In re Melosevich

36 Nev. 67
CourtNevada Supreme Court
DecidedApril 15, 1913
DocketNo. 2065
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 36 Nev. 67 (In re Melosevich) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Nevada 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 Melosevich, 36 Nev. 67 (Neb. 1913).

Opinion

By the Court,

Norcross, J.:

This is an original proceeding in habeas corpus. The petition alleges that the applicant is unlawfully .confined in the state prison because of the alleged fact that the commitment by virtue of which he is so confined is based upon avoid judgment. Applicant was regularly indicted, tried, and convicted of the crime of grand larceny. Based upon the jury’s verdict of guilty, on August 14, 1912, judgment was entered, upon the order of the court,"that defendant, Trifke Melosevich, be confined in the penitentiary at Carson City, Nevada, for the period of not less than two years and not to exceed three years.” The commitment was in accordance with the judgment as entered.

1. The statute of this state provides that a person convicted of the crime of grand larceny "shall be punished by imprisonment in the state prison for any term not less than one year nor more than fourteen years.” (Rev. Laws, 6638.)

Section 7260, Rev. Laws, provides: "Whenever any person shall be convicted of any felony for which no fixed period of confinement is imposed by law, the court shall, in addition to any fine or forfeiture which he may impose, direct that such person be confined in the state prison for a term not less than the minimum nor greater than the maximum term of imprisonment prescribed [70]*70by law for the offense of which such person shall be convicted; and where no minimum term of imprisonment is prescribed by law, the court shall fix the minimum term in his discretion at not less than one year nor more than five years; and where no maximum term of imprisonment is prescribed by law, the court shall fix such maximum term of imprisonment.” '

Section 7261, Rev. Laws, provides: "The board of pardons may at any time after the expiration of the minimum term of imprisonment for which such prisoner was committed thereto, direct that any prisoner confined in such institution shall be released on parole upon such terms and conditions as in their judgment they may prescribe in each case. ”

The sections above quoted relative to an indefinite or indeterminate sentence were incorporated into the law of this state for the first time in the revised criminal practice act passed by the legislature of 1911, which took effect January 1, 1912. Under the old statute, trial judges in all cases were required to impose a definite sentence. Some misconception áppears to have existed for a time in the minds of a number of trial judges as to how sentences should' be imposed under the new law. In a number of cases that have been under consideration by the board of pardons, sentences were imposed like that now in question. The court, upon imposing sentence, had" assumed that it had discretion to' fix a greater minimum or a less maximum sentence than the minimum and maximum sentence prescribed in the statute for the particular offense, for the commission of which judgment was imposed. This was not in ■ accordance with the purpose designed to be accomplished by the indeterminate or, more properly speaking, the indefinite sentence law.

Under the law which had existed for centuries in English-speaking countr'iés, and until the adoption, in recent years, of certain reform's in criminal procedure, the imposition of definite sentences resulted in great 'inequality in the’ terms imposed by different judges for similar offenses. Whether for a certain offense the court [71]*71would have imposed a sentence of one year, five, ten, or twenty years, would depend, to a considerable extent, upon the viewpoint of the individual judge who happened to have tried the case. If the judge happened to be of the opinion that severity of punishment was the best method of suppressing crime, a heavy sentence would be imposed. If it happened to fall to the lot of the offender to be tried before a judge inclined to the view that a greater degree of leniency would accomplish the desired result, a comparatively light sentence would be imposed.

One purpose of the indeterminate sentence law was to minimize the personal equation of the trial judge. Exact justice in the punishment of an offender is probably unattainable. If, however, from the light of all facts and circumstances having a bearing upon a particular case, a sentence, say of two years, would generally be accepted as a just measure of punishment to be imposed, but it appeared that, because of the view of the case peculiar to the mind of the trial judge who happened to have the say, a sentence of five or ten years is imposed, there has been a miscarriage of justice which only some pardoning power could remedy.

As said by Chief Justice Winslow, of the Supreme Court of Wisconsin, in a recent address delivered before the American Institute of Criminal Law and Criminology, of which organization he is the president: " The court should have power to impose an indeterminate sentence, leaving the question of length of term to a board acting on accurate .knowledge of the criminal’s history, behavior, and apparent progress toward reformation.” Again he says: "Power should be vested in some responsible and discreet board in cases where reform is possible to parole prisoners under proper supervision.”

These observations, in a measure, express the purpose sought to be accomplished by the legislature in the enactment of these new provisions in the criminal code of 1912.

Where, as in the crime of grand larceny, the statute fixed a minimum and a maximum sentence, the trial court had no discretion to fix a greater minimum or less maximum [72]*72sentence than that which the statute prescribed. (Miller v. State, 149 Ind. 607, 49 N. E. 894, 40 L. R. A. 109; Terry v. Byers, 161 Ind. 360, 68 N. E. 596; In re Duff, 141 Mich. 623, 105 N.W. 138.)

The effect of section 7260, Rev. Laws, supra, was to .cause the commitment of every defendant, convicted of felony, to the. state prison for the maximum term fixed by statute for the particular offense for which conviction was had, unless the trial court deemed it a proper case for the suspension of the sentence under the provision of Rev. Laws, 7259. (Cases cited, supra.)

The length of service under the sentence was left entirely in the discretion of the board of pardons. It is manifestly the purpose of this statute to leave the period of confinement to the determination of the board of pardons, from a consideration of the circumstances of the crime, the defendant’s past history, his conduct within the prison, the probabilities of or for reformation, and every other fact and circumstance which might have a bearing upon a determination of a just measure of punishment. While the powers of the board of pardons, composed of the governor, the justices of the. supreme court, and the attorney-general, are derived from the constitution (Const, art. 5, sec. 14; Rev. Laws, 307) and are even greater than those specifically expressed in the section of the statute quoted, supra, it was clearly the intention of the legislature that the board of pardons should, when in its judgment a prisoner was deserving of release from confinement, discharge him from such confinement upon parole, thus giving him a further opportunity to establish his reformation while mingling with society, subject to the power of the board, if he proved unworthy of the confidence reposed in him, to return him to prison, and upon the other hand, when he established a just claim therefor, to grant - him a full pardon.

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Bluebook (online)
36 Nev. 67, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-melosevich-nev-1913.