34.500 - Grounds for discharge in certain cases.
1. Â When the jurisdiction of the court or officer has been exceeded.
2. Â When the imprisonment was at first lawful, yet by some act, omission or event, which has taken place afterwards, the petitioner has become entitled to be discharged.
3. Â When the process is defective in some matter of substance required by law, rendering it void.
4. Â When the process, though proper in form, has been issued in a case not allowed by law.
5. Â When the person having the custody of the petitioner is not the person allowed by law to detain the petitioner.
6. Â Where the process is not authorized by any judgment, order or decree of any court, nor by any provision of law.
7. Â Where the petitioner has been committed or indicted on a criminal charge, including a misdemeanor, except misdemeanor violations of chapters 484A to 484E, inclusive, of NRS or any ordinance adopted by a city or county to regulate traffic, without reasonable or probable cause.
8. Â Where the petitioner has been committed or indicted on any criminal charge under a statute or ordinance that is unconstitutional, or if constitutional on its face is unconstitutional in its application.
9.  Where the court finds that there has been a specific denial of the petitioner’s constitutional rights with respect to the petitioner’s conviction or sentence in a criminal case.
[20:93:1862; B § 368; BH § 3690; C § 3762; RL § 6245; NCL § 11394]—(NRS A 1967, 1469; 1971, 773; 1985, 1236)