State Ex Rel. Calandros v. Gore

29 S.E.2d 476, 126 W. Va. 614, 1944 W. Va. LEXIS 26
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 14, 1944
Docket9594
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 29 S.E.2d 476 (State Ex Rel. Calandros v. Gore) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering West Virginia Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State Ex Rel. Calandros v. Gore, 29 S.E.2d 476, 126 W. Va. 614, 1944 W. Va. LEXIS 26 (W. Va. 1944).

Opinion

*616 Riley, Judge:

Relator, George Calandros, seeks the issuance by this Court of a writ of habeas corpus ad subjiciendum against the respondent, Claude Gore, Sheriff of Logan County, on the ground that he is illegally imprisoned in the jail of that county.

From the petition and respondent’s answer the following facts appear:

On January 27, 1943, the Circuit Court of Logan County fined relator two hundred dollars and sentenced him to confinement for a period of ninety days in the county jail, after relator had entered a plea of guilty to an indictment for a misdemeanor. Service of the jail sentence actually began on February 2, 1943, and continued until March 1, 1943, when the circuit court in vacation ordered relator’s release from jail and placed him oh probation for a period of two years. On February 12, 1944, a deputy of respondent served upon Calandros a rule to appear before the Judge of the Circuit -Court of said county at nine o’clock a. m., on February 16, 1944, “to show cause, if any he can, why probation heretofore granted to him should not be revoked”. At a continued hearing held on February 18, 1944, the State introduced evidence to support its claim of violation of probation, while relator appeared specially in person and by counsel “for the sole purpose and no other, and does hereby move the court to quash the rule, to show cause heretofore referred to, and to-discharge the defendant”. The grounds asserted for quashing the rule are: (1) That “the order placing relator on probation entered after he had served more than ten days of sentence was under Code, 62-12-3, a nullity; (2) that relator “remained and still is at liberty upon said probation order at the time of” the hearing; and (3) that the ninety-day period of sentence had expired.

The trial court, agreeing that entry of the probation order was erroneous, revoked it but held also that under the evidence adduced, Calandros had violated the terms *617 of his probation, and committed him to jail to serve out the remainder of the original sentence.

Relator presents the theory here that the suspension order of March 1, 1943, is void and consequently the rule issued thereon was not a proper vehicle for his reincar-ceration.

“The courts of this state have no inherent jurisdiction to suspend a lawful sentence imposed as a punishment for crime, except for short periods in which proceedings may be had to test the legality of the judgment.” Pt. 2, syl., Ex parte Fisher, 95 W. Va. 397, 121 S. E. 287; State v. Thompson, 80 W. Va. 698, 93 S. E. 810. See also State v. Zolantakis, 70 Utah 296, 259 P. 1044, 54 A. L. R. 1463, note 1471-1485. In the Fisher case, Judge Lively speaking for the Court, based the holding upon constitutional grounds. Therein a suspension of sentence was likened to a reprieve, and the opinion suggests that the exercise by a trial court of the power to suspend a lawful sentence is a usurpation of the executive power to grant pardons and exercise clemency. To like effect see Ex parte, U. S., Petitioner, 242 U. S. 27, 61 L. ed. 129, 37 S. Ct. 72. It follows that we must look to the provisions of Chapter 62 of the West Virginia Code, as amended by Chapter 27, Acts West Virginia Legislature, 1939, to determine whether the statute vests in trial courts the power in criminal cases to suspend sentences imposed as a punishment for crime, and if so whether there has been a sufficient compliance with the provisions of the statute. Section 1 provides: “Any court of record of this state having original jurisdiction of criminal actipns shall have authority as provided in this article to place on probation any person convicted of a crime.”; and Section 3, among other things, limits the exercise of the right of suspension by courts of record to the ten-day period immediately following the prisoner’s commitment. Here the order of suspension was not entered until twenty-eight days after relator’s imprisonment began. The power vested in the trial court being wholly statutory in origin, we are *618 of the opinion that entry of the order of probation exceeded the authority accorded by Section 3,' and is void and a nullity.

It seems clear from ,the proceedings which took place on the day on which the criminal court re-committed relator to jail that the notice given to him to appear was intended to be in pursuance of Section 10, Chapter 27, Acts 1939, which prescribes the procedure for revoking a valid probation order. It provides, in part, that the court which placed the individual on probation “may issue an order for his arrest”. In the instant proceeding the notice served was in the form of a rule to show cause why his probation should not be revoked — a form which is readily recognized as a civil process. In the field of criminal procedure, arrest of one subject to criminal process is accomplished through issuance of a warrant (Code, 62-1-2), capias or summons (Code, 62-2-13). A rule to show cause is a process to which the person to whom it is directed may or may not respond by appearance before the issuing tribunal; but the direction of the criminal process is a compelling one. It is evident that the order to arrest an individual, who is at liberty under a valid probationary order, contemplated by Section 10 is of the latter type. Section 10 deals with revocation of a valid order of probation, while the instant proceeding concerns only a void one. The legal effect .of such void order is to place relator at large without authority of law. In Ex parte Fisher, supra, page 402, it was said that “While at large under this void suspension order she is in the same situation as if she had escaped from custody and * * * in such cases the sentence is not satisfied until it has been actually served.” Relator’s status is somewhat analogous to that of an escapee. He may be apprehended whenever found within the limits to which the arresting officer’s power of arrest extends; and the court which originally granted the probation invalidly, where the prisoner is in its presence, without prior thereto issuing a rule upon the prisoner to show cause why *619 the revocation order should not be revoked, may eliminate the probation and order the prisoner to be confined. U. S. ex rel. Campbell v. Bishop, 47 F. 2d 95. Accordant: Neal v. State, 104 Ga. 509, 30 S. E. 858, 42 L. R. A. 190, 69 Am. St. Rep. 175; Norman v. Rehberg, 12 Ga. App. 698, 78 S. E. 256; Dawson v. Sisk, Judge, 231 Ia. 1291, 4 N. W. 2d, 272, 141 A.L.R. 1219, note 1225-1237; State ex rel. Comer v. Hall, 173 Wash. 188, 22 P. 2d 295. But is relator’s confinement valid? We think not. Notwithstanding the probation was void, the State proceeded as if it were valid, gave relator a rule to show cause, and proceeded with a hearing on the theory that he had violated a valid probation order. As the instant probation order was void, relator could not have been guilty of violation of parole.

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Bluebook (online)
29 S.E.2d 476, 126 W. Va. 614, 1944 W. Va. LEXIS 26, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-calandros-v-gore-wva-1944.