People ex rel. Giannone v. Crowley

81 Misc. 2d 879, 367 N.Y.S.2d 940, 1975 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 2478
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedApril 30, 1975
StatusPublished

This text of 81 Misc. 2d 879 (People ex rel. Giannone v. Crowley) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
People ex rel. Giannone v. Crowley, 81 Misc. 2d 879, 367 N.Y.S.2d 940, 1975 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 2478 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1975).

Opinion

Irving Goldman, J.

In this proceeding for a writ of habeas corpus, relator, a resident of Camp Adirondack, contends that his jail time has been improperly credited to his concurrent prison sentences. As a result, he argues that the day for his conditional release has already passed.

On November 7, 1973, the Supreme Court of Richmond County sentenced the relator to an indeterminate sentence of three years for the confessed crime of grand larceny, third degree. When received at Ossining Correctional Facility on November 27, 1973, he had earned 338 days of jail time according to the certification endorsed on his commitment. While at Ossining and on December 12, 1973, he was again taken into custody by Richmond County officials for appearance in Supreme Court on the felony charge of unlawful possession of weapons. Upon his guilty plea, he received an additional indeterminate three-year sentence which was ordered to run concurrently with his "sentence now being served”. His resulting commitment to Ossining bore an endorsement certifying that petitioner had spent 49 days in jail on this later sentence.1

Petitioner contends that his conditional release date should [880]*880have been December 18, 1974 while respondent computes it to be October 29, 1975.

In computing the relator’s maximum release and conditional release dates, the respondent superintendent used this method: each sentence was considered independently and the jail time served with respect to it was applied. Thus, for the first imposed indeterminate three-year sentence (grand larceny) the following computation was used:

Years Months Days
Maximum sentence (3 years) 3 0 0
Less: jail time credit (338 days) 0 11 _8
Time to be served 2 0 22
Add: date received in prison 1973 Uth 27th
Maximum expiration sentence date Less: anticipated "good time” 1975 12th 18th
credit2 1 0 0
Possible conditional release date 1974 12th 18th

Similarly, the computation for the later sentence shows:

. Years Months Days
Maximum sentence 3 0 0
Less: jail time credit (49 days) 1 19
Time to be served 2 10 11
Add: date received in prison 1973 12th 19th
Maximum expiration date 1976 10th 29th
Less: anticipated "good time” 1 0 0
Possible conditional release date 1975 10th 29th

The Penal Law provides that when indeterminate concurrent sentences are imposed "the maximum terms merge in and are satisfied by discharge of the term which has the longest unexpired time to run”. (Penal Law, § 70.30, subd 1, par [a].) Accordingly, relator’s later sentence for the weapons charge would control if no credit is given on that sentence for the 338 days spent in jail on the earlier grand larceny charge.

Inmate Giannone insists that his conditional release date should be December 18, 1974, since, he argues, all his jail time should be credited to both sentences. The date of December 18, 1974 is arrived at by applying the 338-day jail time credit to the earlier sentence. To this allocation, both relator and [881]*881respondent agree. The disagreement arises when the respondent refuses to apply the same jail time credit to both sentences. When respondent applies the 338 days only to the earlier sentence, he follows the literal provision of subdivision 3 of section 70.30 of the Penal Law which provides: "3. Jail time. The * * * maximum term of an indeterminate sentence imposed on a person shall be credited with and diminished by the amount of time the person spent in custody prior to the commencement of such sentence as a result of the charge that culminated in the sentence * * * The credit herein provided shall be calculated from the date custody under the charge commenced to the date the sentence commences and shall not include any time that is credited against the term or maximum term of any previously imposed sentence to which the person is subject. Where the charge or charges culminate in more than one sentence, the credit shall be applied as follows: (a) If the sentences run concurrently, the credit shall be applied against each such sentence” (emphasis supplied).

Assuming that the respondent has correctly applied the jail time credit, the second sentence would control, not only because it was imposed later in time (and thus have a longer maximum) but also because less jail time could be credited to it. The inmate spent a grossly longer period of time in jail on the earlier larceny charge thus leaving it with the shorter unexpired period of time to be run. The weapons charge sentence would then have the "longest unexpired time to run” and its maximum term controls. (Penal Law, § 70.30, subd 1, par [a].) It is with this latter premise that the petitioner takes issue. He contends that by following the respondent’s method of computation, in effect, he is compelled to serve what is tantamount to consecutive sentences, since the 338 days he spent in confinement on the "shorter” larceny charge (albeit jail rather than prison) are days of confinement actually "lost”. Crediting these days only to the earlier sentence compels such sentence to be the shorter, with the result that just brief jail time is credited to the later sentence and what were intended as concurrent sentences are not. The result: he will have spent 387 days in jail (338 plus 49) with no effective credit at all being reflected on his prison term. Were his jail time credited to both sentences, his conditional release date would long have passed. As it is, with the conditional release date of October 29, 1975, proposed by the respondent, relator Giannone will have spent from January 1, 1973 to October 29, [882]*8821975 — barely two months short of three years — in confinement.

Respondent’s position indeed embraces a circular argument, in that how the jail time credit is applied will determine which sentence will be the longer and will control. But the literal reading of the statute requires the application of respondent’s method of computation since the statute restricts application of jail time credit "against each such sentence.” Had the Legislature intended the credit to be applied to both sentences, the adjectives any, all or both could or would have been used. They were so employed in the first subdivision of section 70.30 of the Penal Law, the section under which relator Giannone’s term was calculated. Thus, the statute is explicit in requiring that time served in prison be credited against the minimum of all rather than a particular sentence where sentences are concurrent.3

Thus, construction of the explicit language of the statute compels dismissal of Giannone’s petition. Yet,, no reported decision can be found on facts closely similar to those embraced in his matter.

Matter of Canada (29 NY2d 853) could be considered determinative of the issue. As here, Canada had been transferred from Ossining Correctional Facility where he was serving a IV2

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Bluebook (online)
81 Misc. 2d 879, 367 N.Y.S.2d 940, 1975 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 2478, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-ex-rel-giannone-v-crowley-nysupct-1975.