Commonwealth v. Curry

132 A. 370, 285 Pa. 289, 1926 Pa. LEXIS 444
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedJanuary 18, 1926
DocketMiscellaneous Docket 4
StatusPublished
Cited by68 cases

This text of 132 A. 370 (Commonwealth v. Curry) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Commonwealth v. Curry, 132 A. 370, 285 Pa. 289, 1926 Pa. LEXIS 444 (Pa. 1926).

Opinion

Opinion by

Mr. Chief Justice Moschzisker,

William Curry has petitioned this court for a writ of habeas corpus. Curry was convicted, in Erie County, on May 12,1910, of burglary, and sentenced to the Western Penitentiary for an indefinite term, with a maximum of ten years. He was released on parole at the end of two years and two months, but subsequently, in 1914, was found guilty, in the same court, of attempting another burglary, and sentenced, on May 15th of that year, to the Western Penitentiary for an indefinite term, the minimum to be seven years and six months and the maximum thirty years.

While we have original jurisdiction in such matters, ordinarily applications for habeas corpus should go to other courts, having like jurisdiction, thus affording the Supreme Court time to perform its primary duty of reviewing the decisions of subordinate tribunals, yet, in *292 cases like tlie present, where the application, in effect, requires the review of the sentence of a nisi prius tribunal, this court will act if it, rather than the Superior Court, is the most convenient tribunal in session at the time; but where the application is merely a substitute for an appeal, to question alleged errors during, or .prior to, trial, it will be refused: Halderman’s Petition, 276 Pa. 1, 2; Com. v. Cooper, 277 Pa. 554, 556. An application for habeas corpus is proper, however, where the relator is confined under a void or illegal sentence (Com. v. Morgan, 278 Pa. 395, 396); and condemnation to confinement for a greater period than that allowed by law on the indictment before the court is, according to the established view in this State, an illegal sentence, which entitles the prisoner to the remedy here invoked: Com. v. Morgan, 278 Pa. 395; Halderman’s Case, 53 Pa. Superior Ct. 554, 557; Com. v. McKenty, 80 Pa. Superior Ct. 249, 251.

Section 10 of the Act of June 19,1911, P. L. 1055, provides that, “If any convict released on parole......shall, during the period of parole, be convicted of any crime punishable by imprisonment......[he] shall, in addition to the penalty imposed for such crime,......be compelled to serve in [a] penitentiary......the remainder of the term......which [he] would have been compelled to serve but for......said parole”; and the petitioner admits that this provision applies to his case.

The regular maximum penalty for the offense of which petitioner was last convicted is ten years (Act of March Í3, 1901, P. L. 49), which, plus the time Curry had to serve on his original sentence, because of the breach of his parole, would make him subject to a sentence of 17 years and ten months, in all, as a maximum punishment, unless, for other lawful reasons, a longer sentence could be imposed.

Section 6 of the Act of May 10, 1909, P. L. 495, provides that, “when a person shall have twice before been convicted, sentenced, and imprisoned in a penitentiary *293 for a term, of not less than one year, for any crime committed in this State or elsewhere within the limits of the United States,” on conviction of a subsequent offense, “the court shall sentence such person to a maximum of thirty years”; and it was under this statute that the sentence now attacked was imposed.

While there is a suggestion in some cases (see, for instance, Com. v. McKenty, 52 Pa. Superior Ct. 332, 338; Halderman’s Case, 53 Pa. Superior Ct. 554, 558) as to the possible lack of sufficiency of title to support the above provision of the Act of 1909, the more recent authorities, sustaining similar titles to subsequent criminal-sentence acts, appear to dispose of any doubt as to the constitutional validity of such legislation (see Com. v. Kalck, 239 Pa. 533, 537; Com. v. Sweeney, 281 Pa. 550, 557, and cases there cited); but it is not necessary to discuss this matter now, for, on the record here involved, as we shall later point out, the provision in question does not adversely affect the present petitioner.

The respondents contend that the record before us sufficiently discloses both the prior conviction in this State, above referred to, and also a conviction and penitentiary sentence in New York, hereafter more specifically discussed; hence the applicability of the Act of 1909.

The petitioner claims, on the other hand, that the above legislative provision from the Act of 1909 was revoked by the Act of June 19,1911, supra (which ordains that “all acts or parts of acts inconsistent herewith be and the same are hereby repealed”), and, further, if the provision is still the law, then the present record fails to show that it applies to his case.

Section 6 of the Act of 1911, although in very much the same phraseology as section 6 of the Act of 1909, entirely omits the provision we are now considering, that is, for an increased maximum sentence on conviction of a third offense; but we cannot agree that this shows the “legislature intended to abolish the habitual *294 criminal feature of the law of 1909,” as is contended, by petitioner.

Where there is no specific repeal of a prior act, or of any named part of it, by a subsequent statute on the same general subject, and where, as in the present instance, the latter, while omitting a definite provision of the former, yet contains nothing touching on, much less actually antagonistic to, the omitted part, the last legislation, in the absence of a demonstrated intention to deal with every aspect of the general subject in hand, does not necessarily repeal such omitted part, particularly where, as here, the later statute confines its repeal of former acts to such parts of them as are inconsistent with the provisions contained in the repealing statute: Com. v. Crowl, 245 Pa. 554, 559. Of course, it is well established that a subsequent statute, evidently intended as a revision of the whole subject-matter of, and a substitute for, prior legislation, though it contains no express words of repeal, “must, on general principles of law, as well as in reason and commonsense, operate to repeal the former” (Johnston’s Est., 38 Pa. 511, 515; Long v. Phillips, 241 Pa. 246, 249; Murdoch v. Biery, 269 Pa. 577, 580; Reeves’ App., 33 Pa. Superior Ct. 196, 201; see also Buchannon v. Com., 95 Ky. 334, 25 S. W. 265; People v. Fisher, 274 Ill. 116, 143 N. E. 47, 48); but this rule does not apply to the legislation under discussion.

Here, instead of making it plain that the Act of 1911 was to stand as a substitute for the Act of 1909, and by that course working a repeal of all parts of the last-mentioned statute, or of expressly repealing it, the legislature inserted in the Act of 1911 the provision, to which we have already called attention, repealing such parts of the earlier statute as were inconsistent with the provisions of the later one; and, while the Act of 1911 bears a title much like the Act of 1909, its provisions closely following the latter, making changes here and there, yet our cases generally have treated these statutes as standing together. In Com. v. Kalck, 239 Pa. 533, *295

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Bluebook (online)
132 A. 370, 285 Pa. 289, 1926 Pa. LEXIS 444, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/commonwealth-v-curry-pa-1926.