OPINION BY
Before this Court is an Application for Summary Relief filed by Mikhail Calloway (Calloway), pro se, against the Pennsylvania Board of Probation and Parole (Board) seeking credit towards his original sentence and seeking recalculation of his maximum original sentence.
In 1987, Calloway was sentenced to serve a ten-year state prison sentence (PA Sentence) with a maximum expiry of October 5, 1996. 1 He was constructively paroled on June 11, 1992, to serve a prison sentence in Philadelphia County Prison (County Sentence). He was released therefrom on October 1,1992.
Two weeks later, on October 15, 1992, Calloway was arrested in New Jersey for robbery. He did not post bail. On December 3, 1992, the Board filed a detainer with the New Jersey authorities in relation to this arrest. On April 29,1993, Calloway pled guilty to a reduced charge of Theft from a Person arising from the arrest for robbery in New Jersey. He was sentenced to serve a three-year sentence in a New Jersey state prison on May 21, 1993, (NJ Sentence), with credit for time served from October 15, 1992, (the date of arrest), to May 21, 1993, (the date of conviction for the theft charge). The maximum term expiry for this sentence was February 4, 1995.
On April 20,1994, the Board removed its detainer, and four days later (April 24, 1994), Calloway was paroled from his NJ Sentence, which now had a maximum term expiry of February 8, 1995. On July 1, 1994, he was arrested by New Jersey authorities for violating his parole, but was released 18 days later without having his parole revoked. On October 7, 1994, New Jersey authorities again arrested him for violation of his New Jersey, parole, and this time he remained in official detention for four months and one day until February 8, 1995 (the recalculated date of expiry for the theft charge).
On March 7, 1995, Calloway was arrested by the FBI and tried in federal court for four charges of bank robbery. The next day, the Board lodged its detainer. He was then convicted and sentenced to serve 92 months in federal prison (Federal Sentence) for the four bank robberies. On December 14, 2001, Calloway was released from federal prison.
On February 6, 2002, the Board revoked Calloway’s parole after a hearing and recommitted him for 24 months as a direct
In March of 2004, a New Jersey order was issued vacating Calloway’s conviction for Theft from a Person and amended the conviction to Fourth Degree Theft, which carried a sentence of ten months instead of three years. The order indicated that Cal-loway was sentenced to time actually served from April 21, 1994, to February 8, 1995, and was issued as a result of a negotiated plea by Calloway and the local district attorney’s office.
Calloway then filed a Petition for Review in the Nature of Mandamus 2 addressed to this Court’s original jurisdiction requesting that the Court order the Board to recalculate the maximum expiry date of his original PA Sentence to July 30, 2004, instead of April 6, 2006, to reflect the time he served (1) on the County Sentence (three months and 20 days);' and (2) all the time he spent in confinement including his pre-sentence detention in New Jersey for the robbery arrest for which he did not post bail while on a Board detainer (five months and 18 days) and the time he served for the NJ Sentence (ten months and 17 days). Asserting that there were no issues of material fact and that he was entitled to relief as a matter of law, Callo-way filed the present Application for Summary Relief. 3
I.
As to the County Sentence (three months and 20 days) for which Calloway is seeking credit, because this claim is an attack on the 2002 recalculation order issued by the Board denying credit for the time he served while on constructive parole,
4
Calloway was required to file a direct appeal of that order addressed to this Court’s appellate jurisdiction.
See McMahon v. Pennsylvania Board of Probation
II.
Even though the New Jersey Court issued its order 11 years after the original three year sentencing, nine years after Calloway’s three-year New Jersey prison sentence had expired and two years after the Board had issued its Recalculation Order,
6
Calloway claims that the Board should have recalculated the maximum term expiry on his original PA Sentence to reflect the time spent in pre-sentence detention awaiting sentencing in New Jersey (5 months and 18 days) and the time he actually served in New Jersey that was later reduced by the amended order in 2004 (ten months and 17 days). While we recognize that Calloway would have been credited both with the time he spent in pre-sentence detention
7
had he been detained in Pennsylvania and the excess time he served resulting from his reduced sen
Accordingly, the Application for Summary Relief is denied.
ORDER
AND NOW, this 1st day of September, 2004, the Application for Summary Relief filed by Petitioner in the above-captioned matter is denied.
Notes
. It appears that Calloway was to serve two concurrent ten-year sentences.
. Mandamus is an extraordinary writ.
Bronson
v.
Board of Probation and Parole,
. Rule 1532(b) of the Rules of Appellate Procedure provides as follows:
At any time after the filing of a petition for review in an appellate or original matter the court may on application enter judgment if the right of the applicant thereto is clear.
Pa. R.A.P. 1532(b). An application for summary relief may be granted if a party’s right to judgment is clear and no material issues of fact are in dispute.
Sanders v. Pennsylvania Board of Probation and Parole,
.A prisoner on constructive parole is not released from prison but is paroled from his or her original sentence to immediately begin serving a new sentence.
Merritt
v.
Pennsylvania Board of Probation and Parole,
. Under Section 21.1 of what is commonly known as the Parole Act, a parolee receives no credit towards his or her original sentence for time spent at liberty on parole. Act of August 6, 1941, P.L. 861, as amended, added by Section 5 of the Act of August 24, 1951, P.L. 1401, as amended, 61 P.S. § 331.21a(a).
. The Board contends that Calloway is also out of time to now claim New Jersey time for the same reason he could not challenge his County time — he had to appeal the 2002 Recalculation Order. What this position ignores is that unlike his County time, for which there has not been a change in the underlying facts, this claim only arose as a result of the 2004 New Jersey order vacating his original sentence of three years and re-sentencing Callo-way to time actually served from April 21, 1994, to February 8, 1995. What he is contending is that there is a non-discretionary duly on the part of the Board to credit that time.
. Martin v. Pennsylvania Board of Probation and Parole,
. See 42 Pa.C.S. §§ 9701-9799.6.
. An exception exists where a Pennsylvania sentencing court indicates that imprisonment in another jurisdiction shall satisfy or be credited against both the minimum and maximum time imposed under the court’s sentence. 42 Pa.C.S. § 9761(b).
