In Re Cook Ex Rel. Murray

110 P. 352, 13 Cal. App. 399, 1910 Cal. App. LEXIS 172
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedMay 14, 1910
DocketCrim. No. 135.
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 110 P. 352 (In Re Cook Ex Rel. Murray) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re Cook Ex Rel. Murray, 110 P. 352, 13 Cal. App. 399, 1910 Cal. App. LEXIS 172 (Cal. Ct. App. 1910).

Opinion

*400 HART, J.

The contention of the petitioner is that Murray is now restrained of his liberty by the warden of the state prison at Folsom upon a commitment issued under a void judgment,- that such restraint is therefore illegal, and that the prisoner is entitled to be released therefrom through the writ of habeas corpus.

It appears that, while undergoing a sentence of imprisonment for the term of ten years in the state prison at Folsom, .and before the expiration of said term, Murray, on the seventeenth day of May, 1904, escaped from said prison; that, subsequently, he was apprehended, and that thereafter the grand jury of Sacramento county returned to the superior court of said county an indictment purporting to charge him with the crime of escaping from state prison, as defined by section 105 of the Penal Code. Upon his arraignment upon this indictment, Murray entered a plea- of not guilty. Subsequently, however—on December 8,1904—he withdrew said plea to said indictment and entered a plea, under the allegations of the same indictment, of guilty of the crime of attempting to escape. Thereupon the court sentenced the prisoner to a term of three years in the state prison at Folsom, the term of imprisonment therefor to commence “from the time such convict would otherwise have been discharged from said prison. ’p (Pen. Code, sec. 106.)

If allowed under his first sentence the credits to which, upon certain conditions, he would be entitled under the terms of section 1588 of the Penal Code" (Deering’s edition, 1909), Murray would now be entitled to his discharge but for the sentence or judgment of imprisonment pronounced and entered against him oh his plea of guilty of the crime of attempting to escape from said prison. '

The claim of the petitioner on behalf of the prisoner is that the indictment failed to state a public offense because of the alleged invalidity of section 105( of the Penal Code, under which said indictment was framed, and that, therefore, “all proceedings thereafter had were void as being beyond the jurisdiction of the court.”

The argument upon this point is that if the provisions of section 105 of the Penal Code are in violation of the state and federal constitutions, as is the contention, then the in *401 dictment, being based upon said section, necessarily failed to state any offense of whatsoever nature. In other words, the claim is that if the indictment does not charge the crime of “escaping from the state prison,” it cannot charge the crime of “attempting to escape from state prison,” for, so the argument goes, an attempt to commit an act which, when consummated, is not a crime, cannot itself be a crime.

Section 105 of the Penal Code reads as follows: “Every prisoner confined in the state prison for a term less than for life, who escapes therefrom, is punishable by imprisonment in the state prison for a term equal in length to the term he was serving at the time of such escape; said second term of imprisonment to commence from the time he would otherwise have been discharged from said prison.”

The indictment challenged here is substantially in the language of the foregoing section, and there is no claim that, if said section is not out of harmony with certain provisions of the state and federal constitutions, the allegations of said indictment do not properly set forth a public offense.

The validity of the section of the code under which the indictment was framed is attacked upon the ground that the punishment therein prescribed is such as that it operates with manifestly unjust and unwarranted inequality upon prisoners adjudged guilty of escaping from prison, and that, consequently, the section is in direct conflict with the terms of the fourteenth amendment of the constitution of the United States, guaranteeing to all the equal protection of the law, and with certain provisions of the state constitution, among which is the provision that all laws of a general nature shall have a uniform operation, etc. ■

This position, while new in this state, has been sustained in other jurisdictions upon what I conceive to be unanswerable reasoning. (State v. Lewin, 53 Kan. 679, [37 Pac. 168] ; In re Mallon, 16 Idaho, 737, [102 Pac. 374] ; Barbier v. Connolly, 113 U. S. 27, [5 Sup. Ct. Rep. 357] ; Coon Hing v. Crowley, 113 U. S. 703, [5 Sup. Ct. Rep. 730] ; Hayes v. Missouri, 120 U. S. 68, [7 Sup. Ct. Rep. 350].) But, conceding that section 105 of the Penal Code is invalid for the reasons suggested, we are nevertheless of the opinion that the indictment stated the offense defined by section 106 of the Penal Code, *402 which provides: “Every person confined in the state prison for a term less than for life, who attempts to escape from such prison, is guilty of a felony, and, on conviction thereof, the term of imprisonment therefor shall commence from the time such convict would otherwise have been discharged from said prison.”

It is thus to be seen that the legislature, by the terms of the foregoing section, has declared as a distinct offense, entirely apart from and in no manner or degree or to any extent whatsoever dependent for its force or vitality on the provisions of section 105, the act of attempting to escape from such prison. In other words, section 106 receives no vital force from the provisions of section 105. No one will for a moment question or doubt the power and the right of the legislature to denounce the act of attempting to escape from a prison as a crime, regardless of whether it makes the act of actually escaping from such prison a crime. The legislature has declared that any prisoner confined in a state prison for a term less than for life who attempts to escape from such prison is guilty of a felony, and if the legislature has for any reason failed to declare it a crime for such prisoner to effect his escape from such prison, this mere omission cannot of itself in any measure or in any sense render the act of attempting to escape any the less a crime. Of course, if the legislature had not made the act of attempting to escape from a state prison itself a specific and distinct crime, then the position of counsel for the prisoner would be unimpeachable, assuming that section 105 is void. But, as seen, the crime of attempting to escape is as distinct from the crime of escaping as grand larceny is from robbery, although, as is true as to the two last-named offenses, the first two necessarily possess, in some respects, the same elements.

It follows from the views thus far ventured that there can be no merit in the suggestion that, if section 105 is void, there can be no penalty imposed in the case of the violation of section 106. The penalty prescribed by the last-mentioned section is entirely different from that which section 105 pretends to authorize. Section 106 declares the act therein described to be a felony, but does not expressly prescribe the penalty for the commission thereof.

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Bluebook (online)
110 P. 352, 13 Cal. App. 399, 1910 Cal. App. LEXIS 172, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-cook-ex-rel-murray-calctapp-1910.