14 Colo. 413 | Colo. | 1890
delivered the opinion of the court.
The statute under which the indictment in this case is framed reads as follows: “If any two or more persons shall conspire or agree, falsely and maliciously, to charge or indict, or cause or procure to be charged or indicted, any person for any criminal offense, or shall agree, conspire or co-operate to do, or to aid in doing, any other unlawful act, each of the persons so offending shall on conviction be fined in any sum not exceeding $1,000, and imprisoned not less than three months nor exceeding two years.” Sec. 811, Gen. St. 1883.
In this state two places are resorted to for the confinement of offenders against the state laws, to wit, the state penitentiary, and the county jail of the proper county. The penitentiaiy has long been recognized as the proper place for the incarceration of those convicted of the graver offenses only, while the county jails have been utilized for the confinement of those convicted of minor offenses, and confinement in the penitentiary has always been regarded as more severe than confinement in a county jail, on account of the disgrace and reproach attached to confinement in an institution thus set apart as a place for the incarceration of the more depraved and infamous classes of offenders; and under our constitution the test by which to determine whether an offense less than capital shall be deemed a felony or a misdemeanor is made to depend upon whether the same is punishable by imprisonment in the penitentiary or in the county jail. And by statute the consequences resulting from a conviction of a felony are made much, more serious than those arising from a conviction of a misdemeanor. Art. 18, § 4, Const.; secs. 943, 944, Gen. St.
In imposing the sentence in the case at bar, the criminal court, no doubt, had in mind the following provision, to be found in section 2594 of the General Statutes of this state: “All persons who shall hereafter be convicted of any crime under the laws of this state, or have been heretofore convicted under the laws of this state, or of the territory of Colorado, where the punishment is imprisonment for a period of time exceeding'six months, shall be imprisoned in the penitentiary; and all courts in which such conviction shall be had shall give judgment accordingly.”
An examination of our statutes will show that many offenses may fall within the terms of the above provision; for, while it is undoubtedly true that the place of confinement, whether in the penitentiary or the county
The provision changing the place of confinement of persons convicted of crimes, in certain instances, from the county jail to the state penitentiary, and thereby raising the grade of many offenses from misdemeanors to felonies, is certainly not in any way indicated by the title of the act in which it is found. If it has any relation whatever to the subject, it must he to that portion expressed in the clause, “ the maintenance, government and police of the penitentiary;” and, if such connection be supposed, it will be found to rest upon inference so
It is urged in argument that, as the error is in the sentence only, this court has no power, under existing statutes, either to pronounce the proper sentence, or to remand the cause for the purpose of having the correction made by the trial court. We deem it, however, unnecessary to determine these questions in this case.
, As the-defendant Sarah J. Brooks has recently been pardoned by the executive, no further order in reference to her is necessary. As the defendant B. Herbert Brooks has already served one year in the penitentiary under the judgment of the court below, we think he has been punished sufficiently, and he will therefore be discharged.
Reversed.