
    In re PYLE.
    (No. 5,707.)
    (Submitted March 9, 1925.
    Decided March 11, 1925.)
    [234 Pac. 254.]
    
      Habeas Corpus — Intoxicating Liquors — Bes Adjudicata — Doctrine Inapplicable — Information—Separate Counts — Cumulative Sentences — Fine and Jail Sentence — Judgment.
    
      Sabeos Corpus — Doctrine of Bes Adjudicata Inapplicable.
    1. The doctrine of res adjudicata does not apply in habeas corpus proceedings, but the complainant may make successive applications for the writ until the judicial power of the state has been exhausted.
    Same — Scope of Inquiry on Application for Writ.
    2. The scope of inquiry on application for writ of habeas corpus by one convicted of prime is whether the court had jurisdiction to enter the judgment complained of and issue commitment thereon.
    Intoxicating Liquors — Information—Separate Counts — Cumulative Sentences Authorized.
    3. In a prosecution for violations of the liquor law charged under separate counts in one information, the court may impose eumulative sentences on the several counts on which the defendant is adjudged guilty.
    
      1. Order in habeas corpus proceedings as res judicata, see notes in 1 Ann. Cas. 260; 11 Ann. Cas. 129; Ann. Cas. 1916D, 506.
    
      Same — Fine—Jail Sentence- — -Judgment Held not Ambiguous.
    4. A judgment that defendant convicted on three counts of the information charging violations of the liquor law pay a fine of $200 and serve sixty days in the county jail on each count, and that if the fines be not paid, “he serve them out” at the rate of one day for each two dollars of the fines, held not uncertain or ambiguous, it meaning that he be imprisoned for a total of 180 days, and serve one day for each two dollars of the fines aggregating $600.
    4. Sentence of imprisonment until fine is paid, see note in 12 Am. St. Rep. 202.
    Application for writ of habeas corpus by Eddie Pyle.
    Writ quashed.
    
      Mr. Franh Arnold, for Complainant, submitted a brief and argued the cause orally.
    ilír. L. A. Foot, Attorney General, and Mr. A. M. Angstman, for the -State, submitted a brief; Mr. Angstman argued the cause orally.
   MR. JUSTICE GALEN

delivered the opinion.

Upon application made to this court March 4, 1925, a writ of habeas corpus was on that day issued by the court and made returnable before mo. The attorney general has appeared on behalf of the state by motion to quash, and has filed a return to the writ. There are no issues of fact.

From the files and records of this court it appears that on the fourteenth day of February, 1925, an application for a writ of habeas corpus was made by the prisoner to this court, upon the same facts, and that a writ was on that day regularly issued by the Chief Justice, returnable before Honorable William L. Ford, district judge of Broadwater county, and that on February 25, 1925, after hearing, the writ was dissolved by Judge Ford.

It appears that, by information filed in the district court of Park county, on March 8, 1924, one Eddie Pyle was charged in four counts with, the crime of misdemeanor, consisting of the unlawful sale and possession of intoxicating liquors. The first and third counts charge'unlawful sale of liquor on January 23, 1924, and the second and fourth counts charge the unlawful possession of liquor on the same date. Upon his plea of “not guilty” the accused was regularly tried by a jury, which' on November 19, 1924, returned its verdict of “guilty as charged in the information,” upon the first three counts thereof, leaving the punishment to be fixed by the court. Thereafter, on November 25, 1924, judgment was regularly made and entered on the verdict, whereby it was adjudged “that the said Eddie Pyle pay a fine of two hundred dollars ($200) on each of the first three counts in said information and that he serve sixty (60) days in the county jail on each of the first three counts in said information, and that if the fines are not paid, that he serve them out at the rate of one day for each two dollars ($2) of said fine.” Commitment was regularly issued commanding the sheriff to execute the judgment, and that the defendant be required to “serve in the county jail one day for each two dollars (2) of said fines.”

It is the contention of the prisoner on the merits that the judgment of the court is concurrent as to imprisonment on the different counts upon which he was found guilty and that the fines imposed are not sufficiently definite, in that from the judgment it does not appear that the prisoner is required to he imprisoned in the county jail in default of payment qf the fines, one day for each $2 of the fines, after the expiration of the prison sentence. At the outset, the attorney general contends that the decision of Judge Ford is res adjudicada and constitutes a bar to this proceeding, and that since the writ was heretofore issued by the Chief Justice of this court, returnable before Judge Ford, who has rendered his decision thereon, this court is without authority to issue a second writ based on the same facts.

The contention of. the attorney general will first be briefly considered and disposed of. It is my opinion, under our statutes, that the doctrine of res adjudícala, has no application in habeas corpus proceedings. A decision on habeas corpus by one court does not constitute a bar to another proceeding of the same character in another court having jurisdiction, and the fact that a Justice of this court has once issued a writ, returnable for hearing before a district judge, does not, after decision by the district judge, divest this court of jurisdiction to entertain a second application, issue the writ, and make it returnable before another district judge, or one of its members or before the court itself. No appeal is permitted in habeas corpus cases, and successive applications for the writ may be made until the judicial power of the state has been exhausted.

The scope of inquiry is limited to the jurisdiction of the court in pronouncing its judgment and the validity of the judgment or commitment under which the prisoner is restrained of his liberty.

I cannot go behind the judgment, and I must first make determination alone of the question whether the court had jurisdiction to enter the judgment complained of and to issue commitment thereon. If it did, then is the judgment and the commitment -valid and sufficiently specific to be executed? The judgment is that the prisoner “serve sixty days in the county jail on each of the first three counts in said information ° ® * and that if the fines are not paid that he serve them out at the rate of one day for each two dollars of said fine.”

Section 11078 of the Revised Codes of 1921 permits separate offenses for violation of the liquor laws to be united in separate counts in one information against a person accused, and authorizes trial of the defendant on all at one trial and the imposition of the penalty for all offenses committed. When this section was adopted in 1921,'we then had and now have a statute enacted in 1895, reading as follows: “When any person has been convicted of two or more crimes before sentence has been pronounced upon him for either, the imprisonment to which he is sentenced upon the second or other subsequent conviction must commence at the termination of the first term of imprisonment to which he shall be adjudged, or at the termination of the second or other subsequent term of imprisonment, as the case may be.” (Sec. 11596, Rev. Codes, 1921.) It must be held that the lawmakers had in mind existing laws respecting cumulative sentences at the time of the enactment of section 11078, and, accordingly, that section 11596 was to be made applicable in liquor eases as well as others. It is the only direct 'legislative utterance upon the subject, and must be held applicable in the absence of independent statute indicating a different course in prohibition cases. Such being the case, I hold it was within the court’s province to impose a cumulative sentence on the several counts of the information, on which the defendant was adjudged guilty, and that it did so.

Now as to the question of the definiteness of the fines at tempted to be imposed. The county jail of Park county is designated as the place of imprisonment in expiation of the prison sentences, and, as respects the fines imposed, if the fines be not paid, it is ordered that the defendant “serve them, out at the rate of one day for each two dollars of said fine.” Can any doubt exist as to where or how the prisoner is to satisfy the fines imposed in default of payment thereof? I think not. It is ordered that he be imprisoned in the county jail of Park county, and the commitment is directed to the sheriff of that county for execution. The sheriff is clearly commanded to imprison the defendant for definite cumulative terms, and as to the fines, in default of payment thereof, the sheriff is required to see to it that the prisoner “serves them out at the rate of one day for each two dollars.”

The statute authorizes imprisonment not exceeding “one day for every two dollars of the fine” (sec. 12069, Rev. Codes 1921), and in this case the judgment requires that, if the fines are not paid, the defendant be required to “serve them out.” This language cannot be misunderstood. It clearly means continued imprisonment in satisfaction of the fines imposed. The commitment commands the sheriff, in default of payment of the fines, “that the defendant, Eddie Pyle, serve in the county jail, one day for each two dollars of said fines.” The judgment and commitment are sufficiently clear and leave no doubt as to that which is required of the sheriff. Both are authorized by law. The court acted within its jurisdiction in rendering the judgment, and the same is in all respects regular and valid on its face.

Taking the commitment by its four comers and reading its contents, the sheriff is not left in doubt as to that which he must do, nor from the language employed can there exist doubt in the prisoner’s mind as to what is required. He is to be imprisoned “sixty days in the county jail on each of the first three counts” of the information, i. e., a total of 180 days; and if the fines imposed aggregating $600, be not paid, he must serve them out by imprisonment in the same jail at the rate of one day for each two dollars of the fine. I find no uncertainty or ambiguity in either the judgment or the commitment.

As the term of imprisonment, specified in the commitment, has not yet expired, and no part of the fines imposed have been paid, the prisoner is lawfully detained and restrained of his liberty, and it is ordered that the writ be quashed.

Writ quashed.  