Fisher v. Hollowell

202 N.W. 103, 199 Iowa 335
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedFebruary 10, 1925
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 202 N.W. 103 (Fisher v. Hollowell) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Fisher v. Hollowell, 202 N.W. 103, 199 Iowa 335 (iowa 1925).

Opinion

Vermilion, J. —

The appellant sued out a writ of habeas corpus in the district court. The defendant and appellee is *336 the warden of the state penitentiary. The petition alleged, that the petitioner had been sentenced by the district court of Shelby County to imprisonment in the state reformatory for an indeterminate period not exceeding five years, for the crime of grand larceny; that he was imprisoned under that sentence from November 13, 1915, till December 5, 1916, at which time he escaped; that, after being at large for nearly three years, he was apprehended and returned to the reformatory on August 7, 1919; that thereafter, he was convicted in Jones County of the crime of prison breach or escape, and on February 20, 1920, Avas sentenced to imprisonment — Avhether in reformatory or penitentiary does not appear — for an indeterminate period not exceeding five years; that the latter judgment provided: “This sentence to begin at termination of present sentence noAV being served.” It was alleged that, on the date of the last judgment, the petitioner was transferred to the penitentiary by order of the state board of control. It AA'as further alleged that, Avhile serving the sentences both in the reformatory and the penitentiary, the petitioner had earned all the good time provided by law; that, considering the íavo sentences as one continuous sentence, both sentences expired on March 1, 1924; and that thereafter, he AA'as unlawfully restrained of his liberty by the defendant. A demurrer to the petition Avas sustained.

The question presented by the demurrer is whether the diminution of sentence alloAved the applicant as a prisoner in the penitentiary or reformatory for good conduct is to be computed upon each sentence separately, or as upon one continuous sentence for the total time of both.

Section 5703, Code of 1897 (see Section 3774, Code of 1924), provided in part as folloAvs:

' ‘ ‘ Each prisoner Avho shall have no infraction of the rules and regulations of the penitentiaries or laAvs of the state recorded against him, and who performs in a faithful manner the duties assigned to him, shall be entitled to the diminution of time from his sentence as appears in the following table for the respective years of the sentence * *

From the table incorporated in the statute it appears that the maximum “good time” so alloAved is one month for the first year of the sentence, and that it increases each year there *337 after up to and including the sixth year, and for the sixth and each subsequent year, it is 6 months; and that, if full good time is allowed, a prisoner under a 5-year sentence is required to serve but 3 years and 9 months, and a prisoner under a 10-year sentence is required to serve but 6 years and 3 -months. If the petitioner, serving two 5-year nonconcurrent sentences, and entitled to the maximum good time, is to have his good time computed on each sentence separately, he will be required to serve a total of 7 years and 6 months; while, if it is to be computed as upon a continuous sentence of 10 years, he would be entitled to be discharged after serving but 6 years and 3 months.

Section 5705, Code of 1897 (Section 3777, Code of 1924), would seem to afford an answer to the question presented. It is as follows:

“When a convict is committed under several convictions with separate sentences, they shall be construed as one continuous sentence in the granting or forfeiting of good time.”

It is the contention of the appellee, however, that this section refers only to commitments on separate sentences imposed by the same court at the same time.

It is to be observed that no such limitation of the scope of the statute is to be found in the statute itself. Its terms are broad enough to cover sentences upon separate convictions by different courts at different times. The precise question has not been before presented to us. Decisions in other jurisdictions are cited by both parties, as bearing upon the proposition.

In California, it was held, under a statute providing that good time should be deducted from the “entire term of penal servitude to which the convict shall be sentenced,” that two separate sentences should be considered as one continuous term, for the purpose of commutation. Ex parte Dalton, 49 Cal. 463. After a change in the statute, made soon after the decision in the Dalton case, providing that deductions for good behavior of a prisoner “shall be allowed from his term,” it was held, where the same court imposed two separate and cumulative sentences of imprisonment, that the prisoner was only entitled to credit for good behavior upon each term as it was served, and not upon the terms considered as a continuous period of imprisonment. Ex parte Clifton, 145 Cal. 186 (78 Pac. 655). The *338 decision turned largely upon the evident legislative intent to change the rule announced in the Dalton case, and did not involve consideration or construction of a statute such as Section 5705.

In In re Packer, 18 Colo. 525 (33 Pac. 578), the court, speaking of a statute very similar to Section 5705, and where several separate sentences of imprisonment, one term to commence after the expiration of another, had been imposed by the same court, said arguendo,- — for the question was not in the case, — that the prisoner would be entitled for good conduct to an allowance as upon one continuous sentence.

In Ebeling v. Biddle, 291 Fed. 567, in construing a Federal statute providing that, “when a prisoner has two or more sentences, the aggregate of his several sentences shall be the basis upon which his deduction [for good conduct] shall be estimated,” the court said that, whatever might be the effect of cumulative sentences, the statute fixed the basis of computation as the aggregate term of imprisonment.

None of these cases touch the precise and ultimate question raised here: that Section 5705 should be construed as applying only to sentences imposed by the same court at the same time.

We had before us in Dickerson v. Perkins, 182 Iowa 871, a situation somewhat analogous to that now presented, where the same contention was made in respect to another statute. Section 5439, Code of 1897, provided:

“If the defendant is convicted of two or more offenses, the punishment of each of which is or may be imprisonment, the judgment may be so rendered that the imprisonment upon any one shall commence at the expiration of the imprisonment upon any other of the offenses.”

In that case, the prisoner had been convicted in different courts, of distinct offenses, and sentenced under both convictions to imprisonment in the penitentiary. In the second case, the judgment did not provide that the imprisonment upon it should commence at the expiration of the imprisonment upon the first conviction. It was contended there, as here, that the statute had reference only to sentences imposed by the same court. It was held that the statute conferred power on the court to so render the judgment that the terms of imprisonment *339

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202 N.W. 103, 199 Iowa 335, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fisher-v-hollowell-iowa-1925.