Echeandía Font v. Alvarado

63 P.R. 220
CourtSupreme Court of Puerto Rico
DecidedMarch 7, 1944
DocketNo. 424
StatusPublished

This text of 63 P.R. 220 (Echeandía Font v. Alvarado) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Puerto Rico primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Echeandía Font v. Alvarado, 63 P.R. 220 (prsupreme 1944).

Opinion

MR. Acting Chief Justice Travieso

delivered the opinion of the court.

Cecilio Echeandía Font who is at present confined in the Insular Penitentiary, filed in this court a petition for habeas corpus. On December 16, 1943, we issued the writ returnable to the District Court of San Juan. On December 22, 1943, considering that the legal question involved in this case was a new one in this jurisdiction arid that its decision would affect the situation of many convicts who at present are serving sentences in the same penitentiary, we issued a new order on motion of the prosecuting, attorney of this court with the consent of the petitioner directing that petitioner be brought before this court on January 12, 1944-.

The petitioner was confined to the penitentiary on August 25, 1925, to serve a life sentence imposed on him by the District Court of Arecibo. On March 28, 1941, the Governor of Puerto Eico commuted said sentence and reduced the penalty to 30 years’ imprisonment, which is the one that the petitioner is serving at present.

Petitioner alleges that the 30-year sentence was extinguished and served on November 12, .1942, in accordance with the provisions of Act No. 180 of May 15, 1943; and [222]*222that notwithstanding the good conduct and diligence observed by him during all the time he has been incarcerated, the warden of the penitentiary still keeps him under his custody and deprives him of his liberty alleging as an'only basis that according to his opinion the above-mentioned Act No. 180 of May 15, 1943, has no retroactive effect. Section 1 of said Act in its pertinent part reads thus:

“Section 1. — From and after April 1, 1907, every prisoner sentenced or who may be hereafter sentenced to imprisonment in the Penitentiary, or to imprisonment at hard labor in the district jails of Puerto Rico, who observes good conduct and assiduity, shall be entitled to the following reductions in the terms of his sentence, which shall be computed from his commitment to the jail or penitentiary., provided he is committed after the first day of April, 1907.
£ ( t* # s» *#< # &
(8) For a sentence of thirty years or more, 13 days a month.’’

Petitioner sustains that in accordance with the provisions of the said Act he is entitled to a reduction of 13 days for every natural month elapsed since August 25, 1925, that is, since the date on which he was committed to the penitentiary to serve the penalty of life imprisonment.

In opposition to the petition the prosecuting attorney sustains:

(а) That the*, benefits for good conduct should be computed from and after the date of the commutation and not from the date of petitioner’s commitment to the penitentiary to serve the sentence for life imprisonment; and

(б) That Act No. 180 of May 15, 1943, has no retroactive effect.

The question involved in this proceeding is new in this jurisdiction. And the jurisprudence that we have been able to find is scarce and to a certain extent contradictory.

In the case of In re McMahon, 125 N. C. 38, 34 S. E. 193, the petitioner was originally sentenced to capital punishment which was commuted to that of life imprisonment and the latter reduced to a term of 12 years. The Law of North [223]*223Carolina having been amended increasing- to 5 days the benefits for each month in all sentences, the petitioner claimed the benefits of the new law from the date from which he .started to serve the sentence to life imprisonment, alleging that if those benefits were credited he had the right to be discharged for having served his 12-year sentence. The Supreme Court of North Carolina held that when a sentence for life imprisonment is commuted for that of a term of imprisonment, the benefits of such statutory commutation for good conduct must be credited to the person convicted only from the date of the commutation of the penalty of life imprisonment on. Said court expressed itself thus:

“The view we take of this ease compels us to disagree with the contention of the petitioner, and to hold that he is not entitled to anything under the statutory commutation acts, and that he was not entitled to anything under the original sentence of death; but we have to hold that he is entitled to more now than he was then — that he is now entitled to the statutory commutation as a prisoner for years.
“The discussion of this case leads us to the following conclusions: (1) That a prisoner for life is not entitled to the statutory commutation contained in the áct of 1899, or in the statute of 1885, or in section 3445 of the C<?de. (2) That a prisoner whose term has been commuted from a life sentence to a term of years is entitled to the statutory commutation contained in these statutes, from and after the date of such commutation. (3) That the act of 1899 was amendatory of the former acts, and only changed.the rule by which statutory commutations should be determined after its passage. (4) That the passage of the act of 1899 did not take away from prisoner the statutory commutation they had earned up to the time of its passage, but that they are still entitled to the same, and also to what they may be' entitled to under the act of 1899; that what they had earned before the passage of the act of 1899 and what they have earned under the act of 1899 may be added together, to entitle them to a .discharge, if, by so adding, they are entitled to the same, — that .is, if, by so adding, they complete the term of years for which they are imprisoned. Applying these rules, it is seen that the petitioner is not entitled to his discharge, and the judgment appealed from is affirmed.”

[224]*224The case of State v. Wolfer, 127 Minn. 102, 148 N.W. 898, seems to sustain a contrary doctrine. Nevertheless, said case can he distinguished from that of McMahon due to the fact that, in accordance with the statute of North Carolina, the credits for good conduct should he computed from month to month; and, if the law did not allow any benefit to those sentenced to life imprisonment, the commuted, sentence could not he reduced during the period served under the sentence for life imprisonment. In accordance with the statute of Minnesota, the credits are not allowed from month to month. Prisoners in said State are not granted monthly reductions for good conduct and no benefit whatsoever is allowed them until they are in a condition of being discharged due to the application of all the benefits they have deserved for their good conduct.

We must now consider the local statute, that is, the law establishing a reduction in the sentences of persons confined in penal institutions of Puerto Rico, approved March 14, 1907 and amended by Act No. 180 of May 15, 1943.

The first paragraph of §1, supra, is identical in both acts. The legislator, bearing in mind that the purpose*of the law was the same in 1943 as in 1907, *did not alter said paragraph and limited himself to increasing the number of days that in each month should be credited to the prisoner for good conduct, according to the term of imprisonment to which he had been sentenced. To those confined for thirty years or more their credit was increased from 10 days to which they had a right under the Act of 1907, to .13 days per month.

The last paragraph of §1, in both the original statute and the amended one, reads thus:

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Related

In Re McMahon
34 S.E. 193 (Supreme Court of North Carolina, 1899)
Potter v. Sorensen
148 N.W. 898 (Nebraska Supreme Court, 1914)
State ex rel. Murphy v. Wolfer
148 N.W. 896 (Supreme Court of Minnesota, 1914)

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Bluebook (online)
63 P.R. 220, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/echeandia-font-v-alvarado-prsupreme-1944.