Ex Parte Rody

152 S.W.2d 657, 348 Mo. 1, 1941 Mo. LEXIS 701
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedJune 10, 1941
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 152 S.W.2d 657 (Ex Parte Rody) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ex Parte Rody, 152 S.W.2d 657, 348 Mo. 1, 1941 Mo. LEXIS 701 (Mo. 1941).

Opinion

ELLISON, J.

Habeas corpus., The petitioner is confined in the State penitentiary and contends that under Sec. 9086, R. S. 1939, sec. 8442, Mo. Stat. Ann., p. 6214, enacting the so-called “three-fourths rule” he is entitled to discharge. His imprisonment is accredited to a warrant of commitment issued by the Jackson County circuit court,' dated January 9, 1937, and based on a five-year prison sentence imposed after a plea of guilty to robbery. In October, 1938, while transferred to á sawmill camp- operated by the penitentiary in Callaway County and under guard, petitioner fled and escaped apprehension for three days, said escape being recorded in the prison records. The Warden contends this episode deprives the petitioner of the benefit of the three-foui ths rule. Petitioner contends it does not. Both sides agree, the case involves a construction of. Sec. 9086, supra, as applied to the foregoing facts.

The statute provides that ‘ ‘ any convict who is now or may hereafter be confined in the penitentiary, and who shall serve three-fourths of the time for which he or she may have been sentenced, in an orderly and peaceable manner, without having any infraction of the rules of the prison or law of the same recorded against him, shall be discharged in the same manner as if said convict had served the full time for which sentenced, . . .” (Italics ours.)

In his brief the Warden of the penitentiary, represented by the learned Assistant Attorney General, concedes arguendo that petitioner's.'escape from the sawmill camp violated no rule of the' institution,, but contends that it did violate a law of the same,: within the meaning of those words in the statute, the law being Sec. 4307, R. S. 1939, sec. 3913, Mo. Stat. Ann., p. 2751, which provides that “if any person confined in the penitentiary for any term less than life shall escape from such prison, or, being out under guard, shall escape from the custody of the officers, he shall be liable to the punishment imposed *3 for breaking prison.” Tbe Warden further asserts that the words “confined in the penitentiary” appearing in See. 4307, supra, apply to the petitioner although he was at the sawmill camp, and not in the penitentiary, when he escaped; and argues that if this be not true then the petitioner cannot, claim the benefits of the three-fourths rule under Sec. 9086, supra, because that section uses the same identical words and limits such benefits to convicts now-or hereafter “confined in the penitentiary.”

The petitioner, pro se, in a well written brief begins by .contending to the contrary that Sec. .4307 does not apply to him because -he was detailed to the sawmill camp and was not confined in the penitentiary when he escaped. On that point he cites State v. Betterton, 317 Mo. 307, 292 S. W. 545, and Ex parte Carney, 343 Mo. 556, 122 S. W. (2d) 888. Second, he maintains that the statute, Sec. 4307, is a law of the State, not a law of the penitentiary alone; and that the words “law of the same” used in See. 9086, supra, mean the by-laws or regulations for the government of the penitentiary, made by .the Commission of the Department of Penal Institutions under authority of Sec. 8985, R. S. 1939, see. 8338, Mo. Stat. Ann., p. 6181, and Sec. 9041, R. S. 1939, sec. 8396, Mo. Stat. Ann., p. 6201. Third, petitioner urges that even if the statute, See. 4307, be regarded as a law of the prison, still the Warden and other officials would have no authority to determine whether he had violated the provisions thereof, and to impose punishment therefor. Only a legally constituted court could do that, he contends. Along the same line the petitioner still further affirms that if the statute be considered a regulation of the prison it would be unavailing because printed copies of this and the other rules and regulations of that institution have never been .posted, as required by Sec. 9G41, supra.

We are unable to agree that State v. Betterton, supra, and Ex parte Carney, supra, support petitioner’s first contention. On the contrary, the Betterton decision is against him. The concluding lines of the opinion held Sec. 4307 (then Sec. 3161, R. S. 1919) did apply to a prisoner escaping from a prison farm, and there is- no difference in principle between escaping from a prison farm and a prison sawmill. See. 4307 is grouped with two other statutes, Sec. 4306 and Sec. 4308, all opening with the same clause and containing the same phrase “confined in the penitentiary.” Section 4306 applies to convicts in lawful custody going to the penitentiary, and to those who break the prison walls and escape after they are in. See. 4307, supra, .specially applies to convicts who escape from the custody of the officers while out under guard (the section invoked- by the Warden in this case.) And.Sec. 4308 deals with convicts who escape from within the prison “without breaking such prison.” That was the section upon which the information in the Betterton ease was *4 based, for escaping from a prison farm. But, as already stated, the decision held the prosecution should have been under Sec. 4307.

These three sections and Sec. 9086, supra, are in pari materia and should be construed together. There can be no question about the fact, we think, that under their provisions any convict held in custody under a commitment for the service of a penitentiary sentence is at least constructively “confined in the penitentiary,” whether he be going to the penitentiary, or in the penitentiary, or outside under guard. Section 8989, R. S. 1939, sec. 8341, Mo. Stat. Ann., p. 6183, in the Article dealing with the enterprises of penal institutions, such as farms, quarries, factories and the like, seems to contemplate this for it says the Commission of -the Department of Penal Institutions “shall at all times and under all circumstances mentioned or authorized under this article reserve the supervision of all prisoners under sentence and committed to said commission. ”

Neither are we able to see that the Carney case, supra, cited by the petitioner, helps him. In that case a convict while out on parole from a sentence for one felony, committed another and was convicted and sentenced therefor. He was required to serve out this second sentence and then was detained to serve the full remainder of his first sentence without benefit of the three-fou.rths rule, his parole from the latter sentence having been revoked in the meantime. No demerits had been recorded against him during his incarceration. The decision held he was entitled to claim the rule, and ordered his discharge. This conclusion was based on two grounds: (1) that the first part of Sec. 9086, quoted above, which grants the rule, is not affected by the conditions in a subsequent proviso of the section; (2) that the statute was enacted to encourage obedience to the rules of the pentitentiary by convicts undergoing punishment therein, and does not take into account infractions of law while the convict is out on parole. In other words the opinion construes the statute as meaning that if the convict while confined in the penitentiary obeys the' rules and laws of the institution and is not recorded otherwise, he is entitled to the benefit of the rule regardless of infractions of law committed by him when out on parole, these being unrelated matters.

Granting the Carney case was welhruled on its facts, there are vital differences between it and the instant case.

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Bluebook (online)
152 S.W.2d 657, 348 Mo. 1, 1941 Mo. LEXIS 701, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ex-parte-rody-mo-1941.