This petition for a writ of error was reserved and reported by the single justice, without decision, upon the petition, answer, and return. The return shows as follows; The petitioner, Campbell, on June 9, 1956, in the District Court of Springfield, pleaded guilty to larceny from the person and was sentenced to imprisonment in the house of correction in Springfield for the term *696 of eighteen months. He did not then appeal and, under G. L. c. 218, § 31, he was ordered committed to the jail, 1 to await commitment upon the sentence, until June 11. On that day Campbell appealed to the Superior Court, bail was fixed, and in default of bail he was committed to the Springfield jail. G. L. c. 278, § 18 (“committed to abide the sentence of . . . [the superior] court”). On June 18 Campbell withdrew his appeal, and the judge then sitting revoked the sentence of June 9 and imposed an indeterminate sentence to Massachusetts correctional institution at Concord, that is, the Massachusetts reformatory. See G. L. c. 125, § 1, as amended through St. 1955, c. 770, § 11.
1. We rule that the sentence of June 18 meant an “increase [in] the sentence as first imposed” in violation of G. L. c. 278, § 25, which provides that if, in accordance therewith, an appeal to the Superior Court is withdrawn, “the court may order the appellant to comply with the sentence appealed from, in the same manner as if it were then first imposed, or may revise or revoke the same if satisfied that cause for such revision or revocation exists; provided, that the court shall not increase the sentence as first imposed . . . .” 2
The maximum length of Campbell’s confinement under the sentence for an “indefinite term” (G. L. c. 279, § 31) was five years. This is determined by § 32 (“The court imposing a sentence of commitment for an indefinite term shall not fix the maximum term unless it exceeds five years, but shall merely impose an indefinite sentence or commitment”) and § 33 (“Whoever is sentenced to the Massachusetts reformatory ... for any felony may be held therein for not more than five years unless sentenced for a longer term, in which case he may be held therein for such longer term . . .”). A reference to § 33 was necessarily implicit in the indefinite sentence imposed on June 18.
Sheehan,
*697
petitioner,
The minimum length of Campbell’s confinement (see G. L. c. 127, §§ 128, 130, 130A, 133, 134, 135, 136) was insignificant inasmuch as the sentence, for present purposes, is to be taken as a sentence for five years subject to mitigation in its effect, or termination, by the operation of subsequent events. This principle is well established as to sentences under G. L. c. 279, § 24, in which the maximum and minimum terms are expressly stated.
Commonwealth
v.
Brown,
2. In view of the statutory prohibition of increase of sentence on withdrawal of appeal, we do not reach the question of the right of the court to change the sentence apart from
*698
statute. See
Commonwealth
v.
Weymouth,
3. In the circumstances, the revocation of the earlier sentence is to be construed as conditional upon the imposition of a valid superseding sentence. The action of revocation and the imposition of the indefinite sentence are reversed
(Whitney
v.
Commonwealth,
So ordered.
Notes
The officer’s return on the mittimus of June 9 certifies on that date to conveying the defendant to the house of correction in Springfield.
As to original sentence, see G. L. c. 266, § 25; c. 279, § 6; c. 126, § 8; and c. 218, §§ 26, 27. As to the sentence of June 18, see G. L. c. 279, § 31, and c. 125, § 1, as amended through St. 1955, c. 770, § 11.
“If a final judgment is reversed by reason of error in the sentence, such judgment shall be rendered in the case as the court below should have rendered, or it may be remanded for that purpose to said court. . .
It was stated that the petitioner had been released on parole after serving two years of the indeterminate sentence, that he is now serving a sentence for another crime, with the prospect upon completion of that sentence of being held again under the indefinite sentence because of violation of parole.
