16 Ohio Misc. 322

Allen v. Perini, Supt., Marion Correctional Institution. Davis v. Cooper. Boykin v. Perini, Supt., Marion Correctional Institution.

(Nos. C 68-279, C 68-280, C 68-281

Decided October 18, 1968.)

United States District Court for the Northern District of Ohio, Western Division.

Petitioners represent themselves.

Respondents represented by Attorney General’s Office.

Young, J.

This cause came before the Court on respondent’s motion for an extension of time within which to respond to show cause orders in three petitions for a writ of habeas corpus. Since all three motions present exactly the same questions, the Court is considering these three petitions for the purposes of these motions and for the purposes of these motions alone.

The petition in C 68-279 was filed on September 24 and the respondent was ordered to show cause on or before October 14; C 68-280 was filed on September 25 and the respondent was ordered to show cause on or before October 15; C 68-281 was filed on September 27 and the *323respondent was ordered to show cause on or before October 16. Thus the length of time in which the respondent was to show cause in C 68-279 and C 68-280 was twenty days while the length of time in which the respondent was to show cause was nineteen days in 0 68-281.

The motions all carry the same recital of necessity for the extension of time:

“In the past every effort has been made to comply with orders to show cause within the allotted time and in each case where this was not possible, court aides have been notified and verbal extensions have been granted.
“At latest count we had 125 cases pending in the United States District Court in the Southern District of Ohio, Eastern Division; 12 in the Southern District, Western Division; 14 in the Northern District, Eastern Division; 38 in the Northern District, Western Division; 36 in the Supreme Court of the United States; and 14 in the United States Court of Appeals. In addition, we have numerous cases which must be handled in the state courts.
“We regret that this request is necessary, but at least for the present see no other alternative.”

This Court is entirely sympathetic to the problems which face the respondent. The Court takes notice that the respondent’s attorney, the Office of the Attorney General of the State of Ohio is extremely understaffed, overworked, and presumably underpaid. The case load which they state that they are handling is staggering. For this reason the Court is disposed to give the respondent as much time to reply to a habeas corpus from a prisoner in custody after conviction of a crime as it can under law.

Controlling in this matter is the second paragraph of 28 U. S. Code §2243 which reads: “The writ, or order to show cause shall be directed to the person having custody of the person detained. It shall be returnable within three days unless for good cause additional time, not exceeding twenty days, is allowed.”

It is clear that it is within the discretion of the Court to grant extensions of time within the twenty-day period. Wallace v. Heinze, 351 F. 2d 39 (9th Cir. 1965), cert. denied *324384 U. S. 954 (1966).1 Therefore the Court will grant respondent the full twenty-day period in C 68-281.

The question of whether this Court is empowered to grant an extension of time beyond the twenty-day limit expressed in the statute appears never to have been faced by the Courts of the United States. The present wording was changed from the former more complicated provisions to the same effect by the Judiciary Act of 1948. Unfortunately the hearings and reports surrounding this Act express no reason for the change.2

*325Speaking of the former statute -which provided for return on or before various dates depending on the distance between the place of custody and the court in which the petition for the writ was filed, the Supreme Court of the United States has said:

“This section was taken almost literally from the Ha-beas Corpus Act, chap. 2 of the 31st Car. II, which was designed to remedy procrastination and trifling with the writ. Prior to that act the mode of compelling a return was by taking out an alias, and then a plurtes writ, and thereafter issuing an attachment. A reasonable time has always been allowed for making the return, and it is not to be presumed that one will not be made.” Ex parte Baez, 177 U. S. 378, at 388-89 (1900). [In this case the writ had not been returned.]

Unfortunately the court did not there reach the question of allowance of time beyond the limits set in the statute.

Since the writ of habeas corpus as it is known today derives its origin from the Great Acts of the English Parliament during the Interregnum, the reign of Charles II and the reign of William and Mary it is relevant to look to determine what the various states have done when faced with similar problems. A search of the state statutes indicates that a number of states have time limitations of some form.3 These time limitations vary from the clearly *326discretionary4 to the clearly mandatory.5 But without a single exception, none of these states have had occasion to pass on the question. There is a passing reference in a recent Missouri case to the time limitation in that statute being mandatory.6

Some years ago the Supreme Court in New York had an opportunity to discuss whether such a limitation was mandatory or discretionary. While its discussion is entirely dictum, this Court believes that it is relatively persuasive:

“Further than that the section of the Code [Code of Civil Procedure §2006 as it then read] upon which the respondent relies was intended to specify only a maximum time beyond which an excuse for delay in obedience to the writ would not be considered. This is apparent if we consider the history of the legislation, and the source from which the present words derive. [The court then proceeds *327to trace the provision back to a statute of 1787.] * * * The preamble of that act recites that:
‘ ‘ ‘ G-reat delays have been nsed by sheriffs, gaolers and other officials to whose custody persons have been committed for criminal and supposed criminal matters, in making returns of writs of habeas corpus to them directly and by other shifts to avoid their yielding obedience to such writ contrary to their duty and known laws of the land.’
“The act then provides that for prevention of such abuses the prisoner shall be produced ‘according to the command of the writ,’ unless the commitment of the party be in a place beyond the distance of 20 miles from the place or places where the court shall be. If beyond the distance of 20 miles and not above 100, then within the space of 10 days. If beyond the distance of 100 miles, then within the space of 20 days and not longer. When one considers the difficulties of transportation at that time and the language of the statute, it is clear that it was not intended to do anything more than fix a maximum limit for obedience * * People ex rel. Jenkins, v. Kuhme, 57 Misc. 30, 107 N. Y. S. 1020, 1025 (1907), aff’d, 127 App Div. 907, 111 N. Y. S. 1136 (1908) (per curiam), aff’d, 195 N. Y. 610, 89 N. E. 1109 (1909) (mem.).7

Looking at the present federal statute, 28 U. S. Code §2243, particularly in light of the Jenkins case, supra, it appears that the three- and twenty-day provisions established therein are the outside limits of the reasonable time for the return of writ mentioned by the Supreme Court. Ex parte Baes, supra. This Court does not undertake to substitute its judgment for that of the Congress.

The history of the writ is so well known that there is *328no need to repeat it here. The courts must jealously guard it lest the very occurrences which exercised the New York legislature in 1787 again occur. While the scope of the writ has been greatly increased since the establishment of the maximum time for return by Congress, see Fay v. Noia, 372 U. S. 391 (1963), for the courts to undertake to extend time beyond that twenty day limitation would only tend to weaken the power of the writ.

When the Office of the Attorney General of the State of Ohio was having difficulty responding to ten-day show cause orders, we extended the time to twenty days. Were we now to extend it to thirty days, I am sure that this too would be too little time, for that office has always been and will always be busy. I sympathize with the respondent, but I am bound by the law.

Should the respondent desire to alleviate this problem, it would appear that he would have two courses. The first would be to petition Congress to extend the time limitation established in the statute for post-conviction habeas corpus. The second and better course would be for the State of Ohio to increase the size of the staff in the Office of the Attorney General to permit handling of these petitions more expeditiously. It would certainly appear that the citizens of the State of Ohio could afford a penny a person to preserve the integrity of this great writ.

Since the motions in C 68-279 and C 68-280 seek an extension of time beyond what this Court has determined to be the maximum allowable time for making a return, they will be denied. For the reasons already set forth, the time in which to show cause in C 68-281 will be extended until October 17, 1968. An order will be entered accordingly.

Allen v. Perini
16 Ohio Misc. 322

Case Details

Name
Allen v. Perini
Decision Date
Oct 18, 1968
Citations

16 Ohio Misc. 322

Jurisdiction
United States

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