Narcise v. Eastern State Pen.

9 A.2d 165, 137 Pa. Super. 394, 1939 Pa. Super. LEXIS 49
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedSeptember 25, 1939
DocketAppeal, 22
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 9 A.2d 165 (Narcise v. Eastern State Pen.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Narcise v. Eastern State Pen., 9 A.2d 165, 137 Pa. Super. 394, 1939 Pa. Super. LEXIS 49 (Pa. Ct. App. 1939).

Opinion

Opinion by

Keller, P. J.,

On March 2, 1933, Anthony Narcise, the appellant, was convicted of robbery and sentenced to a term of not less than five nor more than twenty years in the penitentiary. About a year and a half later he took part in a riot in prison and, on conviction, was sen *396 tenced therefor by the Court of Quarter Sessions of Montgomery County to a term of not less than one nor more than two years, to be computed from the expiration of the sentence then being served by the appellant on the robbery charge. After serving more than the minimum of five years on his original sentence, the appellant, on March 8, 1939 applied to the Board of Trustees of the Eastern State Penitentiary for parole. The Board, relying on the opinion of the Attorney General, refused to consider the appellant’s application, on the ground that he would not be eligible to apply for parole until he had served the twenty years maximum of his original sentence and the minimum of the second.

On March 28, 1939, on the petition of appellant, a writ of alternative mandamus issued from the Court of Common Pleas of Dauphin County, commanding the Board of Trustees of the Eastern State Penitentiary to give appellant immediate opportunity to apply for parole on his original sentence, or show cause why the same should not be done. The return on behalf of the Board admitted all of the facts and averred that it had no authority under the parole acts to consider this application. To this return, the petitioner demurred. The lower court, in an opinion filed by Eox, A. L. J., discharged the writ of alternative mandamus. The petitioner appealed to this court. Objection, if any, to the jurisdiction of the court was waived, under Act of May 5, 1899, P. L. 248, section 11.

The statute regulating parole in Pennsylvania is the Act of June 19, 1911, P. L. 1055, and its amendments. Section 8 of this act is as follows:

“Section 8. The Board of Inspectors 1 of each State penitentiary shall meet once each month at its respective penitentiary. At each meeting of the said boards, held as aforesaid, every prisoner confined in such penitentiary upon an indeterminate sentence, whose mini *397 mum term of sentence will expire within three months, shall be given an opportunity to appear before such board, and apply for his or her release on parole, as hereinafter provided.”

The appellees insist, that, in spite of the plain wording of the section, appellant has forfeited his right to apply for a parole by committing a crime while serving his original sentence. In support of this contention, they cite section 10 of the above act, as finally amended by the Act of June 22, 1931, P. L. 862. The pertinent part of this section is as follows:

“Section 10. If any convict released on parole, as provided for in this act, shall, during the period of his or her parole or while delinquent on said parole, commit any crime punishable by imprisonment for which he or she is at any time thereafter convicted in any court of record and sentenced to any place of confinement other than the penitentiary from which he or she was released on parole, such convict shall, in addition to the penalty imposed for such crime committed during the said period, and after the expiration of the same, be compelled, by detainer and remand as for an escape, to serve......the remainder of the term (without commutation) which said convict would have been compelled to serve but for the commutation authorizing said parole,......”

The Attorney General’s department has ruled, that this section applies to prisoners who commit a crime during imprisonment as well as to prisoners who commit a crime while on parole. The lower court adopted this view.

The judgment must be reversed. Section 8 is mandatory and all-inclusive. It provides that every prisoner confined on indeterminate sentence, shall be given an opportunity to apply for parole. It is difficult to see how the legislature could have used stronger language to express its intent. If it had stopped there, no one could claim that any prisoner whose minimum term was *398 to expire within three months could be prevented from applying for parole, no matter how bad a prisoner he might have been. The sole exception to this right is found in section 10, above quoted in part. Under it, it has been held that a parolee who has been recommitted for commission of a crime while on parole cannot thereafter apply for reparole on his original sentence: Com. ex rel. Meinzer v. Smith, 118 Pa. Superior Ct. 250, 253, 180 A. 179. However, if returned to prison for a mere violation of the rules of his parole, which is not a crime, he is eligible for reparóle and the time spent on parole and before delinquency on it is credited on the maximum sentence, Com. ex rel. Crimmins v. Smith, 118 Pa. Superior Ct. 255, 180 A. 181. See also sections 1 and 2 of the Act of May 1, 1929, P. L. 1182, which supplant section 14 of the Parole Act of 1911, as amended by Act of June 3, 1915, P. L. 788.

Aside from parolees who are convicted of a crime committed while on parole, there are no prisoners serving an indeterminate term excluded from the operation of section 8, by the Act of 1911 or its amendments, and no others have been inferentially excluded under section 10. It is a cardinal rule that when a statute is free from ambiguity as enacted, there is no occasion for resorting to rules for statutory interpretation: Farmers-Kissinger Market House Co. v. Reading, 310 Pa. 493, 498, 165 A. 398; Reitz v. Sinking Fund Commission, 315 Pa. 87, 89, 172 A. 292; Com. v. Woodward, 110 Pa. Superior Ct. 478, 486, 168 A. 347. What appellees would have us do is first to read an ambiguity into the act and then resolve it against the prisoner. See Urian v. Scranton Life Ins. Co., 310 Pa. 144, 151, 165 A. 21. As was said in Com. v. West Phila. Fidelio Mannerchor, 115 Pa. Superior Ct. 241, 175 A. 434, “The appellant asks us to supply an exception which would change the plain meaning of the act. In other words, the ambiguity is not in the act but only arises by rea *399 son of the suggestion that a clause be supplied.” To the same effect see Grayson v. Aiman, Inc., 252 Pa. 461, 97 A. 695.

The appellees insist, however, that it is unconscionable to hold that the legislature intended to make any difference in treatment between one who commits a crime while still in prison and another who does so after being given his freedom on parole. Entirely aside from the fact that the words used clearly show its intention, such a distinction is consistent with the whole history of clemency toward prisoners in Pennsylvania. Since the adoption of the Constitution of 1790 (Art. II, see 9), the Governor 2 has had power to grant pardons, and in 1844 it was decided in Flavell’s Case, 8 W. & S. 197, that he could grant pardons with a binding condition subsequent, on breach of which the pardon would become null, and the original sentence be carried into effect.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
9 A.2d 165, 137 Pa. Super. 394, 1939 Pa. Super. LEXIS 49, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/narcise-v-eastern-state-pen-pasuperct-1939.