Ex parte Stevens

31 Mass. 94
CourtMassachusetts Supreme Judicial Court
DecidedMarch 15, 1833
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 31 Mass. 94 (Ex parte Stevens) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ex parte Stevens, 31 Mass. 94 (Mass. 1833).

Opinion

Shaw C. J.

delivered the opinion of the Court. This case comes before the Court on a writ of certiorari, and the object is to submit to the Court the validity of a judgment of the Municipal Court at the November term 1832, whereby on an information filed by the attorney for the commonwealth, the prisoner Stevens was sentenced to an additional punishment, by confinement to hard labor for the term of seven years.

It appears by the record, that at the Municipal Court, December term 1820, the prisoner was indicted and convicted of three distinct larcenies at the same term ; and was thereupon sentenced as a common and notorious thief, pursuant to the statute, to confinement at hard labor for the term of four years, and was discharged in 1824 ; — that by the name of Samuel Malone he was convicted before the Supreme Judi cial Court, at Cambridge, October term 1825, for larceny in stealing a horse of the value of $ 100, without aggravation, upon which he was sentenced to three days solitary imprisonment, and confinement to hard labor in the State prison for one year, and was discharged in 1828 ; — and that at the Supreme Judicial Court, at Cambridge, October term 1829, he was convicted of an aggravated larceny, in stealing property from a shop, for which he was sentenced to three years hard labor in the State prison.

It was decided by the Court in White’s case, at the present term, (ante, p. 90,) that a conviction and sentence, by which one is sentenced as a common and notorious thief, [95]*95under the statute of 1804, c. 143, is being sentenced to punishment by confinement to hard labor for a term of years, within the meaning of the statute of 1827, c. 118, § 19, 20. It is very clear that the conviction at Cambridge in 1829, of larceny in a shop, was the conviction of a crime the punishment of which was, by law, confinement to hard labor for a term of years. Both these therefore are within the prov’sions of the statute of 1827.

But upon the second conviction, being for a simple larceny without aggravation, the term of confinement to hard labor for which it was punishable, and the period to which the prisoner was actually sentenced, not exceeding one year, according to the decision in Seymour’s case, (ante, p. 40,) it was not a punishment by confinement, for a term of years. The consequence is therefore, that according to the construction put upon these statutes, this prisoner was not liable to be sentenced as upon a third conviction, under the statute of 1827, and had the sentence been confinement to the State prison for life, the judgment would have been erroneous.

But the additional sentence in fact awarded upon this information was one day solitary imprisonment, and confinement to hard labor for seven years in the State prison. And by the statute of 1827, c. 118, § 19, a person convicted a second time, who has been once before sentenced for a term of years, is liable to an additional punishment, of thirty days solitary imprisonment, and seven years hard labor. The punishment therefore was such as the Court had authority to award against the prisoner as upon a second conviction ; and without regard to the second conviction, as enumerated in the information, the first and third being sufficient, the prisoner was liable to the sentence actually awarded, as upon a second conviction. These judgments and convictions are entirely separate and distinct, and the insufficiency of one does ‘not in any respect depend upon that of another. If, therefore, there is enough on the record to warrant the judgment, it ought to be sustained.

This reasoning would appear to be entirely sound, and the conclusion to which it leads satisfactory, were it not affected by the operation of St. 1832, c. 73, passed some months be[96]*96fore this judgment was rendered, and which, it is contended, had the legal effect and operation, though perhaps it may not have been so intended by the legislature, to prohibit and put an end to all additional punishments upon second convictions and in effect to repeal that part of St. 1827, c. 118, which provides for such additional punishments upon second convictions. The act relied on provides, that after its passage, no convict shall be sentenced to confinement, by force of the provisions alluded to in the statute of 1827, unless such convict has at two several times before been sentenced to confinement in the State prison, for a period, at each time, of more than one year, and has been twice discharged therefrom in due coursé of law.

The most obvious intent and purpose of this statute was to alter and vary the law and make it more explicit in the particular in which it had been before judicially held, (Commonwealth v. Phillips, 11 Pick. 28,) that two convictions at one and the same term, were two convictions within the. statute, as it stood ; and this statute intended expressly to provide, that to render a convict liable to confinement for life, he should have been at two different times sentenced and committed pursuant to his sentence, so as to be, in the popular language of the prison, a third comer.

But it is contended, that although this was the primary intent of the statute, yet that its language is clear and explicit, and broad enough in its terms, to include all cases where the convict has not been twice before sentenced for a term of years. But we áre of opinion that this is not the necessary or true construction.

That the legislature, by this statute, intended to alter the law in some respects, is quite manifest, but the nature and extent of such alteration must be learned from its language.

In the first place, it is quite clear that the statute of 1827 is not repealed by this act, and this act only directs the manner in which, in certain respects, it shall be construed and carried into effect. To the extent of this restraint and modification, the former statute is repealed and no further. The liability to the additional punishments, still stands upon the statute of 1827. To' what extent then does this act restrain its operation ?

[97]*97The act in question,

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Related

Commonwealth v. Ruiz
108 N.E.3d 447 (Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court, 2018)

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Bluebook (online)
31 Mass. 94, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ex-parte-stevens-mass-1833.