Gilchrist v. OVERLADE, WARDEN, ETC.

122 N.E.2d 93, 233 Ind. 569, 1954 Ind. LEXIS 244
CourtIndiana Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 20, 1954
Docket29,137
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 122 N.E.2d 93 (Gilchrist v. OVERLADE, WARDEN, ETC.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Indiana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Gilchrist v. OVERLADE, WARDEN, ETC., 122 N.E.2d 93, 233 Ind. 569, 1954 Ind. LEXIS 244 (Ind. 1954).

Opinions

Bobbitt, J.

This appeal is from an order of the LaPorte Superior Court denying appellant’s petition for a writ of habeas corpus.

The sole question here presented is whether the alleged surrender of appellant by the warden of the Indiana State Prison to the Federal authorities for trial and conviction for the commission of a Federal offense, while on parole from the Indiana State Prison, constituted a permanent waiver of the right to arrest and recommit him to serve out the remainder of his term in the Indiana State Prison after his release from the Federal Prison, because of the violation of the terms and conditions of his parole.

The pertinent facts as alleged and proven are:

In September, 1944, appellant was sentenced by the Lake Criminal Court for the term of one to ten years in the Indiana State Prison. On March 22, 1949 he was granted a parole. On September 11, 1949 he was arrested in Calumet City, Illinois, and sentenced to the Cook County (Illinois) jail for drunkenness and reckless driving, where he was confined for a period of forty-two days.

Prior to being sentenced to the Cook County jail the Indiana parole agent located at Hammond, Indiana, was advised of appellant’s arrest in Cook County, Illinois. This agent visited appellant in the city jail at Calumet City, Illinois. No action was taken at that time by the Indiana authorities to return appellant to the Indiana State Prison as a parole violator.

[572]*572As a result of his arrest in Calumet City, appellant was charged in the United States District Court, Northern District of Indiana, Hammond Division, with violation of the Dyer Act1 and on November 1, 1949, entered a plea of guilty to such charge.

On November 4, 1949, the Chief Probation Officer of the United States District Court, Northern District of Indiana, wrote the warden of the Indiana State Prison inquiring whether he would accept the return of appellant as a parole violator and permit him to serve any federal sentence which might be imposed upon him by the Federal District Court, concurrently with the remainder of the sentence which he might be required to serve in the Indiana State Prison as a parole violator. In reply to this request such probation officer was advised that the Indiana authorities felt that so long as the Federal government had actual custody of appellant and jurisdiction over him, they had no desire to proceed against him as a parole violator, and that they (the Indiana authorities) would not accept appellant as a Federal prisoner in the Indiana State Prison so that he might serve his Federal sentence concurrently with the remainder of his sentence to which he was subject as a result of his parole violation.

The warden of the Indiana State Prison is prohibited by statute from accepting Federal prisoners. Acts 1897, ch. 142, §1, p. 218, being §13-267, Burns’ 1942 Repl. Neither could the Federal District Court commit appellant to the Indiana State Prison, 18 U. S. C. A. §4082; Mahoney v. Johnston (1944), 9 Cir., 144 F. 2d 663, (Cert. denied, 324 U. S. 853, 65 S. Ct. 711, 89 L. Ed. 1413). It, therefore, appears at the outset that the actual custody of appel[573]*573lant was offered to the Indiana prison authorities only upon a condition which they could not legally accept.

Notwithstanding such report and the above statutory provisions, appellant was sentenced by the Federal District Court on December 13, 1949, for a term of four years and six months “to be served concurrently with the unexpired portion of defendant’s term of imprisonment in the Indiana State Prison at Michigan City.”

The warden of the Indiana State Prison refused to honor a commitment issued by the Federal District Court upon the judgment entered on December 13th, 1949, and on December 30, 1949 this judgment was modified to provide that the sentence thereby imposed upon appellant be served at a place to be designated by the Attorney General of the United States.

Upon his release from the Federal prison at Terre Haute, Indiana, appellant was arrested and returned to the actual custody of the warden of the Indiana State Prison upon a warrant issued by him on January 24, 1950.

Appellant contends that the failure of the proper Indiana authorities2 to exercise their right to recommit him for violation of the terms of his parole when they were given an opportunity so to do was a permanent waiver of any further right to custody and jurisdiction of appellant as a parole violator.

First: Appellant’s sole authority for support of this contention is an opinion of the Attorney General of Indiana, Op. Atty. Gen., 1944, p. 108. This opinion is in answer to six questions submitted by the Department of Public Welfare. Although appellant’s brief does not point out specifically which of the six answers is applicable to the case at bar, we will assume, how[574]*574ever, that he is relying upon the answer to number 4 as this question, unaccompanied by the statement of facts upon which it is based, seems closest to the one which is presently before us, and it is as follows:

“4. If the parolee was released to federal authorities in Indiana, to serve 90 days on an uncompleted federal sentence, would it be considered the same as a release to a foreign state and such release thereby terminate the right of the Indiana authorities to take over the supervision of such parolee after the release of the prisoner by the federal authorities?”

Since the same reasoning is used to arrive at the answer to this question as that which was employed in the answer to question number 1, question number 4 must be considered as being based upon the same factual situation. In the answer to question number 1, it is stated:

“The fact situation as propounded raises the question of whether the executive authority of the state in which a prisoner is under restraint may effectively waive any right to assert legal custody of that person.” (Our italics.)

The cases relied upon by the Attorney General to sustain his opinion involve the executive authority of the state over the custody of persons held for the commission of crimes. None of the authorities cited in the opinion is based upon factual situations such as that in the case at bar.

No question of the waiver, by the executive of the state, of the custody of a prisoner by surrendering him to another state under an extradition warrant is involved in the case now before us.

The effect of the Attorney General’s opinion was to hold that the Governor could waive the jurisdiction of a state over a fugitive or a prisoner on parole. As [575]*575we have already stated, the facts upon which the Attorney General’s opinion is based are essentially different from those in the case at bar and neither such opinion nor the cases cited therein lend support to appellant’s position here.

Second: The Governor of Indiana may, in the exercise of his power to grant pardons and reprieves, surrender a prisoner to another state or to the Federal government to pay the penalty for a crime committed in that State or against the Federal government, in a manner which would effectively waive any right to future custody or jurisdiction of such prisoner.

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Gilchrist v. OVERLADE, WARDEN, ETC.
122 N.E.2d 93 (Indiana Supreme Court, 1954)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
122 N.E.2d 93, 233 Ind. 569, 1954 Ind. LEXIS 244, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gilchrist-v-overlade-warden-etc-ind-1954.