Commonwealth ex rel. Jones v. Rundle

33 Pa. D. & C.2d 9, 1963 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 155
CourtPennsylvania Court of Common Pleas, Dauphin County
DecidedSeptember 16, 1963
Docketno. 503
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 33 Pa. D. & C.2d 9 (Commonwealth ex rel. Jones v. Rundle) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Pennsylvania Court of Common Pleas, Dauphin County primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Commonwealth ex rel. Jones v. Rundle, 33 Pa. D. & C.2d 9, 1963 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 155 (Pa. Super. Ct. 1963).

Opinion

Miller, J.,

A petition for writ of mandamus has been filed by one Lawrence Jones, a prisoner in the Eastern State Correctional Institution at Philadelphia, wherein the warden of that institution and the Pennsylvania Board of Parole have been named as defendants. Petitioner seeks leave to proceed in forma pauperis. Although, as noted by this court previously in numerous similar cases, the pleading, as filed, does not comply with the Pennsylvania Rules of Civil Procedure, we shall treat it as a complaint in mandamus under Pa. R. C. P. 1091, et seq. Defendants, by the Attorney General, have filed a demurrer challenging plaintiff’s cause of action, and have also filed a certificate under the official seal of defendant board summarizing the history of plaintiff’s case. We may take judicial notice of the facts set forth in this certificate: Commonwealth ex rel. Dean v. Pennsylvania Board of Parole, 80 Dauph. 31 (1962), and we note no substantial discrepancy between these facts and those averred in plaintiff’s complaint.

Plaintiff now stands committed as a convicted parole violator, and his complaint prays this court to correct the alleged errors in the recomputation of the expiration date of his maximum sentence by defendant board. After a careful consideration of the matters before us, and the statutory and case law applicable thereto, it is our conclusion that this complaint must be dismissed for the reasons hereinafter discussed.

To summarize the details of plaintiff’s lengthy parole history, it appears that he was originally sentenced on a charge of burglary to the Allegheny County Workhouse in November, 1941, for a term of two and one-half to five years. While so confined, and following a fatal assault upon a fellow prisoner, he was convicted of second degree murder and sentenced to [11]*11a 10- to 20-year term at the State Correctional Institution at Pittsburgh on January 28, 1943, with the balance of the original burglary sentence to be served upon his release from the murder sentence. At that time, a New York detainer was also lodged charging a parole violation from that State. Upon expiration of the minimum murder sentence, on February 13, 1953, he was paroled to serve the remainder of his burglary sentence at the workhouse, and was released from the latter sentence on July 12, 1956, at which time he commenced serving his parole on the murder sentence. While on parole, he was convicted of a crime in New York, and on February 21, 1957, he was available for return to Pennsylvania as a convicted parole violator. He was recommitted to the penitentiary, and after recomputation by the board, the expiration date of the maximum murder sentence was changed from January 28, 1963 to February 6, 1967. Thereafter, he was again paroled on July 19, 1961, and while on parole, was convicted of petty larceny in New York on February 15, 1963. He now stands recommitted in Pennsylvania as a convicted parole violator, and in accordance with the applicable law, defendant board has again recomputed the maximum expiration date of his murder sentence to be September 2, 1968, and has advised plaintiff that he will not be considered for further parole until February, 1965.

Plaintiff contends that the board erred in not giving credit on his murder sentence for the time which he served in the Allegheny County Workhouse on the burglary sentence subsequent to his initial parole on the murder sentence, and also for failing to credit him with penitentiary time served in New York following his convictions in that State while on parole.

The applicable statute governing the board’s action in this case is the Parole Law of 1941, as amended, the Act of August 6,1941, P. L. 861, 61 PS §331.1, et seq., [12]*12and particularly section 21.1 (a) of that law, added by the Act of August 24, 1951, P. L. 1401, as amended, 61 PS §331.21a(a), the applicable portion of which is as follows:

“(a) Convicted violators. Any parolee under jibe jurisdiction of the Pennsylvania Board of Parole released from any penal institution of the Commonwealth who, during the period of parole or while delinquent on parole, commits any crime punishable by imprisonment, for which he is convicted or found guilty by a judge or jury or to which he pleads guilty or nolo contendere at any time thereafter in a court of record, may, at the discretion of the board, be recommitted as a parole violator ... If his recommitment is so ordered, he shall be reentered to serve the remainder of the term which said parolee would have been compelled to serve had he not been paroled, and he shall be given no credit for the time at liberty on parole . . .” (Italics supplied.)

What plaintiff in effect contends is that because he was not at liberty on parole from his murder sentence while he was serving the balance of the burglary sentence in the Allegheny County Workhouse, he should be given credit for this time toward the service of his sentence, this being the converse of the statutory language, supra, which requires that no credit shall be given for time at liberty on parole. Plaintiff evidently is unaware that this issue is not new, and that it has been resolved adversely to him in several prior cases, first by this court in Commonwealth ex rel. Kascak v. Johnston, 68 Dauph. 11 (1955), and a short time later in Money v. Pennsylvania Board of Parole, 68 Dauph. 238 (1955), both times speaking through the late Judge, later President Judge, Neely, and finally by the Superior Court in Commonwealth ex rel. Haun v. Cavell, 190 Pa. Superior Ct. 346 (1959), wherein the Su[13]*13perior Court approved the conclusions reached by Judge Neely in both the Kascak and Money cases.

In Haun, the Superior Court stated, inter alia, that:

“In effect, he [the prisoner] argues that the parole was effective to permit him to start the back time in the workhouse, but was not effective to release him from his penitentiary sentence.
“Under this theory of the law, he would be serving his back time and his assault sentence concurrently. We have said both before and since the Act of 1951 that there can be no longer any doubt that the prisoner’s current sentence and his back time on a prior sentence cannot run concurrently ... [citing cases] ‘In no event did the Legislature intend the sentences to be served concurrently, said President Judge Rhodes in Commonwealth ex rel. Dion v. Martin, 183 Pa. Superior Ct. 310, 315, 131 A. 2d 150 (1957)....
“What the legislature must have intended by ‘at liberty on parole’ is not at liberty from all confinement but at liberty from confinement on the particular sentence for which the convict is being reentered as a parole violator. Any other interpretation would be in conflict with other provisions of the statute, and with the long established policy of the Commonwealth. During the time that a convict may be on parole from a particular offense he might be confined in a Pennsylvania prison on another offense, or in a prison of another state, or in federal prison, or ip a mental institution, or in an enemy prison camp during a war. It was not the intent of the legislature to have the words ‘at liberty’ to mean freedom from confinement under all these and other conceivable circumstances.” (pages 352-53).

The only slight factual difference between the Kascak, Money and Haun cases on the one hand, and this case on the other, is that in those cases, the second offense was committed while the prisoner was on [14]*14parole

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Related

Commonwealth v. Tinson
249 A.2d 549 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1969)
Commonwealth ex rel. Jones v. Rundle
199 A.2d 135 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1964)

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Bluebook (online)
33 Pa. D. & C.2d 9, 1963 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 155, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/commonwealth-ex-rel-jones-v-rundle-pactcompldauphi-1963.