The petitioner, a North Carolina prisoner, pleaded guilty to the crime of forgery and was sentenced to seven years’ imprisonment, suspended during probation for five years. Under the North Carolina probation statute, one who, under suspended sentence as was the petitioner, violates the conditions of his probation, is dealt with “as if there had been no probation or suspension of sentence” 1 and “his original sentence” is “automatically activated.” 2 After serv *991 ing four and a half years on probation, the petitioner had his probation revoked in proceedings had in conformity with these North Carolina procedures. 3 He claims the right to have credited on his seven year prison sentence the four and a half years during which he was on probation. The state court denied relief and this habeas action was filed in the District Court, which sustained the petitioner’s claim and ordered the state authorities to credit time on probation against his forgery prison sentence. We reverse.
There is nothing unusual in the denial by North Carolina law of credit for probation or parole time against a prison sentence. It is common to both state and federal probation and parole systems.
4
The validity of such denial has been universally recognized both in federal and state decisions. The leading case to this effect is
Kaplan v. Hecht
(2d Cir. 1928)
“The second contention is that the time during which appellant was on ¡probation must be credited upon the execution of the sentence of imprisonment imposed on November 2, 1927. The argument runs that, although on probation, he was not a free man, but was undergoing punishment and restraint in execution of the judgment of conviction, so that any imprisonment after December 8, 1927, the expiration of 18 months from the date he was placed on probation, amounts to a second punishment for the same crime, in violation of the Fifth Amendment. The fallacy of this argument is made at once apparent upon a consideration of the purpose of the Probation Act. This is clearly explained in the recent opinion of the Supreme Court, cited above, where the Chief Justice points out that probation is the attempted saving of a man who has taken one wrong step, and whom the judge thinks can be set again upon the path of rectitude, if an opportunity for re *992 form be given him before he is stigmatized with imprisonment and subjected to association with hardened convicts. Hence the judge is given the power to suspend sentence — a thing he could not do without legislation, after the decision in Ex parte United States,242 U.S. 27 ,37 S.Ct. 72 ,61 L.Ed. 129 , L.R.A.1917E, 1178, Ann.Cas.1917B, 355. The purpose is to avoid imprisonment so long as the guilty man gives promise of reform. Clearly, therefore, probation is not intended to be the equivalent of imprisonment. The aim of the statute is reformatory, not punitive, and its language carries this aim into effect. While we have found no decision under the Federal Probation Act which passes upon the contention that the prior probation must be credited upon a sentence of imprisonment imposed when probation is revoked, numerous cases under similar state statutes have adjudicated its lack of merit.”
The District Court, however, relying on
Hart v. Coiner
(4th Cir. 1973)
The judgment of the District Court granting the petitioner habeas relief is accordingly reversed, and the District Court is directed to dismiss as without merit the petition.
Notes
. § 15-200, General Statutes of North Carolina.
.
Hewett v. State of North Carolina
(4th Cir. 1969)
See, also, Roberts v. United States
(1943)
. The record indicates forebearance on the part of the state court. There had been numerous claims of violations of probation on the part of the petitioner over the period but finally, its patience apparently exhausted, the state court revoked his probation. There was no claim made that the facts did not justify revocation under the North Carolina statute, though the District Court did find the statute exacting.
. For cases dealing with probation:
Anglin v. Johnston
(7th Cir. 1974)
For cases dealing with parole:
Zerbst v. Kidwell
(1938)
A number of states have by statute provided for such credit. Typical is the Illinois Statute, which specifically provides that, “[T]ime served on probation or conditional discharge shall be credited by the court against a sentence of imprisonment or periodic imprisonment unless the court orders otherwise.”
See People v. Taylor
(1974)
.State v. Pietsch
(1973)
.
Anglin v. Johnston, supra,
.
Thomas v. United States
(10th Cir. 1964)
