154 Iowa 83 | Iowa | 1912
On September 11, 1908, in the district court of Osceola county, Iowa, the plaintiff herein was convicted of the crime of burglary. Under the statute then in force, the maximum punishment, which could be lawfully imposed for such offense, was imprisonment in the penitentiary for the term of twenty years. Code, section 4789. At the same time, the statute further provided that, whenever a person over sixteen years of age is convicted of a “felony committed subsequent to July 4, 1907 — except murder and treason — the court imposing the sentence of confinement in the penitentiary shall not fix the limit or duration of the same, but the term of such imprisonment shall not exceed the, maximum term provided by law” for the crime for which the prisoner was convicted. Code Supp. section 57l8-al3. To this section is added other provisions for a board of parole, upon the initiation of which persons suffering such confinement may be enlarged upon parole before the expiration of the maximum term. This latter statute constitutes what is usually known as the “indeterminate sentence law.” In entering judgment against the plaintiff herein upon his said conviction of burglary, the district court did not impose upon him an indeterminate sentence, but fixed the limit of his confinement in the penitentiary at two years.
If this sentence is to be given effect according to its terms, and plaintiff is accorded the credit which it is agreed he has earned -for “good time,” the lawful period of his imprisonment would have expired and he was entitled to be discharged on June 17, 1910, a date which was prior to the beginning of this habeas corpus proceeding. The board of parole has taken no action and entered no orders concerning the further detention or discharge of the plaintiff. It should also be said that when plaintiff was
The appellant’s demand for a reversal of the judgment below is based upon two main propositions: Nirst, that the judgment was one within the power .and authority of the district court to enter, and, having never been appealed from or in any manner modified or set aside, it is the duty of the warden to obey it; and, second, that even if the act of a trial court in imposing a determinative sentence, in cases falling within the scope of the indeterminate sentence law, is to be treated as mere surplusage, and the warden of the penitentiary may ignore the same and detain the prisoner until he becomes entitled to discharge under the terms of the last-mentioned statute, yet in the case at bar, there being no evidence or showing whatever that plaintiff was over sixteen years of age when judgment was entered against him, or that the crime of which he was convicted was committed subsequent to July 4, 1907, the presumption of regularity, which we must accord to the proceedings in the district court, requires us to assume that said court found the plaintiff’s age to be such on the date of his offense that he was not properly punishable under the act providing for indeterminate sentences.
The plaintiff’s case in the present proceeding was submitted on the mittimus and upon the conceded facts or