Wilner, J.,
delivered the opinion of the Court.
Md. Code art. 41, § 122 (a) makes it the duty of the Maryland Parole Commission to request its administrative arm, the Division of Parole and Probation, "to make such investigation as may enable the Commission to determine the advisability of granting parole to persons sentenced to a term of 90 days or more under the laws of this State ... whenever the prisoner shall have served in confinement one fourth of the term or consecutive terms.”
Section 122 (b) of art. 41, however, provides that:
"No person who has been sentenced to life imprisonment shall be eligible for parole consideration until he shall have served fifteen years or the equal of fifteen years when considering [pretrial detention and statutory credits against the sentence for good behavior and participation in approved work and educational programs]. Prisoners serving terms of life imprisonment shall only be paroled with the approval of the Governor.”
Facially, these two subsections are not inconsistent. They create two categories of prisoners for purposes of parole — those sentenced to life imprisonment, and all others sentenced to a term of ninety days or more. The former must serve the statutory equivalent of fifteen years before becoming eligible for parole consideration, and even then
they may actually be paroled only with the approval of the Governor. The latter — all others — are eligible for parole consideration at any time, and they
must
be considered after serving one-quarter of their sentence. They need not, of course, actually be paroled at that time (or at any time); but the Division of Parole and Probation must at least investigate their qualification for parole.
Thfe problem arises when the sentencing court imposes a life sentence but, acting pursuant to its authority under Md. Code art. 27, § 641A (a), suspends execution of all of it save a fixed number of years.
When, in that circumstance, is the prisoner entitled to be considered for parole — when one-quarter of the unsuspended term has been served or not until the expiration of fifteen years (or its statutory equivalent)?
The issue comes before us through a petition for declaratory judgment filed in the Superior Court of Baltimore City by three Division of Correction inmates serving "partially suspended life sentences,” on behalf of themselves and a class of like inmates.
One inmate (Hanson) received two
concurrent life terms for murder, with all but fifteen years suspended on each; a second (Thomas) received a life sentence with all but eleven and one-half years suspended; the third (Bell) received a life sentence with all but twenty-seven years suspended (together with a twenty-five year concurrent sentence). They contend that, pursuant to art. 41, § 122 (a), they are entitled to parole consideration after serving one-quarter of the unsuspended term of years (fifteen, eleven and a-half, and twenty-seven respectively), but that, upon the authority of an Opinion of the Attorney General (61 Op. Att’y Gen. 322 (1976)), the Parole Commission considers them subject to the constraints of § 122 (b) and declines to consider them for parole prior to the expiration of fifteen years (or its statutory equivalent).
The inmates argue that § 122 (b) is inapplicable to them and the members of their class, that the Attorney General’s Opinion and the policy of the Parole Commission adopted pursuant to it are wrong, and that the Commission by reason of its policy has unlawfully discriminated against them in contravention of the "equal protection” clause of the Fourteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution and art. 23 of the Maryland Declaration of Rights. They asked for a declaratory judgment that the application of § 122 (b) to prisoners serving partially suspended life sentences is illegal, that the aforementioned opinion of the Attorney General is "invalid, null and void,” and that the Parole Commission "shall apply forthwith the parole provisions of [§ 122 (a)] to the .. . plaintiffs.”
The Attorney General, on behalf of the Parole Commission and the other defendants,
answered the petition, contesting the inmates’ underlying legal premise and asking that the relief prayed be denied. After considering certified docket entries evidencing the status of the three named petitioners and arguments of counsel, the court, on November 17,1981, entered a declaratory judgment that § 122 (b)
was
applicable to the petitioners, and that, as a result, they were not eligible for parole consideration until they served the minimum time required thereby. This appeal ensued.
(1)
Procedural Prelude
As noted, this proceeding was filed as a class action pursuant to Maryland Rule 209. The State has raised no objection to that procedure, and we see nothing in the record before us to suggest that it is inappropriate. We mention this only because, from the record before us, it appears that two of the named petitioners (Hanson and Bell) may not have been entitled to mandatory parole consideration at the time the petition was filed (July 29, 1981) even under § 122 (a), and thus, as to them, there may have been no justiciable controversy at that time.
As the record indicates that Thomas would have been eligible for mandatory review under § 122 (a), however, and given the lack of apparent impropriety with the class action procedure, we shall address the merits of the controversy upon the premise that
the issue raised by Thomas and other inmates in
his
class is presently justiciable and thus properly before us.
(2)
Statutory Construction
Section 122 (b) contains two different limitations with respect to life prisoners. The first sentence, as noted, states that no person "who has been sentenced to life imprisonment” is eligible for parole consideration until he serves the statutory equivalent of fifteen years. The second sentence states that prisoners "serving terms of life imprisonment” may only be paroled with gubernatorial consent.
This appeal involves only the first provision. The thrust of appellants’ argument before the trial court concerned only the fifteen-year requirement and that is all the court’s declaration addressed. The second provision was neither considered nor decided by the trial court, and therefore is not properly before us. Maryland Rule 1085.
The controlling guidelines for statutory construction are fairly clear. As stated in
Koyce
v.
State of Maryland, Central Collection Unit,
289 Md. 134, 140 (1980), "we strive to ascertain and effectuate the real intention of the Legislature.” To do that, we look first to the language of the statute itself.
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Wilner, J.,
delivered the opinion of the Court.
Md. Code art. 41, § 122 (a) makes it the duty of the Maryland Parole Commission to request its administrative arm, the Division of Parole and Probation, "to make such investigation as may enable the Commission to determine the advisability of granting parole to persons sentenced to a term of 90 days or more under the laws of this State ... whenever the prisoner shall have served in confinement one fourth of the term or consecutive terms.”
Section 122 (b) of art. 41, however, provides that:
"No person who has been sentenced to life imprisonment shall be eligible for parole consideration until he shall have served fifteen years or the equal of fifteen years when considering [pretrial detention and statutory credits against the sentence for good behavior and participation in approved work and educational programs]. Prisoners serving terms of life imprisonment shall only be paroled with the approval of the Governor.”
Facially, these two subsections are not inconsistent. They create two categories of prisoners for purposes of parole — those sentenced to life imprisonment, and all others sentenced to a term of ninety days or more. The former must serve the statutory equivalent of fifteen years before becoming eligible for parole consideration, and even then
they may actually be paroled only with the approval of the Governor. The latter — all others — are eligible for parole consideration at any time, and they
must
be considered after serving one-quarter of their sentence. They need not, of course, actually be paroled at that time (or at any time); but the Division of Parole and Probation must at least investigate their qualification for parole.
Thfe problem arises when the sentencing court imposes a life sentence but, acting pursuant to its authority under Md. Code art. 27, § 641A (a), suspends execution of all of it save a fixed number of years.
When, in that circumstance, is the prisoner entitled to be considered for parole — when one-quarter of the unsuspended term has been served or not until the expiration of fifteen years (or its statutory equivalent)?
The issue comes before us through a petition for declaratory judgment filed in the Superior Court of Baltimore City by three Division of Correction inmates serving "partially suspended life sentences,” on behalf of themselves and a class of like inmates.
One inmate (Hanson) received two
concurrent life terms for murder, with all but fifteen years suspended on each; a second (Thomas) received a life sentence with all but eleven and one-half years suspended; the third (Bell) received a life sentence with all but twenty-seven years suspended (together with a twenty-five year concurrent sentence). They contend that, pursuant to art. 41, § 122 (a), they are entitled to parole consideration after serving one-quarter of the unsuspended term of years (fifteen, eleven and a-half, and twenty-seven respectively), but that, upon the authority of an Opinion of the Attorney General (61 Op. Att’y Gen. 322 (1976)), the Parole Commission considers them subject to the constraints of § 122 (b) and declines to consider them for parole prior to the expiration of fifteen years (or its statutory equivalent).
The inmates argue that § 122 (b) is inapplicable to them and the members of their class, that the Attorney General’s Opinion and the policy of the Parole Commission adopted pursuant to it are wrong, and that the Commission by reason of its policy has unlawfully discriminated against them in contravention of the "equal protection” clause of the Fourteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution and art. 23 of the Maryland Declaration of Rights. They asked for a declaratory judgment that the application of § 122 (b) to prisoners serving partially suspended life sentences is illegal, that the aforementioned opinion of the Attorney General is "invalid, null and void,” and that the Parole Commission "shall apply forthwith the parole provisions of [§ 122 (a)] to the .. . plaintiffs.”
The Attorney General, on behalf of the Parole Commission and the other defendants,
answered the petition, contesting the inmates’ underlying legal premise and asking that the relief prayed be denied. After considering certified docket entries evidencing the status of the three named petitioners and arguments of counsel, the court, on November 17,1981, entered a declaratory judgment that § 122 (b)
was
applicable to the petitioners, and that, as a result, they were not eligible for parole consideration until they served the minimum time required thereby. This appeal ensued.
(1)
Procedural Prelude
As noted, this proceeding was filed as a class action pursuant to Maryland Rule 209. The State has raised no objection to that procedure, and we see nothing in the record before us to suggest that it is inappropriate. We mention this only because, from the record before us, it appears that two of the named petitioners (Hanson and Bell) may not have been entitled to mandatory parole consideration at the time the petition was filed (July 29, 1981) even under § 122 (a), and thus, as to them, there may have been no justiciable controversy at that time.
As the record indicates that Thomas would have been eligible for mandatory review under § 122 (a), however, and given the lack of apparent impropriety with the class action procedure, we shall address the merits of the controversy upon the premise that
the issue raised by Thomas and other inmates in
his
class is presently justiciable and thus properly before us.
(2)
Statutory Construction
Section 122 (b) contains two different limitations with respect to life prisoners. The first sentence, as noted, states that no person "who has been sentenced to life imprisonment” is eligible for parole consideration until he serves the statutory equivalent of fifteen years. The second sentence states that prisoners "serving terms of life imprisonment” may only be paroled with gubernatorial consent.
This appeal involves only the first provision. The thrust of appellants’ argument before the trial court concerned only the fifteen-year requirement and that is all the court’s declaration addressed. The second provision was neither considered nor decided by the trial court, and therefore is not properly before us. Maryland Rule 1085.
The controlling guidelines for statutory construction are fairly clear. As stated in
Koyce
v.
State of Maryland, Central Collection Unit,
289 Md. 134, 140 (1980), "we strive to ascertain and effectuate the real intention of the Legislature.” To do that, we look first to the language of the statute itself. "When the language is plain and unambiguous, there is no need to look beyond the language itself, which should be given effect in accordance with the plain meaning of the words.”
Id.,
140. If there is some doubt or ambiguity in the statutory language, a number of extrinsic aids are available in order to discern the true legislative intent, one of which is to consider the legislative history of the enactment in question.
See Welsh v. Kuntz,
196 Md. 86, 93 (1950).
In one of the minor parodoxes
of
this case, both sides look at § 122 (b), immediately reach diametrically opposite interpretations of what it means, and argue nevertheless that there is no ambiguity in the language.
The inmates argue that the phrase "sentenced to life imprisonment” necessarily refers to the unsuspended part of
the life sentence and not to the totality of the sentence actually imposed by the court. To construe the language otherwise, they say, would conflict with and effectively restrict the court’s authority under § 641A of art. 27 to impose a “split sentence,”
and would serve to defeat the parole system. They point out that the effect of applying § 122 (b) where the unsuspended term is fifteen years or less is to deny the prisoner all opportunity for parole, thus requiring him to serve in confinement the full unsuspended period. Inmates such as Bell, whose unsuspended term exceeds fifteen years, would not become eligible for parole until long after one-quarter of the unsuspended term has been served. This, they claim, is unfair and unreasonable when compared with inmates having flat sentences for an equivalent number of years.
The State responds that that distinction was an intentional (and a permissible) one — that "lifers” were meant to be treated differently and may properly be so treated. It argues that the 1976 opinion of the Attorney General is correct, and that by failing to amend § 122 (b) since 1976, the Legislature has acquiesced in the Attorney General’s interpretation.
We do not find the “legislative acquiescence” argument to be particularly persuasive in the context of this case, but we do believe that the State’s construction of the statute is the proper one. It is a construction compelled by a logical and literal reading of § 122 (b)
in pari materia
with § 641A of art. 27.
Section 641A confirms what had previously been judicially determined — that there is a distinction between suspending the initial
imposition
of a sentence and suspending
execution
of a sentence already (or contemporaneously) imposed.
See Knight v. State,
7 Md. App. 313 (1969),
and cf. State ex rel. Sonner v. Shearin,
272 Md. 502, 506, n. 2 (1974);
Skinker v. State,
239 Md. 234 (1965).
See also Municipal
Court of Toledo v. State ex rel. Platter,
184 N.E. 1 (Ohio 1933).
The first sentence of § 641A authorizes a court, upon entering a judgment of conviction, to "suspend the
imposition or execution
of sentence and place the defendant on probation....” (Emphasis supplied.) In context, that provision necessarily refers to a suspension of the
entire
sentence; either a sentence is not imposed at all or, if it is, execution is suspended in its entirety in lieu of probation.
The second sentence of § 641A is what authorizes the "split sentence,” and it is worded quite differently. It says nothing about partially suspending
imposition
of a sentence. Rather, it provides that "[t]he court
may impose a sentence for a specified period
and provide that a lesser period be served in confinement, suspend the remainder of the sentence and grant probation....” (Emphasis supplied.)
The clear import of this is that the power of
partial
suspension relates only to suspension of execution. The court must impose the full sentence; it may then suspend execution of a part of it. The effect of such a partial suspension is as stated in
Picklesimer v. State,
176 S.E.2d 536, 538 (S.C. 1970) — that: "When a portion of a sentence is suspended it merely means that a person is permitted to serve a portion of his sentence at home. The sentence is the total of the part served at the prison and at home.”
See also State v. Germany,
57 S.E.2d 165 (S.C. 1949).
It follows, then, that where the sentence imposed was life imprisonment, notwithstanding that execution of a part of that sentence has been suspended under the second sentence of § 641A, for purposes of § 122 (b), the inmate "has been sentenced to life imprisonment” and not merely to the unsuspended part of it which he must serve in confinement.
See, again, Picklesimer v. State, supra; also Mims v. State,
259 S.E.2d 602 (S.C. 1979).
We do not regard such a construction as in any way restricting the authority of the courts to act under § 641A. Indeed, that question was put to rest in
State v. Wooten, supra,
277 Md. 114. The Court there observed that § 122 (b)
was directed at the Executive branch of the State government, whereas § 641A was directed at the judiciary. It concluded:
"It is simply not illogical to suppose that both of these provisions may govern sentences issued pursuant to § 413 [mandatory life sentence for non-capital first degree murder]. Further, the fact that the Legislature sought to limit the executive branch’s power to parole criminals with life sentences does not mean it intended similarly to attenuate the discretion it granted the judicial branch to suspend sentences.”
Id.
at 119.
See also Williamson
v.
State,
284 Md. 212 (1979).
There is no inconsistency between the two provisions. In considering whether to suspend any part of a life sentence — particularly a mandatory life sentence — a court likely will take into account the provisions of § 122 (b), and may decide to grant the partial suspension only upon the premise that the defendant will in fact be confined for the full unsuspended term, up to fifteen years. To that extent, when the aggregate sentence imposed is life imprisonment, the "split sentence” will, as appellants complain, serve to preclude early parole consideration; but that is a preclusion clearly authorized by the Legislature, and we can find no fault with it.
As we stated in
Dennis v. Warden,
12 Md. App. 512, 514 (1971): "[T]here is no constitutional right to be paroled, and we see no equal protection denial in a statute which requires persons sentenced to life imprisonment to
serve fifteen years of that sentence before becoming eligible for
parole....”
Judgment affirmed; appellants to pay the costs.