intention of the judge  to proceed to pronounce the judgment."

In the case of Bonaker vs. Evans (16 Q. 6., 162)  the court said (p. 171):

"If it be the latter, then the bishop ought to have given the incumbent an opportunity of being heard before it was issued; for no proposition can be more clearly established than that a man cannot incur the loss  of liberty property for an offense by a judicial proceeding until he has had  a fair opportunity of  answering the charge against him,   *  *   *."

In the case of Galpin vs. Page (85 U. S.,  350) the court said:

"It is  a rule as old as the law,  and  never  more to be respected than that no one shall be personally bound until  he has had his  day  in court which is  meant, until he has been duly cited to appear, and has been afforded an opportunity to be heard. Judgment without such citation and opportunity wants all the attributes of a judicial determination; it i usurpation and oppression, and never can be upheld  where justice is justly administered."

Judge Cooley, in his Constitutional Limitations, at page 353, says:

"Perhaps no definition is more often quoted than that given  by Mr. Webs in the Dartmouth College case (17 U..S.  (4 Wheat.),  518);  'By the law land is most clearly intended the general law; a law  which hears before in condemns, which proceeds upon inquiry and renders judgment only after tr The meaning is/that every citizen shall hold his  life, liberty, property, immunities under the protection of the general rules which  govern society

As  we stated in our former opinion, a  trial  is a farce  indeed, is n at all, if the defendant  be not given an opportunity to  prepare for trial which is but another way of saying "an  opportunity to be heard." a mockery solemnly to assure him that he has a right to  defend by himself and by his witnesses;  and then say to him, when, in pursuance of the assurance he demands his trial, "You shall, not have an opportunity  to pr for trial or to produce your witnesses."  It goes without  saying that the right to a trial without any opportunity to prepare for it is an idle, a fatuous thing.

The argument for the motion, however, does not  discuss this  question. follows substantially the  lines  of  the dissenting opinion filed in the o and makes substantially the same points against the prevailing decision. the argument of counsel on the motion and that found in the dissenting opinion lose sight, in our  opinion, of the real ground upon which the court based decision.  That being the case,  the arguments, from one point of view, are necessity beside the point.

The argument of counsel on the motion,  as well as that contained in  the dissenting opinion, seizes upon the fact of the initial jurisdiction of the First Instance, that is, the jurisdiction of the court over the person of t defendant and the subject matter of the action at the beginning of the tr and makes it decisive of  the case at bar.  Indeed, the contention is made where a court has once acquired jurisdiction of the person of the defendant and of the subject matter of the motion, habeas corpus can never issue.  Says the dissenting opinion: , "Where an inferior court has jurisdiction of the the person in a criminal suit, and no writ of error lies in this court, it habeas corpus, review  the legality of the proceedings."

Says the brief of counsel on the motion: 

"One authority  after another was quoted in the original argument in this case to show that the commission of error by a  court of final and exclusive jurisdiction  cannot be reviewed  or corrected in habeas corpus proceeding 

"The true principle of law is  that errors committed by a trial  court h final appellate jurisdiction  of a criminal case  do  not  deprive the could jurisdiction, and habeas corpus  will not lie to review  or correct the ac such court. 

"It is only upon the theory that the Court of First Instance had no  jur over the defendant in the trial of said case,  or over the subject matter case, that this court could have granted the writ of habeas corpus."

The whole burden of these arguments is  that the Court of First Instance jurisdiction over the person of the defendant  and the subject matter of t action when the trial  began.   No attempt whatever is  made  to determine whether the court had jurisdiction at the close.  That, which is the very the whole  case,  is  taken entirely for granted.  No discussion has  been presented  or argument made as to whether or not the court had authority t enter the judgment which it did enter or to enforce it after it was entered in so  far as the initial jurisdiction may be considered as such authority attempt is made to determine whether the defendant  was deprived of a constitutional right, or what effect such deprivation, if any,  has upon t The fact of the original  jurisdiction is seized  upon as the only point in the case worthy of consideration and upon it are based all of the contentions made against the original decision.

Nobody  has denied the initial jurisdiction of the trial court.  It  has been discussed or even  questioned in this court.  That jurisdiction has always been freely conceded.  The decision  of this court rested  upon  something which occurred  after the  jurisdiction referred to had attached and after trial had begun.  It rested upon the proposition that, while the trial court jurisdiction in the first place,  it either lost that jurisdiction during t the trial, or so transcended its powers as to  render its judgment void.  B a person had a peso in  his pocket last week the  conclusion does not necessarily follow that he has  that peso in his pocket this  week.  Likewise fact that the trial court had jurisdiction at the time the trial began does necessitate the conclusion that it  had jurisdiction when  the trial  court that it had authority or power to enter a particular judgment or to enforce after it was entered.  There are many ways in which a court may lose jurisdiction between the beginning of  the trial and the close thereof; and there are ma instances in  the books where a court has, by its own acts, deprived the re of all legal efficacy  and its judgment based thereon of all legal virtue.

This is what occurred in the case at bar.  Having been brought before the bar of the court the defendant was driven to trial upon the moment in disregard of his demand for two days to prepare  for trial made under section 30 of General Orders, No. 58, which provides that "after his plea the defendant shall  be entitled, on demand, to at least two days in which to prepare for trial."   The denial of the right to prepare for trial and the consequence forcing of the defendant to his defense without any time whatever for preparation is, under the provisions of our law, equivalent, in our judgment the refusal of a legal hearing.  It amounts, in effect, to a complete denial trial.  It was an abrogation of that due process of law which is the embodied procedure of the land, and without which a defendant has, in law, no trial all.

We stated in our former decision that habeas corpus would lie in certain where constitutional rights were denied to the defendant, even though the had jurisdiction at the beginning of the cause, or jurisdiction even to decide very question the decision of which destroyed completely the power of the court to enter a judgment of conviction or to enforce it, if entered.   We stated that, where a defendant was denied due process of law in a criminal trial, the judgment of conviction resulting from such trial was either a judgment entered without jurisdiction or was "otherwise a nullity."

In the case of Windsor vs. McVeigh (93 U. S., 274), the court held the doctrine "that, where a court has  once acquired jurisdiction, it has to decide every question which arises in the cause, and its judgment, however erroneous, cannot be collaterally assailed,   *  *   *  is  only correct court proceeds, after acquiring jurisdiction of the cause, according to established modes governing the class to which the case belongs, and  not transcend, in the extent or character of its judgment, the law applicable  to  it."  Concluding the argument in  this case, Mr.  Just described clearly the  situation in the  case before us,  as well as that one with which  he  was dealing, when he said:  "By the act of the court the respondent was excluded from its jurisdiction."

To the same effect is the case of  Cornell vs. Williams (20 Wall., 250), the court said: "The jurisdiction having attached in the case, everything within the power of that jurisdiction, when collaterally  quest be held conclusive of the rights of the parties, unless impeached for fraud"

The case of Hovey vs. Elliott (167 U. S., 409), substantially holds a defendant out of court after he has been duly brought in leaves the c without any more jurisdiction, than it had before he was brought in, a that a judgment rendered without due process of law is void on collateral attack.

The right of a Federal court to release by habeas corpus a person imprisoned under a judgment of a State court without due process of law i declared and exercised in numerous cases.   (Callan vs. Wilson, 127 U. S. Re Lee Tong,  9 Sawy., 333; see also 6 Sawy., 410, 349; 10 Sawy., 532; 7 Sa 526; 11  Sawy., 447; 12 Sawy.,  88, 379; 11 Sawy., 472; 2 Fed.  Rep., 624; Rep., 66, 71; Larkin vs. Ryan, 70 Wis., 676; Re Doyle, 16 R. I., 537;  R 4 Kan. App., 292; Re Durbon, 10 Mont., 147.)

In the case of Counselman vs. Hitchcock (142 U. S., 547) it  was substantially that a witness who has a constitutional  right under the fi amendment to the Federal Constitution to decline to answer questions beca the answers might tend to criminate  him is entitled to  discharge by habeas corpus if imprisoned for contempt in  refusing to answer.   (Hackley vs. Abb.   Pr., 150.)  In  this latter  case the remedy was unquestioned but it held that his constitutional rights had  not been infringed.

It has been held in several cases that a person sentenced to imprisonment an infamous crime without having been presented or indicted by a grand jury required by the fifth amendment to the Constitution of the United  States is entitled to be discharged on habeas corpus.   (Ex parte Wilson, 114 417; U. S. vs. De Walt, 128 U. S., 393; Re Bain, 121 U. S., 1; Ex parte McC Fed. Rep., 71; Ex parte Van  Vranken, 47 Fed.  Rep., 888.)   In the of Ex parte Wilson and Re Bain the constitutional requirement was declared to be jurisdictional.

In the case of Ex parte Reynolds (35 Tex. Crim. Rep., 437) it was that one indicted by a grand jury composed of 14 instead of 12 as the Constitution required, was entitled to be released on habeas corpus.

The unconstitutionality of a statute which violated a bill of rights pro for a plain description of the crime and for protection against furnishing evidence to criminate one's self, and for the right to face witnesses and b heard personally by counsel, was held in Cunningham vs. Ray (63 N. 406)  a good ground of habeas corpus.

As will be seen from these authorities, the mere fact that the court had jurisdiction of the parties and of the cause at the beginning is n necessarily vital in determining the question whether habeas  corpus will release a defendant imprisoned as a result of the trial.   All of these with the  possible exception of those relating to the lack of presentment grand jury, fully admit the jurisdiction of the court at the beginning of

In our  previous decision we asserted that the deprivation of the constitutional right of a trial resulted either in a complete loss of jurisdiction or e the judgment a nullity for some other reason; and that habeas corpus would lie in either  case.  This  language is vigorously assailed in the a of counsel, it  being asserted  that, under the statute, jurisdiction is t ground upon, which habeas corpus can issue and that the expression "a null for some other reason," or an equivalent expression, was unwarranted and unprecedented.  In using these words we were but following the language used in the decisions of the Supreme Court of the United States.

In the case of Ex parte Siebold (100 U. S., 371, 375) the court u language: 

"The only ground on which this court,  or any court, without some  special statute  authorizing it,  will give relief on habeas corpus to a prisoner conviction and sentence of another court is the want of jurisdiction in such over the person or the cause, or some other matter rendering its proceeding void."

Further on in the opinion the court said: 

"The reason of this  rule lies in the fact  that a habeas corpus  proceeding is a collateral  attack of a  civil  nature to impeach the validity a judgment or sentence of another court in a criminal proceeding, and it should, therefore, be limited to cases in which the judgment or sentence attacked is clearly void by reason of its having been rendered without jurisdiction, or by reason of the court's having exceeded its jurisdiction the premises.

"It is said in Ex parte Royall, supra, that after a prisoner is c a crime in the highest court of the  State in which a conviction could be if  such conviction was obtained in  disregard or in violation of rights to him by the Constitution  and laws of the United States, two remedies ar open to him for relief in the Federal courts  he may either take his writ error from this court, under chapter 709 of the Revised  Statutes, and have case reexamined in that way  on the question of  whether the State court h denied  him any right, privilege, or immunity guaranteed him  by the Constitution and laws  of the United States; or he may apply for a writ of habeas corpus to  be discharged  from custody under such conviction, the ground that the State court had no jurisdiction of either his person o offense charged against him,  or had, for some reason, lost  or  exceed its jurisdiction,  so as to  render its judgment a nullity; in proceeding the Federal courts could not review the action or rulings of State court, which could be reviewed by this  court upon  a writ of error. as already stated, the circuit court has a discretion as to which of these remedies it will require the petitioner to  adopt.  This was expressly in Ex parte Royall, supra, and has been repeatedly followed since  that case."

In the case of Ex parte Lennon (166 U. S., 548) the  court used th language:

"It  is only upon the theory that the proceedings and judgment  of the court were nullities that we  are authorized  to reverse its action

In  U. S. vs. Pridgeon  (153  U. S., 48,  62-63) the  court said:

"Under  a writ of habeas corpus the (inquiry)  writ'is addressed errors,  but to the question whether the proceedings  and the judgment rend therein are, for any reason nullities, and  unless it is affirmative the judgment or sentence, under which the petitioner is confined, is void, entitled to his discharge." Laying  aside the questions  springing from the significations  which the word  "jurisdiction" may take on, we may say that a fact that the Federal courts do issue writs of habeas corpus  to release persons held under judgment of a court, not only when the judgment was without jurisdiction, but when  it denies a right conferred by  the Federal Constitution, even if the court had jurisdiction to decide  the  case.   Th clearly  appears from  the  decisions heretofore and hereinafter referred t as those where due process of law was. refused, where there  was a denial o equal protection of  the  law, and where there was  imprisonment under an unconstitutional statute.  (Ex parte Siebold, 100 U. S., 371; Ex parte Virg U. S., 339; Yick Wo vs. Hopkins, 118 U. S., 356; Re Medley, 134 U. S., 160; vs. Barber, 136 U.  S., 313; Re Savage,  134 U. S., 176; Asher vs. Texas, 1 129; Ex parte Royall, supra;  Ex parte Wall, 48 Cal.,  279; Ex parte Pitts, rida, 149; Re Frazee, 63 Mich., 396; Ex parte Rosenblatt, 19 Nev., 439; Re N. Y., 497; Re Kline, 6 Ohio C. C, 216; Baxter vs. Thomas, 4 Okla., 605; Ex Rollins, 80 Va., 314;  Larkin vs. Ryan, 70 Wis., 676; 39 L. R. A., 449.) In these cases it seems clear that the judgments held void were rendered by co which had jurisdiction to try the  issues  involved and that their alleged jurisdiction  was at most a want of authority or power to decide wrong a constitutional question which they had jurisdiction to decide right.

Be that as it may, however,  it is certain that, in either case, i.  e., there is a complete lack of jurisdiction, as that  term is used by counsel motion, or whether the judgment  is an  absolute nullity for the other  re pointed  out, the result to the judgment and to the. person imprisoned is precisely the same.  The judgment is void and the person is illegally rest The word " jurisdiction" as used in our statute is sufficiently broad to cover "power" "and "authority."   So that whenever a court transcends its powers exaggerates its  authority  to  such  an extent as to render its judgment absolutely  void, habeas corpus will lie under our statute.  The  motion i denied.

Arellano, C. J., Carson and Trent, JJ., concur.
 
 



  DISSENTING

JOHNSON, J.,
 

Mr. Schields, the petitioner, had two trial different courts before presenting the petition in the present case for of habeas corpus.  He makes no complaint now in this court, nor did make any complaint in  the Court of First Instance, that he had not been permitted  to present in his  defense all of the proof which he had.   He makes no allegation, even now, that he had  some other proof which he
desired to present.

The judgment of the Court of First  Instance should stand affirmed.

Motion for rehearing denied.


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