Lipps v. State

394 N.E.2d 136, 271 Ind. 543
CourtIndiana Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 12, 1979
DocketNo. 778S147
StatusPublished

This text of 394 N.E.2d 136 (Lipps v. State) 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
Lipps v. State, 394 N.E.2d 136, 271 Ind. 543 (Ind. 1979).

Opinions

HUNTER, Justice.

This case comes to this Court on appeal from the denial of petitioner’s petition for writ' of habeas corpus, treated and decided in the Madison Circuit Court as a petition for post-conviction relief. The petitioner Buford Ray Lipps, had been convicted of inflicting injury while attempting robbery, Ind.Code § 35-13 — 4-6 (Burns 1975), and was sentenced to life imprisonment on December 22, 1966. On February 15, 1974, petitioner was sentenced to a twenty-year determinate term for armed robbery, Ind. Code § 35-13 — M5 (Burns 1975). The sole issue raised in this post-conviction proceeding is whether petitioner is entitled to good time credit on his twenty-year term.

Petitioner argues that the denial of good time credit on his twenty-year determinate term constitutes an unconstitutional ex post facto application of Ind.Code § 11-7-6.1-2 (Burns Supp.1977). Resolution of this issue requires answering two questions:

1. Whether the law under the prior statute, Ind.Code § 11-7-6-1 (Burns 1973), permitted an inmate serving a life sentence to receive good time credit on his concurrent twenty-year determinate sentence; and, if so,

2. Whether application of the later statute, Ind.Code § 11-7-6.1-2 (Burns Supp. 1977), constitutes an ex post facto law in violation of Article 1, § 24 of the Indiana Constitution and Article 1, § 10, cl. 1 of the United States Constitution.

I.

Ind.Code § 11-7-6-1 (Burns 1973) provided:

“Every inmate who is now or hereafter may be confined in the Indiana State Prison, Indiana Reformatory, or Indiana Women’s Prison, for a determinate term of imprisonment, and who, while an inmate in such institution, shall have no infractions of the rules and regulations of the institution, nor infractions of the laws of the state of Indiana or laws of the United States recorded against him or her, and who performs in a faithful manner the duties assigned to him or her while an inmate, shall be entitled to a diminution of time from his or her sentence as indicated in the following table for the respective years of his or her sentence, including time being served for unpaid fine or costs, and pro rata for any part of a year , when the sentence is for more or less than a year.” [Emphasis added.]

[138]*138Under that law, which was in effect at the time of petitioner Lipps’s sentencing, an inmate was not entitled to good time credit on a life sentence since “a life sentence is neither determinate nor indeterminate.” Jones v. Jenkins, (1978) Ind., 372 N.E.2d 1163, 1164. However, this Court has never decided whether a person who is serving a life sentence is eligible for good time credit on a concurrent determinate sentence.

The statute provided that a person confined in an Indiana correctional institution for a determinate period of time “shall be entitled to a diminution of time from his or her sentence . . . .” Ind.Code § 11-7-6-1 (Burns 1973). A table in the statute provides a means of determining how much diminution of time shall accrue to any sentence from one to twenty-one years inclusive.

Petitioner had been given two distinct sentences by two different courts. The statute did not provide that a person serving a determinate sentence would be excluded from good time provisions if he was also serving a life sentence. Therefore, under Ind.Code § 11-7-6-1 (Burns 1973), a person serving a determinate sentence must be classified so that he may earn good time credits regardless of what other sentences had been imposed upon that person. This is consistent with the -individual treatment of distinct sentences when one is determinate and another is indeterminate, in which case good time credits would accrue to the indeterminate sentence under a different statute, Ind.Code § 11-7-7-1 (Burns 1973).

II.

Ind.Code § 11-7-6.1—2 (Burns Supp.1977), now repealed, went into effect on February 19, 1974, four days after petitioner was sentenced, and provided as follows:

“Classification of inmates—Schedule of good time earned [Repealed effective October 1,1977],—Every inmate who is now or hereafter may be confined, upon conviction of a felony, in a correctional institution under the supervision of the Indiana department of correction, except those inmates under sentence of death or life imprisonment, shall at all times during such confinement be assigned to one [1] of the following four [4] time earning classes and shall be entitled to a diminution of time from his or her sentence as indicated in the following table for the respective months of his or her sentence, prorated for any part of a month, including time being served for unpaid fines or costs. Class assignments shall be made in accordance with the procedure provided in this chapter [11-7-6.1-1—11-7-6.1-8]. This good time shall apply both toward an inmate’s discharge date and his parole eligibility date.” [Emphasis added.]

Assuming, without deciding, that this statute specifically excludes inmates serving life sentences from good time credit regardless of what other sentences are being served either concurrently or consecutively, we now turn to petitioner’s ex post facto argument.

Ind.Code § 11-7-6-2 (Burns 1973) provides that the term “inmate” is to be construed as relating solely to those persons who are “within the walls” of a state correctional institution “or are elsewhere working or being under the direct control of the prison officials . . . .” [Emphasis added.] The later statute is framed in terms of the control of the department of correction. Ind.Code § 11-7-6.1—1 (Burns Supp.1977). We find that petitioner was constructively under direct control of prison or department of correction officials from the date of sentencing on February 15, 1974. A similar constructive interpretation was reached in Dunn v. Jenkins, (1978) Ind., 377 N.E.2d 868, when this Court found that a prisoner who is discharged from one sentence and begins a second consecutive sentence is to be deemed as being “received into” an institution when in fact he has been incarcerated in that institution continuously.

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Related

Warner v. State
354 N.E.2d 178 (Indiana Supreme Court, 1976)
Jones v. Jenkins
372 N.E.2d 1163 (Indiana Supreme Court, 1978)
Dunn v. Jenkins
377 N.E.2d 868 (Indiana Supreme Court, 1978)
Woodward v. Murdock
24 N.E. 1047 (Indiana Supreme Court, 1890)

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Bluebook (online)
394 N.E.2d 136, 271 Ind. 543, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lipps-v-state-ind-1979.