McCoy v. Sheriff of New Castle County

14 Del. 433
CourtNew York Court of General Session of the Peace
DecidedNovember 15, 1886
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 14 Del. 433 (McCoy v. Sheriff of New Castle County) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of General Session of the Peace primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
McCoy v. Sheriff of New Castle County, 14 Del. 433 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1886).

Opinions

Grubb, J.,

heard the case in vacation and rendered the following decision:

This case is before me upon a writ of habeas corpus awarded, issued and directed to Thomas Ford, sheriff of New Castle county, [434]*434in the State of Delaware, upon the,petition of Frank McCoy, presented September 1st, 1886.

The facts set forth in the petition are omitted.

The petitioner asks that he be discharged on the ground that the term for which he was imprisoned has expired by mere lapse of time, although the period of his actual imprisonment has been less than that for which he was sentenced by reason of his unlawful escape a>nd absence at large for a period of nine years, seven months and ten days, or thereabouts.

The legal aspects of this case are novel, as the career of the petitioner is notable in the criminal annals of our State. ■ This case differs from all the cases cited in argument in two respects; first, that though cases have been cited where in the sentence the term of imprisonment was fixed and its commencement specified, yet none have been found where the ending also was specified; second, that while a statute in Delaware prescribes that in the sentence the term of imprisonment shall be fixed and the time of its commencement and ending specified, no case has been cited which was subject to the operation of any similar statute in respect either fixing the term or specifying either the time of its commencement or ending. In these respects, therefore, the question raised in this case seems to be as novel elsewhere as it is of. first impression in this State.

The principal inquiries in the determination of the pending case, therefore, are:

First—Can a prisoner who has unlawfully escaped be recaptured after the date specified in his sentence for the ending of his prescribed term of imprisonment and legally be required to serve thereafter a period equal to his illegally being at large, in actual fulfilment of the entire term or amount of the imprisonment fixed in his sentence in case no statute prescribes either that the term shall be fixed, or its commencement specified or its ending specified ?

Second—And, if so, should the law be otherwise in case a statute, as in the present instance, expressly prescribes that when [435]*435imprisonment is a part of the sentence the term shall be fixed, and the time of its commencement and ending specified ?”

The satisfactory solution of these questions must, I conceive^ be found in the consideration of the following inquiries, viz:

First—Is a wrong-doer to be permitted to take the advantage of his own wrong ?

Second—Is the date and manner of the punishment to be of greater importance than its kind and amount?

Third—Is the strict letter to prevail over the general purpose of a statute, and an absurd instead of a reasonable intention to be attributed to the law-maker?

A careful examination of' the authorities will, I am satisfied, upon both principle and precedent, furnish a negative answer to each of these inquiries.

More than two centuries ago, that wise and just maxim of the common law, which is the controling principle of this case, was expressed by Sir Matthew Hale in his Pleas of the Crown, page 602, as applicable to an unlawful escape, in these words : If a felon

escapes out of the gaol by negligence though the gaoler be fined for it, he may retake the felon at any time after, for the felon shall not take the advantage of his own wrong, or the gaolers punishment; but his retaking shall not discharge the gaolers fine.” And this common law maxim has from his day to the present been constantly enunciated by courts until it has become a settled and generally recognized principle of criminal jurispruduence.

In its application to unlawful escapes from legal imprisonment it assumes that the object of punitive law, whether common or statutory, is to protect the public by preventing the commission of crime and that this end is best sought by the infliction of penalties designed to deter or reform those disposed to commit crime.

Punishment then, is the main purpose of the law and of the judgment pronounced in conformity therewith, and the kind and amount of punishment, and not the mere date or manner of its execution, are the essential and substantial part of the sentence, 21 [436]*436Kansas Rep., 638, 646-48; 1 Bishop Cr. Proceed., Secs. 1310, 1384. The term or amount of the imprisonment, where that is part of the punishment, is of chief importance in the eye of the law, while the specification of the date of its commencement and the mere mathematical calculation and specification of the day of ending of the prescribed term or quantum are minor matters of convenient detail only. When the term or quantum is fixed the dates of commencement and ending are necessarily contained and implied in the term or quantum as thus fixed, and need no particular calculation and specification except, perhaps, for the information of the ignorant convict who may be under sentence; but which advantage he may forfeit by an unlawful escape. When no commencement is specified, the day of sentence will, in legal contemplation, be the; commencement of the term. The specifying of the dates of commencement or ending, in the sentence which fixes the term or quantum of imprisonment is, therefore, not a matter of absolute necessity, but of convenient detail only, and hence ought not to operate to lessen the fixed term or quantum of the punishment; as it would do in case of unlawful escape and protracted illegal absence, as well as contravene the sound maxim of law referred to.

Both common sense and the purport of punitive law require that the convicted and sentenced criminal shall suffer the whole, and not unlawfully escape from any part of his prescribed punishment; that expiration of time without^ actual imprisonment shall in no sense be deemed an execution of the sentence; and that four months-in prison and more than nine years out of it, shall not mean being “ imprisoned 10 years,” as this sentence prescribes. It is no sufficient answer to urge that both to recapture and re-imprison the escaping prisoner after the original term of his imprisonment had in mere course of time elapsed, would be an enlargement of his sentence and an increase of his punishment, and therefore in violation of the principles of law enunciated in the numerous authorities cited in that behalf.

This is not a case to which those authorities are applicable, for [437]*437here there is no attempt to enlarge the original term or increase the original quantum of punishment, but merely to secure the execution of the same original sentence and to see that the imprisonment for 1Ó years is wholly suffered by making the prisoner, in addition to the four months or so, actually served, further undergo the remaining nine years and more of this being illegally at large, and thus complete his original term by actual imprisonment.

Nor is it sufficient to object that, because an indictment and conviction for an unlawful escape may possibly be had, and the prisoner thereby be punished by imprisonment for a period sufficient to cover the time of his being illegally at large, therefore the prisoner may not after his prescribed term has expired, by lapse of time merely, be retaken and reimprisoned until its fulfillment by actual imprisonment.

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Bluebook (online)
14 Del. 433, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mccoy-v-sheriff-of-new-castle-county-nygensess-1886.