State Board of Administration v. Jones

102 So. 626, 212 Ala. 380, 1924 Ala. LEXIS 234
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedDecember 18, 1924
Docket3 Div. 688.
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 102 So. 626 (State Board of Administration v. Jones) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State Board of Administration v. Jones, 102 So. 626, 212 Ala. 380, 1924 Ala. LEXIS 234 (Ala. 1924).

Opinion

, SOMERVILLE, J.

The petitioner, who-is a convict in the state prison, seeks by writ of mandamus to compel the state board of administration to certify to the Governor, as-contemplated by section 5131 of the Code of 1923, that the conduct of the prisoner has. been good during the years of his imprisonment — the purpose being to present to the Governor the true facts upon which his discretionary action may be invoked for the deduction of time from the petitioner’s sentences.

Petitioner was convicted on December 12, 1916, in the criminal court of Jefferson county, in six separate cases, on charges of burglary, and in each ease was separately sentenced to serve 2 years in the penitentiary, with provision that the several sentences-should be served serially and cumulatively as numbered on the docket, each sentence-to begin upon the expiration of the sentence preceding.

Petitioner’s contention is that for the purpose of making deductions for good conduct, as authorized by the statute, the six 2-year-periods for which he was sentenced must be-aggregated and treated as a single continuous sentence for 12 years, in which event the authorized deductions would have ended his period of confinement on August 12, 1924, and have resulted in his discharge from the penitentiary on that date.

The contention of the respondent, the state board, on the other hand, is that the several sentences are separate and distinct, and cannot be treated as a single term in the aggregate ; and that deductions must be made-from each separate sentence, as it is served, as though it stood alone, and not progressively as from a single 12-year sentence— the result being that petitioner’s period of confinement would be extended to December 12, 1926.

The validity of these respective contentions-depends upon the proper construction of section 5131 of the Code of 1923 (section 7514, Code 1907; section 5460, Code 1896), and counsel are agreed that that is the only contested question in the ease — the facts being undisputed.

i “Good conduct statutes are framed with-the intention of improving prison discipline, and have that effect if their enforcement is allowed. The credits are said to be in the nature of a payment or reward by the state, to the convict for his good behavior, in order to stimulate him to conform to the rules of [ the institution and to avoid the commission *381 of crimes and misdemeanors during his imprisonment. Such statutes are prompted by the highest motives of humanity, and are looked on with favor both by state and Federal Legislatures.” 21 R. O. L. 1192, § 26.

The first statute 'of this character in this state (Olay’s Digest, p. 406, § 67), enacted in 1843, declared that it was “for the encouragement of the convicts to conduct themselves with industry and propriety.” In construing these statutes this purpose should, of course, have appropriate consideration.

The question before us has not been heretofore considered by this court, and we find only a very few cases in other jurisdictions bearing upon the subject.

The pertinent provision of our statute (section 5131) is:

“Whenever the inspectors of convicts shall report to the Governor that the conduct of any convict in the penitentiary, or at hard labor for the county, has been good during any year or years of his imprisonment, the Governor may, in his discretion, order a portion of the sentence of such convict to be deducted for each year of good conduct as follows. [Here follows the scale of deductions, increasing progressively up to the eighth year.]”

This language, as very clearly appears, is properly applicable only to a single sentence of imprisonment, viz., the term which the convict is serving during the Period of his good conduct. It could not be referable to other successive terms under separate sentences, because at any given time only one term is being served. This view is emphasized by a cognate provision of the Code (section 3615), that “when a convict is sentenced to imprisonment in the penitentiary on two or more convictions, the imprisonment on the second, and on each subsequent conviction, must commence at the expiration of the imprisonment on the preceding conviction.” The practical result of petitioner’s theory of deductions, when applied to his own case, would be to deduct nothing from the first four terms, and to wipe out the last two terms entirely.

We find only two cases in which cumulative sentences have been held to be continuous for the purpose of making deductions for good conduct, and those were based on the language of the statutes which is different from our own. In re Packer, 18 Colo. 525, 33 P. 578; Ex parte, Dalton, 49 Oal. 463. In Colorado the statute expressly stated that separate sentences should be construed as one continuous sentence; and in California the statute provided for deductions as from “the entire term of penal servitude.” Following that decision in California, the Legislature amended the statute by striking out the word “entire,” and allowed credit commutations simply from the convict’s “term!”

In the later case, dealing with the amended statute, the court said:

“It is clear that uncler the language of the original section it was intended to make the successive periods of imprisonment under cumulative sentences continuous for commutation purposes, and it is equally apparent by the subsequent amendment, and also under the present act, that it was intended to leave the terms, as the law leaves them, separate. If the provision- of the act of 1889 had been inserted in the original section, instead of the language there employed, there would be no room for contending that a prisoner’s terms on cumulative sentences meant for cummutation purposes the ‘entire term’ of imprisonment to which he had been sentenced, because, in the absence of any language limiting or qualifying the use of the word ‘term,’ it must be given its legal significance, and, so given, each period of sentence prescribed under cumulative sentences is-legally separate and distinct from the other, and there is nothing in common between them upon which such a contention could be sustained. The judicial records upon which such cumulative sentences are based are themselves separate and distinct; the offenses are different, and the convictions and judgments are distinct; the terms of imprisonment thereunder may be different in point of duration, as they are certainly separate in point of commencement, and! are enforced under separate commitments; the term of each successive imprisonment commencing at the expiration of the prior term.

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Bluebook (online)
102 So. 626, 212 Ala. 380, 1924 Ala. LEXIS 234, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-board-of-administration-v-jones-ala-1924.