(Syllabus.)
1. Constitutional Law — Courts Required to Administer Justice Without Prejudice. Under the declaration of article 2, § 6, Bill of Rights, that "Right and justice shall be administered without sale, denial, delay, or prejudice," as well as by the unwritten dictates of natural justice, the courts of this state are commanded to administer justice without prejudice.
2. Judges — Prejudice or Interest of Judge as Ground for His Disqualification. Such provision of the Oklahoma Constitution makes the prejudice of a judge a ground for his disqualification, and the provision of the statute (Comp. St. 1921, § 2632), "and the same qualifications shall apply to the members of the Supreme Court and the Criminal Court of Appeals, as to other courts of record," refers to section 2629, providing: "No judge of any court of record shall sit in any cause or proceeding in which he may be interested, or in the result of which he may be interested. * * * or in which is called in question the validity of any judgment or proceeding in which he was of counsel or interested, * * * provided, that the disqualifications herein imposed shall not exclude the disqualifications at common law."
3. Same — Denial of Change of Judge on Ground of Prejudice Presumed to Be Denial of Justice. Public confidence in the judicial system and courts of justice of the state demands that cases shall be tried by unprejudiced and unbiased judges, and a denial of a change of judge, applied for on the ground of prejudice, will be presumed to be a denial of justice.
4. Same — Person not to Be Judge in Own Cause in Any Court. The maxim, that "A person ought not to be a judge in his own cause, because he cannot act both as judge and party," applies in all cases where judicial functions are to be exercised, whether in proceedings of inferior tribunals or in courts of last resort.
5. Constitutional Law — Accused Deprived of Due Process of Law Where Judgment is by Biased Judge. An accused is unconstitutionally deprived of due process of law if his liberty and property are subjected to the judgment of a court the judge of which has a direct and substantial pecuniary interest in reaching a conclusion against him.
6. Habeas Corpus — Courts Empowered to Issue, Hear, and Determine Writ of Habeas Corpus. The Constitution of this state confers
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the power to issue, hear, and determine the writ of habeas corpus upon the Supreme and district courts, and though the Legislature cannot inhibit or restrict these courts in the exercise of this power, it may confer the power upon other courts of record and the judges thereof.
7. Same — Statutory Provisions. The statutes of this state provide: "Every person restrained of his liberty, under any pretense what ever, may prosecute a writ of habeas corpus to inquire into the cause of the restraint, and shall be delivered therefrom when illegal." Section 421, Comp. St. 1921.
"Writs of habeas corpus may be granted by any court of record in term time, or by a judge of any such court either in term or vacation; and upon application the writ shall be granted without delay." Section 423.
"No sheriff or other officer shall be liable to a civil action for obeying any writ of habeas corpus or order of discharge made thereon." Section 437.
"The Criminal Court of Appeals and judges thereof shall have the right to issue writs of habeas corpus." Section 3048.
8. Same — Courts Having Concurrent Original Jurisdiction in Habeas Corpus. This court, the Supreme Court, and district courts, and the justices and judges thereof have concurrent original jurisdiction in habeas corpus.
9. Same — Duty of Judge in Vacation to Grant Habeas Corpus on Application. The judge, in vacation, to whom the application is made for a writ of habeas corpus, is compelled to grant the same, unless it is clearly apparent from the petition or the papers annexed that the petitioner is not entitled to it.
10. Same — In Petition for Habeas Corpus, Facts Duly Alleged Taken as True Unless Denied by Return. In a petition for a writ of habeas corpus, verified by the petitioner's oath, facts duly alleged may be taken to be true unless denied by the return, and, when not denied by the return, they are considered as admitted.
11. Same — Officer to Whom Writ is Directed Must Obey It. The sheriff or other officer to whom the writ of habeas corpus is directed is bound to obey the same, no matter by what authority or warrant, by whomsoever issued, he may hold the prisoner. It is enough for him to know that the state demands of him to show by what authority he restrains the prisoner.
12. Same — Nature of Writ — Effect of Constitutional Guaranty. Section 10 of the Bill of Rights provides: "The privilege of the writ of habeas corpus shall never be suspended by the authorities of this state." The writ of habeas corpus is an ancient
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prerogative writ. It is a writ of right, granted to inquire into all cases of illegal imprisonment. The writ cannot be abrogated or its efficiency impaired by legislative action. And under the constitutional guaranty the cases within the relief afforded by the writ at common law cannot be placed beyond its reach and remedial action by statute.
13. Same — Statutory Prohibition of Release on Habeas Corpus of One Confined for Contempt Only Applicable When Court Has Jurisdiction to Render Particular Judgment. The provisions of the Habeas Corpus Act (section 432, C.S. 1921), which provides: "No court or judge shall inquire into the legality of any judgment or process, whereby the party is in custody, or discharge him when the term of commitment has not expired in either of the cases following: * * * Second, upon any process issued on any final judgment of a court of competent jurisdiction; or, third, for any contempt of any court, officer or body having authority to commit, * * *" only apply when the court has jurisdiction to render the particular judgment. A court of competent jurisdiction is one having power and authority of law at the time of acting to do the particular act. Jurisdiction of the person of the prisoner, and of the subject-matter, is not alone conclusive, but the jurisdiction of the court to render the particular judgment is a proper subject of inquiry. If there was no legal power to render the judgment or issue the process, there was no court of competent jurisdiction, and consequently no judgment or process. All is coram non judice and void.
14. Same — Jurisdiction of Criminal Court of Appeals to Inquire into and Adjudicate Illegality of Commitment. When a person is held in custody under a void order of commitment, or is imprisoned without due process of law under the sentence of any court of the state, it is not only within the authority of this court, but it is its duty upon habeas corpus to inquire into the illegality of the commitment when the matter is properly brought before it by petition, and if it be adjudged that the order of commitment was made without authority of law, the person will be entitled to a discharge from custody in order to preserve the constitutional right of all persons not to be deprived of liberty without due process of law.
15. Contempt — Contempt Proceedings Held not Sui Generis. Section 25 of the Bill of Rights abrogates the doctrine that proceedings to punish for contempts are sui generis.
16. Same — Power to Define Contempts and to Regulate and Punish Therefor not Exercise of Inherent Power. Under the first clause of section 25, Bill of Rights, prescribing that "the Legislature shall pass laws defining contempts and regulating the proceedings
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and punishment in matters of contempt," the power to define contempts and to regulate the proceedings and punishment in matters of contempt in the courts of this state are not the exercise of an inherent power.
17. Same — Nature of "Criminal Contempt" and Punishment Therefor. A criminal contempt is a crime. If the contemnor is found guilty, the punishment imposed is a "sentence" in a criminal case. Such adjudication is a "conviction," and commitment in consequence thereof is in execution of sentence for a criminal offense.
18. Same — Proof of Guilt to Be Beyond Reasonable Doubt. In criminal contempt, as in criminal cases, the presumption of innocence obtains, and proof of guilt must be beyond reasonable doubt.
19. Same — Constitution and Statutes Held to Limit Courts' Power in Punishing Contempts. The first clause of section 25 of the Bill of Rights, and the statute defining contempts and specifically enumerating what acts shall constitute contempts, limit the power of the courts to the punishment of contempts of the character defined in the statute, and in the mode and to the extent provided by other provisions of the Penal Code.
20. Constitutional Law — Constitutional Provisions to Safeguard Citizens' Liberty and Security to Be Liberally Construed. In the Constitution of Oklahoma the utmost pains have been taken to preserve all the securities of individual liberty, and all provisions of the Constitution designed to safeguard the liberty and security of the citizen should be liberally construed by the courts.
Original application by O.O. Owens for a writ of habeas corpus to be directed to Ben B. Dancy, Sheriff of Oklahoma County. Judgment discharging the petitioner.
[For other phases of this controversy, see the following cases: State ex rel. Attorney General v. Owens, 125 Okla. 66, 256 P. 704, 52 A.L.R. 1270, wherein judgment was rendered against O.O. Owens for direct contempt of the Supreme Court. State ex rel. Atty. Gen. v. Davenport et al., 125 Okla. 1, 256 P. 340, wherein writ of prohibition was issued prohibiting the Criminal Court of Appeals from interfering with enforcement of Supreme Court's judgment
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against O.O. Owens for contempt. Dancy, Sheriff, v. Owens, 126 Okla. 37, 258 P. 879, wherein, on certiorari to review judgment of Criminal Court of Appeals (37 Okla. Cr. 118, 258 P. 758) releasing O.O. Owens from custody in pursuance of a judgment of contempt of Supreme Court, such judgment of the Criminal Court of Appeals was quashed by the Supreme Court. Owens v. Dancy, Sheriff, 36 Fed. Rep. (2nd Series) 882, wherein the United States Circuit Court of Appeals, on appeal by O.O. Owens from the U.S. District Court for the Western District of Oklahoma, denied Owens relief, through writ of habeas corpus, from the judgment of contempt of the Oklahoma Supreme Court. Petition for writ of certiorari by Owens denied by the Supreme Court of the United States April 28, 1930. — Reporter.]
Among the pleadings herein are set forth the following:
"In the Criminal Court of Appeals of the State of
Oklahoma.
"O.O. Owens, Petitioner, v. Ben B. Dancy, Sheriff of Oklahoma
County, Oklahoma, Respondent. No. A-6581.
"Amended and Supplemental Application for Writ of
Habeas Corpus.
"Your petitioner respectfully shows to the court that he is restrained of his liberty in the custody of the above named respondent at the city of Oklahoma City, in the state of Oklahoma under a pretended commitment issued by the order and judgment of the Supreme Court of the state of Oklahoma in a certain cause numbered upon the dockets of said Supreme Court No. 18081. A true, full, and complete copy of the said pretended commitment is hereinafter set out at page 54 of the record (Exhibit A) attached hereto and made a part of this application the same as if herein in full set out.
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"Your petitioner shows that he is advised and therefore says and avers that said commitment is illegal and void and the restraint of his person thereunder is unlawful for the following reasons, to wit:
"(1) That the aforesaid order and commitment was issued without jurisdiction in the Supreme Court aforesaid.
"Your petitioner shows that certain proceedings have been had in the Supreme Court of the state of Oklahoma in a certain cause heretofore pending in said court in which the state of Oklahoma ex rel. Attorney General of the state of Oklahoma was relator, and this petitioner was respondent, numbered upon the dockets of said court No. 18081.
"Your petitioner attaches hereto a true, full, and complete transcript and copy of all the pleadings, orders, judgments, motions, and proceedings had in said cause, and marks the same Exhibit A, and makes it a part of this application the same as if herein in full set out.
"(2) Your petitioner respectfully shows to the court that in the information filed in said cause no facts are pleaded sufficient to constitute a contempt of court or any public offense under the Constitution and laws of the state of Oklahoma, and that for such reason the Supreme Court of the state of Oklahoma is and has at all times been in said action without jurisdiction to proceed against your petitioner.
"(3) Your petitioner further shows that the aforesaid information hereinbefore exhibited is unverified except upon belief and that such objection has not been waived by your petitioner, but has expressly been insisted upon and has been overruled by the order of said court, as shown by Exhibit A hereinbefore exhibited.
"(4) Your petitioner respectfully shows that the proceedings aforesaid in the Supreme Court of the state of Oklahoma in said cause are coram non judice and void for reason that seven of the Justices acting in said cause, to wit, Chief Justice Fred P. Branson,
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Justice John B. Harrison, Justice Charles W. Mason, Justice James I. Phelps, Justice E.F. Lester, Justice J.W. Clark, and Justice Fletcher Riley, are and have been at all times disqualified to act in said cause; that as to said disqualifications, at page 28 of Exhibit A attached hereto, the request of your petitioner that said Justices of the Supreme Court certify their disqualification appears; that notwithstanding this the disqualification aforesaid of the said Justices, all of them declined to certify the same except Justice Albert C. Hunt, and the remaining justices of said court, to wit, Chief Justice Fred P. Branson, Justice J.W. Clark, Justice Fletcher Riley, Justice J.I. Phelps, Justice E.F. Lester, Justice John B. Harrison, Justice Charles W. Mason, and Justice R.A. Hefner, proceeded to hear and determine said cause.
"Your petitioner respectfully shows that in addition to the disqualifications set out in the said motion and request made to said Supreme Court for the disqualification of certain of the Justices, Chief Justice Fred P. Branson is disqualified for the reason that he was interested in the prosecution of said cause and the further reason that he was grossly biased and prejudiced against your petitioner. That the interest of the said Chief Justice Fred P. Branson in said cause is and was that he participated in and was instrumental in procuring said cause to be prosecuted and in ordering and directing its prosecution and the selection and employment of counsel to prosecute the same.
"Your petitioner says that at the same time that said information was filed in said cause No. 18081 against your petitioner another information was filed in said Supreme Court numbered upon the dockets of said court No. 18080 against your petitioner's counsel, H.B. Martin, charging him, the said H.B. Martin, with a contempt of court. That the basis of said information against the said H.B. Martin was the filing by him as counsel for your petitioner of the motion set out in the transcript hereto attached in said information against your petitioner, at page 12 of said transcript and continuing to page 20 thereof.
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"Your petitioner shows that at the time of the decision of the two causes referred to in said motion, to wit, cause No. 13646 upon the dockets of the said Supreme Court, and cause No. 17409 upon the dockets of said court, the said Chief Justice Fred P. Branson was a Justice of said Supreme Court, and that after the decision of the said cause No. 13646 the said Justice Fred P. Branson told your petitioner that in the decision of said cause your petitioner had been robbed and that he, the said Fred P. Branson, knew how it had been done, but was not at liberty to inform your petitioner.
"Your petitioner says that the aforesaid information against the said H.B. Martin has proceeded to trial in the Supreme Court aforesaid, and that in the trial of said cause the said Chief Justice Fred P. Branson was sworn as a witness in the prosecution of said cause and testified, in substance, that he had not told your petitioner that he had been robbed as aforesaid, but that he had told your petitioner that if the facts in said cause were as your petitioner stated them to be to him that he, your petitioner, had been robbed; and in said trial of said cause No. 18080 your petitioner testified on behalf of the said respondent, H.B. Martin, in part, that the said Chief Justice Branson had said to him, without conditions or limitations, that your petitioner had been robbed in said decision, saying: `They robbed you in that case. I know how they did it, but, of course, I can't tell you.'
"And your petitioner further says that in the trial of the said cause No. 18080 your petitioner testified, in substance, that the said Branson had endeavored, indirectly, to induce your petitioner to employ one R.C. Allen, a friend and former law partner of the said Chief Justice Fred P. Branson, to obtain relief for your petitioner for the wrongs that the said Branson had told your petitioner had been committed against him by certain of the judges of the said Supreme Court. Your petitioner says that the said Chief Justice Branson in his testimony contradicted the testimony of your petitioner on the subject of the attempt to induce your petitioner to employ the said R.C. Allen, and partly admitted
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and partly denied the testimony of your petitioner as to what the said Branson had told him as to having been robbed in the aforesaid decision.
"And your petitioner says that because of the conflict aforesaid between his testimony in said trial and the testimony of the said Chief Justice Branson great anger, prejudice, and resentment has arisen and been entertained by the said Chief Justice Branson against your petitioner, and that the said Chief Justice Branson, because of his said resentment against your petitioner, has for a long time prior to the 23d day of April, 1927, with great severity, evidenced his anger and vindictiveness toward your petitioner.
"Your petitioner says that on or about the evening of the 17th day of February, 1927, at the lobby of the Skirvin Hotel, in the city of Oklahoma City, in the presence of one of the counsel of the said H.B. Martin, Christy Russell, the said Chief Justice Fred P. Branson denounced your petitioner vehemently in language too obscene, indecent, and profane to set out in a pleading, all of which was before the judgment in said cause No. 18081 and the commitment hereinbefore complained of.
"And your petitioner further shows to the court that Hon. H.A. Ledbetter, a member of the bar of this court and of the Supreme Court of the state of Oklahoma, was one of counsel of your petitioner in said cause No. 18081 in the Supreme Court, and the said Ledbetter was also a material witness in behalf of your petitioner in said cause. That on the said 23d day of April, 1927, the said Hon. H.A. Ledbetter was absent from said trial because of illness and was at the time in the city of Dallas, in the state of Texas, that the circumstances of his illness were set out in certain affidavits filed in said cause. That on the said 23d day of April, 1927, at the lobby of the Skirvin Hotel, in the city of Oklahoma City, your petitioner is informed and believes and therefore says that the said Chief Justice Fred P. Branson in an angry and excited manner stated to Hon. A.F. Moss, one of your petitioner's counsel, in the presence of a great many spectators, ladies and
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gentlemen, some of whom are unknown to your petitioner, that if the said Ledbetter took the stand and testified to anything against him, the said Fred P. Branson, that he would summarily disbar the said Ledbetter, and that he, the said Ledbetter, would have to answer personally to him, the said Chief Justice Fred P. Branson, therefor; and that on said occasion last above described the said Branson in loud, boisterous, obscene, and profane language denounced the aforesaid Ledbetter and threatened him as aforesaid, and directed the said A.F. Moss to communicate said statements of him, the said Branson, to the said Ledbetter.
"And your petitioner further shows that in the trial of said cause No. 18080, while the said Chief Justice Branson was upon the witness stand, in cross-examination by the said Ledbetter, the following questions were propounded to him and the following answers given by him:
"`Q. Mr. Branson, you stated awhile ago, I believe, you had never suggested the name of Mr. R.C. Allen to (sic or) any other lawyer in any way that he should be employed in a law-suit in this court? A. I never did, and I say that I will resign before to-morrow's sun goes down if either of you, with all your alacrity in those matters, or your client, can establish it, and he will get rid of me without the Legislature's intervention. Now, that is plain.
"`Q. Did you ever suggest the name of any other lawyer? A. I suggested, at your solicitation, you asked me who was friendly with Judge Clark, and you are the only man, and you are of the type that your client is, seek information, and then try to make the most of it. You asked me if Joe Rawls was not a good friend of Clark, and I told you I thought he was, and you said you thought you would employ him in a good lawsuit. You are the man that did it, and you know it, and I answered your leading question, and I say in the presence of this court that you are an infamous coward to mention that in a conversation that you sought.
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"`Mr. Ledbetter: If the court please, I don't think that statement is right and — A. (interrupting) I don't either, and I will apologize to the court, but I will state it to him privately when the court adjourns.'
"And on said occasion the aforesaid Chief Justice Branson testified further:
"`Q. You referred just now, Mr. Justice Branson, to the question that I propounded about the employment of other counsel, "That you and your client." What do you have reference to? A. Well, your client is dual. I meant Mr. Owens. I suppose that he was your client.
"`Q. Then you did not have reference to Mr. Martin? A. No, sir; I didn't have Martin in mind. Martin was not considered. I had reference to Mr. Owens.'
"And your petitioner avers that the purpose and motive of the said Branson in the making of said threats was to prevent the appearance of the said H.A. Ledbetter as a witness in behalf of your petitioner's counsel, the said H.B. Martin, as to the transactions between the said Branson and the said Justice J.W. Clark and the said Ledbetter, referred to in the aforesaid testimony of the said Chief Justice Branson hereinbefore set out, to the end that said transaction should be concealed from further exposure to publicity.
"Your petitioner further says and avers that he is informed and believes and therefore avers the fact to be that on the said 23d day of April, 1927, because of his bias, prejudice, and anger toward your petitioner, the said Chief Justice Fred P. Branson called over the telephone the respondent, Ben B. Dancy, and in substance instructed him with reference to the treatment of your petitioner in his custody and warned the said Dancy not to obey any writs of any court in any wise interfering with his custody of your petitioner, and not to produce your petitioner in obedience to any writ of habeas corpus issued by any court in his behalf. And your petitioner says he is informed and believes and therefore avers the fact to be that the said Chief
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Justice Fred P. Branson, on the afternoon of the 23d day of April, 1927, having learned that an alternative writ of habeas corpus had been issued by Hon. James S. Davenport, Associate Justice of the Criminal Court of Appeals of the state of Oklahoma, unlawfully and without any warrant or authority of law whatever, and without any jurisdiction whatever, caused a pretended order of prohibition to be issued and served upon the said Justice James S. Davenport, in substance prohibiting the aforesaid Justice from the exercise of his judicial power and authority in entertaining and acting upon the application of your petitioner for a writ of habeas corpus in the premises. And your petitioner is advised and therefore says that such interference was malicious on the part of the said Chief Justice Fred P. Branson, and was because of his enmity and prejudice to your petitioner, and was done in an effort to deprive your petitioner of his constitutional right to be heard in a court of competent jurisdiction upon his petition for a writ of habeas corpus; and your petitioner is informed and believes and therefore pleads that on the 25th day of April, 1927, at the Supreme Court rooms and in the presence of the bar and other members of said court that the said Chief Justice Branson in an unseemly and wrongful manner undertook to publicly rebuke the said Associate Justice James S. Davenport of this honorable court and to warn him against the exercise of his jurisdiction in this cause, and addressed himself to the press of the state to warn the press from publishing what appeared to be a conflict or disagreement in the premises between the Supreme Court and this honorable court.
"Your petitioner further says and avers that he is informed and believes and therefore says that the aforesaid Chief Justice Fred P. Branson in the further pursuit of his anger, prejudice, and resentment against your petitioner had and held by him, the said Fred P. Branson, at the time when said pretended judgment and commitment was issued, as aforesaid, has given to the press and caused to be published false and injurious statements referring to your petitioner and his
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aforesaid cause, of which the following is an example and an instance:
"`This court has nothing to say as to Mr. Davenport's attempt to break into the press.
"`The Supreme Court, when it speaks for publication, does so through its records. In the instant case, it speaks through its records in the form of an absolute writ of prohibition against Mr. Davenport. * * * The writ speaks for itself and is all this court has to say in regard to it.
"`If Mr. Davenport has examined the statutes of the state and the decisions which this court has familiarized itself with over a period of 8 months, he would not, within 40 minutes, have undertaken to release a man on bond that this court had just previously committed to jail, and who had continuously boasted that he had a million dollars to spend to destroy the Supreme Court of Oklahoma.
"`The effort to mislead the public that the Supreme Court undertook to suspend the writ of habeas corpus is not embraced in the writ of prohibition which this court handed down and has no reference to the power in any proper case of any court to issue a writ of habeas corpus. The judgment of this court by examination of any citizen will show for itself.
"`Points to Law.
"`Justice Branson pointed out that the statutes provided "No court or judge shall inquire into the legality of any judgment or process whereby the party is in custody or discharge him when the term of commitment has not expired in either of the following cases — upon any process issued on any final judgment of a court of competent jurisdiction; or for any contempt of any court, officer or body having authority to commit."
"`Notwithstanding the mandatory edict of the statute, Judge Davenport, acting as a judge with no other member present, undertook to suspend this statute as
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against the deliberate judgment of the constitutional Supreme Court of Oklahoma and this could lead to nothing except anarchy under the guise of law.'
"Your petitioner says that he is informed and believes that the statement above quoted appeared in the Oklahoma News of April 28, 1927, published in the city of Oklahoma City, and that on the evening of said day in the dining room of the Skirvin Hotel, in Oklahoma City, Mr. A.F. Moss, Mr. H.B. Martin, Mr. Christy Russell, and Mr. Clarence E. Owens were dining near the table where the said Chief Justice Fred P. Branson and his wife were seated and dining, that the said Chief Justice Branson beckoned Mr. Moss to come to his table and which Mr. Moss did, and then and there the said Chief Justice marked with a lead pencil a copy of the said Oklahoma News containing the aforesaid statement and handed the same to Mr. Moss with much glee and a boasting air.
"Your petitioner avers that he is advised and therefore pleads that the judgment of 12 months' imprisonment and $5,000 declared in the aforesaid pretended judgment and commitment is without authority of law, excessive, cruel, and unusual; that said judgment has no precedent in the practices of the courts of this state and no authority in the statutes or the laws of this state, and that the rendition of said judgment in which the aforesaid Chief Justice Branson participated and acted was because of the aforesaid bias and prejudice of the aforesaid Chief Justice and his associates as aforesaid.
"Your petitioner says and avers that he is advised and therefore pleads that because of the interest in the prosecution of your petitioner for an alleged contempt of court and because of his resentment, prejudice, and bias, as hereinbefore set out, that the aforesaid Chief Justice Branson was and is disqualified from in any wise acting in the determination of said cause in which your petitioner was a party, and that said disqualification in the aforesaid Chief Justice is against public policy, and that because of its presence and the participation of said Chief Justice in said cause No.
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18081 the judgment and commitment hereinbefore set out and exhibited is absolutely null and void and of no effect and is coram non judice.
"(5) Your petitioner further says that because of the facts hereinbefore set out said Associate Justice J.W. Clark is and has been at all times herein mentioned disqualified to sit in the trial of your petitioner by interest in its result and because of bias and prejudice, and that the aforesaid Associate Justice J.W. Clark is and has been disqualified in said cause because of the following facts: That upon the trial of cause No. 18080, aforesaid, in which your petitioner's counsel, H.B. Martin, was prosecuted for a contempt of court in filing for your petitioner the same motion which is the basis of count No. 2 in the information aforesaid against your petitioner, the said Associate Justice J.W. Clark refused to disqualify in said cause because of his bias and prejudice arising from litigation then pending between your petitioner and the said Associate Justice J.W. Clark, and other facts, and that by the consideration and judgment of the said Supreme Court in said cause it was ordered and adjudged as follows:
"`In view of the decisions presented to the court this morning it is the opinion of Justices Thompson, Brown, Huett, Swank, and Utterback that this court has the authority to pass upon the qualification of the members to sit, and it is further the opinion of these Justices referred to that the two Justices, Clark and Riley, are disqualified, and it should be so held.'
"And your petitioner avers that the said Associate Justice J.W. Clark is further disqualified by the fact that the said J.W. Clark was a witness for the prosecution in the aforesaid trial of the said cause No. 18080, and under cross-examination in said cause admitted that he had consulted with the aforesaid H.A. Ledbetter about a campaign contribution to be made in his behalf to Bill Semple by the said Ledbetter, who was at the time an attorney in a certain cause then pending in said Supreme Court, and which cause had been assigned to the said Justice J.W. Clark for an opinion, although the said J.W. Clark did testify further that
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he afterwards determined not to take said contribution and so advised the said H.A. Ledbetter, and that in the said cause the said Justice J.W. Clark received for use in the preparation of said opinion, from one of his personal friends, a lawyer, who was not counsel of record in said cause, a private letter and statement of the supposed facts in said cause, without notice to the adverse parties. And your petitioner says and avers that because of the controversy arising from said transaction between the said Justice J.W. Clark and the said H.A. Ledbetter, who was your petitioner's counsel, that the said Justice J.W. Clark was disqualified in your petitioner's cause to sit as a judge, and that such disqualification is against public policy, and that because of its presence and the participation of the said Justice J.W. Clark in said cause No. 18081 the judgment and commitment hereinbefore set out in exhibit is null and void and of no effect and is coram non judice.
"(6) And your petitioner says and avers that he is advised and therefore pleads the fact to be that the aforesaid Justice Fletcher Riley is and has been at all times herein mentioned disqualified because of interest in the result of said cause, and because of his prejudice and bias against your petitioner, and because the aforesaid Justice Fletcher Riley, before the commencement of said cause No. 18081 in the Supreme Court, aforesaid, had brought an action in the district court of Oklahoma County, Okla., to recover damages against your petitioner in the sum of $200,000 because of the publication of a newspaper article set out and exhibited in the information filed against your petitioner, which is exhibited in Exhibit A attached to this petition, at pages 5 to 8 thereof; that said action is still pending and undermined, and that the same matters and things are at issue in said action in the district court of Oklahoma county as are at issue in the count 1 in the information against your petitioner in said cause No. 18081, and your petitioner shows that a determination in said cause No. 18081 in favor of the said Associate Justice Fletcher Riley and in favor of the prosecution in said cause last named would have an
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effect, as your petitioner is advised, upon the determination of the same issues in the aforesaid action for damages against your petitioner. That upon said facts the aforesaid Justice Fletcher Riley was included in the same judgment of the Supreme Court rendered in cause No. 18080 disqualifying the aforesaid Justice J.W. Clark in said cause, which said judgment and order of the said Supreme Court is hereinbefore quoted in paragraph 5 of this pleading. And your petitioner is advised and therefore believes that because of said facts that the aforesaid judgment and commitment under which your petitioner is held as aforesaid are coram non judice and absolutely void, and that the restraint of your petitioner thereunder is illegal.
"(7) Your petitioner says and avers, as to Justice Charles W. Mason, that heretofore, to wit, on the 18th day of April, 1927, one of your petitioner's counsel, Mr. Christy Russell, who was also counsel in said cause No. 18080, made an argument in the Supreme Court in the latter cause in which he argued the issue of fact in said cause that the respondent, H.B. Martin, petitioner's counsel, had alleged in good faith, believing it to be true, that one J.D. Lydick had written a certain opinion handed down as the opinion of the Supreme Court of Oklahoma by the said Charles W. Mason as his opinion and that of the court. That after the oral argument of Mr. Russell had been made, near the court room in which said cause was then on hearing, the said Justice Charles W. Mason made an assault upon Mr. Russell with curses and with blows, for which the said Supreme Court did on April 19, 1927, cite the said Justice Charles W. Mason to show cause why he should not be punished for contempt, and upon which citation, on the 30th day of April, 1927, in the said court the cause of the said Charles W. Mason was heard and tried upon said citation, and the said Justice Charles W. Mason was convicted and found guilty by said court of said contempt.
"And your petitioner says and avers that at the time, April 23, 1927, when the said judgment and commitment hereinbefore complained of was made and
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rendered by the said Supreme Court, the said Justice Charles W. Mason acted as one of the members of the said court, while said citation against him, the said Charles W. Mason, was still pending and undetermined.
"And your petitioner says and avers that on or about the 20th day of April, 1927, that the said Justice Charles W. Mason did cause to be prepared and published in the Daily Oklahoman, a newspaper of general circulation throughout the state of Oklahoma, a statement substantially as follows:
"`Mr. Russell prompted and demanded the occasion he complains of by his own flagrant misconduct in cowardly making a knowingly false statement reflecting upon my honor and character. This charge was not only unsupported by any evidence, but, on the contrary, all the evidence clearly established the same to be false and wholly unfounded.
"`Character assassins, who claim the protecting cloak of the court room to escape legal accountability in making sensational charges which they lack the moral or manly courage to make elsewhere, should keep within the privilege the law accords them.
"`When Mr. Russell so obviously exceeded all bounds of propriety and took occasion to insult me, I availed myself of the first opportunity to demand of him his reasons for so doing. I did tell him in no uncertain terms that his statements were false and he was cowardly and unprincipled for making them.
"`I did nothing in or near the court that could have had a tendency to disrupt or interfere with the proceedings. I did that which I felt any man has both the right and duty to do. I regret the matter occurred in so far as the same could possibly be considered as disrespectful or discourteous to the members of the special court. I have the highest regard for the members of the court, and would do nothing to show disrespect to them or any other court, but, surely even a public officer has some personal rights when he is so falsely and unfairly attacked.'
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"And your petitioner says that he and all of his counsel had often made the statement complained of in the aforesaid published statement of Associate Justice Mason; that said statement was alleged in appropriate language of pleading in the motion which was the basis of the information for contempt, aforesaid, against your petitioner, and was verified by the oath of your petitioner, and was one of the issues of fact in the aforesaid cause.
"Your petitioner avers that in said cause No. 18081 of your petitioner, had said cause been tried before qualified Justices upon the issues in said cause, and had evidence been introduced in said trial upon said issue, that the said Justice Charles W. Mason was an interested witness against your petitioner, in this, to wit, that one Miss B. Jackson was and would have been a material witness upon the subject of whether J.D. Lydick, and not the said Mr. Justice Mason, wrote the opinion in said cause No. 17409 referred to in the motion which is the basis for count 2 in said information, and that the said Miss Jackson would have testified, in substance, that on one occasion subsequent to January 3, 1927, after the filing of the aforementioned motion verified by your petitioner, the said Mr. Justice Mason arranged for a conference with the said Miss Jackson at the home of Mrs. J.R. Dale, and that at such time and place the said Justice Mason did go to the home of the said Mrs. Dale and have a conference with said Miss Jackson and stated in said conference, among other things, that he had heard that the Legislature was going to investigate him and he did not want the said Miss Jackson here at the time the Legislature was in session, and he thought it would be best for her to go to her brothers, who lived in Missouri, and stay there until after this was over, and that she, the said Miss Jackson, refused to do so, and when she told him that she refused to do so, that he, the said Mason, then said that if she did stay here and testify against him that his friends would go to any length to ruin her, the said Miss Jackson. And the said Miss Jackson, had the cause been tried upon its issues before a court consisting of qualified judges, would have
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further testified that while she was clerk of the aforesaid Justice Mason, she warned him against irregular practices of permitting other lawyers to write opinions for him and discussing too freely with interested lawyers, having access to his confidence, cases in hands for opinions and consideration, and that such testimony would have conflicted to some extent with the testimony of the said Justice Charles W. Mason, and the said Mr. Justice Mason, had your petitioner gone to trial and introduced evidence, would have been called upon to weigh his own testimony against the testimony of said Miss B. Jackson and others on matters relating to his own honesty and integrity.
"And your petitioner is advised that, in addition to the other disqualification hereinbefore set out and pleaded as to the said Justice Charles W. Mason, he was disqualified by interest in the result of said cause and has ever since been so disqualified to act as a Justice of the Supreme Court in the determination of your petitioner's cause, and that such disqualification contravenes the public policy of this state and renders the judgment and commitment under which your petitioner is detained absolutely void and of no effect and coram non judice.
"(8) Your petitioner avers that upon the aforesaid pretended trial of said cause no evidence whatever was introduced on behalf of either the prosecution or on behalf of your petitioner; that the issues made in said cause were made by the aforesaid information herein exhibited, and the plea of not guilty to said information entered by your petitioner. Your petitioner is advised and therefore says that said plea put in issue all of the material allegations of said information, and that none of the said allegations were admitted or proved by any evidence, and your petitioner therefore says that he is advised that the pretended judgment and commitment hereinbefore complained of constituted a denial of due process of law to your petitioner and is therefore null and void.
"(9) And your petitioner respectfully shows to the court that in said proceedings hereinbefore complained of your petitioner was cited upon two counts. That count No. 1 was based upon a certain newspaper publication alleged
Page 138
to have been theretofore published in the Tulsa World, which said alleged publication appears at length in said count No. 1 of the aforesaid information. That in considering the judgment rendered as aforesaid against your petitioner, without any proof whatever or any admission of said publication, the wrongs alleged to have been committed by your petitioner in said publication were considered and included in the oral statements of the Chief Justice at the time your petitioner was sentenced, as aforesaid, in relation to the matters and things for which your petitioner is subjected to fine and imprisonment. Your petitioner pleads, as is herein in full set out, the statement made by Chief Justice Branson from the bench, a true, full, and complete transcript of which is included in Exhibit A attached to this application, at pages 45 to 49 thereof. And your petitioner says that he is advised and therefore says that because of said facts the judgment and commitment hereinbefore complained of and the proceedings upon which it is based denied to your petitioner due process of law and are therefore null and void and of no effect.
"(10) And your petitioner is advised and therefore says that the acts charged against him in the aforesaid information in cause No. 18081 in the said Supreme Court do not constitute any offense known to the Constitution and laws of this state, for the reason, among others, that the truth of what is charged in the pleading which is the basis of said information is in no wise negatived or denied, and that the good faith of your petitioner in causing said pleading to be filed is not denied or put in issue.
"(11) And your petitioner says he is advised and therefore avers that the wrongs hereinbefore complained of have deprived your petitioner of his liberty without due process of law guaranteed to him under the Constitution and laws of the state of Oklahoma, as well as under the Constitution and laws of the United States of America, and particularly the Fourteenth Article of Amendment to the Constitution of said United States.
"(12) Your petitioner says that the judgment and
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commitment hereinbefore complained of are further illegal and void in this, to wit, that therein it is determined against your petitioner that the matters and things set forth in the motions and papers, which are made the basis of both counts in said information, are false in fact, although it is not alleged in said information that any of said statements were false, and no evidence whatever was introduced or received upon any issue of falsehood in said statements and no issue of falsehood in said statements is in the pleadings in said cause.
"(13) Your petitioner further says and avers that said pretended judgment and commitment is void and of no effect for the further reason that in rendering said judgment and commitment your petitioner is informed and believes and therefore says that the same was written and prepared before your petitioner was heard in said cause or given an opportunity to be heard.
"(14) And your petitioner says and avers that heretofore on the 23rd day of April, 1927, by the order and consideration of Hon. James S. Davenport, one of the judges of this honorable court, it was ordered and an alternative writ of habeas corpus was issued to the respondent commanding him to produce your petitioner before the said Hon. James S. Davenport and to make return of said writ on the 27th day of April, 1927, and that it was ordered that the petitioner in the meantime be enlarged upon the giving of bail in the sum of $15,000 to appear on the said 27th day of April; that pursuant to said order your petitioner caused to be executed his bail bond in accordance therewith, which was duly approved on the said 23d day of April, aforesaid, and thereupon it was ordered by the said Hon. James S. Davenport, judge of this honorable court, that your petitioner be released from the custody of the respondent until the further order of the court or a judge thereof, all of which is of record in this cause. That nevertheless your petitioner remains in the custody of the said respondent and has so remained ever since. That your petitioner is a necessary witness in the determination of this cause, and that he is entitled to appear and is bound to appear by
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his said recognizance in the further proceedings in this cause.
"Wherefore your petitioner prays that he be enlarged under his present bail or under such other bail as may be ordered by this honorable court; that appropriate process issue and be enforced to require the respondent, Ben B. Dancy, sheriff of Oklahoma county, Okla., to enlarge your petitioner pursuant to the orders of this honorable court, and that a peremptory writ of habeas corpus be issued by this honorable court to the said respondent commanding him, according to law, to make due return thereof, and that appropriate orders be made to enforce the obedience of the respondent to the writs and orders of this honorable court in the premises and to punish those who interfere therewith. H.B. Martin, A.F. Moss, Attorneys for Petitioner.
"State of Oklahoma, County of Oklahoma — ss:
"O.O. Owens, being duly sworn, says that he is the petitioner in the above-entitled cause; that he has read the foregoing petition; and that the statements and allegations therein made and contained are true.
"O.O. Owens.
"Subscribed and sworn to before me May 2, 1927.
"[Seal.] Guy Huff, Notary Public.
"My commission expires October 12, 1929.
"Exhibit A.
"State of Oklahoma ex rel. Attorney General, Relator, v. O.O. Owens, Respondent. No. 18081.
"Appearances:
"For the relator, C.B. Cochran and D.H. Linebaugh.
"For the respondent, H.B. Martin, A.F. Moss, H.A. Ledbetter.
"Transcript of Proceedings Had Before the Supreme Court of the State of Oklahoma in the Above-Entitled Cause.
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"Information for Contempt.
"First Count.
"Comes now George F. Short, Attorney General of the state of Oklahoma, in behalf of and in the name of the people of the state of Oklahoma, and respectfully shows and gives this honorable court to understand and be informed as follows:
"That on July 6, 1926, there was filed in the Supreme Court of Oklahoma an original action styled `V.V. Harris et al. v. R.D. Hudson, No. 17590.' On July 9, 1926, an opinion was rendered by the Supreme Court and filed in said case. A petition for rehearing was filed in said cause on July 22, 1926, and on said date O.O. Owens filed an application for leave to intervene in said case. The petition for rehearing was denied on September 7, 1926, and on September 13, 1926, an application to file a second petition for rehearing was filed in said case. That the application of O.O. Owens for leave to intervene in said case and the application to file the second petition for rehearing in said case were pending in said case and in said court on October 24, 1926, October 31, 1926, November 1, 1926, and November 2, 1926.
"On May 6, 1926, an original action was filed in the Supreme Court of Oklahoma styled. `V.V. Harris et al. v. T.G. Chambers, O.O. Owens, et al. No. 17409,' wherein the plaintiffs sought writs of prohibition and mandamus against T.G. Chambers, O.O. Owens et al. On May 11, 1926, a separate response was filed in said cause by Riverside Oil Refining Company, O.O. Owens, and G.R. Lefever. On June 22, 1926, the Supreme Court of Oklahoma rendered its opinion in said cause, and the same was duly filed on said date, but no writ or mandate has been issued in said case up to this time. The informant further gives the court to understand and be informed that on October 24, 1926, the said O.O. Owens, respondent herein, caused to be published in Tulsa Daily World, a newspaper published in the city of Tulsa, state of Oklahoma, and having a general circulation in the state
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of Oklahoma, a certain printed article and advertisement of and concerning the Supreme Court of Oklahoma and the Justices thereof, which said article is in the words following, that is to say:
"`Tulsa World — October 24, 1926, October 31, 1926, November 1, 1926 (Morning and Evening Editions), November 2, 1926 (Morning and Evening Editions).
"`So That the People May Know Why I am a Candidate for State Representative.
"`I have never had any political ambitions. I have none now. I seek election to the Legislature for the purpose of rendering such service as constructive thought and fearless and aggressive action will permit, including particularly initiating and pressing a thorough and searching investigation of the conduct and practices of the Supreme Court.
"`Courts as a whole, and particularly the highest court in the state, should be respected and referred to with respect. But when an undercurrent of gossip and rumor becomes so widespread among the lawyers that the Supreme Court no longer has the confidence and respect of the bar (as the lawyers of the state are collectively referred to), the whole people should be informed so as to avoid the pitfalls of misplaced confidence and trust.
"`The public is now well informed on the Supreme Court's attitude with respect to matters political, but only the lawyers, and those laymen who have been unfortunate enough to learn by bitter experience with the Supreme Court, can know the attitude of certain of its members on matters commercial and financial.
"`The Supreme Court has recently been bitterly assailed by practically every newspaper in the state and charged with attempting to legalize alleged fraud. If the Supreme Court will condone alleged corruption in political matters, what will it do, and what has it done, in financial and commercial controversies?
"`The Supreme Court has been charged, because
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of its action in the Dabney-Searcy political controversy, with depriving the citizens of their constitutional rights. Certain members of the Supreme Court have also been charged with lending its power, and making of it, the lower courts and the legal machinery of the state a tool for use in private controversies, in depriving or attempting to deprive citizens of their property, and in looting or attempting to loot business enterprises. Such procedure denies the injured individuals other constitutional rights than that of suffrage. It denies the citizens the right to own property.
"`The Supreme Court, through the action of certain of its members, has arrogated to itself all the powers of all branches of the state government, legislative, executive, and judicial. Certain members of the court have made their will and desire the law. They have thereby made the Supreme Court a menace to government, society, and the people's sacred rights and welfare.
"`The vacillating attitude recently displayed by the Supreme Court in political controversies is nothing less than a sacrifice of principle and conviction for expediency.
"`The Dabney-Searcy opinion is but a leering insult to the intelligence of the people of the state; a perfect demonstration that politics, intrigue, and influence enter into the consideration by the Supreme Court of controversies coming before it.
"`Justice Mason, as a result of a decision of the Supreme Court, obtained his position on that court under a cloud of suspicion such as now overhangs Dabney. With Justice Mason occupying such an unenviable position, why, then, was the Dabney-Searcy case assigned to him to write the court's opinion? Is there any one so credulous as to believe he would have written any opinion other than the one he did? And he cited the court's opinion in his own case as a precedent for his handiwork for Dabney! What else could be expected?
"`The Dabney-Searcy opinion is admitted to be an attempted outrage of the people's rights. How many equally outrageous opinions have been written by the Supreme Court in private controversies? Only the lawyers
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and the extremely experienced laymen know. The whole people should be informed.
"`Since statehood every other branch of the state government has been either suspected, criticized, investigated, or impeached. In the past, the Supreme Court has only been suspected; recently it has been criticized. It should now be investigated. The Legislature is the only body empowered to make such investigation and apply the proper remedy.
"`Lack of information on the part of the laymen, as well as lack of knowledge of the correct way to proceed, has prevented any aggressive steps being taken. Fear and professional selfishness on the part of the lawyers have restrained them in any attempt to correct the known and suspected evils existing in the Supreme Court.
"`It is for the purpose of exposing such conditions and applying the proper remedy that I seek election to the Legislature. It is for the purpose of eliminating, if possible, the contempt for law, facts, evidence, precedence, equity, and justice, heretofore exhibited by certain members of the Supreme Court, that I am a candidate for election as state representative.
"`I do not want the job for the money.
"`O.O. Owens.
"`This space paid for by O.O. Owens — not by his friends.'
"Said Attorney General further gives the court to understand and be informed that the said O.O. Owens, respondent herein, also caused said printed article and advertisement to be printed and published in Tulsa Daily World on October 31, 1926, and again in the issue of November 1, 1926, and again in the issue of November 2, 1926. That O.O. Owens, the respondent, did on each of said dates, and in the city of Tulsa, county of Tulsa, and state of Oklahoma, authorize and cause to be published the said printed article and advertisement of and concerning the Supreme Court of
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Oklahoma and the Justices thereof. That the said O.O. Owens, respondent herein, wrote, approved, caused to be written, and caused to be published, and is responsible for the above and foregoing article, and caused and procured extensive and general circulation of said article in the city of Tulsa and throughout the state of Oklahoma on the dates of their publication.
"The said Attorney General further gives the court to understand and be informed that the said article, so written, printed, published, and circulated, reflects upon the honor, integrity, and purity of this honorable court, and was designed, intended, and calculated to hold up to public opprobrium and to incite public contempt for this court and certain of the Justices thereof, and for the purpose of leading the people of this state to distrust the fairness and impartiality of the decisions of this court, and for the further purpose of influencing, intimidating, and coercing this court and Justices thereof in their further action in connection with the said case of V.V. Harris et al. v. R.D. Hudson, No. 17590, and said case of V.V. Harris et al., v. T.G. Chambers, O.O. Owens et al., No. 17409. That said articles were further intended to impede and corrupt the due administration of justice with reference to said causes in the Supreme Court of Oklahoma and in other cases pending in said court, and to impute to the Supreme Court of Oklahoma and certain of the Justices thereof unworthy motives and dishonorable conduct, tending to bring said court and its Justices into disrepute, and to destroy the respect of the public for this court, for its decisions, its honesty, integrity, and its dignity.
"Wherefore the said Attorney General prays the consideration of this honorable court in the premises, and moves the court for a rule upon the respondent, O.O. Owens, to be and appear in this court on a day to be named, and show cause if any he has, why he should not be held in contempt of this court, and punished accordingly for the publication and circulation of said articles as aforesaid. George F. Short, Attorney General of the State of Oklahoma. By Wm. L. Murphy, Assistant Attorney General.
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"Second Count.
"Comes now George F. Short, Attorney General of the state of Oklahoma, in behalf of and in the name of the people of the state of Oklahoma, and respectfully shows and gives this honorable court to understand and be informed as follows:
"That on May 6, 1926, there was filed in the Supreme Court of the state of Oklahoma an original action styled, `V.V. Harris et al. v. T.G. Chambers, O.O. Owens, et al., No. 17409'; that an opinion was rendered by the Supreme Court of Oklahoma in said cause on June 22, 1926, and was duly filed on said day, but no writ or mandate has issued in said cause.
"That on January 3, 1927, O.O. Owens, respondent herein, filed and caused to be filed in said cause, and in the Supreme Court of the state of Oklahoma, a certain instrument in writing designated: `Motion of the defendants Riverside Oil & Refining Company, a corporation, O.O. Owens, and G.R. Lefever for leave to file a petition for rehearing in said cause, and to stay the mandate and writ of mandamus in said cause,' and said instrument in writing is in the following words, to wit:
"`In the Supreme Court of the State of Oklahoma.
"`Filed in Supreme Court of Oklahoma. January 3, 1927.
"`William M. Franklin, Clerk.
"`V.V. Harris, Receiver of the Riverside Oil & Refining Company,
a Corporation, and S.D. Lynch et al., Plaintiffs, v. Hon.
T.G. Chambers, a District Judge of the Thirteenth Judicial
District of the State of Oklahoma, and the Riverside Oil &
Refining Company, a Corporation, and O.O. Owens et al.,
Defendants. No. 17409.
"`Motion of the Defendants Riverside Oil & Refining Company, a
Corporation, O.O. Owens, and G.R. Lefever for Leave to File
a Petition for Rehearing of said Cause, and to Stay the
Mandate and Writ of Mandamus in said Cause.
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"`Comes now the defendants Riverside Oil & Refining Company, a corporation, and O.O. Owens and G.R. Lefever and move the court for leave to file a petition for rehearing of said cause and a petition to stay the mandate and writ of this honorable court in said cause, pending the determination of such petition for rehearing, and for the grounds of said motion respectfully show to the court the following facts:
"`(1) Heretofore, to wit, on May 6, 1927, there was filed in this cause a petition, praying a writ of mandamus to issue to Hon. T.G. Chambers, one of the Judges of the Thirteenth judicial district of the state of Oklahoma, sitting as judge of the district court of Oklahoma county in said state and against these moving defendants, who were at the time parties to a cause pending in said district court, in which the said S.D. Lynch et al. were plaintiffs and these moving defendants et al. were defendants, commanding the said court and these moving defendants not to proceed further in said cause. These movants show that at the time said petition was filed in said cause these movents and their codefendants were prosecuting, in the aforesaid cause then pending in the said district court, a petition and motion to remove one V.V. Harris, who was pretending to act or was acting as receiver of the property of the aforesaid Riverside Oil & Refining Company, and said movents show that after the filing of the aforesaid petition in this cause briefs were duly submitted to this honorable court by the respective counsel of the parties, and oral argument was heard, but no evidence was introduced, and that thereafter, on June 16, 1926, an opinion was handed down by this court, deciding, in substance, that the relief prayed for be granted, but no writ of mandamus and no mandate has been issued in this cause, either to the respondent judge, or against these movents, and no petition for rehearing has been filed in this cause.
"`(2) These movents show that the reason no petition for rehearing was filed in this cause was and is that these movents are informed and believed that this cause was never considered by this honorable court
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and that the opinion handed down, as the opinion of this court, purporting to have been written by one of the honorable Justices of this court, Justice Charles W. Mason, was in fact written by one J.D. Lydick, who was one of the counsel for the plaintiffs in this cause, and that said opinion, having been prepared and written, as aforesaid, was copied in the office of the aforesaid Justice Charles W. Mason, and handed down by him as the opinion of this court, without evidence in this cause and without any consideration of either the pleadings in this cause or the briefs filed therein, either by the said Justice Charles W. Mason, or any of the other Justices in this court. And movents further show to the court that before the commencement of this action there had been prosecuted in the district court of Oklahoma county, aforesaid, an action by the said S.D. Lynch et al. against these movents et al., which said action was commenced on February 21, 1921, and tried before a referee of said district court, one John H. Halley, in the latter part of the year 1921, and before the 8th day of June, 1922, and a decree and judgment in said cause, on the said 8th day of June, 1922, was passed upon the journal of said district court, by which, among other things, it was adjudged and decreed that this movent, O.O. Owens, who was at the time general manager and vice president of the movent company, was indebted to the movent company in a sum aggregating $95,824.59, because of the conversion of the property of the said company to the use and benefit of the said Owens, and these movents show the court that a proceeding in error was duly prosecuted in this court from said judgment and decree, numbered upon the dockets of this court 13646, and a record and case-made of all the proceedings of the said district court was duly made, settled, signed, allowed, authenticated, and filed in the said district court, and filed in this honorable court in said proceeding in error. That in said record there was no evidence whatever tending to support the said judgment of the said district court, and that said judgment and decree in said respect was contrary to all of the evidence heard and introduced in the trial of said cause, and movents show that also in said decree, as a
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consequence of the said judgment and decree against the movent, Owens, it was ordered and decreed that the plaintiff in this cause, the said V.V. Harris, be and was appointed general receiver of all the property of the defendant corporation, and directed to take the custody of said property into his possession, and hold and preserve and operate the same under the orders of the said district court, and movents show that the said judgment and decree was duly superseded pending the determination of said cause upon said petition in error, and that thereafter, upon the consideration of this honorable court, an opinion and decision was rendered in said cause, modifying said judgment and decree theretofore rendered in said district court, in that the judgment against the said Owens as to $93,324.59 of said judgment was set aside and reversed, and the aforesaid judgment and decree was reversed as to the appointment of said receiver, and as to the costs of said action, and movents show that thereafter, on the 7th day of July, 1925, another opinion was written, promulgated, and filed in said cause, upon its face affirming the aforesaid judgment and decree of said district court in all things.
"`(3) Movents say that they are informed and believe and therefore plead that the purported opinion of this court, filed as aforesaid, July 7, 1925, was prepared by Hon. J.W. Clark, one of the Justices of this court, under the direction and control of Hon. George M. Nicholson, who was at the time Chief Justice of this court, and that the said Nicholson was at the time under the control and direction of one J.B. Dudley, one of the counsel in said cause. That the aforesaid Justice Clark, in the preparation of the said opinion, did so prepare the same without knowledge of what was contained in the case-made in said cause, and without consideration of the briefs in said cause, but in preparing said opinion the said Justice Clark was directed by the aforesaid Justice Nicholson to prepare an opinion affirming the judgment of the trial court, and movents say that they are informed and believe and therefore plead that the said purported opinion did not receive the concurrence of a majority of this court at any time
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before or at the time of its filing, and that the aforesaid opinion was prepared and filed and promulgated without the examination by the said Justice Clark, or any of the Justices purporting to concur in said opinion upon its face, of the record in said cause, either as to the evidence or the pleadings, and without consideration, examination, or knowledge of the briefs in said cause and what they contained.
"`(4) And movents therefore say that said pretended judgment and opinion of this honorable court was in truth and fact not its judgment and opinion, and never received the consideration of this honorable court.
"`(5) And movents say that in the record and case-made aforesaid, filed in said cause No. 13645, the only basis for the judgment and decree of the district court appealed from appearing was a certain private letter, written by one J.B. Dudley to the said John H. Halley, referee in said cause when pending in the aforesaid district court, many weeks after all the evidence in said cause had been introduced and heard, and the evidence had been closed, and the parties had departed from the court, in which letter the said Dudley directed the said referee as to what items and charges should be made and found against the said Owens as misappropriations and conversions of the funds and property of the said defendant corporation.
"`(6) Movents show that upon said purported judgment and opinion of this honorable court a mandate issued out of the office of the clerk of this honorable court, to the district court of Oklahoma county, aforesaid, on the 8th day of March, 1926, directing, among other things, that the said district court proceed in the said cause No. 30413, in that court, in accordance with the directions of the aforesaid opinion, and that at the time of the commencement of this action, the honorable district court was under the direction of said mandate proceeding regularly in accordance with the aforesaid purported opinion and mandate to hear and determine a motion then pending in said district court and said cause No. 30413, whether at that time it was proper
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to continue the property of said defendant corporation in the custody and control of the aforesaid receiver, or whether it was to the best interest of the said defendant corporation to return its property to the custody and control of its regularly constituted officers.
"`(7) Movents further show that argument of counsel had been presented, upon said motion and petition last above referred to, to Hon. T.G. Chambers, one of the judges of said court, and that said court had, upon consideration, ruled and held that under said opinion and mandate the said district court had jurisdiction to hear and determine said motion. That thereupon this cause was commenced by the plaintiffs herein, including the said V.V. Harris, acting as receiver of the defendant corporation and the agent of the said honorable district court of Oklahoma county, to prevent the court of his appointment and under the orders of which he was acting from judicially examining the issues between the contesting parties in the cause in which he had been appointed.
"`(8) Movents further show to the court that the consideration and determination of the petition of the plaintiffs in this cause was substantially a reconsideration and construction of the last opinion of this court in cause No. 13646, and involved determining the meaning and effect of said opinion, as well as the correctness of said opinion, with reference to the record upon which it proceeded in said cause No. 13646. Movents say that they are advised and therefore plead that to determine this cause and decide the same in the manner hereinbefore in this motion described, without judicial consideration and without the benefit of the briefs presented in said cause and without knowledge of the part of the Justices participating in said decision of what was in the case-made upon which said causes both proceeded, was a legal fraud against the rights of these movents and was a denial of due process of law under the guaranties of the Constitution of the United States of America, and particularly the Fourteenth Article of Amendment thereto.
"`(9) And movents say that they are advised
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and therefore plead that the control, in the determination of this cause, of Hon. J.W. Clark, one of the Justices of this honorable court participating therein, by Hon. George M. Nicholson, another of the Justices of this honorable court participating therein, and the control of Hon. George M. Nicholson in the premises by the said J.B. Dudley, one of the counsel in said cause, is, in law and fact, a fraud against the rights of these movents.
"`(10) And movents say that they are advised and therefore plead that the manner in which the opinion in this cause was prepared, filed, and promulgated, as hereinbefore set out, constitutes a legal fraud against the rights of these movents and a deprivation of their property without due process of law, against the guaranties of the Fourteenth Amendment, aforesaid, of the Constitution of the United States of America.
"`(11) And movents say that, if given the process of this court so that the witnesses having knowledge of the facts hereinbefore set out and pleaded may be examined in this honorable court touching said facts, the same will be established by said proof.
"`Wherefore these movents pray that, by the consideration and orders of this honorable court, they may be permitted to introduce the testimony of witnesses and the affidavits of witnesses to support the averments of the facts pleaded in this motion, and that, upon the consideration of said proof, proper orders of this court be made to enable the court to reconsider and determine this cause, according to the rights of the parties and to manifest justice and law. H.B. Martin, of Tulsa, Counsel for Riverside Oil & Refining Company, O.O. Owens, and G.R. Lefever, Movents.
"`State of Oklahoma, County of Tulsa — ss:
"`O.O. Owens, being first duly sworn, says that he is one of the defendants in the above-entitled case; that he has read the foregoing motion; and that the statements, allegations, and averments, therein contained
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upon information and belief, he is informed and believes to be true; that the statements, averments and allegations therein positively made are true.
"`O.O. Owens.
"`Subscribed and sworn to before me this 1st day of January, 1927.
"`[Seal.] L.E. Braddon, Notary Public.
"`My commission expires July 18, 1928.
"`I, Jessie E. Moore, clerk of the Supreme Court of the state of Oklahoma do hereby certify that the above and foregoing is a full, true, and complete copy of the motion of the defendants Riverside Oil & Refining Company, a corporation, O.O. Owens, and G.R. Lefever for leave to file a petition for rehearing of said cause, and to stay the mandate and writ of mandamus in said cause, in case No. 17409, V.V. Harris, Receiver, et al. v. Hon. T.G. Chambers, a District Judge of the Thirteenth Judicial District of the State of Oklahoma et al, in the above matter as the same remains on file in my office.
"`In witness whereof I hereunto set my hand and affix the seal of said court at Oklahoma City, this 7th day of April, 1927.
"`[Seal.] [Signed] Jessie E. Moore,
"`Clerk of the Supreme Court of Oklahoma.'
"Indorsement: `No. 17409. V.V. Harris et al., Plaintiffs, v. Hon. T.G. Chambers et al., Defendants. Motion of the Defendants Riverside Oil & Refining Company, a Corporation, O.O. Owens, and G.R. Lefever for Leave to File a Petition for Rehearing of said Cause, and to Stay the Mandate and Writ of Mandamus in Said Cause.'
"The said Attorney General further gives the court to understand and be informed that the respondent, O.O. Owens, caused said instrument in writing to be written, and he approved, instigated, and authorized, and is responsible for said instrument in writing,
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and did on January 3, 1927, in Oklahoma City, in the state of Oklahoma, cause said instrument in writing to be filed in and presented to the Supreme Court of the state of Oklahoma. That said instrument in writing, so written, filed, published, and presented to this court, and which concerns said case of V.V. Harris et al. v. T.G. Chambers et al., No. 17409, reflects upon the honor, integrity, and purity of the Supreme Court of the state of Oklahoma, and was designed, intended, and calculated to hold up to public opprobrium and to incite public contempt for said court and certain of the Justices thereof, and for the purpose of leading the people of the state to distrust the fairness and impartiality of the decisions of said court, and for the further purpose of influencing, intimidating, and coercing this court and the Justices thereof in the further determination and consideration of said case, No. 17409, in its further action and proceedings therein. That said written instrument was further intended to impede and corrupt the due administration of justice with reference to said cause No. 17509 and to impute to said court and certain Justices thereof unworthy motives and dishonorable conduct, tending to bring this court and its Justices into disrepute, and to destroy the respect of the public for said court for its decisions, honesty, integrity, and its dignity.
"Wherefore the said Attorney General prays the consideration of this honorable court in the premises, and moves the court for rule upon the respondent, O.O. Owens, to be and appear in this court on a day to be named, and show cause, if any he has, why he should not be held in contempt of this court, and punished accordingly for the filing and publishing said written instrument and its presentation to this court. [Signed] George F. Short, Attorney General, by [Signed] Wm. L. Murphy, Assistant Attorney General.
"State of Oklahoma, County of Oklahoma.
"Wm. L. Murphy, being first duly sworn, deposes and says that he is an Assistant Attorney General of the state of Oklahoma, that the allegations made by
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him in the first and second counts of the above information, and each of the same, are true as he verily believes.
"[Signed] Wm. L. Murphy.
"Subscribed and sworn to before me this the 7th day of January, 1927.
"[Seal.] Reuel Haskell, Jr., Notary Public.
"My commission expires 12-29-29."
"Indorsed: No. 18081. Filed in the Supreme Court of Oklahoma, January 10, 1927.
"Jessie E. Moore, Clerk.
"In the Supreme Court of the State of Oklahoma.
"The State of Oklahoma ex rel. the Attorney General of the
State of Oklahoma, Relator, v. O.O. Owens, Respondent. No.
18081.
"Rule to Show Cause.
"The State of Oklahoma to O.O. Owens, Respondent:
"Whereas, at the request of the Supreme Court of Oklahoma, the Attorney General of the state of Oklahoma has filed in this court an information charging that you, the said O.O. Owens, did on October 24, and October 31, and November 1, and November 2, in the year 1926, cause to be published in the Tulsa Daily World a certain printed article and advertisement of and concerning the Supreme Court of Oklahoma and the Justices thereof, and on January 3, 1927, that you, the said O.O. Owens, caused to be filed in cause No. 17409 in the Supreme Court of Oklahoma, a certain instrument in writing, designated `Motion of the defendant Riverside Oil & Refining Company, a corporation, O.O. Owens, and G.R. Lefever for leave to file a petition for rehearing in said cause, and to stay the mandate and writ of mandamus in said cause,' and charging further in said information that said printed article and advertisement published in the Tulsa Daily World, and said instrument in writing filed in case No. 17409, in the Supreme Court of Oklahoma, reflects
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upon the honor, integrity, and purity of this honorable court, and were designed, intended, and calculated to hold up to public opprobrium the said court, and to incite public contempt for this court and certain of the Justices thereof, and for the purpose of leading the people of this state to distrust the fairness and partiality of the decisions of this court, and for the purpose of influencing, intimidating, and coercing this court and the Justices thereof, and for the purpose of impeding and corrupting the due administration of justice with reference to certain causes pending in the Supreme Court of Oklahoma; that said articles and instruments in writing impute to the Supreme Court of Oklahoma and certain Justices thereof unworthy motives and dishonorable conduct, tending to bring said court and its Justices into disrepute, and to destroy the respect of the public for this court for its decisions, honesty, integrity, and its dignity. A copy of which said information is hereto attached:
"Now, therefore, you, the said O.O. Owens, are hereby commanded to be and appear before the honorable Supreme Court of the state of Oklahoma on Thursday, January 13, 1927, at 10 o'clock in the forenoon, in the Supreme Court room, in the city of Oklahoma, Oklahoma county, state of Oklahoma, then and there to show cause, if any you have, why you should not be held in contempt of this court, and punished accordingly, for the publication and circulation of the article set out in count 1 of said information, and for the filing and publishing of the written instrument set out in count 2 of said information. You are further notified that the Supreme Court is aware that you will be, at the time fixed for said hearing, a member of the Legislature of the state of Oklahoma, and that under section 22, art. 5, of the Constitution of Oklahoma, you will be privileged from arrest during the session of the Legislature, and if you desire to claim such immunity you may do so, in which event you are commanded to be and appear before the honorable Supreme Court of the state of Oklahoma at 10 o'clock in the forenoon on the 5th day after the adjournment of said session of the Legislature, then and there to
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show cause, if any you have, why you should not be punished for the aforesaid contempt of this court.
"It is further ordered that the marshal of this court forthwith deliver a copy of this notice to the respondent.
"Done by order of the Supreme Court of the state of Oklahoma, on this the 7th day of January, 1927.
"[Signed] Geo. M. Nicholson, Chief Justice.
"Attest: Wm. M. Franklin, Clerk of the Supreme Court, by Reuel Haskell, Jr., Asst.
[Seal.]
"State of Oklahoma, County of Oklahoma — ss:
"I received the above on January 7, 1927, and served the same on O.O. Owens, at the State Capitol building, Oklahoma City, Okla., on January 7, 1927, at 5 o'clock p.m., by delivering to him personally a copy of the same with the information in this case attached thereto.
"This return made this 10th day of January, 1927. [Signed] Chas. B. Hickok, Marshal of the Supreme Court.
"Filed in Supreme Court of Oklahoma, March 29, 1927.
"Jessie E. Moore, Clerk.
"Exhibit A.
"In the District Court of the State of Oklahoma.
"The State of Oklahoma ex rel. the Attorney General of the State of Oklahoma, Relator, v. O.O. Owens, Respondent. No. 18081.
"Application Requesting Certain Members of the Supreme Court to Certify Their Disqualifications.
"Now comes O.O. Owens, respondent herein, and respectfully represents to the court that Justice Fred
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P. Branson, Justice J.W. Clark, Justice Fletcher Riley, Justice Albert Hunt, Justice J.I. Phelps, Justice Chas. W. Mason, Justice E.F. Lester, and Justice John B. Harrison are disqualified to sit and try this cause under the laws of the state of Oklahoma, for the reasons and upon the grounds as follows, to wit:
"First. That the said Justices aforesaid, and each of them, are biased and prejudiced against this respondent.
"Second. Your respondent further represents and states to the court that the said Justices aforesaid, and each of them, are interested in this cause.
"Third. Your respondent further represents and states to the court that Justice J.W. Clark and Justice Fletcher Riley are especially disqualified to sit and try this cause by reason of that certain order and judgment entered in cause No. 18080, styled State of Oklahoma, upon the relation of the Attorney General of the State of Oklahoma, v. H.B. Martin, wherein by said order and judgment in said cause No. 18080, the said Justice J.W. Clark and Fletcher Riley were adjudged to be disqualified to sit and try said cause No. 18080 which said cause No. 18080 is a companion case to this cause, and grows out of the same controversy, the order and judgment in said cause No. 18080 being referred to and made a part of this application as though the same were copied at length herein.
"Fourth. Your respondent further represents and states to the court that in the trial of this cause it will be necessary to use, and it is the intention of the respondent to use, the said Justices aforesaid as witnesses in the trial of this cause.
"Fifth. Your respondent further represents and states to the court that the rule to show cause herein shows on its face that the said Justices aforesaid being all the members of the Supreme Court of the state of Oklahoma, with the exception of Robert A. Hefner, that the said Supreme Court of the state of Oklahoma is the informer and prosecutor against this respondent, and under the Constitution and laws of the state
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of Oklahoma, said Justices aforesaid are disqualified to sit in judgment in the trial of this cause.
"Sixth. Your respondent further represents and states to the court that in cause No. 18080 all the Justices aforesaid certified their disqualifications to sit in judgment in the trial of said cause, and in this connection your respondent respectfully represents that cause No. 18080 grows out of the same subject-matter as this cause, and by reason of which the said Justices aforesaid are disqualified to sit in judgment in the trial of this cause; that the order and judgment certifying their said disqualifications in cause No. 18080 is on file in cause No. 18080, and the same is made a part of this application; as though fully copied at length herein.
"Seventh. Your respondent further represents and states to the court that by reason of the order and judgments aforesaid in cause No. 18080, wherein the aforesaid Justices disqualified themselves and in the order and judgment wherein Justices Clark and Riley were ordered by the judgment of the court to certify their disqualifications, the said Justices aforesaid are disqualified to sit in judgment in the trial of this cause, and said orders and judgments aforesaid are relied upon as an adjudication of the fact of disqualification of said Justices as aforesaid.
"Eighth. Your respondent further represents and states to the court that there is now pending in the district court of Oklahoma county a cause styled Fletcher Riley v. O.O. Owens, which is a damage suit for $200,000, and which said damage suit grows out of the matters and things set out in the information for contempt in this cause, and by reason of which the said Fletcher Riley is especially disqualified to try this cause.
"Wherefore your respondent prays that the aforesaid Justices certify upon the journal of this court their disqualifications to sit and try this cause and that your respondent have such other and further relief that he may be entitled to. [Signed] H.B. Martin, A.F.
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Moss, and H.A. Ledbetter, Attorneys for Respondent.
"I, O.O. Owens, on oath, state that I am the respondent in the above-entitled cause; that I have read the foregoing motion and application; and that the statements, allegations, and averments therein made and contained are true.
"[Signed] O.O. Owens.
"Subscribed and sworn to before me this 29th day of March, 1927.
"[Signed] Glessner Gerry,
"[Seal.] Notary Public.
"My commission expires December 3, 1929."
Indorsements:
"No. 18081.
"In the District Court of the State of Oklahoma.
"The State of Oklahoma ex rel. the Attorney General of the State of Oklahoma, Relator, v. O.O. Owens, Respondent.
"Application Requesting Certain Members of the Supreme Court to Certify Their Disqualifications.
"Filed in Supreme Court of Oklahoma, March 29, 1927. Jessie E. Moore, Clerk.
"In the Supreme Court of the State of Oklahoma.
"State of Oklahoma ex rel. Attorney General of the State of Oklahoma, Relator, v. O.O. Owens, Respondent. No. 18081.
"Objection to the Jurisdiction of the Court.
"Comes now the respondent and objects to the jurisdiction of this honorable court to proceed in this cause upon the following grounds and for the following reasons:
"I. The pretended information filed in this cause is not verified as required by law.
"II. The pretended information filed and exhibited in this cause against this respondent is void upon its
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face for the reason that it charges in neither of its counts any contempt of court or any public offense under the Constitution and laws of the state of Oklahoma.
"III. That this honorable court has no jurisdiction either of the subject-matter of said information or the person of this respondent. [Signed] H.A. Ledbetter, A.F. Moss, H.B. Martin, Attorneys for Respondent."
Indorsement:
"In the Supreme Court of the State of Oklahoma.
"State of Oklahoma ex rel. Attorney General of the State of Oklahoma, Relator, v. O.O. Owens, Respondent. No. 18081.
"Objection to the Jurisdiction of the Court.
"Filed in Supreme Court of Oklahoma, March 29, 1927.
"Jessie E. Moore, Clerk.
"In the Supreme Court of the State of Oklahoma.
"State of Oklahoma ex rel. Attorney General of the State of Oklahoma, Relator, v. O.O. Owens, Respondent. No. 18081.
"Demurrer.
"Comes now the respondent, O.O. Owens, and demurs to the information filed and exhibited against him in said cause upon the following grounds and for the following reasons:
"I. Because this honorable court has no jurisdiction of the subject-matter of said cause.
"II. Because the information filed and exhibited in said cause does not state facts sufficient to constitute a contempt of court or any public offense.
"III. Because the pretended information filed in said cause is duplicitous upon its face. [Signed] H.A.
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Ledbetter, A.F. Moss, H.B. Martin, Attorneys for Respondent.
"Filed in Supreme Court of Oklahoma, March 29, 1927.
Jessie E. Moore, Clerk.
"In the Supreme Court of the State of Oklahoma.
"State of Oklahoma ex rel. Attorney General of the State of Oklahoma, Relator, v. O.O. Owens, Respondent. No. 18081.
"Journal Entry.
"Now, on this 29th day of March, A.D. 1927, the above-entitled cause comes on upon the appearance of the respondent to the citation heretofore issued in said cause. The respondent appears in person and by his counsel, H.A. Ledbetter, A.F. Moss, and H.B. Martin, and C.B. Cochran and D.H. Linebaugh appear as counsel for the court.
"And thereupon the respondent filed, by leave of court, his motion to disqualify certain of the Justices of the court in said cause.
"And thereupon, by leave of court, the respondent files his objection to the jurisdiction of the court, in writing, without waiving any of his rights under the request for a disqualification of the Justices.
"And thereupon, neither of said motions being ruled upon by the court, the Chief Justice inquired whether the respondent desired to file any further pleadings at this time; whereupon the respondent, without waiving either of said other motions or any of his rights in connection therewith, with the permission of the court, filed a demurrer.
"And thereupon the Chief Justice inquired whether respondent desired to file any further pleading at this time; whereupon counsel for the respondent stated to the court that respondent preferred to wait until the pending motions had been disposed of before pleading to the merits.
"Thereupon C.B. Cochran requested the court to
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grant a reasonable time within which to file a brief on the motion to disqualify certain members of the court, and counsel for the respondent requested a reasonable time thereafter within which to file an answer brief.
"The court thereupon ordered that counsel for the court be granted 10 days from this date within which to file a brief, and counsel for the respondent be given 10 days from date of service of said brief on them within which to file an answer brief, and that the counsel for the court be given 5 days thereafter within which to file a reply brief if they desired to do so.
"It is further ordered that typewritten briefs, 9 in number, may be filed in lieu of printed briefs.
"It is further ordered that the further hearing of this cause be and the same is continued until April 23, 1927, at 1 o'clock p.m., and the respondent is ordered to be and appear in court at said time without further notice.
"Fred P. Branson, Chief Justice.
"O.K. H.B. Martin.
"C.B. Cochran.
"Filed in Supreme Court of Oklahoma, April 28, 1927.
"Jessie E. Moore, Clerk.
"To the Chief Justice of the Supreme Court of the State of Oklahoma:
"State of Oklahoma, on the relation of the Attorney General of the State of Oklahoma, Relator, v. O.O. Owens, Respondent. No. 18081.
"Without regard to the motion of the respondent filed herein to disqualify certain members of the court, which said motion has by the court been overruled, I desire on my own motion to certify my disqualification in this case, and respectfully request that you enter the same, and make proper announcement thereof. [Signed] Albert C. Hunt, Associate Justice.
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"Be it remembered that the above styled and numbered cause came on for hearing on the 23d day of April, 1927, pursuant to assignment heretofore duly made, before the following members of the Supreme Court: Fred P. Branson, Chief Justice; John B. Harrison, Justice; Charles W. Mason, Justice; James I. Phelps, Justice; E.F. Lester, Justice; J.W. Clark, Justice; R.A. Hefner, Justice; Fletcher Riley, Justice.
"Appearances:
"For the relator,
"C.B. Cochran and D.H. Linebaugh.
"For the respondent,
"H.B. Martin and A.F. Moss.
"Chief Justice Branson: State of Oklahoma on the relation of the Attorney General, v. O.O. Owens, No. 18081. Is the respondent present?
"Mr. Martin: Yes, sir.
"Chief Justice: On the 29th day of March there was filed in this court an application requesting certain members of the Supreme Court of the state of Oklahoma to disqualify in this cause. This motion is overruled and denied with the following exceptions: The Chief Justice of this court has in his possession a communication just delivered, which reads as follows:
"`To the Chief Justice of the Supreme Court of the state of Oklahoma. State of Oklahoma, on relation of the Attorney General of the State of Oklahoma, Relator, v. O.O. Owens, Respondent, No. 18081. Without regard to the motion of respondent filed herein to disqualify certain members of the court, which said motion has by the court been overruled, I desire on my own motion to certify my disqualification in this cause, and respectfully request that you enter same and make proper announcement thereof. [Signed] Albert C. Hunt, Associate Justice.'
"On the 29th day of March, 1927, in this cause there was filed objection to the jurisdiction of the court.
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Let the record show this objection is by the court overruled.
"On the 29th day of March, 1927, there was filed in this cause a demurrer. Let the record show that the demurrer and each and every ground thereof is by the court overruled and denied.
"Does the respondent desire to say anything further? But, before taking this up the court appoints Mr. C.F. Worley as special bailiff of this court in this cause. Mr. Worley, you will please take your place as special bailiff.
"I desire to state further that an opinion will be filed by this court as early as it can possibly be done, setting forth the reasons and the authorities why the members of this court challenged on motion to disqualify refused to disqualify, and same will be made a matter of public record.
"Does the respondent desire to be heard further?
"Mr. Martin: If the court please, the respondent desires to call the court's attention to the absence of one of his counsel, Mr. H.A. Ledbetter, because of illness, and I have received this morning two affidavits describing the condition of Mr. Ledbetter, and the respondent does not desire to proceed until a reasonable time be given to enable the attendance of his counsel. May I file these affidavits, if the court please?
"Chief Justice: Let the record show that the pleading filed in this cause show that Mr. A.F. Moss and H.B. Martin are also counsel for Mr. Owens. The motion for further continuance of this matter on this ground is by the court overruled and denied.
"Mr. Martin: Will I have leave to file the affidavits?
"Chief Justice: You may have leave to file them, sir.
"Mr. Martin: The respondent enters a plea of not guilty and demands a jury trial.
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"Chief Justice: Let the record show the demand for jury trial is by the court overruled and denied, the court holding or following the holding of the Special Supreme Court in the case of state against H.B. Martin, the count No. 2 in the information in this cause, on which the defendant will now be requested to show cause why he should not be adjudged guilty of contempt, and is direct contempt of this court, the jury trial is denied.
"Anything further for the respondent?
"Mr. Martin: The respondent will not introduce evidence, because of the fact that several of the judges now sitting are material witnesses in this case.
"Chief Justice: Let the record show that in open court counsel for respondent announces that he does not desire to plead further in this cause, or file any response or introduce any evidence.
"Has the respondent anything further to say why he should not by the order, judgment, and decree of this court be adjudged in contempt of this court on the second charge of the information and complaint filed by the Attorney General in this court on the 7th day of January, 1927? If so, respondent is now given the opportunity to make further defense and to make further statements or to show further cause.
"Mr. Martin: Will your honor indulge us a moment for consultation?
"Chief Justice: At this juncture the court desires to state that this cause is only called for trial on count No. 2 in the information or complaint, and that count No. 1 is not now called for trial, but will be postponed on the motion of the court itself until such time as the court sees fit to call the same for trial.
"Mr. Martin: All has been said for the respondent that the respondent desires to say.
"Chief Justice: I didn't quite understand you.
"Mr. Martin: I said all has been said for the respondent that he desires to say.
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"Chief Justice: Let the record so show, Mr. Reporter. The court will take a recess for 30 minutes, at which time the respondent will be in open court. The court will now take a recess.
"(A short recess was thereupon taken.)
"Chief Justice: Let the record show the respondent and his counsel are present in court and pursuant to recess taken court reconvenes and takes a further recess until 1 o'clock on this the 23d day of April, 1927, when the respondent and his counsel are directed to be present in court at 1 o'clock, which does not mean 1:30.
"(Thereupon a recess was taken until 1 o'clock p.m., and at 1 o'clock p.m., April 23, 1927, court reconvened, parties present and presiding as heretofore, and the following further proceedings were had:)
"Chief Justice: Mr. Owens present?
"Mr. Martin: Yes.
"Chief Justice: And counsel are present?
"Gentlemen, preliminary to this matter, it is thought not amiss that I state that this is not a felicitous occasion for any member of this court. This is a painful occasion to each and all of us, and our reluctance in this matter was due to our desire as a court to do the work of the public and not engage or participate in the personal attacks of any individual, whether actuated by spleen or otherwise upon the individual members of this court, or the court as an instrumentality of government. The public at large and many lawyers fail to realize the basic reason the courts are given power to punish for contempt. The individual members who compose a court compose it today, they may be gone to-morrow, but the court as an instrumentality of government goes on forever. The offense is not against the individuals. The offense is one calculated to strike down and destroy the strong arm of the judiciary which is thrown around the property rights and the citizenry of a great commonwealth, and the law has been written in opinions too numerous
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to be tabulated that it is not only the power, but it is the mandatory duty, of the Justices who happen to occupy the position on the bench to vindicate the arm of government and not allow it to be dragged in slime and dust and shame.
"This court as now composed, and as composed since July, 1925, has been reluctant on numerous occasions to fight back and refuse to take any action, even in the face of what the members knew to be their duty, hoping and trusting that sooner or later the respondent who is now before the bar of this court would recognize that his own citizenship in Oklahoma had given him prosperity, and that the courts of this state had reached out their protective power and shielded him on many occasions in his efforts to accumulate wealth, and that, even if he did consider this court had fallen into error, it was the final judgment of this court, and as a citizen of this state it was his duty to bow in obedience to it.
"This court found that he refused to do that; that he hammered in the press by paid political advertisements in which he brazenly and with an effrontery never called to the attention, I dare say, of the citizenship of a commonwealth in this Union before; that he paid for the political advertisement in which he charged this court, as an instrumentality of government, with practically every conceivable offense known to criminal jurisprudence.
"Even then the court brushed it aside. The membership was so reluctant to take action. Finally in a case that had already been determined, he came into this court, as plea in count No. 2 called for trial on this date, and he there charged over his signature and over his oath that this court and members thereof had been guilty of everything practically that a member of the judiciary could be guilty of. The court, then conversant with a long line of authorities hundreds of years old, recognizing, as some courts have said under circumstances like this, his unwillingness to perform his duty, that the judicial armament should be stricken from him and he should abandon his position
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to some one who has the courage to vindicate the court over which he is seeking to preside.
"This is not a personal matter. There is not a member of this court who has ever entertained or now entertains any ill feeling towards the respondent in this action. Many have been the occasions when the friendship of members of this court personally has been demonstrated to his counsel and to him. There is nothing personal in this matter.
"As stated this morning, this court in a formal opinion, which cannot now be prepared, will set forth a long line of adjudicated cases holding that it was our duty to act in the premises, and the membership of this court has refused to shirk from it.
"When this case was called this morning we requested Mr. Owens to state what he had to say in defense of his conduct. Not one word has been presented in defense of his conduct. He stands, as it were, charged and a plea of guilty entered, because he offers nothing except a general denial, without any proof to show any mitigation of his conduct towards this court and the members thereof.
"I, now, Mr. Owens, again ask you if you have anything further to say why this court should not sustain the allegations in count No. 2 on your contempt charge and enter judgment thereon.
"Mr. Owens: My counsel advises me to say `No.' That is not my judgment.
"Chief Justice: It is the order, judgment, sentence, and decree of this court that for the charge of contempt set forth and pleaded in count No. 2 in the case against you that you be now delivered unto the bailiff and marshal of this court, Mr. Worley, and that he take and deliver you under a commitment, which I now sign in open court, to the sheriff of Oklahoma county, where you shall be confined for a period of 12 months from this date, and it is further the order, judgment, and sentence of this court that you pay into the clerk of this court within 10 days from this date
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a fine of $5,000, or in failure to do so let execution issue and levy upon your property.
"The clerk will file the commitment I have signed and certify and deliver it to Mr. Worley. Mr. Worley, take charge of the respondent.
"Mr. Martin: If the court please, the respondent moves the court to stay the execution of this judgment under the rules of the court for 15 days to enable him to present a brief and petition for rehearing.
"Chief Justice: Let the record show there is no rule of this court in a contempt proceeding or any original matter of this sort and of this character where a judgment shall be stayed for 15 days to file a petition for rehearing. The judgment is immediately in effect. The clerk will please certify this judgment and commitment and deliver certified copy to Mr. Worley with instructions, Mr. Worley, that you comply forthwith with the commitment. Anything else, gentlemen?
"Mr. Martin: Is there a journal entry of the order your honor has just made?
"Chief Justice: The journal entry is contained in the judgment and commitment. I will give you a copy, Mr. Martin.
"Mr. Martin: Thank you.
"Chief Justice: The court will take a recess until Tuesday morning, subject to call."
The judgment and sentence will be found in full in the opinion in this case.
"State of Oklahoma, Oklahoma County — ss:
"Certificate of Reporter.
"I, Guy A. Huff, one of the official reporters for the district court of Oklahoma county, Okla., do hereby certify that I reported in shorthand the proceedings had in cause No. 18081, before the Supreme Court of the state of Oklahoma, April 23, 1927, in which State of Oklahoma ex rel. Attorney General is plaintiff, and
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O.O. Owens is defendant, and that the above and foregoing is a full, true, and correct transcript of my shorthand notes so taken, and is in all respects full, true, correct, and complete.
"Guy A. Huff, Reporter.
"Subscribed and sworn to before me this 23d day of April, 1927. Harry L. Redak, Notary Public in and for Oklahoma County, Okla.
[Seal.]
"My commission expires September 30, 1929."
On the same day that the information herein was filed against O.O. Owens, the Attorney General, also by direction of the Supreme Court, filed an information, wherein H.B. Martin was charged with contempt as set forth in the second count of the information against the petitioner.
The opinion of Branson, C.J., in support of the writs of prohibition directed to James S. Davenport, as one of the judges of this court, and against this court was filed with the clerk May 10, 1927.
See State ex rel. Attorney General v. Davenport et al. (No. 18081), 125 Okla. 1, 256 P. 341.
The opinion by Riley, J., of the Supreme Court, in support of the conviction of criminal contempt and commitment issued thereon was filed with the clerk May 24.
The opinion by Thompson, J., of the Supreme Court (Special Justices) in State ex rel. Attorney General v. Martin (No. 18080), 125 Okla. 52, 256 P. 667, was filed May 21 with the clerk. On the same day the opinion of the Supreme Court (Special Justices) by Utterback, C.J. "mandamus," 125 Okla. 24, 256 P. 681, holding that Justices Clark and Riley were disqualified by reason of their interest in the case was filed with the clerk.
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The opinions of Branson, C.J., and Riley, J., above referred to will be considered as the briefs.
A.F. Moss, H.B. Martin, and Christy Russell, for petitioner.
Everest, Vaught & Brewer, for respondent.
DOYLE, P.J., after stating the case, delivered the opinion of the court.
This case originates in this court by an application for a writ of habeas corpus on the part of O.O. Owens. The petition was signed by the petitioner and verified by his oath, and alleges that he is unlawfully restrained of his liberty by Ben B. Dancy, sheriff of Oklahoma county, on a purported commitment issued upon the order and judgment of the Supreme Court of the state of Oklahoma (125 Okla. 66, 256 P. 704), in the absence of any jurisdiction in that court to make and enter said order and judgment, and alleging that the petitioner is detained and deprived of his liberty without due process of law as guaranteed to him under the Constitution and laws of the state of Oklahoma, and in violation of the Constitution and laws of the United States of America, and particularly the Fourteenth Article of Amendment to the Constitution of the United States.
On the filing of this petition it was presented to Judge Davenport, who declined to issue the writ of habeas corpus, but issued a rule on the sheriff of Oklahoma county to show cause why the writ of habeas corpus should not be granted as prayed for, which rule was made returnable April 27, 1927.
On the same day the Supreme Court issued an alternative writ of prohibition against Judge Davenport and this court, and ordering Judge Davenport to appear before the Supreme Court on April 25th,
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then and there to show cause why the alternative writ of prohibition should not be made absolute. Judge Davenport appeared before the Supreme Court and challenged the jurisdiction of said court to issue the alternative writ. Whereupon the Supreme Court issued what is styled an "Absolute Writ of Prohibition," and reciting:
"It is the further order, judgment, and decree of the Supreme Court of Oklahoma that the said James S. Davenport, as a judge of the Criminal Court of Appeals of the state of Oklahoma, and the said Criminal Court of Appeals of the state of Oklahoma, be, and each of them are hereby, absolutely and permanently prohibited, restrained, and enjoined from promulgating, issuing, filing, or entering any order or judgment of any kind or character which in any manner seeks to review, vacate, modify, affirm, or reverse the final judgment and sentence of this court heretofore entered herein, and are further absolutely and permanently restrained, prohibited, and enjoined from in any manner interfering, or attempting to interfere, with the enforcement of said judgment and sentence of this court, or from taking any action which in any manner seeks to disturb the final judgment and sentence of this court."
And further reciting that Ben B. Dancy, sheriff of Oklahoma county, Okla.,
"is further absolutely and permanently prohibited, restrained, and enjoined from obeying, enforcing, or carrying out any order or judgment of any kind or character issued by the Criminal Court of Appeals of * * * Oklahoma which seeks to or directs the said sheriff to release the said O.O. Owens from his custody, or which in any manner seeks to interfere with the enforcement of the judgment and sentence of this court."
On April 27th, the respondent, sheriff, filed a return to said rule to show cause with the clerk of this court, stating that the petitioner, O.O. Owens, is now
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held in his custody in the county jail in Oklahoma City, pursuant to a judgment and sentence of the Supreme Court, a copy of which is attached and made a part thereof. And that he had been enjoined from releasing the said petitioner under subsequent orders of the Supreme Court of the state of Oklahoma, a copy of which is attached and made a part thereof.
On May 2d, counsel for petitioner, by leave of court first obtained, filed in this court an amended and supplemental application for a writ of habeas corpus, with duly certified copies of information for contempt, and judgment and sentence; also, transcript duly certified of proceedings in State ex rel. Attorney General v. O.O. Owens. Thereupon this court issued a writ of habeas corpus, directed to the respondent and duly attested in the name of the presiding judge, which writ commanded the respondent to have the body of the said O.O. Owens before this court at 10 o'clock on the 4th day of May, 1927. At which time the respondent failed to return the writ or produce the body of said petitioner. Later in the day the respondent filed the writ and return thereto with the clerk of this court, wherein he states "that he is precluded from obeying the writ of habeas corpus issued by the Criminal Court of Appeals by reason of the judgment, writ of prohibition, and order of the Supreme Court, and for that reason, solely, he cannot produce the said O.O. Owens as ordered and directed therein."
On May 4th, afternoon session of this court, counsel for the petitioner moved for judgment awarding the writ and discharging the petitioner on the ground and for the reason that the allegations of the amended petition have not been traversed or denied by the return filed by the respondent.
At this stage of the proceedings Mr. E.S. Vaught
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appeared as counsel for the respondent and stated that he was not authorized to traverse or deny the facts as alleged in the petition upon which the writ of habeas corpus issued. Thereupon the court announced that its action upon the refusal of the respondent to obey the writ would be held in abeyance.
It appearing that Attorney General George F. Short filed the information in the Supreme Court upon which the petitioner was by the judgment of said court committed into the custody of the respondent, the court asked his successor, the present Attorney General, whether or not he desired to appear and traverse by answer the amended petition herein. The Attorney General very properly, we think, declined to offer anything in defense of the proceedings.
Thereupon the court announced that, in accordance with the practice approved by the respective appellate courts of this state, the facts duly alleged in the amended petition and not denied must be assumed to be and are deemed true.
In Ex parte Wood, 58 Okla. 278, 159 P. 483, the Supreme Court held that where an officer, charged with an unlawful restraint, neglects to make a return to a writ of habeas corpus, and the petition duly verified on its face shows that the petitioner is by said officer illegally restrained of his liberty, no legal cause for the restraint appearing, such petitioner is entitled to his discharge.
In the opinion it is said:
"While the court has ample power to enforce obedience to its order by attachment, and require that the sheriff shall make a return to the writ, we are not required to do so, but may proceed in a summary way to determine the cause upon the verified and undenied petition."
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In Ex parte Pruitt, 31 Okla. Cr. 294, 238 P. 501, this court held:
"In a habeas corpus proceeding, where an officer charged with an unlawful restraint neglects to make a return to a rule to show cause why the writ should not issue, and the petition, duly verified on its face, shows that the petitioner is by said officer illegally restrained of his liberty, no legal cause for the restraint appearing, such petitioner is entitled to his discharge."
In Whitten v. Tomlinson, 160 U.S. 231, 16 S. Ct. 297, 40 L. Ed. 406, and in Kentucky v. Powers, 201 U.S. 34, 26 S. Ct. 387, 50 L. Ed. 648, 5 Ann. Cas. 692, it is held that in a petition duly verified for writ of habeas corpus "facts duly alleged and not denied are admitted true." To the same effect is Matter of Depue, 185 N.Y. 68, 77 N.E. 800.
In Ex parte O'Connor (Cal. Sup.) 252 P. 730, it is held:
"In habeas corpus proceeding, where matters included in petition are not denied in return, they are considered as admitted and must be taken as true."
Counsel for petitioner proceeded to argue the case, and, having concluded their arguments on May 5th, the cause was submitted upon the amended petition and the arguments of counsel.
On May 10th, the opinion of the Supreme Court was filed with the clerk of this court. The opinion by Branson, Chief Justice, Mason, V.C.J., Phelps, Lester, Clark, and Riley, Associate Justices concurring, arrogates to the Supreme Court of this state the power to suspend the privilege of the writ of habeas corpus in all cases wherein by the judgment of said court a person is held in execution of its judgment, rendered upon a conviction for criminal contempt, and wherein said court attempts to suspend the writ itself as issued in this case. It is also held in said opinion
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that this court is without jurisdiction to issue writs of habeas corpus.
If the Supreme Court wished to respect the process of the state issued in this case, it could have caused the Attorney General to file a motion to quash the rule issued and to dismiss the proceedings had on the ground that this court had no jurisdiction in the premises, or it could have caused the Attorney General on the return of the writ to have filed a plea to the jurisdiction of this court to entertain the proceeding. State ex rel. Mays v. Breckenridge, 43 Okla. 711, 142 P. 407.
It is a general principle of law that there is no wrong without a remedy, and because there is no wrong without a remedy the courts have said a plea to the jurisdiction of a superior court is bad unless it discloses another jurisdiction that can try the right. This is no mere technical rule of pleading. It is founded upon the supposition of the law that every wrong can be remedied.
Chitty says:
"In all pleas to the jurisdiction of the superior courts, it must be shown that there is another court in which justice may be effectually administered, for if there be no other mode of trial, etc., that alone would give the superior court jurisdiction." Chitty, 144, and cases cited.
The very essence of civil liberty consists in the right of every individual to claim the protection of the law, and every person is entitled to certain remedy for every injury to person, property, or reputation. One of the first duties of government is to afford that protection.
To deprive a citizen of the privilege of the writ of habeas corpus is to take from him one of the highest and
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most sacred rights secured to him by the Constitution and laws of the land.
In Ex parte Sullivan, 10 Okla. Cr. 465, 138 P. 815, Ann Cas. 1916A, 719, it is said:
"When a person is held under a commitment for contempt of court, such person may, by habeas corpus, secure a determination as to the jurisdiction of the court in ordering the commitment. It matters not what the general powers and jurisdiction of the court may be, if it acts without authority in the particular case, its judgment and order is a mere nullity. And if it be adjudged that the committing court had no jurisdiction, and that the order of commitment was made without authority of law, the person will be entitled to a discharge from custody, in order to preserve the constitutional right of all persons not to be deprived of liberty without due process of law. That this court has no authority to review the judgments of the Supreme Court of this state is beyond question; but it is equally well settled that when a person is held in custody under a void order of commitment, or is imprisoned without due process of law under the sentence of any court of the state, it is not only within the authority of this court, but it is its duty, upon habeas corpus to inquire into the illegality of commitment when the matter is properly brought before it by petition, and, if found to be as averred, that such imprisonment is illegal, because the committing court had no jurisdiction, then to discharge the prisoner."
If the Supreme Court has the power claimed for it by the Chief Justice in the opinion delivered by him, a power has risen up in our state government greater for the time being, than the people themselves.
Thus it appears that there is a question of jurisdiction in this case, so presented as to call for its determination before the case itself can be determined, but the same question is involved in every case. The very act of giving judgment is of itself an assertion,
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or at least the assumption, of the right to give judgment. The most that distinguishes that case from others, so far as the question of jurisdiction is concerned, is that there the Supreme Court by its writs of prohibition, directed to this court, and by the opinion supporting the same, assumes the prerogative of sovereignty and assumes to be omnipotent and above the law in the exercise of its jurisdiction to punish for a criminal contempt.
If the doctrine announced were true, it would be easy to show that the existence of such a power in the Supreme Court would place the liberty of every citizen at the mercy of that tribunal.
Hamilton expressed in the Federalist the universal sentiment of his time, when he said that:
"The arbitrary power of conviction and punishment for pretended offenses had been the great engine of despotism in all ages and all countries and the existence of such power is utterly incompatible with freedom."
Edmund Burke said:
"Law and arbitrary power are in eternal enmity."
In a case of great importance to the people, in which they are deeply interested, and where the questions involved affect interests of so much magnitude, it could not be expected that in the consideration of the questions of constitutional law presented we should shut out of view entirely the nature and origin of our government. For this reason we propose to make a few observations upon it in passing, for it would seem that if our conceptions of our government be erroneous, our reasonings upon it cannot fail to be confused and unsound.
All modern governments are the result of experiment, and all the blessings they secure flow from improvements
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in the science of government, from time to time, suggested by observation and experience. It took a long time to learn the true nature and office of government; to discover and secure the principles commonly indicated by such terms as "Magna Charta," "Bill of Rights," "habeas corpus," "due process of law," the "right to law," and the right of "trial by jury."
One axiom illustrated by all history is that power tends to corrupt those who possess it, and the consequent necessity of prescribing its arrogance. It is true, however, that there are exceptions to the rule that all men use power as badly as they dare.
All history proves that public officers of any government, when they are engaged in a struggle to retain their places, become bitter and revengeful and hate those who oppose them even in the most legitimate way with a rancor which they never exhibit towards actual crime.
All history teaches the danger of intrusting unlimited power to any man or body of men. Constitutions are based upon this experience, and keep this danger constantly in view. And while designed to confer upon governments and public officers such powers as are necessary, they at the same time endeavor to guard against their abuse, and the assumption of powers not conferred, by establishing limitations and boundaries as clearly and well defined as the nature of the case will admit.
And, in framing a government, the problem to be solved is, How can man be so checked and controlled as to exercise power, and not abuse it?
In our system of government, the people are the source of all political power, and as a matter of course all governments "derive their just powers from the
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consent of the governed." This is a fundamental American principle. Another fundamental principle is that the people may not only limit their government, but they may limit themselves. They may limit the former as to the extent of its powers, their distribution, and mode of exercise. They may bind themselves as to the manner in which they may alter or reform the same.
Judge Cooley, in his great work on Constitutional Limitations, says:
"In considering state Constitutions we must not commit the mistake of supposing that, because individual rights are guarded and protected by them, they must also be considered as owing their origin to them. These instruments measure the powers of the rulers, but they do not measure the rights of the governed. * * *
"Designed for their protection in the enjoyment of the rights and powers which they possessed before the Constitution was made, it is but the framework of the political government, and necessarily based upon the pre-existing condition of laws, rights, habits, and modes of thought. There is nothing primitive in it; it is all derived from a known source. It presupposes an organized society, law, order, property, personal freedom, a love of political liberty, and enough of cultivated intelligence to know how to guard it against the encroachments of tyranny." Cooley, Const. Lim. (8th Ed.) p. 95.
This brings us to a consideration of the nature of our state government and the powers conferred upon it by the people.
Under the provisions of the Enabling Act, the people of the territory of Oklahoma and the Indian Territory were authorized to organize a state government, which government was required to be republican in form. The people did so form a government not only republican in form, but in compliance with the limitations and
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restrictions imposed upon them by the aforesaid Enabling Act. Subject to such limitations and restrictions, the people were at liberty to establish such government as they saw fit. They elected delegates of the people to frame a Constitution which should be proposed to the people as the fundamental law of the state.
Stimson says:
"The people of Oklahoma, when they came together the other day to frame their Constitution, were the supreme political assembly known to a free world. They are the very source of all political power; nothing can withstand their will, and when expressed, it is permanent until they themselves in the same way choose to change it." The American Constitution, p. 8.
The Constitution thus framed was submitted to the people, and was by them ratified and confirmed as their primary and fundamental law by which the people solemnly pledged themselves to abide, and to the provisions of which they exacted a strict conformity on the part of all the agents of the government that might be deemed necessary, by personal oath, in the administration of the affairs of the state. Recent events have demonstrated the wisdom of those who framed it.
The Constitution thus adopted is the great charter of our rights and liberties, to which the humblest may at all times appeal, and to which the highest must at all times submit.
Nor can we fail to be culpable in the judgment of our fellow men and of posterity if we fail to adhere to that fundamental instrument according to its true intent and meaning, and under which the people of our state hold and enjoy all the rights most dear to free men, and to the support of which we are all bound by the most solemn obligations which can possibly be imposed upon members of a social or political organization.
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We may remark here that it cannot for a moment be conceded that, in a conflict of authority between the two appellate courts of the state, the Supreme Court has the sole right to judge the conflict, or any better or further right, than this court to judge of the relative power of the two courts.
Let us then look to the Constitution adopted by the people of Oklahoma, and endeavor to ascertain its true intent and meaning in the distribution of judicial power, of the limitations and restraints of power set forth therein for the security of individual liberty, also to the safeguards therein which we today rely upon to keep power within bounds.
Before entering upon a discussion of the various sections of our fundamental law bearing upon the questions presented, it is important that we call attention to the general rules of construction under which Constitutions are universally interpreted. They may be summarized as follows:
First. The object and purpose of the law, whether fundamental or otherwise, must be considered, and the Constitution must not be interpreted on narrow or technical principles, but liberally and on broad, general lines in order that it may accomplish the objects intended by it and carry out the principles of government.
Second. The presumption and legal intendment is that each and every word, clause, and sentence has been inserted for some useful purpose, for which reason the instrument must be construed as a whole.
Third. When two constructions are possible, one of which raises a conflict or takes away the meaning of a section, sentence, phrase, or word, and the other does not, the latter construction must be adopted; in other
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words, the interpretation which harmonizes the Constitution as a whole must prevail.
In Ex parte Crump, 10 Okla. Cr. 133, 135 P. 428, 47 L.R.A. (N.S.) 1036, it is said:
"The duty of the courts in construing constitutional provisions is to give effect to the intent of the framers and of the people in adopting the same, and whenever it is possible to do so, each provision must be construed so that it shall harmonize with all others, to the end that the intent may be ascertained and carried out and effect given to the instrument as a whole. In all cases where the meaning is clear and unambiguous, the question is not what was the intention, but what is the meaning of the language used."
Bearing in mind these well-settled canons of constitutional construction, let us examine the provisions of our Constitution bearing upon the judicial department of our state government.
The relevant provisions of the Bill of Rights, article 2, of the Constitution, are as follows:
"Sec. 6. The courts of justice of the state shall be open to every person, and speedy and certain remedy afforded for every wrong and for every injury to person, property, or reputation; and right and justice shall be administered without sale, denial, delay, or prejudice.
"Sec. 7. No person shall be deprived of life, liberty, or property, without due process of law. * * *
"Sec. 9. Excessive bail shall not be required, nor excessive fines imposed, nor cruel or unusual punishments inflicted.
"Sec. 10. The privilege of the writ of habeas corpus shall never be suspended by the authorities of this state. * * *
"Sec. 17. No person shall be prosecuted criminally in courts of record for felony or misdemeanor otherwise
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than by presentment or indictment or by information. * * *
"Sec. 19. The right of trial by jury shall be and remain inviolate. * * *
"Sec. 20. In all criminal prosecutions the accused shall have the right to a speedy and public trial by an impartial jury of the county in which the crime shall have been committed. * * *
"Sec. 25. The Legislature shall pass laws defining contempts and regulating the proceedings and punishment in matters of contempt: Provided, that any person accused of violating or disobeying, when not in the presence or hearing of the court, or judge sitting as such, any order of injunction, or restraint, made or rendered by any court or judge of the state shall, before penalty or punishment is imposed, be entitled to a trial by jury as to the guilt or innocence of the accused. In no case shall a penalty or punishment be imposed for contempt, until an opportunity to be heard is given. * * *
"Sec. 33. The enumeration in this Constitution of certain rights shall not be construed to deny, impair, or disparage others retained by the people."
The relevant parts of article 7 of the Constitution are as follows:
"Section 1. The judicial power of this state shall be vested in the Senate, sitting as a court of impeachment, a Supreme Court, district courts, county courts, courts of justices of the peace, municipal courts, and such other courts, commissions or boards, inferior to the Supreme Court, as may be established by law.
"Sec. 2. The appellate jurisdiction of the Supreme Court shall be coextensive with the state, and shall extend to all civil cases at law and in equity, and to all criminal cases until a Criminal Court of Appeals with exclusive appellate jurisdiction in criminal cases shall be established by law. The original jurisdiction of the Supreme Court shall extend to a general superintending control over all inferior courts and all commissions and
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boards created by law. The Supreme Court shall have power to issue writs of habeas corpus, mandamus, quo warranto, certiorari, prohibition, and such other remedial writs, as may be provided by law, and to hear and determine the same; and the Supreme Court may exercise such other and further jurisdiction as may be conferred upon it by law. Each of the Justices shall have power to issue writs of habeas corpus to any part of the state upon petition by or on behalf of any person held in actual custody, and make such writs returnable before himself, or before the Supreme Court, or before any district court, or judge thereof, in the state.
"Sec. 3. The Supreme Court shall consist of five Justices until the number shall be changed by law. The state shall be divided into five Supreme Court judicial districts until the Legislature shall change the number of members of the court, at which time the Legislature shall redistrict the state to conform to the number of Justices of the Supreme Court. * * *
"Sec. 8. The appellate and the original jurisdiction of the Supreme Court shall be invoked in the manner now prescribed by the laws of the Territory of Oklahoma until the Legislature shall otherwise provide. * * *
"Sec. 10. The district courts shall have original jurisdiction in all cases, civil and criminal except where exclusive jurisdiction is by this Constitution, or by law, conferred on some other court, and such appellate jurisdiction as may be provided in this Constitution, or by law. The district courts, or any judge thereof, shall have power to issue writs of habeas corpus, mandamus, injunction, quo warranto, certiorari, prohibition, and other writs, remedial or otherwise, necessary or proper to carry into effect their orders, judgments, or decrees."
To effectuate the first provision of section 2 of article 7 of the Constitution of this state, the Second Legislature passed an act entitled, "An act perpetuating the Criminal Court of Appeals, defining its duties, powers, and jurisdiction." Approved March 2, 1909
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(S.L. 1909, c. 14, art. 2). By its provisions this court is given exclusive appellate jurisdiction in all criminal cases, coextensive with the state.
The act provides that this court shall consist of three judges; that "said judges shall have the same qualifications, and receive the same salaries as Justices of the Supreme Court;" that they shall be nominated by districts defined therein, and shall be voted for by the qualified voters of the state at large for a term of six years; that the judges of the Criminal Court of Appeals in office at the time this law takes effect shall continue in office as such judges until the expiration of their term of office under their appointment and until their successors are duly elected and qualified.
Other provisions are as follows:
Appellate Jurisdiction: "The Criminal Court of Appeals shall have exclusive appellate jurisdiction, coextensive with the limits of the state, in all criminal cases appealed from the district, superior and county courts, and such other courts of record as may be established by law." Section 3047, C.S. 1921.
Original Jurisdiction. "Said court and judges thereof shall have the power to issue writs of habeas corpus; and, under such regulations as may be prescribed by law, issue such writs as may be necessary to exercise its jurisdiction; and may prescribe and promulgate such rules for the government of said court as it may deem necessary." Section 3048.
Attestation of Process. "All writs or process issuing from the Criminal Court of Appeals shall be attested in the name of the presiding judge and under the seal of the court." Section 3053.
The act further provides for three law clerks to said
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court, and that the clerk of the Supreme Court shall be ex officio clerk of this court, and that the decisions and opinions of this court shall be reported and published as provided by law for the reporting and publishing of the decisions of the Supreme Court, in separate volumes from the Supreme Court reports, which shall be styled, "Oklahoma Criminal Reports."
And further provides:
"Sec. 21. In all criminal cases wherein any person has been convicted of crime in any court in this state prior to the date of the passage and approval of this act, and in all other criminal cases wherein the state of Oklahoma is required by law to assume the care, control, custody and jurisdiction of persons convicted of crime, in any court in Indian or Oklahoma Territories, prior to statehood, and in any of the cases hereinbefore enumerated, wherein any person has been convicted and sentenced by any of the aforementioned courts to any prison, or penitentiary, situated outside of the territory now comprising the state of Oklahoma, and any such person so convicted and sentenced having heretofore taken an appeal from such conviction and sentence, which appeal is now pending before the Criminal Court of Appeals of this state; and upon the hearing of such appeal should the Criminal Court of Appeals be of opinion that the conviction and sentence in such case should be affirmed, said court shall have the power to modify the sentence of the trial court in said case, to the extent of changing the place of confinement of the appellant, or appellants, from the prison or penitentiary situated without the state of Oklahoma designated in the judgment of said trial court, to such other place of confinement within the state as may be provided by law for persons convicted of crime."
In the case of Byers v. Territory, 24 Okla. 811, 105 P. 998, Mr. Justice Dunn, speaking for the Supreme Court, said:
"This section to our minds makes conclusive the intention of the Legislature to confer upon the Criminal Court of Appeals full power and jurisdiction to take, hold,
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and determine any and all criminal causes pending on appeal in the Supreme Court at the time of its creation. This construction is not in conflict with the terms of the Enabling Act, but is in harmony with it; it being the intent and purpose of the Enabling Act, as we have seen, to place the jurisdiction of these causes pending on appeal in some final appellate tribunal to be established by the Constitution or by law. That such is proper construction of the scope of the Enabling Act, see the case of State of Montana ex rel. Haire v. Rice, State Treasurer, 204 U.S. 291, 27 S. Ct. 281, 51 L. Ed. 490."
To the same effect is the case of Buck v. Dick, Warden, 27 Okla. 854, 113 P. 920.
The Supreme Court, in case entitled In re Opinion of the Judges, 25 Okla. 76, 105 P. 325, held that:
"Upon the creation of the Criminal Court of Appeals, all criminal jurisdiction theretofore vested in this court ceased and vested in that court, together with the authority to express an opinion on matters referred pursuant to Wilson's Rev. & Ann. St. Okla. 1903, §§ 5588, 5589, should said sections by that court be held constitutional."
Mr. Justice Sharp, speaking for the Supreme Court in the case of Cook v. State, 37 Okla. 362, 132 P. 341, said:
"Pursuant to the authority conferred in section 2, art. 7, of the Constitution of this state, the Legislature on May 18, 1908, passed an act creating a Criminal Court of Appeals, chapter 28, Sess. Laws 1907-8, p. 291. By section 4 of said act it was provided that said court should terminate on the 1st day of January, 1911, unless continued by the Legislature. On March 2, 1909 (article 2, c. 14, Sess. Laws 1909), said court was continued, and by express terms was given exclusive appellate jurisdiction in all criminal cases. * * *
"This court is therefore without jurisdiction to entertain the appeal. Byers v. Territory, 24 Okla. 811, 105 P. 998; Ex parte Justus, 26 Okla. 101, 110 P. 907; Brown v. State, 6 Okla. Cr. 442, 119 P. 447; State ex rel. Eubanks v. Cole, 4 Okla. Cr. 25, 109 P. 736."
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It may be here stated that the powers of the government, other than those reserved by the people, have been apportioned through three separate, distinct, and co-ordinate departments; the legislative, executive, and judicial, having their powers alike limited and defined in the Constitution. They are each co-ordinate, because co-ordination is that which is equal, which derives authority from a common source, and within their respective spheres of action, equally independent and exclusive in respect to the duties assigned; to the end that we may have "a government of laws and not of men."
Likewise, under the Constitution and laws of our state the two appellate courts are co-ordinate and exclusive in their respective appellate jurisdictions. Neither can interfere with nor control the other. Neither is subordinate to nor dependent upon the other, but both are responsible to the people from whom they each derived whatever power they respectively possess.
The Chief Justice asserts that the Supreme Court is a constitutional court, and that the Criminal Court of Appeals is a statutory court. He seems to overlook the fact that, under the authority of section 3, art. 7, the present Supreme Court was organized by act of the Legislature, S.L. 1917, c. 145, p. 232. However, its exclusive appellate jurisdiction "to all civil cases at law and in equity" is wholly of the Constitution (section 2, art. 7) and this court's exclusive appellate jurisdiction in all criminal cases is derived from said section 2, and by act of March 2, 1909, above quoted. In other respects the appellate jurisdiction of the Supreme Court is regulated by statute except appeals from the Corporation Commission.
The Chief Justice then proceeds to state that the Supreme Court has been granted original jurisdiction under the third clause of said section 2 to issue writs of prohibition "to prevent threatened action by a court in
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excess of its authority and jurisdiction, or to prevent the abuse of authority or the use of excessive judicial force." And he further states (125 Okla. 5, 11, 256 P. 349):
"The threatened exercise of pretended jurisdiction by the Criminal Court of Appeals is upon an original action filed in said court. The said petition seeks at the hands of that court that a final judgment and decree in contempt entered by the Supreme Court of the state be vacated, set aside, and held for naught. Such jurisdiction has never been permitted to be given by authority of the Constitution of the state to the Criminal Court of Appeals, and its attempt to exercise the same is in excess of its power, and a writ of prohibition by this court expressly authorized to grant such writs against any of the courts in the state, undertaking to exercise jurisdiction it does not possess, is within its right, its power, and its duty. * * *
"That this court has the power and authority to issue a writ of prohibition to any court in this state created by the Constitution and laws of this state prohibiting it from attempting to exercise the jurisdiction and authority not given it by the Constitution and laws of the state; * * * that this court has inherent jurisdiction, as well as statutory jurisdiction, to hear and punish for contempts; that there is no appeal therefrom, and no writ authorized to be issued to review the judgment of this court on contempt, save and except to a federal court, where a federal question may be involved."
The Constitution only refers three times to writs of prohibition. First, in section 2, art. 7, conferring jurisdiction upon the Supreme Court; second, in section 10, art. 7, conferring jurisdiction upon district courts; third, in section 20, art. 9, providing for appeals to the Supreme Court from the Corporation Commission, as follows:
"Writs of mandamus and prohibition shall lie from the Supreme Court to the commission in all cases where such writs, respectively, would lie to any inferior court or officer."
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Writs of prohibition are not mentioned in the statutes of this state. The authorities all agree that prohibition is a common-law writ. We must then look to the common law, as to the right and power of the Supreme Court to issue a writ of that character as being conferred upon it by the same section of the Constitution which authorizes it to issue other remedial writs.
It is the established rule that:
"Where the Supreme Court is expressly authorized to issue writs of prohibition, the power is limited, as it was at common law, to cases where the act sought to be prohibited is of a judicial nature, in the absence of constitutional or valid statutory provision to the contrary."
The universal rule is that:
"The writ lies only as between courts which sustain to each other the relation of superior and inferior, and cannot issue from a court to prohibit another court which is in no manner subordinate or inferior to it." 23 A. & E. Ency. of Law, pp. 217, 218, and cases cited.
It is a remedy provided by the common law against the encroachment of jurisdiction by inferior courts, and for the purpose of keeping such courts within the bounds prescribed for them by law. The functions whose exercise may be restrained by it are judicial functions. Unlike a writ of injunction, which acts upon the parties to the suit, a writ of prohibition operates upon the court. Disobedience of the writ is punishable as a contempt.
The writ of prohibition issues only on a suggestion or a petition therefor, showing unequivocally every fact requisite to justify its issuance. In this case the record fails to show either a suggestion or petition therefor. So far as the record shows, the proceedings were instituted by the court upon its own motion.
By numerous decisions the Supreme Court has uniformly held that the power to issue writs of prohibition
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was a means to an end; was a power granted to enable the court to exercise its appellate jurisdiction and superintending control over inferior courts.
In Hirsh v. Twyford, 40 Okla. 220, 139 P. 313, the Supreme Court said:
"Prohibition is an extraordinary judicial writ issuing out of a court of superior jurisdiction to keep inferior courts and tribunals within the limits and bounds prescribed for them by law."
It is said in Hall v. Barrett, 121 Okla. 122, 247 P. 973, last expression of the Supreme Court, that:
"According to the weight of authority, prohibition is not a writ of right, but one of sound discretion, to be granted or withheld by the court exercising supervisory control according to the nature and circumstances of each particular case."
It follows beyond a possible doubt that the Supreme Court has no jurisdiction, original or otherwise, to issue writs of prohibition to this court.
The assumption of power by the Chief Justice and the concurring majority here calls to mind the following comments on the federal courts by two immortals.
Jefferson said:
"It is not enough that honest men are appointed judges. All know the influence of interest on the mind of men, and how unconsciously his judgment is warped by that influence. To this bias add that of the esprit de corps, of their peculiar maxim and creed, that `It is the office of a good judge to enlarge his jurisdiction,' and the absence of responsibility, and how can we expect impartial decisions between the general government, of which they are themselves so
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eminent a part, and an individual state, from which they have nothing to hope or fear? We have seen, too, that contrary to all correct example they are in the habit of going out of the question before them, to throw an anchor ahead, and grapple for a further hold for future advances of power." Jefferson, vol. 1, p. 81.
In the first inaugural address of President Lincoln, he said:
"At the same time, the candid citizen must confess that, if the policy of the government upon vital questions affecting the whole people is to be irrevocably fixed by the decisions of the Supreme Court, the instant they are made in ordinary litigation between parties in personal actions, the people will have ceased to be their own rulers, having to that extent practically resigned their government into the hands of that eminent tribunal."
The claim of paramount jurisdiction of the Supreme Court over all the courts of the state by reason of its power to issue writs of prohibition without even excepting "the Senate, sitting as a court of impeachment," is without precedent; to require authorities would end the question at once; they cannot be found.
If the Constitution has vested the Supreme Court with this unlimited power, then it has power to usurp the whole state government, and that, too, without transcending its constitutional authority.
It would seem that this absurd claim of power in the Supreme Court should be supported by some sound reasons, which we fail to find. If the maxim, "Expressio unius est exclusio alterius," so much relied upon by the Chief Justice, is pertinent, we fail to see it. We think the argument made is petitio principii, and there could scarcely have been a more perfect
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"reductio ad absurdum," of the jurisdiction in question.
It follows from what has been said that this attempt to ingraft upon the jurisprudence of this state a new and heretofore unheard of doctrine, subversive of constitutional rights, is abortive in so far as it affects the jurisdiction of this court to issue, hear, and determine writs of habeas corpus.
This brings us to the consideration of another important question suggested by the argument of the Chief Justice. He says:
"Even if we concede, which we do not, that the power to issue the writ of habeas corpus, as granted by the Constitution, is an unlimited power to inquire into all commitments and detentions, our conclusion in this case must remain the same. The Constitution does not grant the Criminal Court of Appeals the power to issue such writ.
"There is no authority of law in the Constitution or in the statutes for the Criminal Court of Appeals to overrule our judgment. Final authority in the matter here involved must be vested in some tribunal, or else there would never be an end to litigation, and annoyance and confusion would ensue. Aside from the power of the federal courts to review for federal questions, the framers of our organic law saw fit to place such final authority in this court, and not in the Criminal Court of Appeals, and we now ask the question, Why should it have been otherwise?"
In answer, we say there are certain powers conferred upon the Supreme Court for the faithful exercise of which the people trust only to your conscience and your honor, for the faithful exercise of which you are answerable only to the people. And while you confine yourselves within the prescribed bounds of your appellate jurisdiction in civil actions, you may decide just what you please: you may overrule
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and override every principle of law, disregard every mandate of the Constitution, but that of due process of law, and no department of the government can interfere with you; the executive cannot review your judgments nor reverse them; the Legislature cannot interfere with vested rights, nor can it any more interfere with vested wrongs. Even an impeachment of the justices would not reverse their judgment, nor correct their wrongs. When other men should succeed you, they could not annul the judgments rendered. This supremacy, this absolute omnipotence in your sphere, is necessary to enable you to perform the judicial office and protect property rights in all controversies between individuals.
The same high power has been conferred upon this court in the exercise of its exclusive appellate jurisdiction in all criminal cases. Its judgment in good faith and in its own sphere of action is absolute and subject to no review, except by writ of habeas corpus.
The people nevertheless bind the powers conferred with limitations, they prescribed its arrogance and say to its pride, "Thus far shalt thou go and no farther." They say:
"The privilege of the writ of habeas corpus shall never be suspended by the authorities of this state." Const. art 2, § 10.
They say:
"The Legislature shall pass laws defining contempts and regulating the proceedings and punishment in the matters of contempt." Const. art 2, § 25.
It is also to be remembered that the appellate judges are responsible for all their acts in the ordinary course of criminal prosecution, as well as in the extraordinary course of impeachment.
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In proceedings by habeas corpus neither this court nor the Supreme Court exercises appellate jurisdiction when it issues this writ, and in issuing the writ and determining the questions arising under it neither possess more power than is possessed by a district court or any judge authorized by law to issue the writ and authorized to remand or discharge the prisoner according to the circumstances of the case.
The state by virtue of its own sovereignty, never delegated nor relinquished, has the right to inquire for itself through its courts of record into the cause of restraint of its citizens. The Constitution confers the power upon the Supreme Court and each of the Justices, and upon "the district courts or any judge thereof," to issue writs of habeas corpus. But the Legislature, though it cannot inhibit or restrict those courts or justices and judges thereof, in the exercise of this power, may confer the power upon other courts of the state and on their judges.
Section 36 of article 5 of the Constitution expressly provides that:
"The authority of the Legislature shall extend to all rightful subjects of legislation, and any specific grant of authority in this Constitution, upon any subject, whatsoever, shall not work a restriction, limitation, or exclusion of such authority upon the same or any other subject or subjects whatsoever."
Under this provision it was entirely competent for the Legislature to regulate the issuing and hearing of this great writ of right. Accordingly, the Legislature has made provision for the issuance, hearing, and determining of the writ "by any court of record in term time, or by a judge of any such court either in term or vacation," and has prescribed the mode of procedure in such cases. And it has specifically
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provided that the Criminal Court of Appeals and the judges thereof shall have the power to issue writs of habeas corpus.
The relevant provisions of the Habeas Corpus Act, enacted by the first Legislature of the territory of Oklahoma, and adopted by virtue of section 2 of the schedule of the Constitution are as follows:
Sec. 421. (C.O.S. 1921). "Every person restrained of his liberty, under any pretense whatever, may prosecute a writ of habeas corpus to enquire into the cause of the restraint, and shall be delivered therefrom when illegal."
Sec. 423. "Writs of habeas corpus may be granted by any court of record in term time, or by a judge of any such court either in term or vacation; and upon application the writ shall be granted without delay."
Sec. 424. "The writ shall be directed to the officer or party having the person under restraint, commanding him to have such person before the court or judge, at such time and place as the court or judge shall direct, to do and receive what shall be ordered concerning him, and have then and there the writ."
Sec. 429. "The return must be signed and verified by the person making it, who shall state:
"First. The authority or cause of restraint of the party in his custody.
"Second. If the authority be in writing, he shall return a copy and produce the original on the hearing.
"Third. If he has had the party in his custody or under his restraint, and has transferred him to another, he shall state to whom, the time, place and cause of the transfer."
Sec. 431. "The court or judge shall thereupon proceed in a summary way to hear and determine the cause, and if no legal cause be shown for the restraint
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or for the continuance thereof, shall discharge the party."
Sec. 432. "No court or judge shall inquire into the legality of any judgment or process, whereby the party is in custody, or discharge him when the term of commitment has not expired in either of the cases following.
"First. Upon process issued by any court or judge of the United States, or where such court or judge has exclusive jurisdiction; or,
"Second. Upon any process issued on any final judgment of a court of competent jurisdiction; or,
"Third. For any contempt of any court, officer or body having authority to commit; but an order of commitment as for a contempt, upon proceedings to enforce the remedy of a party, is not included in any of the foregoing specifications;
"Fourth. Upon a warrant or commitment issued from the district court, or any other court of competent jurisdiction, upon an indictment or information."
Sec. 437. "No sheriff or other officer shall be liable to a civil action for obeying any writ of habeas corpus or order of discharge made thereon."
Sec. 445. "No deposit or security for costs shall be required of an applicant for a writ of habeas corpus."
This court in Ex parte Johnson, 1 Okla. Cr. 414, 98 P. 461, said:
"In determining the construction to be given to these provisions, we are mindful that the great object and purpose of the writ of habeas corpus is the liberation of those who may be imprisoned without sufficient or probable cause. It is the most simple and speedy remedy. Habeas corpus is a great prerogative writ, and is the best protection and most efficient security of personal liberty known to law. Its history is lost in antiquity. It was in use before, but the first
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royal recognition of it is found in Magna Charta. It was guaranteed to our English ancestors by the habeas corpus act of 1679, and came to us as a part of our inheritance from the mother country. It was secured to the citizens by that part of article 1, § 9, Const. U.S., which provides: `Sec. 9. The privilege of the writ of habeas corpus shall not be suspended unless when, in cases of rebellion or invasion, the public safety might require it.' And that part of article 14 of the Amendments to the Constitution of the United States which provides that no person shall be deprived of life or liberty `without due process of law.'
"Justice Tarsney in the case of In re Patswald, 5 Okla. 790, 50 P. 142, commenting on this provision of the federal Constitution, says:
"This writ cannot be abrogated or its efficiency curtailed by legislative action. Cases within the relief afforded by it at common law cannot, until the people voluntarily surrender the right to this, the greatest of all writs, by an amendment of the organic law, be placed beyond its reach and remedial action. Its privileges cannot be even temporarily suspended, except for the safety of the state in cases of rebellion and invasion. Const. art. 1, § 9. That provision of the Constitution is a guaranty that the writ of habeas corpus should remain as it existed at the common law, and should not be curtailed by legislative enactment or by subtle and metaphysical judicial interpretation, and Legislatures can no more prevent its application to cases where it would have been applicable at common law than they can abrogate the right of trial by jury.'
"It is secured to the people of Oklahoma by section 10 of the Bill of Rights, which is as follows: `Sec. 10. The privilege of the writ of habeas corpus shall never be suspended by the authorities of this state.' The great and leading intent of our Constitution in respect to the writ of habeas corpus is manifest. It is that every citizen may be protected by judicial action from unlawful imprisonment. By virtue of this broad and comprehensive provision in the Bill of
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Rights, and the existing statutes, it is a writ of right; and this court, the Supreme Court, the district and county court, and any justice or judge thereof has power to grant writs of habeas corpus for the purpose of inquiring into the cause of restraint of liberty of any person in jail who is in custody in violation of his rights under the Bill of Rights, the Constitution or the laws of the state, and the court, justice, or judge to whom the application is made, shall forthwith allow a writ of habeas corpus, unless it appears from the petition itself that the petitioner is not entitled thereto.
"While all courts of record have concurrent original jurisdiction, a district court or the judge thereof, except as provided by article 25, c. 68, Wilson's Rev. & Ann. St. 1903 (section 5764) [section 423, C.S. 1921], can only grant, issue, and determine the writ upon the petition of a party confined in that respective district; and a county court, or judge thereof, can only grant, issue, and determine the writ upon the petition of a party confined in that particular county.
"Under this section this court exercises original, and not appellate jurisdiction. It is well settled that regulative restrictions of the constitutional privileges of the writ must receive a liberal interpretation at the hands of the courts, with a view of giving the petitioner the full benefits of his constitutional right to the writ.
"It is our opinion that under the power with which this court is invested by the Constitution and laws of this state any person restrained of his liberty within the state has the right to invoke the original jurisdiction of this court on habeas corpus."
The Supreme Court of this state construed this provision of the Bill of Rights in the case of Wisener, Sheriff, v. Burrell, 28 Okla. 546, 118 P. 999, 34 L.R.A. (N.S.) 755, Ann. Cas. 1912D, 356. The court, speaking through Mr. Justice Dunn, says:
"In the discussion of the case of Ex parte Johnson
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[1 Okla. Cr. 414, 98 P. 461], supra, Judge Doyle, of the Criminal Court of Appeals of this state, takes note of the fact that no specific provision is made in the statute for appeals in this class of cases, and concludes that, had it been intended to provide for appeals, some proper provision would have been made. Discussing the same, he uses the following language.
"`The courts of several states have held that the decisions in habeas corpus cases are not reviewable under a general law allowing an appeal from all final judgments. See Howe v. State, 9 Mo. 690; Ex parte Jilz, 64 Mo. 205, 27 Am. Rep. 218; Carruth v. Taylor, 8 N.D. 166, 77 N.W. 617; People v. Conant, 59 Mich. 565, 26 N.W. 768. In some states the right of appeal has been expressly granted by legislative enactments; in other states the courts hold that a decision in a habeas corpus proceeding is appealable under a statute which gives an appeal from a final order affecting a substantial right, made in a special proceeding. See State v. Buckham, 29 Minn. 462, 13 N.W. 902, and Winton v. Knott, 7 S.D. 179, 63 N.W. 783. By virtue of a provision of section 21 of the Enabling Act (June 16, 1906, c 3335, 34 Stat. 277), all laws in force in the territory of Oklahoma at the time of the admission of Oklahoma as a state were extended over and put in force throughout the state, except as modified or changed by the "Enabling Act," or by the Constitution of the state. Thus the adoption of the habeas corpus statutes of the Territory of Oklahoma was only so far as the same were not repugnant to, or in conflict with, the Constitution of the state. Had it been intended to provide for appeals in habeas corpus, some appropriate provision would have been made. Its omission affords the best evidence to the contrary, and, if anything is wanting to remove all doubt, it will be found in the nature and object of this great writ as a constitutional right; its purpose being to afford a speedy remedy to a party unjustly accused of the commission of a crime, without obstructing or delaying public justice, both of which appeals would be defeated by the delays consequent upon an appeal. Any other rule would operate
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practically to subvert the constitutional safeguards and the fundamental rights of the citizen.'"
After quoting Chief Justice Shaw of the Supreme Judicial Court of Massachusetts, in the case of Wyeth v. Richardson, 10 Gray, 240, Chief Justice Smith of the Supreme Court of North Carolina in the case of State v. Miller, 97 N.C. 451, 1 S.E. 776, and Chapman, P.J., in Ex parte White, 2 Cal. App. 726, 84 P. 242, he concludes:
"Little, if anything, can be added to the force of the logic and reasoning contained in the foregoing cases. It is to be noted, also, that our Constitution on this subject is as broad as it may well be. Section 10 of article 2, commonly known as the `Bill of Rights,' provides in broad and comprehensive terms that `the privilege of the writ of habeas corpus shall never be suspended by the authorities of this state.' It is to be noted that the language of the Constitution is not merely that the writ of habeas corpus shall never be suspended, but it is the privilege of the writ which is never to be suspended. * * *
"So jealous have the people been of an opportunity being afforded every citizen for a speedy determination of the righteousness of his incarceration, that they have placed the power to adjudicate that question in every court of record and judge thereof in the state. Even the county court and its judge is vested with a limited jurisdiction to issue this writ."
To the same effect is the case of Ex parte Logan, 33 Okla. 659, 126 P. 800.
In Ex parte Krouch et al., 63 Okla. 105, 162 P. 1084, the Supreme Court said:
"Petitioners were also denied the right to be heard. This is an indispensable essential to the right to punish for contempt. Article 2, § 25, Const., provides:
"`In no case shall a penalty or punishment be
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imposed for contempt, until an opportunity to be heard is given.'
"This provision of the Constitution was construed and applied in the case of Ex parte Sullivan, 10 Okla. Cr. 465, 138 P. 815, Ann. Cas. 1916A, 719, wherein it was held:
"Under that clause of section 25 of the Bill of Rights, providing, `In no case shall a penalty or punishment be imposed for contempt, until an opportunity to be heard is given,' an opportunity to be heard before a penalty or punishment is imposed for contempt is an indispensable essential to the administration of due process of law as contemplated by the constitutional inhibition that, `No person shall be deprived of life, liberty, or property, without due process of law.' Section 7, Bill of Rights.
"It therefore clearly appears that petitioners are unlawfully restrained of their liberty without due process of law; for which reason the judgment of contempt is reversed, set aside, and held for naught, and petitioners ordered discharged."
In Ex parte Plaistridge, 68 Okla. 256, 173 P. 646, it is said:
"In Ex parte Sullivan, 10 Okla. Cr. 465, 138 P. 815, Ann. Cas. 1916A, 719, petitioner was charged with a criminal contempt and was denied an opportunity to be heard and punishment imposed in violation of section 25 of the Bill of Rights. Likewise in Ex parte Krouch et al., 63 Okla. 105, 162 P. 1084, petitioners, in addition to being denied a trial by jury, were also adjudged guilty of contempt and punishment imposed without an opportunity to be heard, and were properly discharged."
Mr. Justice Williams, speaking for the court in Herndon v. Hammond, 28 Okla. 616, 115 P. 775, said:
"Also the Criminal Court of Appeals has jurisdiction to issue writs of prohibition to restrain the county court from proceeding to judgment on this complaint
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if it has not jurisdiction. State ex rel. Eubanks v. Cole, 4 Okla. Cr. 25, 109 P. 736.
"In Ex parte Justus, 26 Okla. 101, 110 P. 907, in an opinion by this court, it is said: `The Court of Criminal Appeals of Texas has practically the same jurisdiction as the Criminal Court of Appeals of this state. In Griffin v. Tucker, County Atty., 102 Tex. 420, 118 S.W. 635, the Supreme Court of Texas said: "Ordinarily this court follows the construction given to penal statutes by the Court of Criminal Appeals, since the enforcement of such statutes must be in accordance with such construction; but the decisions of questions coming within the scope of cases of contested elections is intrusted to the civil courts, and must be in accordance with constitutional and statutory provisions." This seems to be a salutary rule.'"
"Under the Constitution (section 2, art. 7) and the statutes of this state, this tribunal has been especially created for the adjudication of all matters on appeal involving criminal offenses. This tribunal having jurisdiction of appeals to determine as to the matters here involved, and being of matters pertaining exclusively to criminal offenses, we feel constrained to follow its holding thereon.
"The writ is denied. All the Justices concur."
In Ex parte Gonshor, 113 Okla. 101, 239 P. 249, a late case, it was held that:
"The Supreme Court, the Criminal Court of Appeals, district and county courts, and justices and judges thereof, have concurrent original jurisdiction in habeas corpus."
The first Chief Justice, third Governor of the state, now Judge of the United States District Court of the Eastern District of Oklahoma, in the case of Smythe v. Smythe, 28 Okla. 266, 144 P. 257, said:
"This being a criminal case this court has no jurisdiction to review the same. It may be that the appellate jurisdiction of the Criminal Court of Appeals
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in this case may be invoked by the plaintiff in error. Further, in all criminal cases, or matters calling for the construction of penal provisions by proceedings in habeas corpus, the jurisdiction of that court should be invoked, rather than this."
The present Chief Justice says:
"The Legislature could with as much reason give the said Criminal Court of Appeals appellate jurisdiction in civil matters as it could to give it original jurisdiction to issue habeas corpus which might destroy the jurisdiction given thereto to the Supreme Court."
It can scarcely be said that this statement rises to the dignity of argument.
During the period in which the Supreme Court of this state rendered the opinions above cited and quoted from four former members of the Constitutional Convention at various times held the high office of Chief Justice; namely, R.L. Williams, Matthew J. Kane, Samuel W. Hayes, and John B. Harrison They and their associates, able, eminent, and just, determined all questions of law coming before the court in a manner that commands the confidence and esteem of all persons who honor and respect impartial administration of law.
That which Blackstone said about the Constitution of his country is equally applicable to ours:
"Magna Charta only, in general terms, declared that no man should be imprisoned contrary to law; the habeas corpus act points him out effectual means, as well to release himself, though committed even by the king in council, as to punish all those who shall thus unconstitutionally misuse him." Book IV, 439.
In May, 1861, occurred the first suspension of the privilege of the writ of habeas corpus in this country. One John Merryman was arrested upon the general charge of treason and committed to Ft. McHenry. Upon
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his petition Chief Justice Taney issued a writ of habeas corpus. The commandant in response to the writ answered that the President had notified him that he had suspended the writ of habeas corpus and instructed him not to obey it.
The Chief Justice held that the President could not suspend the privilege of the writ of habeas corpus nor authorize a military officer to do it, and directed the clerk of the court to transmit a copy of his opinion under seal to the President of the United States. Ex parte Merryman, 17 Fed. Cas. 144, No. 9,487, 9 Am. State Trials, 892.
In the opinion the circuit justice says:
"The right of the subject to the benefit of the writ of habeas corpus, it must be recollected, was one of the great points in controversy * * * in England between arbitrary government and free institutions, and must therefore have strongly attracted the attention of the statesmen engaged in framing a new and, as they supposed, a freer government than the one which they had thrown off by the Revolution. From the earliest history of the common law, if a person was imprisoned — no matter by what authority — he had a right to the writ of habeas corpus, to bring his case before the King's Bench; and if no specific offense was charged against him in the warrant of commitment, he was entitled to be forthwith discharged; and if an offense was charged which was bailable in its character, the court was bound to set him at liberty on bail. The most exciting contests between the Crown and the people of England, from the time of Magna Charta, were in relation to the privilege of this writ, and they continued until the passage of the statute of 31 Car. II, commonly known as the great Habeas Corpus Act. This statute put an end to the struggle, and finally and firmly secured the liberty of the subject against the usurpation and oppression of the executive branch of the government. It nevertheless conferred no right upon the subject, but only secured a right already existing. For,
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although the right could not justly be denied, there was often no effectual remedy against its violation. Until the statute of 13 William III, the judges held their offices at the pleasure of the king, and the influence which he exercised over timid, time-serving and partisan judges, often induced them, upon some pretext or other, to refuse to discharge the party, although entitled by law to his discharge, or delayed their decision from time to time, so as to prolong the imprisonment of persons who were obnoxious to the king for their political opinions, or had incurred his resentment in any other way.
"The great and inestimable value of the Habeas Corpus Act of 31 Car. II, is that it contains provisions which compel courts and judges, and all parties concerned, to perform their duties promptly in the manner specified in the statute.
"And Chief Justice Marshall, in delivering the opinion of the Supreme Court, in the case of Ex parte Bollman and Swartwout, used this decisive language, in 4 Cranch [8 U.S.] 95 [2 L. Ed. 554]: `It may be worthy of remark, that this act (speaking of the one under which I am proceeding) was passed by the First Congress of the United States, sitting under a Constitution which had declared "that the privilege of the writ of habeas corpus should not be suspended, unless when, in cases of rebellion or invasion, the public safety may require it." Acting under the immediate influence of this injunction, they must have felt, with peculiar force, the obligation of providing efficient means, by which this great constitutional privilege should receive life and activity; for if the means be not in existence, the privilege itself would be lost, although no law for its suspension should be enacted. Under the impression of this obligation, they give to all the courts the power of awarding writs of habeas corpus.'"
Upon the question of jurisdiction (Fed. Stats.) section 751, Rev. Stat. (U.S. Comp. St. § 1279), provides that:
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"The Supreme Court and the * * * district courts shall have power to issue writs of habeas corpus."
And section 752 (section 1280) further provides that:
"The several Justices and judges of the said courts, within their respective jurisdictions, shall have power to grant writs of habeas corpus for the purpose of an inquiry into the cause of restraint of liberty."
Construing the foregoing sections in the case of Ex parte McCardle, 6 Wall. 318, 18 L. Ed. 816, Chief Justice Chase said:
"The first section gives to the several courts of the United States, and the several Justices and judges of such courts within their respective jurisdictions, in addition to the authority already conferred by law, power to grant writs of habeas corpus in all cases where any person may be restrained of liberty in violation of the Constitution, or of any treaty or law of the United States.
"This legislation is of the most comprehensive character. It brings within the habeas corpus jurisdiction of every court and of every judge every possible case of privation of liberty contrary to the national Constitution, treaties, or laws. It is impossible to widen this jurisdiction."
Mr. Justice Bradley, in Boyd v. United States, 116 U.S. 616, 6 S. Ct. 535, 29 L. Ed. 756, after reviewing those famous landmarks of liberty and law, the Wilkes Case, and the case of Entick v. Carrington and Three Other King's Messengers, 19 How. State Trials, 1029, and the history of the Fourth and Fifth Amendments of the Constitution of the United States, continues as follows:
"It may be that it is the obnoxious thing in its mildest and least repulsive form; but illegitimate and unconstitutional practices get their first footing in that way, namely, by silent approaches and slight deviations from legal modes of procedure. This can only be obviated by adhering to the rule that constitutional provisions for the security of person and property should be liberally
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construed. A close and literal construction deprives them of half of their efficacy, and leads to gradual depreciation of the right, as if it consisted more in sound than in substance. It is the duty of courts to be watchful for the constitutional rights of the citizen and against any stealthy encroachments thereon. Their motto should be obsta principiis."
In the case of People ex rel. Tweed v. Liscomb, 60 N.Y. 559, 19 Am. Rep. 211, Allen, J., expressing the unanimous opinion of the court, says:
"This writ cannot be abrogated, or its efficiency curtailed, by legislative action. Cases within the relief afforded by it at common law cannot, until the people voluntarily surrender the right to this, the greatest of all writs, by an amendment of the organic law, be placed beyond its reach and remedial action. The privilege of the writ cannot even be temporarily suspended, except for the safety of the state, in cases of rebellion or invasion. Const., art. 1, § 4.
"The remedy against illegal imprisonment afforded by this writ, as it was known and used at common law, is placed beyond the pale of legislative discretion, except that it may be suspended when public safety requires, in either of the two emergencies named in the Constitution. This provision of the Constitution is a transcript of the former Constitution of the state, and it cannot be intended that the framers of the Revised Statutes, by which the practice of the courts in term time was placed under the same regulations as that which had from the first been prescribed for the officers upon whom power had been conferred from time to time by statute, designed to interfere with the principles governing the exercise of the jurisdiction, or lessen the value, the efficiency or importance of the writ itself, which, in respect of the jurisdiction of the Supreme Court and Court of Chancery, was beyond the reach of legislation.
"Bringing the procedure in term time, as well as in vacation, within the same general rules, removes all doubt that the intent was that every court and officer having power to grant a writ of habeas corpus, and to pass upon
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the legality of an imprisonment, has and may exercise, in the forms prescribed by law, all the power exercised at common law by the Court of King's Bench in England, and the Supreme Court of this state, as the corresponding tribunal with us.
"There is no occasion to be alarmed, or to be frightened out of our propriety, lest, by reason of the number of magistrates to whom this great power has been committed, the judgments of superior courts will be nullified, and judicial proceedings rendered nugatory, so far as they interfere with personal liberty. The power has existed in many inferior magistrates for more than three-fourths of a century, and the laws and judgments of courts have been executed without unseemly interruption by means of this writ of liberty, and although a third of a century since a distinguished executive of this state called the attention of the Legislature to the very danger now invoked as a reason for so construing the statute as to contract the jurisdiction of this writ, the Legislature did not participate in the fears expressed, and suffered the statutes to remain in that form, by which the liberty of the citizen would have the largest protection. 3 Hill, 649, note. It is no new feature in the law that inferior magistrates may, when thereunto called, sit in judgment upon the jurisdiction of the highest courts, when their process or judgments come collaterally before them. Trespass will lie for property seized, or for the imprisonment of a person by virtue of the judgment of the highest court of the state, if it has not jurisdiction of the person, or to give the judgment, and a justice of the peace must pass upon the jurisdiction, if the action chances to be before him for trial. It matters not what the general powers and jurisdiction of a court may be; if it act without authority in the particular case, its judgments and orders are mere nullities, not voidable, but simply void, protecting no one acting under them, and constituting no hindrance to the prosecution of any right. Elliott v. Peirsol (1 Pet. 328 [7 L. Ed. 164])."
"Neither should the Habeas Corpus Act, which judges have `revered as the bulwark of the Constitution, the Magna Charta of personal rights,' be shorn of its power and its glory by a subtle and metaphysical interpretation;
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rather should it receive a liberal construction, in harmony with its grand purpose, and in disregard, if need be, of technical language used.
"This act has always been construed in favor of, and not against, the liberty of the subject and the citizen; the reading must be the same whether the benefit of it is invoked by the purest and best citizen of the state, or the greatest sinner, and the one most worthy of condign punishment. The law is no respecter of persons, and suffers no man, be he guilty or innocent, to be deprived of his liberty, except `by due process of law'; and the writ of habeas corpus is as available, even to the guilty, and he whom the popular voice would condemn, as it has proved against commitments by the king in council. But the act needs no interpretation, and is in full accord with the common law, and the adjudications both in this state and in England, and with the Constitution."
In Ex parte Jilz, 64 Mo. 205, 27 Am. Rep. 218, 2 Am. Cr. Rep. 217, the Supreme Court of Missouri said:
"With what propriety could it be denominated `the great writ of liberty,' if this be the law? When, then, would a citizen, illegally restrained of his liberty, get his final discharge on a habeas corpus?
"This is no time to impair the efficacy of this writ. Now, more than ever before, should we be careful to preserve `this dearest birthright of Britons,' as, more than a century ago, it was characterized by the English colonists in America. No prison walls should be strong enough, against its mandate, to hold one for whom it issues, nor any judge or court too great to bow in submission to the judgment rendered in the proceeding by a tribunal authorized to issue the writ of habeas corpus."
The people ordained that the privilege of the writ of habeas corpus should not, under any circumstances, be suspended. They meant to guard against such misconception of constitutional liberty as that into which the majority of the Supreme Court has fallen. Never before has it been decided that express provisions of a
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Constitution may be set aside by mere implication and presumption; never before has a court attempted to suspend the privilege of the writ of habeas corpus.
Again the Chief Justice says:
"In the instant case, we take it as unanswerable, if all our other holdings should be debatable, that, if the Criminal Court of Appeals can issue a writ of habeas corpus at all, it is by virtue of legislative enactment, and the strong arm of the Legislature has stricken down the power of such a statutory court to issue such writ, and on the same inquire into, vacate, or review a judgment of a court having power to commit for contempt."
After quoting section 432, C.S. 1921, he says:
"The statute quoted supra prevents the Criminal Court of Appeals, or any judge thereof, inquiring into the judgment and commitment of this court, which judgment and commitment fixed the punishment of the respondent, and said Criminal Court of Appeals can have no jurisdiction, unless it can hold that the said section is violative of the Constitution of this state. The said Criminal Court of Appeals has no authority to declare said section violative of the Constitution of Oklahoma. That power is vested in this court, and this court alone, and, as heretofore stated, this court holds that the said statute is not violative of the Constitution of Oklahoma.
"The able Supreme Court of Oklahoma Territory, in the case of In re Frank McMaster, 2 Okla. 435, 37 P. 598, in the syllabus, makes clear the law as to the said statute."
The Chief Justice was quite unfortunate in the citation of this case to support his opinion, because this case was overruled in the case of In re Patswald, 5 Okla. 789, 50 P. 142, wherein the Supreme Court of Oklahoma Territory held:
"The provisions of the Habeas Corpus Act of this territory (section 4578, Laws of 1893), excluding from
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its benefits persons committed or detained by virtue of any process issued on any final judgment of a `court of competent jurisdiction,' only applies when the tribunal had jurisdiction to render the particular judgment. A court of `competent' jurisdiction is one having power and authority of law at the time of acting to do the particular act. The prohibition contained in said section, forbidding inquiry into the legality of any process or judgment specified in the provision above referred to, does not take from the court or officer having jurisdiction of the writ, the power, or relieve from the duty, of determining whether the judgment or process emanated from a court of competent jurisdiction to issue the process or render the judgment."
Justice Tarsney, delivering the opinion of the court, said:
"There is no question but that at the common law and in the absence of a statute, illegalities which make void a judgment in a criminal action, no matter by what court such judgment may have been rendered, may be inquired into on habeas corpus, and if the judgment is found to be void the prisoner may be discharged. Does our statute change this rule of the common law and take away this right of inquiry? If such were the intended effect of the statute, our answer would be: The power is not in the Legislature to take away this right. Relief from illegal imprisonment by means of this remedial writ is not the creature of any statute. The right to be discharged from illegal imprisonment is not derived from the famous statute of Charles II of England (31 Car. 2 C. 2), nor from the later act of 56 Geo. III, nor from any statute of this territory. It was in use before Magna Charta and came to us an inheritance from the mother country, and exists as a part of the common law of this territory, and it is made a part of our Constitution that no person shall be deprived of his liberty `without due process of law.' Amendment to Const. art. 5.
"It is true that by the procedure upon writs of habeas corpus at the common law, the return was generally conclusive; not always, for the petitioner may
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confess and avoid such a return by admitting the truth of the matters contained in it, and suggest others, not repugnant, which take off the effect of them (Hurd, Habeas Corpus, 270). The return was generally conclusive, but not conclusive of the right, but only of the truth of the facts stated in the return; and if the facts stated in the return show the petitioner to be illegally imprisoned, he would be discharged."
The opinion is concurred in by Dale, C.J., and Bierer and McAtee, JJ., Justices participating in the McMasters opinion cited.
Again, the Supreme Court of the Territory of Oklahoma, in the same case, In re Frank McMaster, 9 Okla. 432, 60 P. 280, expressly overruled and held for naught the first opinion cited above. Irwin, J., delivering the opinion of the court, after reviewing the law applicable, concludes as follows:
"By our action herein we do not wish to be understood as in any way reflecting upon the judges who handed down the former opinion; but we feel, no matter how honest and conscientious they acted in the matter, an error was committed in resolving the doubt of the court's jurisdiction against the petition herein; and without expressing any opinion upon the merits of the case, as we now view the law, a mistake has been made by this court which it is in duty bound to correct.
"As there was no proceeding in the case before the Supreme Court and no action pending in which said court had a right to act we believe that any action taken by the court in the premises was without jurisdiction, and, therefore, void, and being void should be set aside according to the prayer of this petition, which is accordingly done; and the judgment heretofore entered is hereby vacated and held for naught.
"All of the Justices concurring."
In Ex parte Creasy, 243 Mo. 688, 148 S.W. 914, 41 L.R.A. (N.S.) 478, the Supreme Court of Missouri
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held that in a habeas corpus proceeding to determine the validity of a commitment for contempt, the judgment of contempt is not conclusive on the court issuing the writ as to the facts of the alleged contempt.
In the opinion it is said:
"Our constitutional provision as to writs of habeas corpus has a deep-seated meaning. It was lodged there for the sole purpose of affording one deprived of liberty the right to have the cause of his detention investigated, and, too, whether such detention was upon the judgment of a court, or was upon some other alleged authority. To say that the committing court, in contempt proceedings, can absolutely conclude an investigation of the facts by the tribunal hearing the writ of habeas corpus, is giving the judge whose court has been the target of an alleged contempt, more power than our Constitution ever contemplated. `If such be the law, the only thing left for the court hearing the writ of habeas corpus, is to determine whether the judgment and writ of commitment are regular upon their face. If they are, then the prisoner must be remanded, it matters not how flagrantly the offended judge may have disregarded the facts. Judgments in contempt proceedings are in a measure different from other judgments. They are judgments entered by one not altogether disinterested. They may not be cool, dispassionate judgments, but may be shaded by the feelings of one presiding over a court thought to have been outraged by the conduct of a person in attendance upon such court. Human liberty is too sacred under our Constitution to say that, under a judgment emanating from such a source, the actual facts are not for review in the court trying the writ of habeas corpus. Mere jurisdiction of the person and the subject-matter is not and should not be the test of a valid judgment in a contempt proceeding. This is the test in ordinary judgments, but out of respect for constitutional provisions with reference to the writ of habeas corpus, many courts have gone further and as to contempt judgments have said that, in order to sustain the contempt judgment, it must not only be shown that the court had jurisdiction of the person,
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and of the subject-matter — i.e., contempt — but that it must be shown that under both the law and the facts the particular judgment could be sustained."
In Ex parte Howell, 273 Mo. 96, 200 S.W. 65, the Supreme Court of Missouri said:
"The judgment herein from which petitioners seek relief relies for its potential force upon a finding of direct contempt alleged to have been committed in the face of the court. It is urged preclusively rather than affirmatively, that the findings of this judgment are conclusive, and that no ulterior inquiry can be made into the facts, the effect of which may be to question its validity; the contention being, in brief, as is the general rule, that the judgment imports absolute verity — its face constituting, not only a certificate of the legitimacy of its origin, but of its present good character. While the older authorities in other jurisdictions, from which the text-writers deduce statements of principles, unqualifiedly apply the general rule of immunity from collateral attack to judgments of the character here in question, we hold otherwise. Here one convicted of direct contempt, in seeking relief through habeas corpus, is not limited to an inquiry as to the convicting court's jurisdiction; but, if the truth of the findings upon which the judgment is based is denied in the petitioner's reply to the return, inquiry may be made in regard thereto. To this extent we have, as has been done elsewhere (Counselman v. Hitchcock, 142 U.S. 547, 12 S. Ct. 195, 35 L. Ed. 1110; Ex parte Fisk, 113 U.S. 713, 5 S. Ct. 724, 28 L. Ed. 1117, Ex parte Irvine [C.C.] 74 F. loc. cit. 959), brushed aside the hard and fast rule which theretofore hedged about judgments for direct or criminal contempt rendering them immune from attack, and have authorized an inquiry to test the truth of their findings (Ex parte Creasy, 243 Mo. loc. cit. 688, 694, 148 S.W. 914, 41 L.R.A. [N.S.] 478). The wisdom and wholesomeness of this modification of the general rule is supported by reason and justice. There is no appeal or right to a writ of error from a judgment for direct or criminal contempt; no provision having been made therefor by
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statute, the right does not exist. In re Clark, 208 Mo. loc. cit. 146, 106 S.W. 990, 15 L.R.A. (N.S.) 389.
"Absent the right of appeal, no opportunity for a full review of the proceedings is afforded, except by habeas corpus. * * *
"Viewed from every vantage, the reasons for the exemption of judgments for direct contempt from the ordinary rule of immunity from collateral attack became more apparent. In other proceedings the judge stands indifferent between the parties; the procedure is along a beaten pathway, found from experience most promotive of justice; and the judgments resulting therefrom are not only entered under the supervision of the court, but are subject, before becoming conclusive, to the scrutiny and criticism of opposing counsel. This rendered, the possibility of their findings incorrectly stating the facts on which they are based are remote, if not impossible. Under such circumstances it is not difficult to account for the origin and permanence in our jurisprudence of the rule ordinarily applicable that the findings of a judgment shall import verity and that its conclusions shall be inviolable. The characteristics of such a judgment are entirely different from those which distinguish a judgment for direct contempt. The latter is summary, and in a sense ex parte, in that the court is the only active factor in its rendition. Whatever part the contemner may have contributed to it was completed before the action of the court commenced. With the announcement of the punishment inflicted the judgment became final, except for its formal entry upon the record. When so entered its only resemblance to an ordinary judgment is in its form. The court's adjudication is a conviction and its commitment in consequence an execution. Ex parte Kearney, 7 Wheat. loc. cit. 43, 5 L. Ed. 391."
In Ex parte Duncan, 42 Tex. Cr. R. 661, 62 S.W. 758, Davidson, P.J., in the course of his opinion, says:
"A judgment which is void is conclusive of nothing, and may be the subject of inquiry in a collateral proceeding. The recited facts therein are not binding in anyway, nor for any purpose. Nor can the court make
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contempt of that which is not contempt (Church on Habeas Corpus, § 152), and every attempt to do so would be in excess of authority or jurisdiction, as much so as if the court had no authority or power to punish for contempt, either in relation to the person or subject-matter. There must be contempt in order to justify punishment for the offense. `There are three essential elements necessary to render conviction valid. These are, that the court may have jurisdiction over the subject-matter, the person of the defendant, and the authority to render the particular judgment. If either of these essential elements is lacking, the judgment is fatally defective, and the prisoner held under such judgment may be released on habeas corpus.' Ex parte Degener, 30 Tex. App. 566 [17 S.W. 1111]; Ex parte Taylor, 34 Tex. Cr. R. 591 [31 S.W. 641]; Ex parte Tinsley, 37 Tex. Cr. R. 517 [40 S.W. 306, 66 Am. St. Rep. 818]; Ex parte Kearby and Hawkins, 35 Tex. Cr. R. 531 [34 S.W. 635]; Ex parte Kearby, 35 Tex. Cr. R. 634 [34 S.W. 962]; Brown on Jur. §§ 109, 110; Ex parte Lake, 37 Tex. Cr. R. 656 [40 S.W. 727, 66 Am. St. Rep. 848].
"`Some of the older authorities regard jurisdiction of the matter and the prisoner sufficient to give the court jurisdiction to pronounce the judgment which could not be successfully assailed by this writ. The rule now, supported by high and abundant authority and excellent reason, is that the court must not only have jurisdiction over the person and the matter, but authority to render the particular judgment. The judgment is not conclusive upon the question of the authority of the court to render it. That, as well as any other matter which would render the proceedings void, is open to inquiry.' 7 Am. and Eng. Enc. of Law (2d Ed.) p. 36; People v. Lipscomb [Liscomb] 60 N.Y. 559 [19 Am. Rep. 211]; People v. Oyer & Term, Ct., 101 N.Y. 245 [4 N.E. 259], 54 Am. Rep. 691; Ex parte Degener, 30 Tex. App. 566 [17 S.W. 1111]; Holman v. Austin, 34 Tex. 668; Ex parte Fisk, 113 U.S. 713 [5 S. Ct. 724, 28 L. Ed. 1117].
"Jurisdiction of the person and subject-matter are not alone conclusive, but the authority of the court to
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render the particular judgment is the subject of inquiry; and if, upon a review of the whole record, it appears that a judgment unwarranted by law was entered, the party thus placed in contempt will be released under the writ of habeas corpus. Same authorities. Among other jurisdictional defects is also found the following: The infliction of punishment in excess of that allowed by law. Ex parte Edwards, 11 Fla. 174; Haines v. Haines, 35 Mich. 138; People v. Lipscomb [Liscomb] 60 N.Y. 559 [19 Am. Rep. 211]; Matter of Patterson, 99 N.C. 467 [407, 6 S.E. 643]; Matter of Walker, 82 N.C. 908 [95]; Commonwealth v. Newton, 1 Grant, Cas. (Pa.) 453; In re Pierce, 44 Wis. 411."
The question here presented has been passed upon many times in other jurisdictions, and the rule stated in the foregoing opinions has long been firmly established.
This court, in Ex parte Mingle, 2 Okla. Cr. 708, 104 P. 68, held:
"That the writ of habeas corpus is a writ of right, and cannot be abrogated or its efficiency impaired by statute, and the cases within the relief afforded by the writ at common law cannot be placed beyond its reach under the constitutional guaranty."
And see Ex parte Justus, 3 Okla. Cr. 111, 104 P. 933, 25 L.R.A. (N.S.) 483, and cases cited.
In the case of Ex parte Sullivan, supra, the question was on habeas corpus to determine the validity of a commitment for contempt by the Supreme Court of this state.
In the opinion it is said:
"It is well settled, by numerous decisions of this and other courts, that the writ of habeas corpus is a writ of right, and cannot be abrogated or its efficiency impaired by legislative action, and under the constitutional guaranty, the cases within the relief afforded by the writ at common law cannot be placed beyond its
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reach and remedial action by statute. A court of competent jurisdiction is one having power and authority of law at the time of acting to do the particular act, and jurisdiction of the person and of the subject-matter is not alone conclusive, but the jurisdiction of the court to render the particular judgment or issue the process is a proper subject of inquiry; and the proceedings of the committing court will be examined so far as necessary to determine the question of jurisdiction. If there was no legal power to render the judgment, or issue the process, there was no court of competent jurisdiction, and consequently no judgment or process. All is coram non judice, and void.
"The privilege of habeas corpus cannot be denied as a matter of comity between co-ordinate courts."
The highest function of this court is to pass upon constitutional questions arising in cases involving the life and liberty of the citizen, and as the court of last resort in all criminal cases it has in the exercise of its appellate jurisdiction during the past 19 years determined more than 6,000 cases.
In the exercise of its original jurisdiction, it has passed upon not less than 500 habeas corpus cases. During this period this court has never felt called upon to exercise its authority to punish for contempt. Should it be called upon so to do, and to sentence and commit for a criminal contempt, we recognize the right and duty of the Supreme Court or any Justice thereof, or any district court or district judge thereof, in his respective district, to issue upon a duly verified petition, alleging facts showing illegal imprisonment, the writ of habeas corpus, and to inquire into the cause of such restraint of liberty. The question as to whether the writ should issue must be determined in each case from the record presented and upon its own facts. And, if it should be found as alleged that the petitioner is without due process of law restrained of his liberty and illegally imprisoned, to discharge the petitioner.
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We have as little doubt of the jurisdiction of the court in this case as in any which the court has ever been called upon to determine.
The petitioner, invoking elementary principles of justice and right, asks this court to try and determine, according to its established procedure, his right to his liberty, and we now proceed to determine his application on the merits.
The petitioner, O.O. Owens, in the custody of the sheriff of Oklahoma county, under a judgment of conviction and sentence of imprisonment for 12 months and a fine of $5,000, seeks discharge and liberty upon a writ of habeas corpus issued by this court.
The return of the respondent does not pretend to justify his authority to hold the petitioner other than under the commitment issued by the Supreme Court. The facts alleged in the petition upon which the writ issued are not denied in the return.
The question, then, with which we are confronted is whether, under well-established rules of law, the facts presented by the petitioner for the writ are adequate to justify the relief prayed for.
Blackstone says:
"The glory of the English law consists in defining the time, the causes, and the extent, when, wherefore, and to what degree the imprisonment of the subject may be lawful. This it is which induces the absolute necessity of expressing upon every commitment the reason for which it is made; that the court upon an habeas corpus may examine into its validity." Book III, p. 133.
Our Penal Code provides:
"Whenever a person shall be imprisoned for contempt, the substance of the offense shall be set forth
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in the order for his confinement, and made a matter of record in the court." Section 1700, C.S. 1921.
Here the commitment as shown by the return of the respondent is as follows:
"Appendix A.
"In the Supreme Court of the State of Oklahoma.
"The State of Oklahoma ex rel. The Attorney General of the State of Oklahoma, Relator, v. O.O. Owens, Respondent. No. 18081.
"Judgment and Sentence.
"On January 3, 1927, O.O. Owens, filed in the case of V.V. Harris, Receiver of the Riverside Oil & Refining Company, a Corporation, et al., Plaintiffs, v. T.G. Chambers et al., Defendants, No. 17409, a certain pleading, entitled: `Motion of the Defendants, Riverside Oil & Refining Company, a Corporation, O.O. Owens and G.R. Lefever for Leave to File a Petition for Rehearing of Said Cause, and to Stay the Mandate and Writ of Mandamus in Said Cause.'
"On January 7, 1927, the state of Oklahoma, on the relation of the Attorney General of said state, filed in this court an information, praying that a rule be issued, directed to the said O.O. Owens, to appear before this court and show cause, if any he had, why he should not be adjudged guilty of contempt of this court, for filing and publishing the said motion, and on January 7, 1927, this court issued its rule upon the said O.O. Owens, directing him to appear before this court on January 13, 1927, or on the fifth day after the adjournment of the session of the Legislature of the state of Oklahoma, then and there to show cause if any he had, why he should not be held in contempt of court, and punished accordingly.
"On March 29, 1927, the said O.O. Owens appeared in open court, in response to the rule to show cause, and filed an application requesting certain members of the Supreme Court to certify their disqualification; also objections to the jurisdiction of the court; and also a demurrer. The cause was thereupon continued
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until the 23d day of April, 1927, for the purpose of permitting briefs to be filed on the application requesting certain members of the court to certify their disqualification.
"Now, on this the 23d day of April, A.D. 1927, the above cause coming on for further hearing, the respondent appeared in person, and by his attorneys, H.B. Martin and A.F. Moss, and thereupon the application of the said O.O. Owens requesting certain members of the Supreme Court to certify their disqualification was, by the court, overruled. The objections of the respondent to the jurisdiction of the court, thereupon coming on for consideration, was by the court overruled. Thereupon, the demurrer of the respondent coming on for consideration, the same was by the court overruled as to each and all of the grounds contained therein. Thereupon the respondent presented to the court affidavits concerning the absence of H.A. Ledbetter, one of the attorneys for the respondent, and orally requested a postponement of the cause. The court advised the respondent that he was represented by other counsel, to wit, A.F. Moss and H.B. Martin, and thereupon overruled the application for a postponement of the case.
"The court thereupon asked the respondent whether he desired to be heard further as to why he should not be adjudged guilty of contempt of court under the second count of the information filed herein, and advised the respondent that he would not be required to plead or answer further to count No. 1 contained in said information at this time, or until further order of the court. Thereupon the respondent verbally entered a plea of `Not guilty,' and demanded a trial by jury. The demand for jury trial was by the court denied, the court holding that the matters charged in the second count of the information constituted a direct contempt of court.
"Thereupon, the court inquired of the respondent if he desired to be heard further as to why he should not be adjudged in contempt of court and punished therefor, and the respondent thereupon stated
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that he did not care to present any testimony or to be heard further.
"The court, having given the respondent a full opportunity to be heard, and the court being well and sufficiently advised in the premises, finds that said O.O. Owens did, on January 3, 1927, file in cause No. 17409, a pleading designated: `Motion of the Defendants, Riverside Oil & Refining Company, a corporation, O.O. Owens and G.R. Lefever, for Leave to File a Petition for Rehearing of Said Cause, and to Stay Mandate and Writ of Mandamus in Said Cause'; and the court further finds that said pleading contained numerous statements that are directly contemptuous of this court, scurrilous, false, and inserted for the purpose of reflecting, not only on the members of this court, but on the court as such, and for the purpose of holding the court up to public opprobrium, and to incite public contempt for the court and certain Justices thereof, and for the purpose of influencing, intimidating, and coercing the Supreme Court of Oklahoma, and the Justices thereof, in the further determination and consideration of cause No. 17409, and such contemptuous allegations appearing in said pleading, are as follows:
"`These movents show that the reason no petition for rehearing was filed in this cause was and is that these movents are informed and believe that this cause was never considered by this honorable court, and that the opinion handed down, as the opinion of this court, purporting to have been written by one of the honorable Justices of this court, Justice Charles W. Mason, was in fact written by one J.D. Lydick, who was one of the counsel for the plaintiffs in this cause, and that said opinion having been prepared and written by, as aforesaid [was copied in the office of the aforesaid Justice], Charles W. Mason, and handed down by him as an opinion of this court, without evidence in this cause, and without any consideration of either the pleadings in this cause or the briefs filed therein, either by the said Justice Charles W. Mason, or any of the other Justices in this court.
"`Movents say that they are informed and believe
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and therefore plead that the purported opinion of this court, filed as aforesaid, July 7, 1925, was prepared by Hon. J.W. Clark, one of the Justices of this court, under the direction and control of Hon. George M. Nicholson, who was at the time Chief Justice of this court, and that the said Nicholson was at the time, under the control and direction of one J.B. Dudley, one of the counsel in said cause. That the aforesaid Justice Clark, in the preparation of the said opinion, did so prepare the same without knowledge of what was contained in the case-made in said cause, and without consideration of the briefs in said cause, but in preparing said opinion the said Justice Clark was directed by the aforesaid Justice Nicholson to prepare an opinion affirming the judgment of the trial court, and movents say that they are informed and believe and therefore pleaded that the said purported opinion did not receive the concurrence of a majority of this court at any time before or at the time of its filing, and that the aforesaid opinion was prepared and filed and promulgated without the examination by the said Justice Clark, or any of the Justices purporting to concur in said opinion upon its face, of the record in said cause, either as to the evidence or the pleadings, and without consideration, examination or knowledge of the briefs in said cause and what they contained.
"`And movents say that they are advised, and therefore plead, that the control, in the determination of this case, of Hon. J.W. Clark, one of the Justices of this honorable court, participating therein, by the Hon. George M. Nicholson, another of the Justices of this honorable court participating therein, and the control of Hon. George M. Nicholson in the premises by the said J.B. Dudley, one of the counsel in said cause, is, in law and fact, a fraud against the rights of these movents.'
"The court finds that the above and foregoing constitutes a direct contempt of this court; and, the respondent, having failed to show cause why he should not be adjudged guilty of contempt and punished therefor.
"It is by the court ordered and adjudged that O.
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O. Owens be, and he is hereby, adjudged guilty of direct contempt of this court under count 2 of the information filed therein, and it is further ordered and adjudged that for said contempt the said O.O. Owens shall be imprisoned in the county jail of Oklahoma county, state of Oklahoma, for and during a period of 12 months, said time to commence upon the date of incarceration of the said O.O. Owens in the county jail of Oklahoma county, Okla., and to expire when the said O.O. Owens shall have served in said county jail the full time of 12 months; and it is further adjudged that, as a further punishment for such contempt, the said O.O. Owens shall pay a fine of $5,000 and the costs of this action, the same to be paid to the clerk of this court within 10 days from this date; and, upon failure to pay said fine and costs, within 10 days from this date, execution shall be issued and levied on the property of the said O.O. Owens.
"It is further ordered that the said O.O. Owens be, and he is hereby, directed to stand committed to the county jail of Oklahoma county, Okla., and C.F. Worley, the bailiff of this court, is ordered to take immediate charge of said O.O. Owens, and to forthwith deliver the said O.O. Owens into the custody of the sheriff of Oklahoma county, Okla., together with a certified copy of this order and judgment, and the said sheriff of Oklahoma county, Okla., is commanded to receive the said O.O. Owens and to incarcerate and safely keep him in the county jail of Oklahoma county, Okla., for the full term of 12 months from the date of said incarceration, and certified copy of this order and judgment shall be delivered to the sheriff of Oklahoma county, Okla., and shall constitute his warrant and authority for committing the said O.O. Owens to the county jail of Oklahoma county, and restraining him therein in accordance with the terms of this judgment and sentence.
"Done in open court, this the 23d day of April, A.D. 1927. [Signed] Fred P. Branson, Chief Justice, Supreme Court of Oklahoma.
"Attest: Jessie E. Moore, Clerk, Supreme Court of Oklahoma. [Seal.]"
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The petition is based upon the provision of the Bill of Rights which reads, "No person shall be deprived of life, liberty, or property, without due process of law" (Const. art. 2, § 7), and that clause in section 25 of the Bill of Rights which reads, "The Legislature shall pass laws defining contempts and regulating the proceedings and punishment in the matters of contempt."
The principle that no person shall be deprived of life, liberty, or property, except by due process of law is older than written Constitutions. The phrase "due process of law," as used in the Bill of Rights, is synonymous with the phrase "law of the land" as found in Magna Charta. A definition of the meaning of the words "law of the land" and "due process of law," which has received the sanction of the courts, is Mr. Webster's familiar definition:
"By the `law of the land' is most clearly intended the general law; a law which hears before it condemns; which proceeds upon inquiry, and renders judgment only after trial. The meaning is that every citizen shall hold his life, liberty, property, and immunities under the protection of the general rules which govern society."
Says Judge Cooley:
"The definition here given is apt and suitable as applied to judicial proceedings, which cannot be valid unless they `proceed upon inquiry' and `render judgment only after trial.'
"Due process of law in each particular case means such an exertion of the powers of government as the settled maxims of law permit and sanction, and under such safeguards for the protection of individual rights as the maxims prescribe for the class of cases to which the one in question belongs." Cooley on Const. Lim. (8th Ed.) pp. 636, 741.
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In Ex parte Sullivan, supra, we said:
"The right to punish for contempt is inherent in every constitutional court having common-law powers. Without entering into a discussion of the reasons underlying the right, we will only say that its existence is essential to the preservation of order in judicial proceedings and to the enforcement of the judgments, orders, and decrees of the courts, and consequently to the due administration of justice; and in a measure upon its proper and prudent exercise depend the respect and dignity and efficiency of courts of justice. Contempts of court are punished as offenses against the administration of justice, and not as personal affronts to those who exercise judicial functions, and a person imprisoned as punishment for criminal contempt, properly so called, is imprisoned in execution under a sentence for crime. Under the principles and rules of the common law, the right to punish for contempt in a summary manner is recognized, and the power to punish, by fine or imprisonment, at the discretion of the court, contempts against the dignity and authority of the court, committed in the presence of the court, instanter, without notice or hearing, is unquestioned. In such cases the court acts upon view; there is no presentation, no plea, nor issue upon which there can be a trial. Ex parte Savin, 131 U.S. 267, 9 S. Ct. 699, 33 L. Ed. 150; Ex parte Clark, 208 Mo. 121, 106 S.W. 990, 15 L.R.A. (N.S.) 389.
"And it is held that such proceeding recognized as due process of law under the common law must be considered as `due process of law' within the meaning of the constitutional provision. However, none of the states in which those decisions were made seem to have in their Constitutions a provision limiting the power of the courts to inflict summary punishment for contempt, and under this constitutional guaranty it is the unquestionable right of a contemner to have an opportunity to be heard before punishment is imposed. We have been unable to find that this significant provision appears in any other state Constitution.
"Another rule of common law upon which there is some conflict of authority is that the Legislature
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has no power, in the absence of constitutional provisions, to abridge, impair, limit, or regulate the inherent power of the courts to punish for contempt, and this was the rule adhered to by the Supreme Court of Oklahoma Territory. See Burke v. Territory, 2 Okla. 499, 37 P. 829, and Smith v. Speed, 11 Okla. 95, 66 P. 511, 55 L.R.A. 402. In all free governments absolute power rests somewhere. In this state it is neither lodged with the legislative, nor the executive, nor the judicial branch of government, nor with all combined, but sovereignty rests with the people, and in their sovereign capacity they have placed certain constitutional limitations upon the power of the courts in proceedings for contempt."
The Supreme Court of the United States, in the case of Tumey v. Ohio, 47 S. Ct. 437, 71 L. Ed. p. —, holds: "Officers acting in a judicial or quasi judicial capacity are disqualified by their interest in the controversy to be decided"; that an accused is unconstitutionally deprived of due process of law if his liberty and property are subjected to the judgment of a court, the judge of which has a direct and substantial pecuniary interest in reaching a conclusion against him; that an accused has a right to an impartial judge regardless of the evidence against him, and may halt the trial by objection seasonably raised because of the disqualification of the judge.
In the opinion Mr. Chief Justice Taft, speaking for the court, says:
"That officers acting in a judicial or quasi judicial capacity are disqualified by their interest in the controversy to be decided is of course the general rule. Dimes v. Grand Junction Canal, 3 H.L.C. 759 [10 Eng. Reprint, 301]; Gregory v. Cleveland, C. & C.R. Co., 4 Ohio St. 675; Pearce v. Atwood, 13 Mass. 324; Taylor v. Worcester County, 105 Mass. 225; Kentish Artillery v. Gardiner, 15 R.I. 296, 3 A. 662; Moses v. Julian, 45 N.H. 52, 84 Am. Dec. 114; State, Winans, Prosecutor, v. Crane, 36 N.J. Law, 394; Peninsular R.
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Co. v. Howard, 20 Mich. 18; Stockwell v. White Lake, 22 Mich, 341; Findley v. Smith, 42 W. Va. 299, 26 S.E. 370; Nettleton's Appeal, 28 Conn. 268; Cooley, Const. Lim. (7th Ed.) pp. 592 et seq. Nice questions, however, often arise as to what the degree or nature of the interest must be. One is in respect to the effect of the membership of a judge in a class of taxpayers or others to be affected by a principle of law, statutory or constitutional, to be applied in a case between other parties and in which the judge has no other interest. Then the circumstance that there is no judge not equally disqualified to act in such a case has been held to affect the question. Wheeling v. Black, 25 W. Va. 266, 280; Peck v. Essex County, 20 N.J. Law, 457; Dimes v. Grand Junction Canal, 3 H.L.C. 759 (see Baron Parke's Answer for the Judges, pp. 785, 787); Y.B. 8, Hen. VI. 19, s.c. 2 Roll., Abr. 93; Evans v. Gore, 253 U.S. 245, 247, 40 S. Ct. 550, 64 L. Ed. 887 [889], 11 A.L.R. 519; Stuart v. Mechanics' & F. Bank, 19 Johns (N.Y.) 496; Ranger v. Great Western R. Co., 5 H.L.C. 72 [10 Eng. Reprint, 824]. We are not embarrassed by such considerations here, for there were available in this case other judicial officers who had no disqualification, either by reason of the character of their compensation or their relation to the village government.
"All questions of judicial qualification may not involve constitutional validity. Thus matters of kinship, personal bias, state policy, remoteness of interest would seem generally to be matters merely of legislative discretion. Wheeling v. Black, 25 W. Va. 266, 270. But it certainly violates the Fourteenth Amendment and deprives a defendant in a criminal case of due process of law to subject his liberty or property to the judgment of a court, the judge of which has a direct, personal, substantial pecuniary interest in reaching a conclusion against him in his case.
"The mayor of the village of North College Hill, Ohio, had a direct personal pucuniary interest in convicting the defendant who came before him for trial, in the $12 of costs imposed in his behalf which he would not have received if the defendant had been
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acquitted. This was not exceptional, but was the result of the normal operation of the law and the ordinance."
The record shows that the information in this case was by direction of the Supreme Court, filed and signed by George F. Short, Attorney General, and verified by Wm. L. Murphy, Assistant, upon belief only; that upon arraignment the respondent pleaded not guilty and demanded a trial by jury. Upon the issue thus joined, no evidence whatever was offered to sustain or support the allegations of the information. The plea of not guilty having been entered, the court pronounced its judgment of conviction and issued the commitment thereon.
In the opinion of the Supreme Court in support of the commitment issued and filed May 24, 1927, Justice Riley, speaking for the court, said:
"Our opinion shall be directed first to the application requesting certain members of this court to certify their alleged disqualifications. By the application it is asserted:
"(1) That said Justices and each of them are biased and prejudiced against the respondent.
"(2) That said Justices and each of them are interested in this cause.
"(3) That Justice J.W. Clark and Justice Fletcher Riley are disqualified by reason of a certain judgment entered in cause No. 18080, State of Oklahoma ex rel. the Attorney General v. H.B. Martin, 125 Okla. 24, 256 P. 681, whereby said Justices were adjudged to be disqualified to sit and try cause No. 18080, a companion case to the instant cause and growing out of the same controversy.
"(4) That it will be necessary in the trial of this cause to use, and it is the intention of the respondent to use, the said Justices aforesaid as witnesses.
"(5) That the rule to show cause herein shows
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on its face that this court, except Robert A. Hefner, is the informer and prosecutor against respondent, and that under the Constitution and laws of this state said Justices are disqualified herein.
"(6) That all of the Justices certified their disqualifications in cause No. 18080.
"(7) That, by reason of the certified disqualifications of Justices in cause No. 18080, and by reason of the judgment in cause No. 18080, whereby Justices Clark and Riley were by mandamus forced to certify their disqualification, all of said Justices are disqualified herein.
"(8) That there is now pending in the district court of Oklahoma county a cause, styled Fletcher Riley v. O.O. Owens et al., which is a damage suit for $200,000, which said suit grew out of the matter and things set out in the information for contempt in this cause, and by reason of which Fletcher Riley is especially disqualified to try this cause.
"It must be borne in mind that the order entered by this court in cause No. 18080, wherein seven Justices of this court declined to sit further in that cause, specifically denied the motion filed by that respondent to require the challenged members to certify their disqualifications. In that case this court clearly recognized that under the law applicable to contempt cases the members of the court against whom the contempt was committed were not disqualified to sit. It must likewise be remembered that the respondent Martin, in cause No. 18080, sought a writ of mandamus in cause No. 18123, filed and presented to the regularly elected Supreme Court, wherein it was sought to compel Justices Clark and Riley to certify their alleged disqualifications, and in that action this court entered a judgment denying the writ; Justices Clark and Riley not participating therein.
"In a contempt case, the court may and should take judicial notice, not only of the records of the court, but of the acts of the defendant committed in the presence of the court or reflected by pleadings by him filed therein. Therefore, there is no proper purpose to
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be had in calling the judges of the court as witnesses in contempt cases.
"It is contended that the Justices and each of them are interested in this cause, and therefore disqualified.
"Section 2632, Compiled Oklahoma Statutes 1921, provides:
"`No Justice of the Supreme Court of this state or Judge of the Criminal Court of Appeals shall participate in the decision of any cause in such court appealed thereto from a lower court of said state, in which court such Justice or Judge was judge presiding at the trial of such cause; and the same qualification shall apply to the members of the Supreme Court and Criminal Court of Appeals, as to other courts of record; and, whenever any member of either of said courts is disqualified, the same shall be entered of record in such court and such disqualifications of such members shall forthwith be certified by the clerk of such court to the Governor of the state, who shall appoint some member of the bar of the state, possessing the same qualifications as the members of such court, to sit as special judge in said cause.'
"In said section is contained the clause, `and the same qualifications shall apply to the members of the Supreme Court and Criminal Court of Appeals, as to other courts, of record,' which manifestly refers to section 2629, Compiled Oklahoma Statutes 1921, which is as follows:
"`No judge of any court of record shall sit in any cause or proceeding in which he may be interested, or in the result of which he may be interested, or when he is related to any party to said cause within the fourth degree of consanguinity or affinity, or in which he has been of counsel for either side, or in which is called in question the validity of any judgment or proceeding in which he was of counsel or interested, or the validity of any instrument or paper prepared or signed by him as counsel or attorney, without the consent of the parties to said action entered of record: Provided, that the disqualifications herein
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imposed shall not exclude the disqualifications at common law.'
"In the course of the opinion it is said: `What is an interest such as would disqualify a Justice of the Supreme Court in a civil or criminal cause or proceeding pending before him?
"`Can it be said that the result of this action would in any way affect a suit pending between one of the judges and the respondent in the district court of Oklahoma county? If so, how would it so affect it? Neither the Constitution, the statute, nor the common law recognizes an imaginary interest in the result of lawsuits.'
"This is an action in the name of the state of Oklahoma against respondent, the result of which can only inure to the benefit of the people of the state of Oklahoma. It is the right of the people to cause their courts to be treated with respect. It is the public interest, and not the personal pride of the judges, which establishes this inherent power of courts to punish for contempts. It is the public will that they command respect and obedience to their lawful orders and mandates; without that right and will enforced, the law would become a dead letter, and fraud and violence would prevail. As judges of this court we would be unmindful of our trust, we would become traitors to the people, if we did not demand the respect due a judicial tribunal over which we have been commissioned to preside by the sovereign citizens of the state of Oklahoma.
"From Roman antiquity, we are afforded a heritage in the emblematic form of the blinded Goddess of Justice, Justitia. She holds aloft in her left hand the scales — untouched — in her right she holds the unsheathed sword, as a means to enforce or command that none shall disturb the balance of even and exact justice. She is blinded to the balance struck, but she is ever alert that none shall interfere, truly she is the jealous mistress.
"The duty and responsibility of a Justice to protect the court over which he presides cannot be evaded,
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for by evasion the scales of justice may be destroyed. If the brother or father of a Presiding Justice enter the court and by physical act or insolent behavior commit a contempt, could it be said that the Justice should retire from the bench and thus permit the court to be even momentarily destroyed? Certainly not. His duty is clear. Ties of blood will not relieve nor excuse him. Nor can there be a pecuniary interest to rescue, for, if there be a pecuniary interest in the subject-matter pending out of which the contempt grows, the judge is for that and in that disqualified and eliminated before sitting. So the pecuniarily interested judge is not and cannot be a judge before whom a contempt, direct or indirect, can be committed. * * *
"As judges of this court, we are interested to the extent that the honor and dignity of this court shall be respected, that the orders and mandates of this court shall be obeyed, and, when in the course of duty under our commission from the people, it becomes necessary by contempt proceedings or otherwise to protect the adjudicated property rights of the citizens of this state when even and exact justice has been done between litigants, then to that extent and to that extent alone are we interested.
"We judicially know that the respondent, by his attorney, in cause No. 36361, in the district court of Tulsa county, sued 125 defendants, joining numerous members of this court therein, alleged fraud and corruption, and by extraordinary process restrained members of this court from passing further on the subject-matter of the action in this court out of which this contempt grew (until he was prohibited solely in such restraint), and that then, when the district judge was so prohibited, the respondent sought to intervene here and appeared by his attorney and contended that, since certain Justices were sued and others called as witnesses, they should disqualify — a most preposterous contention.
"We have made an examination of the available cases reported bearing upon qualifications of judges, and we have been unable to find any case holding that a judge is disqualified to dispose of a contempt which
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has been directed against the court of which he is a member. We conclude that such an officer's duty is plain, and that duty commands that he shall proceed, however willing he may be to forego the private injury to himself and however inclined he may be to stand aside in order that the people may be assured that justice with fairness is being administered in the court. We are now firmly convinced that Judges sitting alone, against whom a contempt is committed, have no alternative but to hear, determine, and punish the contempt, if one has been committed against this tribunal of which they comprise the whole membership.
"We therefore conclude that, under the Constitution, the statutes, and the common law, a judge against whom a contempt is committed is not disqualified to try and dispose of the contempt.
"BRANSON, C.J., MASON, V.C.J., and HARRISON, PHELPS, LESTER, and CLARK, JJ., concur.
"HEFNER, J., concurs in the conclusion reached, but is of the opinion that the punishment inflicted is too severe.
"HUNT, J., not participating, having certified his disqualification."
We have thus set forth the reasoning of the court in support of its holding that the Justices participating in the opinion were not disqualified, in order that a full understanding of the question presented may be had.
It is contrary to the genius and spirit of free institutions that any man or body of men in any capacity should try his or their own cause and render judgment therein. It is not sufficient answer to say that a contempt proceeding is the concern of the court, to the extent that the honor and dignity of the court shall be respected, and not of the individuals composing that body. Disguised as it may be, the personal element
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everywhere remains and everywhere predominates in human affairs, and will so long as human nature remains the same.
Mr. Justice Cooley says:
"There is also a maxim of law regarding judicial action which may have an important bearing upon the constitutional validity of judgments in some cases. No one ought to be a judge in his own cause; and so inflexible and so manifestly just is this rule, that Lord Coke has laid it down that `even an act of Parliament made against natural equity, as to make a man a judge in his own case, is void in itself; for jura natur‘ sunt immutabilia, and they are leges legum.'
"This maxim applies in all cases where judicial functions are to be exercised, and excludes all who are interested, however remotely, from taking part in their exercise. It is not left to the discretion of a judge, or to his sense of decency, to decide whether he shall act or not; all his powers are subject to this absolute limitation; and when his own rights are in question, he has no authority to determine the cause." Cooley on Const. Lim. (8th Ed.) p. 870.
Cited to this principle are the following cases: Washington Ins. Co. v. Price, Hopk. v. 2; Sigourney v. Sibley, 21 Pick. [Mass.] 101 [32 Am. Dec. 248]; Regents of University v. Turner, 159 Cal. 541, 114 P. 842, Ann. Cas. 1912C, 1162; In re Conant, 102 Me. 477, 67 A. 564, 120 Am. St. Rep. 512; State v. Slate, 278 Mo. 570, 214 S.W. 85, 8 A.L.R. 1226; State v. Bednar, 18 N.D. 484, 121 N.W. 614, 20 Ann Cas. 458; Ex parte Ellis, 3 Okla. Cr. 220, 105 P. 184, 25 L.R.A. (N.S.) 653, Ann. Cas. 1912A, 863; Freeman on Judgments, § 144.
The text continues:
"Nor is it essential that the judge be a party named in the record; if the suit is brought or defended in his interest, or if he is a corporator in a corporation which
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is a party, or which will be benefited or damnified by the judgment, he is equally excluded as if he were the party named. Accordingly, where the Lord Chancellor, who was a shareholder in a company in whose favor the Vice Chancellor had rendered a decree, affirmed this decree, the House of Lords reversed the decree on this ground, Lord Campbell observing, `It is of the last importance that the maxim that "no man is to be a judge in his own cause" should be held sacred. And that is not to be confined to a cause in which he is a party, but applies to a cause in which he has an interest.' We have again and again set aside proceedings in inferior tribunals, because an individual who had an interest in a cause took a part in the decision. And it will have a most salutary effect on these tribunals, when it is known that this high court of last resort, in a case in which the Lord Chancellor of England had an interest, considered that his decree was on that account a decree not according to law, and was set aside. This will be a lesson to all inferior tribunals to take care, not only that in their decrees they are not influenced by their personal interest, but to avoid the appearance of laboring under such an influence.'
"The people of the state, when framing their Constitution, may possibly establish so great an anomaly, if they see fit; but if the Legislature is intrusted with apportioning and providing for the exercise of the judicial power, we cannot understand it to be authorized, in the execution of this trust, to do that which has never been recognized as being within the province of the judicial authority. To empower one party to a controversy to decide it for himself is not within the legislative authority, because it is not the establishment of any rule of action or decision, but is a placing of the other party, so far as that controversy is concerned, out of the protection of the law, and submitting him to the control of one whose interest it will be to decide arbitrarily and unjustly.
"Nor do we see how the objection of interest can be waived by the other party. If not taken before the decision is rendered, it will avail in an appellate
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court; and the suit may there be dismissed on that ground. The judge acting in such a case is not simply proceeding irregularly, but he is acting without jurisdiction. And if one of the judges constituting a court is disqualified on this ground, the judgment will be void, even though the proper number may have concurred in the result, not reckoning the interested party." Cooley, Const. Lim. (8th Ed.) pp. 873, 874.
Supporting this rule the annotator appends the following note:
"In Queen v. Justices of Hertfordshire, 6 Q.B. 753, it was decided that, if any one of the magistrates hearing a case at sessions was interested, the court was improperly constituted, and an order made in the case should be quashed. It was also decided that it was no answer to the objection that there was a majority in favor of the decision without reckoning the interested party, nor that the interested party withdrew before the decision, if he appeared to have joined in discussing the matter with the other magistrates. See, also, the Queen v. Justices of Suffolk, 18 Q.B. 416; The Queen v. Justices of London, 18 Q.B. 421; Peninsular R. Co. v. Howard, 20 Mich. 18. But in North Dakota it has been held that the mere presence of, and participation by, a member of the Supreme Court, in a case in which he may be disqualified on account of his interest in the result, does not render the proceedings and judgment of the court void, where his presence is not necessary to constitute a quorum, and his vote does not determine the result. State ex rel. Langer v. Kositzy, 38 N.D. 616, 166 N.W. 534, L.R.A. 1918D, 237."
While there is considerable diversity of opinion in civil cases as to whether a judgment participated in by a disqualified judge or judges is absolutely void or is merely voidable, in criminal cases the weight of authority is to the effect that a judgment participated in by a disqualified judge is absolutely void.
In the case of Conant's Appeal, 102 Me. 477, 67 A. 564, 120 Am. St. Rep. 512, it is held:
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"The maxim, that `A person ought not to be judge in his own cause, because he cannot act both as judge and party,' applies in all cases where judicial functions are to be exercised, whether in proceedings of inferior tribunals or in courts of last resort."
To the same effect is People v. Connor, 142 N.Y. 130, 36 N.E. 807, affirming 65 Hun, 392, 20 N.Y.S. 209.
It has been well said that it is of the greatest importance that courts should be pure in that nothing of private feeling should be at work in such tribunals; that participation by a disqualified judge is such conduct as might influence the opinion of the other members of the court; and that a judge should not by his conduct afford any ground for believing or even suspecting that the other judges have been influenced by him, it being highly desirable that judicial proceedings shall be conducted by persons who cannot be suspected of improper motives.
Another reason advanced is that such a participation may cast a suspicion on the impartiality of the decision, even if the parties consent thereto, and that:
"The state cannot endure the scandal and reproach which would be visited upon its judiciary in consequence." Oakley v. Aspinwall, 3 N.Y. 552.
The Supreme Court of this state (Special Justices) determined this question in the companion case of State ex rel. Attorney General v. Martin, 125 Okla. 24, 256 P. 681, by its judgment duly entered 10 weeks before the judgment of conviction was rendered in the Owens Case, wherein it is held that:
"It does not always rest with the judge alone whose right to sit is questioned to say whether he is or is not disqualified. In cases where there is a doubt or question, it should be referred to the decision of the court."
And that:
"From the record in this case and the undisputed facts
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appearing herein, the disqualifications of the judges are shown."
The opinion of the court was by Utterback, Special Chief Justice. We quote from the opinion:
"The contention is made that respondent filed an application for a writ of mandamus in the Supreme Court of the state of Oklahoma on February 1, 1927, the same being cause No. 18123, and, because that application was denied by the Supreme Court, it is binding on this court, and we are now precluded from considering this question. That matter was presented to and considered by a court, the members of which, except Justices Riley and Clark, prior thereto, certified their disqualification in the case at bar. In the cause now before us, presenting the same questions, and on identical grounds as the motion which was presented to the Supreme Court, the members of which had disqualified, we held that the action of the Supreme Court in denying the writ in that case does not preclude the consideration of the application here by this court.
"It is earnestly insisted that, even granting that these Justices, Riley and Clark, are under the law disqualified to participate in this proceeding, there is no power vested in the majority of this court to so declare them disqualified, and that they are the sole and only judges of their own qualifications, and that, if they abuse this discretion, vested in them by law, the only remedy is by a proceeding for impeachment. This does not appear to us to be the law. Sections 2629 and 2632, C.O.S. 1921, hereinbefore set forth, provide:
"`No judge of any court of record shall sit in any cause or proceeding in which he may be interested, or in the result of which he may be interested.'
"Further:
"`The same qualifications shall apply to the members of the Supreme Court and the Criminal Court of Appeals, as to other courts of record.'
"The question as to whether or not the majority members of this court may declare an individual member disqualified by reason of interest or prejudice has not been
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passed upon directly by this court so far as we are able to determine, and, in fact, it is a matter that from its very nature seldom arises. Ordinarily, a judge on the first intimation of his disqualification voluntarily withdraws, as did the seven judges in this case. However, we find that our position is fortified by authority" (here citing and quoting from the opinion in Trustee Internal Improvement Fund, Appellant, v. William Bailey, Appellee, 10 Fla. 213, and a Tennessee case, entitled Waterhouse v. Martin, Peck, 374).
"It is contended that the rule announced herein as to the disqualification of judges does not apply in contempt cases; that every judge in this state has the sole and exclusive right to hear and determine, in the manner provided by law, all questions of contempt arising in his court. We recognize the force of this argument, and agree that, where the disqualification is alleged to, and does, arise out of matters inherent in the contempt itself, the judge's disqualification may not be urged, but, where it appears that the disqualification of the judge is apparent on account of extraneous matters not connected with the contemptuous act itself, the judge may then be disqualified as in other cases.
"In the case of Back et al. v. State of Nebraska, 75 Neb. 603, 106 N.W. 787, the fourth [paragraph of the] syllabus is as follows:
"`Contempt: Transferring Case. Upon prosecution for contempt in the district court, the judge before whom the cause is regularly to be heard may refuse to transfer the cause to another judge of the same court for hearing, unless it is made to appear by due proof that a fair and impartial trial cannot be had before him, or that some other ground for change of venue prescribed by statute exists.'
"In Lamonte v. Ward et al., 36 Wis. 558, it is said:
"`It is stated in the complaint that the case of Lamonte v. Pierce was commenced in the Milwaukee county court; that all of the proceedings in the cause until after the alleged contempt was committed by Pierce, were had in that court, and that, pending an application to punish Pierce for such contempt, the venue was duly changed to the circuit court. It is now claimed, on behalf of the appellants,
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that such change of venue was without authority of law, and, consequently, that the circuit court never obtained jurisdiction of the proceeding. The statute provides for the removal from the county to the circuit court of any cause or matter which shall come before the county court or judge in which the judge shall be interested, or in which he shall have acted as counsel for any party, R.S. c. 117, § 59, as amended by chapter 33, Laws of 1862 (Tay. Stats. 1323, § 84). If this proceeding is not a cause within the meaning of the statute, it is certainly a matter, and we have no doubt it is within the intention as well as the letter of the statute. The complaint does not state the reasons for the removal of the proceeding to the circuit court, and, in the absence of averment, we must presume, in favor of the regularity of such removal, that it was for one of the causes specified in the statute. It follows that the first ground of demurrer is not well assigned.'
"The Constitution prescribed that:
"`Right and justice shall be administered without sale, denial, or prejudice.' Section 6, art. 2, Bill of Rights.
"Our interpretation of this provision of the Constitution is that a judge is prohibited from trying a case in which he is prejudiced by or for either party. In Ex parte Ellis, 3 Okla. Cr. 225, 105 P. 186, 25 L.R.A. (N.S.) 653, Ann. Cas. 1912A, 863, the court said:
"`The framers of our Constitution guarded with special care our judiciary and tried to place it above suspicion of unfairness, passion, or prejudice, so that public confidence in our courts would not be shaken, and provided that right and justice should be administered without prejudice. By virtue of this constitutional provision, who can doubt or question the absolute and unqualified right of the citizen when called to answer in a court of justice to demand that his trial shall be before an impartial judge and by impartial jurors? Any other doctrine would place the rights of the citizen which were intended to be protected by this constitutional provision at the mercy or control of the court or judge thereof.'
"The Supreme Court of the state of Oklahoma construes this section of our Constitution in the case of Son v. Linebaugh, 101 Okla. 291, 225 P. 686, relative to the disqualification
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of a district judge. The court, speaking through Justice Nicholson, says:
"`While the respondent insists that he is not unfriendly to either of the petitioners, and that he can accord them a fair and impartial trial, and while we do not doubt his sincerity in this regard, yet the question is not so much whether he feels that he would be able to give the petitioners a fair and impartial trial, as whether his utterances and actions preclude reasonable men from feeling that a fair and impartial trial can be had before him, and that he is disinterested in the result.
"`(1, 2) Section 6, art. 2, of the Constitution, requires that "right and justice shall be administered without sale, denial, delay, or prejudice." The basic principle on which the law rests is that every litigant is entitled to have his rights determined by an impartial and disinterested tribunal and one that has not prejudged his case. It matters not that a judge is honest, and that he actually believes he can give litigants a fair trial; if he has discussed the merits of a case, and has formed an opinion before a trial, he is bound to enter upon the trial more or less biased or prejudiced. This should not be. Judges should refrain from partisanship in cases pending before them and should not permit the clamor of the public to warp their judgment. The judiciary is the safeguard of the nation and the state, and the members thereof should so conduct themselves as to inspire the confidence of all, so that every one will feel and know that in the courts their rights will be protected. This confidence cannot exist, if judges persist in discussing out of court the merits of cases pending before them and forming and expressing opinions thereon before a hearing in the orderly course of procedure, and where this has been done the judge should not, in justice to the litigant, insist upon being permitted to sit in the trial of his case.
"`In State ex rel. Warner et al. v. Fullerton, District Judge, 76 Okla. 35, 183 P. 979, this court said:
`"Courts should scrupulously maintain the right of every litigant to an impartial and disinterested tribunal for the determination of his rights. All are interested in the integrity, independence, and impartiality of the judiciary, the most important and powerful branch of our government. Judges presiding over the courts should be unbiased, impartial,
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and disinterested in the subject-matter in litigation and it is of the utmost importance that all doubt or suspicion to the contrary be jealously guarded against, and, if possible, completely eliminated, to the end that we may maintain and give full force and effect to the high ideals and salutary safeguards written in the organic law of the state. State ex rel. Mayo v. Pitchford, 43 Okla. 105, 141 P. 433; Yazoo & M.V.R. Co. v. Kirk, 102 Miss. 41, 58 So. 710, 834, 42 L.R.A. (N.S.) 1172, Ann. Cas. 1914C, 968."
"`To like effect are Dennison v. Christopher, 19 Okla. Cr. 467, 200 P. 783; Robertson v. Bozarth, 87 Okla. 102, 209 P. 742.
"`The evidence in the cases at bar convinces us that the respondent has prejudged the petitioners' cases; that he cannot accord to them that fair and impartial trial guaranteed to them by the Constitution and to which they are justly entitled under the law; and that he should certify his disqualification.'
"The Oklahoma Supreme Court has rendered a number of decisions which sustain our position. We quote from some of them as follows:
"`It is important, not only that this case be tried by a fair and impartial judge, but also that this court shall see to it that no suspicion attach to the courts of judicial proceeding, in order that it may be made apparent, in so far as possible, to the community that the judicial proceedings are impartial and beyond reproach; this to the end that the confidence in our judicial system may be sustained. Under the circumstances surrounding the case pending in Carter county, involving this election contest, it would be impossible for respondent to give to the trial that calm and unprejudiced consideration which would be given by a judge wholly separated from the turmoil, and to allow respondent to try this cause under these circumstances would be, in our judgment, to weaken the confidence of the public in the integrity of the court, and this we say, even though respondent should feel in his heart that as to the matters involved he is able to give a fair and impartial trial. We are strengthened in this conclusion by the acts of respondent, since the cause in question came within the jurisdiction of his division of the court.' State ex rel. Garrett v.
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Freeman, Judge of District Court of Carter County, 102 Okla. 291, 293, 229 P. 296, 297.
"`In order to maintain and foster proper respect and confidence of the people in the courts, the courts must be presided over by unbiased, impartial, and disinterested judges and all doubt and suspicion to the contrary must be jealously guarded against. McCullough v. Davis, 11 Okla. Cr. 431. 147 P. 779; State ex rel. Warner v. Fullerton, 76 Okla. 35, 183 P. 979; Dennison v. Christopher, Superior Judge, 19 Okla. Cr. 467, 200 P. 783.' Schulte v. Bolen, District Court Judge, 90 Okla. 238, 216 P. 928.
"`Moreover, the state has an interest in the standing, integrity, and reputation of its courts, and, when constitutional or statutory provisions forbid a judge from acting officially, his action is regarded as transgressing the public policy of the state. Such prohibitions are plainly intended not only for the benefit of the parties to a suit, but for the general interests of society by preserving the purity and impartiality of the courts and fostering the respect and confidence of the people for their decisions. 15 R.C.L. 530.
"`We are not unmindful of the fact that the practice of disqualifying trial judges on the grounds of bias or prejudice may be subject to much abuse. Captious and unwarranted accusations of bias should be discouraged. On the other hand, much of the adverse criticism against the courts of this state may be traced to the interest, real or apparent, shown by trial judges either in the subject-matter of the suit or the ultimate judgment to be rendered in particular cases. And in order to foster confidence in the integrity and impartiality of courts, a presiding judge should be compelled to certify his disqualification where it appears probable that such judge would not afford the defendant a fair trial.' Dennison v. Christopher, Superior Judge, 19 Okla. Cr. 467, 471, 200 P. 783, 784.
"We therefore hold that this court has the power, and it is its duty to consider this petition for a writ of mandamus on motion of respondent to disqualify these Justices of the Supreme Court from trying this case.
"Second. Upon the record are these Justices, or either of them, disqualified from trying this case?
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"In considering this matter relative to Justice Riley we find that respondent says, and it is not denied, that there is now pending, and has been pending for some months, a certain action in the district court of Oklahoma county, Okla., wherein Justice Riley is plaintiff and in which he seeks to recover from O.O. Owens the sum of $200,000 damages because of an alleged libel; that respondent in this court is counsel in said cause for the said O.O. Owens.
"As to said Justices, respondent further says that there is now pending in the district court of Tulsa county, Okla., a certain action wherein O.O. Owens is plaintiff and these Justices are defendants and wherein said Justices are sued for $100,000 damages alleged to have been occasioned said O.O. Owens on account of the fraud of said Justices Clark and Riley in causes before them as members of this court.
"The allegation is made that the opinion of the Supreme Court in cause No. 13646 was written, prepared, and filed by Justice Clark and was published as the opinion of this court, wherein it was shown that Justice C.W. Mason concurred, when in truth and fact said Justice Mason did not concur therein; and all of these suits are closely interwoven, and grow out of decisions which were participated in by Justices Clark and Riley; and that respondent herein, H.B. Martin, is sole counsel for the said O.O. Owens in all of these pending causes. It is also to be noted that the citation in the case at bar was issued against both H.B. Martin, respondent herein, and O.O. Owens. The trial of one will necessarily involve the rights of the other. They are in fact joint defendants in this cause.
"Respondent's answer to the charge is that he believes the facts stated in his motion are true. In the hearing of this case, as we view it, this court must pass upon the truth of respondent's allegations in his answer. It seems to us that the circumstances would require these Justices to pass upon the merits of cases in which they are interested.
"It is a matter of common knowledge that this litigation has been aired before the people of this state to a considerable extent. In view of the conditions as hereinbefore set out, are these Justices prejudiced or interested to such an extent as to probably prevent that fair consideration which should be given by a judge to the interest of a litigant appearing
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before him? In view of the decisions of this court and the Criminal Court of Appeals of this state, to which we have referred herein, as well as the courts of other states, we answer this question in the affirmative. With the interest of these Justices in the litigation pending both in the suit in Tulsa county and the suit by Justice Riley in Oklahoma county and the allegations made therein, and the allegations made in respondent's answer herein, it is only reasonable for the ordinary mind to conclude that they are interested in the litigation now before us to the extent that they could not give that free, impartial and unbiased consideration to the respondent herein due every litigant in this court. It may be said that respondent is simply acting as attorney for O.O. Owens in all of this litigation, and for that reason these Justices could have no prejudice against him, but, as is well known the rule is for the attorney to make his client's case his case, and, as lawyers, we know that the allegations in a pleading, after all the subject-matter is sifted and gone over, are as a rule confined to those allegations which the attorney decides are material. The attorney's interest is so clearly interwoven with his client's interest that the result of the case affects the attorney, and this fact is well known to all lawyers as well as judges, and the charge is a joint charge involving the joint acts of Owens as well as respondent. In the case of Knickerbocker Ice Co. v. Gray, 165 Ind. 140, 72 N.E. 869, 6 Ann. Cas. 607, note page 610, it was held that a stenographer of an attorney of one of the parties to an action was disqualified by interest from writing the deposition of a witness for use on the trial. In this case at bar if Justices Clark and Riley participate, they will be called upon to decide an issue which might vitally affect the result of the litigation in Tulsa county and in Oklahoma county now pending between these Justices and the client of respondent, wherein respondent is the only attorney engaged in behalf of his client. In Julian v. State, 167 Ind. 421, 79 N.E. 359:
"`The appellant, pursuant to a statute, was granted a change of judge in a criminal proceeding. At that time it was necessary for the regular judge to appoint the special one to hear the cause. A statute then in force denied a defendant more than one change of judge. Section 2078, Burns' 1908. The regular judge appointed, as special
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judge, an attorney who had been consulted by appellant for employment as his attorney, but who was never so employed. The appellant, notwithstanding the one change procured by him, objected to the appointment because the appointee was not disinterested. In reversing the judgment of conviction, and vacating the appointment of the special judge, the court quoted approvingly from Joyce v. Whitney, 57 Ind. 550, 554, as follows:
"`"Judges are by no means free from the infirmities of human nature, and therefore it seems to us that a proper respect for the high positions they are called upon to fill should induce them to avoid even a cause for suspicion of bias or prejudice, in the discharge of their judicial duties"'" (here citing and quoting from the case of State ex rel. Williams v. Ellis, 184 Ind. 307, 112 N.E. 98, and State ex rel. Linde, Atty. Gen., v. Robinson et al., 35 N.D. 410, 160 N.W. 512).
"The question of the interest of a judge in litigation depends upon the circumstances of each case.
"In Gill v. State, 61 Ala. 169, the court says:
"`According to the stern morality of the common law, a judge is required to be legally indifferent between the parties. Any, the slightest pecuniary interest in the result, disqualifies.'
"And the same court, in Ex parte Cornwell, 144 Ala. 497, 39 So. 354, says:
"`Any interest, the probable and natural tendency of which is to create a bias in the mind of the judge for or against a party to the suit, is sufficient to disqualify. The judge is human, and human nature at best is weak, and as far as it is possible a perfect equipoise should always be preserved in the administration of justice by the courts. Pecuniary interest in the result of the suit is not the only disqualifying interest.'
"`In Medlin v. Taylor, 101 Ala. 239, 13 So. 310, the probate judge, whose qualifications to sit in the cause were under review, was held not to have any disqualifying interest in the result of the case within the provisions of the Constitution or statute. He had, however, a personal
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interest in the similarity of the contest then being heard, and that of his own pending in the circuit court, and the opinion concludes: "It is the opinion of the court, however, that under the doctrines of the common law, aside from our constitutional and statutory provisions, he had such a personal interest in the questions involved in the contestation of Medlin, in the nature of things, such a bias in favor of one of the parties of the case, as disqualified him to hear and determine the same, and justified his action in declining so to do." See, also, Bryce v. Burke, 172 Ala. 219, 55 So. 635.
"`In Moses v. Julian, 45 N.H. 52, 84 Am. Dec. 118, is the following pertinent language: "It is the right of every citizen to be tried by judges as impartial as the lot of humanity will admit." This is but the expression of a well-known rule of universal justice everywhere recognized. * * * It is one of the great principles of the common law, for which the people of England had struggled for ages, and which they ultimately succeeded in establishing against the strenuous efforts of a tyrannical government. We can have no higher authority than this for denouncing as illegal everything which interferes with the entire impartiality of every legal tribunal.'
"Having in mind the litigation and charges hereinbefore set forth, the issues joined therein, the inevitable interest of these two Justices in the final outcome thereof, together with the fact that the respondent, as a member of the bar of this court, has been, and now is, active counsel for O.O. Owens in all such pending litigation, and is here jointly charged with O.O. Owens for contempt of this court, we are of the firm and fixed opinion that Justices Clark and Riley are, within the law of this state, in fact disqualified to try respondent in such a manner as will bring no suspicion of the fairness and integrity of the court and its decision in this cause."
The opinion by Chief Justice Utterback, Huett, Thompson, Brown, and Swank, Associate Justices, concurring, is based upon a judgment pronounced in open court holding that Justices Clark and Riley were disqualified by reason of their interest in the case. Said Justices thereupon
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certified their disqualifications. On February 14th, the Governor appointed J.A. Diffendaffer and George Trice in their stead.
Prior to directing their disqualifications to be entered of record, the Supreme Court appointed C.B. Cochran and D.J. Linebaugh to act as counsel for the court in presenting the charges against the respondents Martin and Owens.
Aided by able counsel who represented the state and those who represented the respondent as well, the court seems to have given this question that careful consideration which its importance required, and we are convinced that it is not only decisive as to the disqualifications of Justices Clark and Riley, but also as to the other five Justices concurring in the opinion of the court in the Owens Case. Justice Hefner, having dissented as to the punishment imposed, leaves his concurrence, in effect, dubitante.
If Justice Riley can maintain an action against Mr. Owens for libel, based upon the facts as alleged in the information for contempt, then each of the six Justices concurring in his opinion in this case could also bring action on the same grounds against Mr. Owens.
Recurring to the opinion of the court, Justice Riley asks the following questions:
"Can it be said that the result of this action would in any way affect a suit pending between one of the judges and the respondent in the district court of Oklahoma county? If so, how would it so affect it?"
In his conclusion he says:
"We now say from an examination of the instrument filed by respondent, Mr. Owens, that there is no evidence to sustain the truth of his assertions — that they were made without probable cause; that these assertions go beyond criticism or denunciation of the decisions to which reference is made and constitute an attack upon the integrity,
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the purity, the motives, and the fairness and honesty of this court as an instrumentality of government."
And we think, if the Supreme Court had jurisdiction, that, under well-settled principles of law, the findings and the judgment in the contempt case would be decisive of his right to maintain said action against the respondent.
Again, Justice Riley, speaking of the action brought by Mr. Owens in the district court of Tulsa county, says that the respondent —
"joining numerous members of this court therein, alleged fraud and corruption, and by extraordinary process restrained members of this court from passing further on the subject-matter of the action in this court out of which this contempt grew."
It appears that the Supreme Court interposed a writ of prohibition against said district judge from further proceeding in the cause. No opinion, it appears, has been filed, but we assume that a majority of the present membership of the Supreme Court participated in the proceedings had.
Certain misconduct on the part of Chief Justice Branson, as a witness in the Martin Case, is averred and not denied, also that Justice Mason on the 18th day of April made an assault upon Mr. Christy Russell, of counsel for the respondent, for which the Supreme Court (Special Justices) did cite the said Justice to show cause why he should not be adjudged guilty of contempt, and upon which said Justice was tried and found guilty of said contempt.
Justices Harrison, Phelps, and Lester were not by misconduct of any kind disqualified. However, they, with five other members of the court in the Martin Case, caused their disqualifications to be entered of record and the clerk of the court certified the same to the Governor. For this reason we think they are estopped from denying disqualification in the Owens Case.
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As to whether or not they are material witnesses in the case, Thompson, Special Justice, in his opinion in the Martin Case, says:
"Justices Branson, Hunt, Clark, Riley, Lester, Phelps, and Mason took the witness chair and in detail conclusively established the lack of any legal foundation or justification for the charges prepared and filed by respondent accusing the members of this court with misconduct as set forth in said motion."
In the case of Cooke v. United States, 267 U.S. 517, 45 S. Ct. 390, 69 L. Ed. 767, Mr. Chief Justice Taft says:
"All we can say upon the whole matter is that where conditions do not make it impracticable, or where the delay may not injure public or private right, a judge called upon to act in a case of contempt by personal attack upon him, may, without flinching from his duty, properly ask that one of his fellow judges take his place. Cornish v. United States [C.C.A.] 299 F. 283, 285; Toledo Co. v. United States [C.C.A.] 237 F. 986, 988.
"The case before us is one in which the issue between the judge and the parties had come to involve marked personal feeling that did not make for an impartial and calm judicial consideration and conclusion, as the statement of the proceedings abundantly shows. We think, therefore, that when this case again reaches the district court to which it must be remanded, the judge who imposed the sentence herein should invite the senior circuit judge of the circuit to assign another judge to sit in the second hearing of the charge against the petitioner."
In Cornish v. United States, supra (299 F. 283) it is said:
"The publication claimed to be contemptuous was dominantly a libel upon the individual judge who had issued the injunction. In such a case, and where there is no impelling necessity or exigency, we greatly deprecate the prosecution of contempt proceedings before that same judge, and we again call attention to what we said upon that subject in Toledo Co. v. United States, 237 F. 986, 988, 150 C.C.A. 636.
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* * * We repeat what we then said, in concluding our discussion of that subject:
"`We can well understand the reluctance with which a district judge would put himself in a position which seemed to be a shifting to another of this sometimes burdensome and very delicate duty; but it is of the greatest importance that contempt proceedings be put, as far as possible, beyond the reach of even unjust adverse criticism, and in such a situation as has been recited the judges of this court upon whom the duty may fall will always be ready to assign a judge from another district.'"
The Supreme Court of Idaho, in the case of Day v. Day, 12 Idaho, 556, 86 P. 531, 10 Ann. Cas. 260, said:
"It is contended by counsel for appellant that under the provisions of section 18, art. 1, of the Constitution of Idaho, `the people have prohibited a court from trying a case in which he is prejudiced by or for either party.' Said section is as follows: `Courts of justice shall be open to every person, and a speedy remedy afforded for every injury of person, property or character, and right and justice shall be administered without sale, denial, delay or prejudice.' They also cite paragraph 40 of the Magna Charta, which reads: `To none will we sell; to none will we deny or delay right or justice.' They contend through that constitutional provision that the people have declared that justice shall be administered not only without sale, without denial, and without delay, but also without prejudice, and contend that the legislative power to pass laws regulating the change of venue is limited by constitutional provisions respecting the subject. * * * It is contended that said section of the Constitution is self-acting, self-executing, and requires no legislative provision for its enforcement, and cannot be abridged or modified by any legislative or judicial act. There is no question but what said provision is self-operating, and it is regarded as settled in this country that all negative or prohibitive clauses in a Constitution are self-executing. * * * The Legislature, neither by neglect to act nor by legislation, can nullify a mandatory provision of the Constitution. * * * For it cannot be maintained that a judge who is biased or prejudiced in a case on trial before him can administer justice without prejudice. Disregarding
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said provisions of the Constitution, the ordinary principles of right and justice prohibit or disqualify a judge from trying a case in which he is prejudiced for or against either of the parties to the suit. This provision of the Constitution cannot be brushed aside by saying that it is a mere maxim of the law and means nothing. For the principle therein expressed is one of the foundation stones of our judicial system and jurisprudence, and could not be removed without shattering the entire system."
In Ex parte Ellis this court held:
"Under the declaration of article 2, § 6, Bill of Rights, that `Right and justice shall be administered without sale, denial, delay, or prejudice,' as well as by the unwritten dictates of natural justice, the courts of this state are commanded to administer justice without prejudice."
And that:
"Public confidence in our judicial system and courts of justice demands that causes be tried by unprejudiced and unbiased judges, and a denial of a change of judge, applied for on the ground of prejudice, will be presumed to be a denial of justice."
To effectuate this command of the Constitution, the Legislature enacted chapter 14, Sess. Laws 1909, p. 167, which provides that a judge shall be incompetent and disqualified to hear and try a cause when in any wise interested or prejudiced. Section 1 (now section 2629, C.S. 1921) provides:
"No judge of any court of record shall sit in any cause or proceeding in which he may be interested, or in the result of which he may be interested, * * * or in which is called in question the validity of any judgment or proceeding in which he was of counsel or interested."
As a method to render this section operative to the members of the two appellate courts, section 4 (now section 2632) provides:
"The same qualification shall apply to the members of the Supreme Court and the Criminal Court of Appeals,
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as to other courts of record: and, whenever any member of either of said courts is disqualified, the same shall be entered of record in such court and such disqualifications of such court and such disqualifications of such member shall forthwith be certified by the clerk of such court to the Governor of the state, who shall appoint some member of the bar of the state, possessing the same qualifications as the members of such court, to sit as special judge in said cause."
In the light, then, of these established rules and principles, it cannot be maintained that the petitioner was accorded his constitutional right to be tried by disinterested and unprejudiced judges as guaranteed by the second clause of section 6 of the Bill of Rights, nor can it be said that his conviction was by due course of legal proceedings, in conformity with established rules and principles of jurisprudence, founded upon the Constitution and the laws of our state.
It is also urged that the petitioner is deprived of his liberty "without due process of law," because the information does not state facts sufficient to constitute criminal contempt; that the same was not verified as by law required, and the facts alleged are not supported by affidavit or other proof; that the respondent was denied his constitutional right to a trial by jury; that the judgment pronounced, sentence imposed, and commitment issued are not supported by affidavit or other proof; and that the court was without jurisdiction to pronounce the judgment and impose the sentence.
The record shows that, the plea of not guilty having been entered, the respondent demanded a trial by jury, which demand was by the court denied. The court then pronounced its judgment of conviction and issued the commitment thereon.
To justify this procedure, the Supreme Court says:
"A contempt proceeding is sui generis. It is neither
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civil nor criminal, but may partake of either in its nature.
"Contempt of court is not a crime in the state of Oklahoma. Under section 1500, C.O.S. 1921, only those acts are crimes that are declared so by statute.
"That the statutory definition of direct contempt does not exclude other forms of contempt known to the common law."
A preliminary question is thus presented as to whether or not a criminal contempt is a crime.
In what is perhaps the most celebrated contempt case in the history of American jurisprudence, Gompers v. Buck's Stove & Range Co., 221 U.S. 418, 31 S. Ct. 492, 55 L. Ed. 797, 34 L.R.A. (N.S.) 874, Mr. Justice Lamar, delivering the opinion of the court, said:
"Contempts are neither wholly civil nor altogether criminal. And `it may not always be easy to classify a particular act as belonging to either one of these two classes. It may partake of the characteristics of both.' Bessette v. [W.B.] Conkey Co., 194 U.S. 329 [24 S. Ct. 665, 48 L. Ed. 102 (997)].
"It is not the fact of punishment but rather its character and purpose that often serve to distinguish between the two classes of cases. If it is for civil contempt, the punishment is remedial, and for the benefit of the complainant. But if it is for criminal contempt the sentence is punitive, to vindicate the authority of the court. * * * But it may involve much more than mere matters of practice. For, notwithstanding the many elements of similarity in procedure and in punishment, there are some differences between the two classes of proceedings which involve substantial rights and constitutional privileges. Without deciding what may be the rule in civil contempt, it is certain that in proceedings for criminal contempt the defendant is presumed to be innocent, he must be proved to be guilty beyond a reasonable doubt, and cannot be compelled to testify against himself. Boyd v. United States, 116 U.S. 616 [6 S. Ct. 524, 29 L. Ed. 746]; United States v. Jose [C.C.] 63 F. 951; State v. Davis. 50 W. Va. 100
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[40 S.E. 331, 14 Am. Crim. Rep. 282]; * * * Sabin v. Fogarty [C.C.] 70 F. 482, 483; Drakeford v. Adams, 98 Ga. 724 [25 S.E. 833]."
This distinction between the two forms of proceedings, and that the acts sought to be punished by criminal contempt proceeding is "crime" in the full and true sense of the word are again emphatically pointed out in the case of Gompers v. United States, 233 U.S. 604, 34 S. Ct. 693, 58 L. Ed. 1115, Ann. Cas. 1915D, 1044, an aftermath of the first Gomper's Case just above quoted. The respondent pleaded the statute of limitations. The court held that, being thus a crime both by statute and analogy, the statute of limitation was applicable as for prosecution for crime.
Mr. Justice Holmes, speaking for the court, says:
"It is urged in the first place that contempts cannot be crimes, because, although punishable by imprisonment and therefore, if crimes, infamous, they are not within the protection of the Constitution and the amendments giving a right to trial by jury, etc., to persons charged with such crimes. But the provisions of the Constitution are not mathematical formulas having their essence in their form; they are organic living institutions transplanted from English soil. Their significance is vital, not formal; it is to be gathered not simply by taking the words and a dictionary, but by considering their origin and the line of their growth, Robertson v. Baldwin, 165 U.S. 275, 281, 282 [17 S. Ct. 326, 41 L. Ed. 715]. It does not follow that contempts of the class under consideration are not crimes, or rather, in the language of the statute, offenses, because trial by jury as it has been gradually worked out and fought out has been thought not to extend to them as a matter of constitutional right. These contempts are infractions of the law, visited with punishment as such. If such acts are not criminal, we are in error as to the most fundamental characteristic of crimes as that word has been understood in English speech. So truly are they crimes that it seems to be proved that in the early law they were punished only by the usual criminal procedure (3 Transactions of the Royal Historical Society [N.S.] P. 147 [1885]), and that at least in England it
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seems that they still may be and preferably are tried in that way. See 7 Halsbury, Laws of England, 280, sub v. "Contempt of Court," 604; Clements v. Erlanger, 46 L.J. (N.S.) Ch. (Eng.) pp. 375, 383; Matter of Macleod, 6 Jur. 461; Schreiber v. Lateward, 2 Dick. 592; Wellesley's Case, 2 Russ. & M. 639, 667; In re Pollard, L.R. 2 P.C. 106, 120; Ex parte Kearney, 7 Wheat. 38, 43 [5 L. Ed. 391]; Bessette v. W.B. Conkey Co., 194 U.S. 324, 328, 331, 332 [24 S. Ct. 665, 48 L. Ed. 997]; Gompers v. Buck's Stove, etc., Co., 221 U.S. 418, 441 [31 S. Ct. 492, 55 L. Ed. 797, 34 L.R.A. (N.S.) 874]."
In the case of Michaelson v. United States, 266 U.S. 42, 45 S. Ct. 18, 69 L. Ed. 162, 35 A.L.R. 451, the Supreme Court of the United States held that the provision of the Clayton Act giving a right to trial by jury in proceedings for contempt in violating a decree is mandatory, although the statute provides that trial may be by the court, or, upon demand of the accused, by a jury, and that:
"In criminal contempts, as in criminal cases, the presumption of innocence obtains and proof of guilt must be beyond reasonable doubt."
Mr. Justice Sutherland, delivering the opinion of the court, said:
"But it is contended that the statute materially interferes with the inherent power of the courts and is therefore invalid. That the power to punish for contempts is inherited in all courts, has been many times decided and may be regarded as settled law. It is essential to the administration of justice. The courts of the United States, when called into existence and vested with jurisdiction over any subject, at once become possessed of the power. So far as the inferior federal courts are concerned, however, it is not beyond the authority of Congress (Ex parte Robinson, 19 Wall. 505, 510, 511, 22 L. Ed. 205 [208]; Bessette v. W.B. Conkey Co., 194 U.S. 324, 326, 24 S. Ct. 665, 48 L. Ed. 997 [1001]); but the attributes which inhere in that power and are inseparable from it can neither be abrogated nor rendered practically inoperative. That it may be regulated within limits not precisely defined may not
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be doubted. The statute now under review is of the latter character. It is of narrow scope, dealing with the single class where the act or thing constituting the contempt is also a crime in the ordinary sense. It does not interfere with the power to deal summarily with contempts committed in the presence of the court or so near thereto as to obstruct the administration of justice, and is in express terms carefully limited to the cases of contempt specifically defined. Neither do we think it purports to reach cases of failure or refusal to comply affirmatively with a decree — that is to do something which a decree commands — which may be enforced by coercive means or remedied by purely compensatory relief. If the reach of the statute had extended to the cases which are excluded a different and more serious question would arise. But the simple question presented is whether Congress may require a trial by jury upon the demand of the accused in an independent proceeding at law for a criminal contempt which is also a crime. In criminal contempts, as in criminal cases, the presumption of innocence obtains. Proof of guilt must be beyond reasonable doubt, and the defendant may not be compelled to be a witness against himself. * * *
"The intent of Congress in adopting the provision was to give to the accused a right of trial by jury, not merely to vest authority in the judge to call a jury at his discretion. See [Rock Island County] Supervisors v. United States, 4 Wall. 435, 446, 447, 18 L. Ed. 419 [422, 423]."
The recent case of Ex parte Grossman, 267 U.S. 87, 45 S. Ct. 332, 69 L. Ed. 527, 38 A.L.R. 131, fully bears out the same view.
In Creekmore v. United States [C.C.A.] 237 F. 743 [L.R.A. 1917C, 845], it is held:
"With certain exceptions, a criminal contempt is a crime, and a criminal contempt proceeding is a criminal proceeding for all purposes, and one adjudged guilty of a criminal contempt may be properly characterized as a convict.
"A criminal contempt is an `offense,' within the meaning of Rev. Stat. § 5541 [U.S. Comp. St. § 10527]."
In Re Shull, 221 Mo. 623, 121 S.W. 10, 133 Am. St. Rep. 496, it is held:
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"Contempt of court is a specific criminal offense; the adjudication is a conviction, and the commitment in consequence thereof is an execution."
In Hydock v. State, 59 Neb. 296, 80 N.W. 902, it is held:
"Proceedings in contempt are in their nature criminal. The rules of strict construction applicable to criminal prosecutions obtain therein, and presumptions and intendments will not be indulged to sustain a conviction for contempt of court."
Mr. Church, in his work on Habeas Corpus (2d Ed.) § 308, says:
"Contempt of court is a specific offense, and the fine imposed is a judgment in a criminal case. The adjudication is a conviction, and the commitment in consequence thereof is execution."
In Ex parte Gudenoge, 2 Okla. Cr. 110, 100 P. 39, it is held:
"Contempts of court are divided into direct and indirect contempts, and are classified as civil and criminal. The distinction between `civil' and `criminal' contempts is plainly drawn. The former consists in disobeying some judicial order made in the interest of another party to the proceeding; the latter, of acts disrespectful to the court or obstructive to the administration of justice, or calculated to bring the court into disrepute."
In Nichols v. State, 8 Okla. Cr. 550, 129 P. 673, it is said:
"Criminal contempts are prosecuted to preserve the power and vindicate the dignity of the courts, and to punish the offender. By * * * the issuance of attachment or rule to show cause, a criminal action is commenced and the accused is entitled to all the constitutional guaranties in criminal prosecutions, as provided by section 20 of the Bill of Rights, Const. art. 2" [section 20.]
In Emery v. State, 29 Okla. Cr. 27, 232 P. 128, we said:
"It is essential to the validity of proceedings in contempt, subjecting a party to a fine and imprisonment, that they
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show a case in point of jurisdiction within the provisions of the law by which such proceedings are authorized. Cress v. State, 14 Okla. Cr. 521, 173 P. 854."
"In a proceeding for contempt of court, if the contemnor is found guilty, the punishment imposed is a sentence in a criminal case. Such adjudication is a conviction, and the commitment in consequence thereof is in execution of sentence for a criminal offense. Flathers v. State, 7 Okla. Cr. 668, 125 P. 902; Burnett v. State, 8 Okla. Cr. 639, 129 P. 1110, 47 L.R.A. (N.S.) 1175."
And see Ex parte Dawes, 31 Okla. Cr. 397, 239 P. 689; Blanton et al. v. State, 31 Okla. Cr. 419, 239 P. 698; Wofford v. State, 33 Okla. Cr. 288, 243 P. 988.
The only expression of the Supreme Court on this question is found in Smythe v. Smythe, 28 Okla. 266, 144 P. 257, wherein it was held that a proceeding to punish for a contempt, committed in the presence of the court, is a criminal action.
Our Penal Code defines and classifies crimes as follows:
"1501. A crime or public offense is an act or omission forbidden by law, and to which is annexed upon conviction, either of the following punishments:
First. Death.
Second. Imprisonment.
Third. Fine.
Fourth. Removal from office; or,
Fifth. Disqualification to hold and enjoy any office of honor, trust, or profit under this state.
"1502. Crimes are divided into:
First. Felonies.
Second. Misdemeanors.
"1503. A felony is a crime which is, or may be, punishable with death, or by imprisonment in the penitentiary.
"1504. Every other crime is a misdemeanor.
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"1505. This chapter specifies the classes of persons who are deemed capable of crimes and liable to punishment therefor, and defines the nature of the various crimes; and prescribes the kind and measure of punishment to be inflicted for each. The manner of prosecuting and convicting criminals is regulated by the Code of Criminal Procedure.
"1506. The punishments prescribed by this chapter can be inflicted only upon a legal conviction in a court having jurisdiction."
It has been repeatedly held by federal and state courts that proceedings to punish for contempt are sui generis, because they art not hedged about with all the safeguards provided in the Bill of Rights and Constitutions for protecting one accused of ordinary crime from the danger of unjust conviction.
This is due, of course, to the fact that before the ratification of the federal Constitution, courts had been held to be inherently empowered to protect themselves and the function they perform by summary proceedings without a jury to punish disobedience of their orders and disturbance of their hearings.
Generally speaking, the inherent powers of courts are those which are essential to their existence and to the due administration of justice. Among the inherent powers of a court of last resort is the power which the court has of enforcing and effectuating its own mandates.
It is said that, under the common law, the jurisdiction of courts is a part of the power inherent in the state by virtue of its sovereignty, and is susceptible of no limitation not imposed by the state itself.
It is a fundamental principle that the powers of government, whatsoever they may be, are derived from the people. This one truth must therefore be evident that whatever power an officer or department of the government can rightfully exercise must be and is derived from the Constitution which the people themselves have adopted.
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In our state Constitution, the limits of legislative, executive, and judicial power has been traced with precision. So we must look to that instrument for the purpose of determining these questions.
Section 25 of the Bill of Rights abrogates the doctrine that proceedings to punish for contempts are sui generis. There is perhaps no other state with a Constitution containing a provision similar to this provision. So it may be said that this constitutional provision is sui generis.
It will be observed that the first clause of section 25 of the Bill of Rights, interpreted by its own terms, has a meaning perfectly clear and definite. It constitutes a plain and clear grant of power to the Legislature to regulate proceedings in contempt. It reads:
"The Legislature shall pass laws defining contempts and regulating the proceedings and punishment in matters of contempt."
Having thus delegated the power to the Legislature to regulate the proceedings and punishment in matters of contempt, the framers of our Constitution went further. They provided:
"That any person accused of violating or disobeying, when not in the presence or hearing of the court, or judge sitting as such, any order of injunction, or restraint, made or entered by any court or judge of the state shall, before penalty or punishment is imposed, be entitled to a trial by jury as to the guilt or innocence of the accused."
In the third and last clause they provided:
"In no case shall a penalty or punishment be imposed for contempt, until an opportunity to be heard is given."
Thus prescribing that which the plainest dictates of natural justice must prescribe to every tribunal the law, that "No man shall be condemned unheard."
Constitutional and statutory provisions are always to
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be interpreted in the light of the evils they were obviously designed to remedy. No other rule of interpretation is more generally established or more generally recognized. The framers of our Constitution were practical men, and many members of that memorable body were able lawyers; a large number of whom have since ranked among the leading counsel of our state and nation. So it was, when our constitutional convention assembled, the persistent claim that the courts were above the law in the exercise of inherent power to punish for contempt came to be considered. Many of the framers of the Constitution had witnessed the conduct of one of the Associate Justices of the Supreme Court of Oklahoma Territory, who for a brief period had assumed the role of a judicial tyrant in this county of Oklahoma, the history of which is only in part set forth in the cases cited and relied upon in the opinions of the Supreme Court in the Martin and Owens Cases, i.e., In re Frank McMaster, 2 Okla. 435, 37 P. 598, and Burke v. Territory, 2 Okla. 499, 37 P. 829, wherein it appears that J.J. Burke and E.E. Brown, editors of the Times Journal of this city, were convicted of contempt and committed to the county jail of this county. Also shown by the "Disbarment proceedings against Judge J.L. Brown," 2 Okla. 590, 39 P. 469. To restrain this abuse of power the Third Territorial Legislature passed an act entitled, "An act to define contempts of court, and to prescribe penalties for the same." S.L. 1895, p. 91, c. 13.
The members of the convention were familiar also with the case of Smith v. Speed, 11 Okla. 95, 66 P. 511, 55 L.R.A. 402, construing the aforesaid act of the Legislature, and wherein the Supreme Court of the Territory held:
"The Legislature of this territory has no power to take away from the courts whose jurisdiction originated in the organic act, the right to punish a contempt, and to either turn it over to a separate tribunal, and remove the hearing of it to another county nor to cause the matter to be submitted to a trial by jury."
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However, we may here remark that the opinion was a fair exposition of the laws in force at that time.
The presumption that courts will not abuse their power, nor assume power not granted, is not indulged in by the people in the formation of governments.
The framers of the Constitution knew that judicial tyranny is hard enough to resist under ordinary circumstances, for it comes in the guise of impartiality and with the prestige of fairness.
Experience admonished them to guard against anything of this kind in the future of the state. They very well knew that no people could be free under a government which had the power to punish without restraint, and so the foregoing provision, section 25 of the Bill of Rights, was formulated and was adopted by the people of our state.
While it is well settled that jurisdiction may be conferred by necessary implication as effectively as by express terms, it is a familiar rule of construction that a general grant of power may be controlled in a particular case by a special grant. And this must be so, in order to give effect to the whole instrument and render it consistent with itself.
Thus it appears that the power to define contempts and to regulate the proceedings and punishment in matters of contempt in the courts of this state are not the exercise of an inherent power.
The Legislature in pursuance of this provision of the Bill of Rights has defined contempts of court. Section 1697, art. 16, of the Penal Code, entitled "Other crimes against Public Justice." Here is the statute, the declared will of the people through their Legislature:
"Contempts of court shall be divided into direct and indirect contempts. Direct contempts shall consist of disorderly or insolvent behavior committed during the session of the court and in its immediate view and presence, and
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of the unlawful and willful refusal of any person to be sworn as a witness, and the refusal to answer any legal or proper question; and any breach of the peace, noise or disturbance so near to it as to interrupt its proceedings, shall be deemed direct contempt of court, and may be summarily punished as hereinafter provided for. Indirect contempts of court shall consist of willful disobedience of any process or order lawfully issued or made by court; resistance willfully offered by any person to the execution of a lawful order or process of a court."
In Ex parte Ballew, 20 Okla. Cr. 105, 201 P. 525, this court said:
"The Constitution (section 25 of the Bill of Rights), quoted above, directs the Legislature to pass laws defining contempt and to regulate the proceedings and punishment in matters of contempt. Our statutes (sections 2277 and 2279 [1697, C.S. 1921]) quoted above, have defined both direct and indirect contempt. It will be seen that the charge here of an assault on the judge at the entrance to a barber shop on the street of Ardmore, after court hours, does not come within our statutory definition of direct contempt as being `insolent behavior committed during the session of the court and in its immediate view and presence,' nor is it `any breach of the peace, noise or disturbance so near to it as to interrupt its proceedings.' Neither was the assault complained of an indirect contempt within the definition of the statute, as being a `willful disobedience of any process or order lawfully issued or made by court,' or `resistance willfully offered by any person to the execution of a lawful order or process of court.' The assault complained of was none of the things constituting a contempt as defined by statute. The people of this state, by section 25 of the Bill of Rights, directed the Legislature to define contempts, and a statute defining direct and indirect contempts has since been adopted, specifically enumerating what acts shall constitute contempt. Applying the rule of statutory construction, `Expressio unius est exclusio alterius,' the affirmative description and enumeration of the acts constituting contempt implies a negative as to the exercise of such power in other cases not enumerated. 25 R.C.L. 982; 36 Cyc. 1122."
In Ex parte Hickey, 4 Smedes & M. (Miss.) 751, the
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respondent, Hickey, was editor of a newspaper in which an editorial appeared, wherein acts and conduct of the presiding judge of the court then in session were discussed and criticized. For this he was convicted of criminal contempt and sentenced to serve a term of 5 months in jail and pay a fine of $500. In the body of the opinion it is said:
"The Constitution and laws of Mississippi jealously guard the freedom and rights of its citizens. * * *
"Yet by the doctrine of contempts, as insisted upon, there exists an offense not only undescribed and undefined in nature and character, and one whose very existence is dependent upon the opinion and discretion of a judge, but a punishment, to use the words of Senator Clinton, in Yates v. The People (6 Johns. 467), `unlimited, uncontrolled, indefinite, arbitrary, and omnipotent.' `It is to be remembered,' he adds, `that summary convictions are against the genius and spirit of our institutions, and in derogation of civil liberty. The judge is without check, and the accused without the usual guards of freedom. There is no grand jury to accuse, no petty jury to try, but his property and liberty depend upon the fiat of the court. Here, then, is a case where an unjust and tyrannical judge may, at pleasure, imprison an innocent man for life, and being a judicial act for which he cannot be questioned, thus place punishment at defiance. A doctrine pregnant with such horrible results can never be in unison with the letter or the spirit of a free and enlightened system of jurisprudence.' * * *
"It is a maxim of law that where a discretion is allowed courts in the punishment of defined offenses, that discretion must be regulated by law. But in this instance, the law, as claimed, sets to itself no bounds, and, under the influence of strong passions, punishment may be inflicted to a cruel, an unusual and excessive degree. The records of the English courts are not without glaring examples, under this authority, which might be hence quoted as precedents for imitation. There are no guards, then, against a resort to the most tyrannical licentiousness, and it is not an unreasonable jealousy to distrust men clothed with arbitrary power. It is certainly better that the freedom of
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the citizen should be controlled by fixed and plain laws, than to be left dependent upon the uncertain moderation of those in power. The authority to punish at pleasure, and during pleasure, is, indeed, more consonant and agreeable to a throne, without responsibility, than to tribunals of justice erected upon free and equal laws. * * *
"But our own Legislature has passed a law upon this subject in these words: `The courts shall have power to fine and imprison any person who may be guilty of a contempt of the court, while sitting, either in the presence or hearing of such court; provided, that such fine shall not exceed one hundred dollars, and no person, for such contempt, shall be imprisoned for a longer period than the term of the court at which the contempt shall have been committed.' H. and H. 436, 26. The same law, it is to be remarked, is made applicable to the circuit, the chancery, and the high Court of Errors and Appeals.
"This statute describes clearly the offense, and affixes for it a limited, terminable and definite punishment. Upon what principle can the Legislature be supposed to have overlooked the existence if any such could be imagined under our Constitution, of a power unlimited, ungranted and undefined, to punish contempts of courts without their walls, acts unaffecting the decorum or respect of their presence? A greater offense is thus made subject to circumscribed chastisement, and a lesser is left liable to an infinite degree of punishment. The sense, spirit, scope, and intention of a statute are to be regarded in its construction, and judges are so to construe it as to suppress a mischief, or advance a remedy. Dwarris, 718. Is not the power of punishing implied contempts mischievous; should it not be remedied? Our statute, by this rule of interpretation, should be pronounced `declaratory' of the law upon the subject of contempts, so far as they are committed by general persons. A common sense survey of the statute creates a forcible implication that its language details the circumstances which can alone constitute a contempt of our courts. Our legislators frame the laws, acknowledging the Constitution as the highest and the only authority on earth for their guide in shaping them. They found in that instrument no such principle as this doctrine of constructive contempts would establish, but rather a precedent and paramount authority to disobey it. They have, in consequence,
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commanded the subject of contempts of courts not to be governed, to quote the words of Lord Coke, `by the crooked cord of the discretion of the judges,' but to be `measured by the golden metewand of the law.'
"The shield which our Constitution throws around the press has been held up to interpose before the power of the courts to punish for contempts. The most dearly prized offspring of our national liberty, is the freedom of the press. It is so, because it can be made its most effectual protection at home, and because it can be employed as the apostle of those liberties to millions abroad. The worst enemy to freedom is ignorance. Instruct men in the knowledge of their rights, and a vindication of those rights follows as surely as light follows the rising sun."
In Ex parte Earman, 85 Fla. 297, 95 So. 755, 31 A.L.R. 1226, the Supreme Court of Florida said:
"A `direct contempt' is an insult committed in the presence of the court or of a judge when acting as such, or a resistance to, or an interference with, the lawful authority of the court or judge in his presence, or improper conduct so near to the court or judge acting judicially as to interrupt or hinder judicial proceedings. This species of contempt may be punished at once and summarily by the court that is offended, in order to maintain its authority and dignity, but the punishment must be appropriate to the offense and not excessive.
"An `indirect' or `constructive contempt' is an act done not in the presence of a court or of a judge acting judicially, but at a distance, under circumstances that reasonably tend to degrade the court or the judge as a judicial officer, or to obstruct, interrupt, prevent, or embarrass the administration of justice by the court or judge. See Ex parte McCown, 139 N.C. 95, 51 S.E. 957, 2 L.R.A. (N.S.) 603."
In Craig v. Hecht, 263 U.S. 255, 44 S. Ct. 103, 68 L. Ed. 293, Mr. Chief Justice Taft says:
"It is of primary importance that the right freely to comment on and criticize the action, opinions and judgments of courts and judges should be preserved inviolate; but it is also essential that courts and judges should not be
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impeded in the conduct of judicial business by publications having the direct tendency and effect of obstructing the enforcement of their orders and judgments, or of impairing the justice and impartiality of verdicts.
"If the publication criticizes the judge or court after the matter with which the criticism has to do has been finally adjudicated and the proceedings are ended so that the carrying of the court's judgment cannot be thereby obstructed, the publication is not contempt and cannot be summarily punished by the court however false, malicious or unjust it may be. The remedy of the judge as an individual is by action or prosecution for libel."
In the case of In re Pryor, 18 Kan. 72, 26 Am. Rep. 747, Mr. Justice Brewer says:
"After a case is disposed of, a court or judge has no power to compel the public, or any individual thereof, attorney or otherwise, to consider his rulings correct, his conduct proper, or even his integrity free from stain, or to punish for contempt any mere criticism or animadversion thereon, no matter how severe or unjust."
In the case of Emery v. State, supra, we said:
"When a case is disposed of and the decision announced, such decision becomes public property, and as such subject to public scrutiny and investigation. In such cases the press, the public, or any individual thereof, attorney or otherwise, has the undoubted right to comment upon the decision and criticize and censure the court as they see fit, being responsible for the abuse of that right."
The charge in this case is based on an instrument filed with the clerk of the court, "for leave to file a petition for rehearing in said cause (No. 17409) and to stay the mandate and writ of mandamus in said cause." It is alleged in the conclusion of the second count of the information "that said instrument in writing, so written, filed, published, and presented, was further intended to impede and corrupt the due administration of justice with reference to said cause No. 17409."
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In the opinion of the court, Justice Riley says:
"We therefore hold that the contempt committed was a direct contempt and in the face of the court, for the reason that the respondent, by signing and verifying the instrument filed, knew and intended that the same would be deposited in the office of the clerk of this court, and he further knew and intended that the same should be presented and would in its natural course come before this court. We think the language of the instrument, verified and filed by respondent, falls within the statutory definition of direct contempt (section 1697, C.O.S. 1921), in that the same was "insolent behavior committed during the session of the court and in its immediate view and presence.' However, we are of the opinion that the statutory definition of direct contempt does not exclude other forms of contempt known to the common law."
A petition for rehearing is not a pleading, and a motion for leave to file a petition for rehearing is a fortiori, not a pleading. It at most is a communication addressed to the court. Obviously, it requires no argument to show that such an instrument does not come within the purview "of disorderly or insolent behavior committed during the session of the court and in its immediate view and presence."
In Emery v. State, supra, this court held:
"Contempts of court in this state are governed by constitutional and statutory provisions, and not by common-law rules."
To the same effect is Ex parte Dawes, 31 Okla. Cr. 397, 239 P. 689.
In the Emery Case the defendant was held for writing a letter to a trial judge relating to a cause pending on a motion for rehearing. In the opinion of this court it is held that the same constituted indirect contempt under the statutory definition.
In Ex parte Earman, supra, the Florida Supreme Court held that letters or other written communications
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sent through the mail to a judge fall within that class of contempts known as indirect or constructive contempts of a criminal character, provided that the contents are such as to show a contempt of the court.
In State v. Anderson, 40 Iowa, 207, the defendant, an attorney, had published in a newspaper over his own name, after the trial and determination of a cause, an article somewhat severely criticizing the rulings of the judge on the trial and intimating that his mind had been biased. Under a statute defining contempt as "contemptuous or insolent behavior" toward the court "while engaged in the discharge of a judicial duty," it was held that the defendant could not be punished for contempt.
In State v. Root, 5 N.D. 487, 67 N.W. 590, 57 Am. St. Rep. 568, it was held:
"Abusive and defamatory language, used by an attorney at law concerning a judge and his official action in cases pending, which the attorney is prosecuting, and which language attacks the private character of the judge as a citizen, does not constitute contempt of court, where it is not used in the courthouse or in the immediate view and presence of the court."
In Snyder v. State, 151 Ind. 553, 52 N.E. 152, it was held:
"Where attorneys during a court day, but while it was not in session, held a meeting, at which one of their number presided, in a room in the courthouse adjoining the court room, and occasionally used as a court room, which meeting was attended by the judge, at their request, their acts in his presence are not committed in the presence of the court, and hence cannot constitute direct contempt."
In Blanton v. State, 31 Okla. Cr. 419, 239 P. 698, this court held:
"A witness, upon whom is served a subp[fn_]na duces tecum, ordering him to produce before a grand jury books, documents, and records, who attends before the grand jury
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and testifies, but fails to produce such books, documents, and records without satisfactory excuse is guilty of an indirect contempt."
[fn_][Editor's Note: This character is non-transferable.]
It will be observed that in the judgment and commitment the court "finds that said pleading" was filed "for the purpose of influencing, intimidating, and coercing the Supreme Court of Oklahoma, and the Justices thereof, in the further determination and consideration of cause Numbered 17409."
The purpose of said motion, as appears from its title and allegations, was to stay the mandate and writ of mandamus in said cause No. 17409. For this reason we think the information, if sufficient to charge a contempt, which we do not decide, charges an indirect contempt, defined by the statute as follows:
"Indirect contempts of court shall consist of willful disobedience of any process or order lawfully issued or made by court; resistance willfully offered by any person to the execution of a lawful order or process of a court."
In Salter v. State, 2 Okla. Cr. 464, 102 P. 719, 25 L.R.A. (N.S.) 60, 139 Am. St. Rep. 935, we said:
"In the Constitution of Oklahoma, the utmost pains have been taken to preserve all the securities of individual liberty, and all the provisions of the Constitution designed to safeguard the liberty and security of the citizen should be liberally construed by the courts."
We are not unmindful of the statement made in the opinion of the court in Hosmer v. State, 24 Okla. Cr. 312, 218 P. 164, "that the common law and procedure governs, in so far as not superseded or modified by the Constitution or by statutory enactments authorized by the Constitution," and referred to in the opinions of the court in the Martin and Owens Cases. This statement was overruled in Emery v. State, supra, and in Ex parte Dawes, supra, and we here expressly overrule the same as incompatible with section
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25 of the Bill of Rights and the statutes effectuating the same, which exclude "other forms of contempt known to the common law."
In the case at bar we expressly hold that the first clause of section 25 of the Bill of Rights, and the statute (section 1697) defining direct and indirect contempts and specifically enumerating what acts shall constitute contempt, limits the power of the courts to the punishment of contempts of the character defined in the statute, and in the mode and to the extent provided by other provisions of the Penal Code to which reference herein is made.
We come now to the question of the sufficiency of the information in that the same was not verified and the facts alleged were not supported by affidavit or other proof.
Section 1699, Penal Code, provides that:
"In all cases of indirect contempt the party charged with contempt shall be notified in writing of the accusation and have a reasonable time for defense; and the party so charged shall, upon demand, have a trial by jury."
Construing this section in Wofford v. State, 33 Okla. Cr. 288, 243 P. 988, it is said:
"Since the facts contained in the charge did not occur in the immediate view and presence of the court, the proceeding attempted to charge defendant with an indirect criminal contempt. It is necessary that a proceeding to punish for indirect criminal contempt under section 25, art. 2, of the Constitution, and sections 1697 and 1699, Comp. Stat. 1921, be instituted by affidavit, complaint, or information setting forth the facts upon which the charge is based. Where contempt is predicated on affidavit filed with the court or judge, or oral testimony under oath given before the court, a statement of the charge in writing by the court or judge will suffice."
Counsel also contend that the judgment pronounced is void because it is not supported by affidavit, evidence, or other proof.
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Having held that criminal contempts are crimes, punishable like other public offenses, and having shown that, in proceedings for criminal contempt, the presumption of innocence obtains, that proof of guilt must be beyond a reasonable doubt, and that every presumption and intendment of innocence in such a proceeding is in favor of the party charged, we deem it sufficient to say that the statement that the affiant believes the facts stated in the information to be true is no more than the expression of an opinion, and one which may conscientiously be made and yet prove nothing, and be based upon no facts or knowledge. See Miller v. U.S., 8 Okla. 315, 57 P. 836.
The record further shows that no evidence was offered in support of the allegations of the second count in the information, upon which the judgment and sentence of the court is based.
It follows from what has been said that no evidence having been offered to support or sustain the charge, the Supreme Court was without jurisdiction to pronounce the judgment and sentence or to issue its commitment thereon.
We are also of the opinion that the punishment imposed is in violation of the constitutional guaranty that excessive fines shall not be imposed or cruel or unusual punishments inflicted, Bill of Rights, § 9, and is without authority of law.
The commitment recites:
"It is further ordered and adjudged that for said contempt the said O.O. Owens shall be imprisoned in the county jail of Oklahoma county, state of Oklahoma, for and during a period of 12 months, said time to commence upon the date of incarceration of the said O.O. Owens in the county jail of Oklahoma county, Okla., and expire when the said O.O. Owens shall have served in said county jail the full 12 months; and it is further adjudged that as a further punishment for such contempt, the said O.O. Owens shall pay a fine of $5,000 and the costs of this action, the
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same to be paid to the clerk of this court within 10 days from this date; and upon failure to pay said fine and costs, within 10 days from this date, execution shall be issued and levied on the property of the said O.O. Owens."
By act of the Legislature in 1913, the law providing that fines, imposed as punishment in criminal actions, partake of the nature of civil judgments was repealed. S.L. 1913, p. 203. And this act provided that:
"All costs in the prosecution of all criminal actions shall in case of conviction of the defendant be adjudged a part of the penalty of the offense of which the defendant may be convicted, whether the punishment for such offense be either imprisonment, or fine, or both, and fixed either by the verdict of the jury, or judgment of the court, trying the case, and the payment of such fees and costs in addition to the payment of the fine assessed, shall be enforced by imprisonment until the same shall be satisfied, at a rate of one dollar per day of such fees and costs, or fine, or both." Section 6332, Comp. St. 1921.
Thus it appears that in default of the payment of the fine imposed and the costs, the petitioner would, under the statute, have to serve a term of not less than 15 years' imprisonment in satisfaction of the judgment and sentence.
In his opinion in State ex rel. Attorney General v. Davenport et al., 125 Okla. 1, 256 P. 340, the Chief Justice says:
"The judgment as to the punishment inflicted is not in violation of the law. Whether the Legislature should have been more definite in prescribing the punishment in cases of contempt is not before us for comment. * * * There is no limitation as to the amount of the fine or the duration of the punishment."
Truly, this is a most remarkable statement. In our government there is no source from which such unlimited power over the liberty and property of the citizen can be derived. It would be contrary to principles of natural justice and right. It is a maxim of the law that, where a
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discretion is allowed courts in the punishment of defined offenses, that discretion must be regulated by law.
The provisions prescribing punishment for contempt and its limitations are found in the following sections of our Penal Code:
"1698. Punishment for contempt shall be by fine or imprisonment, or both, at the discretion of the court."
"2286. Where the performance of an act is prohibited by any statute, and no penalty for the violation of such statute is imposed in any statute, the doing of such act is a misdemeanor."
"1508. Except in cases where a different punishment is prescribed by this chapter or by some existing provisions of law, every offense declared to be misdemeanor is punishable by imprisonment in the county jail not exceeding one year or by a fine not exceeding five hundred dollars, or both such fine and imprisonment."
Another provision of the Penal Code provides:
"2306. Upon a conviction for any crime punishable by imprisonment in any jail or prison, in relation to which no fine herein prescribed, the court may impose a fine on the offender not exceeding two hundred dollars in addition to the imprisonment prescribed."
Without the maximum limitations prescribed by the sections quoted just above, following section 1698, said section would be unconstitutional as being too vague and indefinite to be enforced. Ex parte Cain, 1 Okla. Cr. 7, 93 P. 974.
We remark here that the maximum punishment for contempt as fixed by various statutes, federal and state, in but few instances exceeds a fine of $200 and imprisonment for 30 days.
To recapitulate what has been held, we maintain:
First. That upon the undisputed facts as set forth in the amended petition herein, and the Constitution and
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the laws of the state, the seven Justices of the Supreme Court concurring in the judgment of conviction of the petitioner, O.O. Owens, were disqualified by reason of interest and prejudice.
Second. The information being verified on belief only, and no evidence having been offered in support of the allegations thereof, the Supreme Court was without jurisdiction to pronounce the judgment and sentence.
Third. The judgment and sentence imposed being in violation of the constitutional guaranty that excessive fines shall not be imposed, or cruel or unusual punishments inflicted, and being without authority of law, the court was without jurisdiction to pronounce said judgment and to issue its commitment thereon.
It has been intimated that the respondent may disregard the decision of this court, if it should award the writ of habeas corpus as prayed for by reason of the writ of prohibition and orders of the Supreme Court commanding him so to do.
The framers of the Constitution took care to provide by what power or authority and in whose name the judicial writs of the state should run. Section 19 of article 7 declares the will of the people in this respect. These writs do not run in the name of this court, or of the Supreme Court, or of the Legislature, or of the Governor, but in the name and by the authority of the state of Oklahoma.
It is known to all that the object of this great writ of right is to guard and protect the liberty of the citizen. But if the officer to whom the writ is directed, in the name and by the authority of the state, can be permitted to defy the state's authority and to claim exemption from the power of the state's writ on the ground that he has been prohibited by order of the Supreme Court from obeying the same, then, indeed, was the work of the framers of our
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Constitution a mere sound, an empty expression, the Bill of Rights but a mere compilation of glittering generalities, the Constitution itself a declaration of principles without sanction, an idle covenant without obligation — a pompous pretension to supreme and fundamental law, but in fact a supple instrument in the hands of ambition, to be moulded at convenience or defied at will, as the occasion may suggest.
The Constitution declares that "The Governor shall cause the laws of the state to be faithfully executed." Const. art. 6, § 8. Whatever right, therefore, the Constitution and laws of the state gives to any of its citizens, the Governor must take care to enforce and to that end may employ the whole or so much of the executive power of the state as shall be needful. Where the people frame the laws, the people demand obedience to the laws.
In the case of Fluke et al. v. Canton, Adjutant General, 31 Okla. 718, 123 P. 1049, the Supreme Court of this state said:
"Under our Constitution it is the duty of the courts to announce the law and leave the responsibility of the enforcement of the law to the executive department."
We do not deem it necessary to say anything further upon the subject at this time.
From all the foregoing considerations it is our opinion that the petitioner, O.O. Owens, is unlawfully restrained of his liberty and is imprisoned without due process of law. It follows that he is entitled to a discharge from the imprisonment of which he complains. He is therefore by the judgment of this court discharged therefrom.
DAVENPORT, J., concurs.
EDWARDS, J., concurs in the conclusion.