In Re Gilliam

161 P.2d 793, 26 Cal. 2d 860, 1945 Cal. LEXIS 203
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedAugust 31, 1945
DocketCrim. 4640
StatusPublished
Cited by33 cases

This text of 161 P.2d 793 (In Re Gilliam) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re Gilliam, 161 P.2d 793, 26 Cal. 2d 860, 1945 Cal. LEXIS 203 (Cal. 1945).

Opinion

SPENCE, J.

By this proceeding in habeas corpus petitioner challenges the propriety of the trial court’s adjudication that he is an habitual criminal. (Pen. Code, § 644.)

The information contained three counts, respectively charging petitioner with burglary and with two prior convictions of felonies. One of the prior convictions was alleged to have been for burglary committed in Texas, for which judgment was “pronounced and rendered and the defendant served a term of imprisonment” in the Texas State Prison. The other prior conviction was alleged to have been for “box car robbery, a felony,” for which “judgment [was] pronounced and rendered” and “defendant . . . was imprisoned in a Federal Prison known as ‘U.S.I.R.’ at Chillicothe, Ohio.” The last-mentioned prison is the United States Industrial Reformatory “used for the confinement of male persons who have been or shall be convicted of offenses against the United States, . . . and sentenced for terms of imprisonment for more than one year, with or without hard labor, except those who have been convicted previously of an offense punishable by imprisonment for more than one year, and except also those convicted of treason, murder in the first or second degree, rape or arson, and those sentenced to life imprisonment.” (18 U.S.C.A. Supp. § 831, p. 261.) Upon arraignment, petitioner pleaded guilty to the principal charge of burglary, and admitted the two prior felony convictions and the service of the terms of imprisonment as alleged. Following such plea and admissions, the trial court determined the principal crime to be burglary in the second degree, adjudged petitioner an habitual criminal as required by law (Pen. Code, § 644), and sentenced him to State Prison “for the term prescribed by law on Counts One, Two and Three of the information.”

Petitioner claims to be illegally deprived of his liberty and in support thereof he argues that the trial court erred in these respects: (1) in holding his conviction of “box car robbery” and imprisonment therefor to be a “qualified prior” *862 within the provisions of section 644 of the Penal Code; and (2) in adjudging him to be an habitual criminal without taking evidence on the point. The cited code section, so far as pertinent to petitioner’s contentions, reads as follows: ‘ ‘ Every person convicted in this State of any felony who shall have been previously twice convicted upon charges separately brought and tried, and who shall have served separate terms therefor in any State prison and/or Federal penitentiary, either in this State or elsewhere, of the crime of . . . burglary . . . shall be adjudged an habitual criminal and shall be punished by imprisonment in the State prison for life.”

Petitioner first maintains that the prior conviction for “box car robbery” should not be considered in fixing his status as an habitual criminal because that offense is not one of those enumerated in section 644. The record herein includes a certified copy of the writ of commitment which was issued in the matter of the designated offense and which recites that petitioner “was indicted ... for having . . . violated sec. 409 of the U.S. Code—robbery of interstate shipments of freight, etc., contrary to the statutes of the United States in such case made and provided; and the said accused was convicted of said charge. ...” Referring to said section 409 captioned “Larceny, etc., of goods in interstate or foreign commerce; penalty” (18 U.S.C.A., p. 270), the following provision is pertinent: “Whoever . . . shall enter any [railroad] car [containing interstate or foreign shipments of freight or express] with intent ... to commit larceny therein . . . shall . . . be fined not more than $5,000, or imprisoned not more than ten years, or both. ...” Our statutes, contain a correlative provision in section 459 of the Penal Code where it is provided that “every person who enters any . . . railroad car . . . with intent to commit grand or petit larceny or any felony is guilty of burglary.” At the time for sentence, petitioner was interrogated as to the nature of the two prior convictions and he stated: “They were for Burglary.” As so admitted by petitioner, his offense against the federal statute manifestly comes within the import and intent of section 644, expressly specifying burglary among the enumerated crimes for consideration by the trial court in passing judgment. Upon such basis this case is distinguishable from People v. Lohr, 28 Cal.App.2d 397 [82 P.2d 615], cited by petitioner, because in that case the record furnished “no assistance” as *863 to which section of the federal act there involved defendant had transgressed. Accordingly, it was said there at page 399: “We must therefore assume that defendant was convicted of the violation of that portion of the . . . Act which” was the least offense thereunder, one not comparable with any of the enumerated felonies in said section 644. Likewise the record before us does not involve an “unidentified” crime as was the situation in People v. McChesney, 39 Cal.App.2d 36 [102 P.2d 455]. Rather, the record here affirmatively establishes that the prior conviction in question does fulfill the statutory requirement (Pen. Code, § 644).

With reference to this same ■ prior conviction, petitioner next takes the position that the térm of imprisonment served therefor does not come within the contemplation of section 644 because, he contends, that section of the Penal Code is based upon the serving of a term in any state prison or federal penitentiary, and not upon the serving of a term in a federal reformatory. In this connection he argues that a “reformatory” is distinguishable from a penal institution such as a “prison” or “penitentiary” because the primary purpose of a reformatory is to educate, discipline and reform the persons confined therein rather than to punish them for their crimes. But this attempted general distinction, based merely upon the name which may be given to an institution, is of but little, if any, assistance in solving the question presented, for under enlightened modern practices the object of reformation may be as characteristic of the scheme of management of a so-called prison or penitentiary as it is of a reformatory. (Webster’s New International Dictionary (2d ed.), pp. 1810, 1968.) Rather it is the character of the institution and its inmates together with the nature of the proceedings leading to confinement therein which determine its status in relation to the language of the code section under consideration. The word “penitentiary” may be used in a sense sufficiently broad to include a “reformatory” (50 C.J. § 3, Penitentiary, p. 330; State v. Vaughn, 15 Okla.Cr. 187 [175 P. 731]), and so it would appear here with reference to the federal reformatory wherein petitioner was imprisoned.

As declared by federal statute (18 U.S.C.A. § 831, supra) the “United States Industrial Reformatory” at Chillicothe, Ohio, is used for the confinement of male persons who have been convicted of offenses against the United States, *864 with certain exceptions, and who have been sentenced for terms of imprisonment for more than one year. Said statute also provides that “it shall be sufficient for the courts to sentence

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Bluebook (online)
161 P.2d 793, 26 Cal. 2d 860, 1945 Cal. LEXIS 203, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-gilliam-cal-1945.