198 A. 812 | Pa. Super. Ct. | 1938
Argued March 15, 1938. The relator, George Paige, has appealed from the order of the court below discharging a writ of habeas corpus and remanding him to the custody of the warden of the Eastern State Penitentiary. *538
The relevant facts on which the appellant relies may be stated as follows:
On April 12, 1934 Paige pleaded guilty to an indictment for burglary, (March Term 1934, No. 1103). When brought before the court for sentence, on May 4, 1934, the day before the last day of the April 1934 Term, he stated that he had never before been in trouble except for a trifling liquor violation, and there appeared to be no record of his previous conviction or imprisonment. The presiding judge, apparently overlooking the fact that persons convicted of burglary1 are specifically excepted from the probation provisions of the Act of June 19, 1911, P.L. 1055, and its amendment of May 7, 1925, P.L. 554, erroneously placed the defendant on probation for a period of ten years. Subsequently having learned that the defendant had a long criminal record in other states, the same judge ordered him brought into court on a bench warrant, and after a hearing, in the course of which Paige admitted his prior criminal record and the falsity of his statements about his prior imprisonment, on June 4, 1934, revoked the order placing him on probation and sentenced him to the Eastern State Penitentiary for a term of not less than five years nor more than ten years, to take effect as of May 4, 1934 — a sentence admittedly within the maximium allowed by law. The sentence of June 4, 1934 was imposed after the ending of the April Term aforesaid, at which the defendant pleaded guilty and was placed on probation.
The relator claimed to be entitled to his discharge on two grounds: (1) That the placing of the defendant on probation was a sentence, and that the court had no power, after the expiration of the term, to revoke it and *539 sentence him to the penitentiary, for any cause except the subsequent violation of the terms of his probation, pursuant to the fourth section of the Act, of which violation there was no allegation or proof. (2) That the sentence to the penitentiary was imposed in chambers and not in open court as required by law. On the oral argument, the second ground was withdrawn, because it was based on an inadvertent error of fact, and is not pressed.
The appellant's argument rests on the premise that the order of May 4, 1934 placing him on probation was a sentence. We have, however, definitely ruled to the contrary in Com. v. Fox,
We have ruled that an order suspending the imposing of sentence is not appealable, because not a final judgment, — (See Com. v.Carelli,
The appellant points out that in Com. v. Reilly,
We have gone into the matter thus fully to clear up a matter of practice, as to which the courts and the profession have been in some doubt.
In the present case, however, such a review is not really essential. The relator pleaded guilty to burglary. A plea of guilty is just as effectual for a conviction as a verdict of guilty. "The mode of conviction whether by plea of guilty or trial before a jury, was a *544
matter of no moment": Com. v. Thompson,
In United States ex rel. Campbell v. Bishop, 39 Fed. (2) 208, the trial judge, following a plea of guilty by the defendant to an indictment charging him with violation of the National Prohibition Act, indefinitely suspended sentence, — which was unlawful under the Federal practice, (See Miller v. Aderhold,
supra) — and six months later revoked the suspension and committed defendant to the penitentiary. On appeal to the Circuit Court of Appeals for the 5th Circuit, this action was approved. The court pointed out that the indefinite suspension of sentence was unlawful and that the judge could have been required by mandamus to eliminate it, (citing Ex parte United States,
Had the Commonwealth appealed from the order of May 4, 1934 — see Com. v. Mayloy,
Our Supreme Court has, in recent cases, limited the common law rule that a court cannot change, modify or revoke its judgment after the term at which it was entered. In Markofski v. Yanks,
But even if we were wrong in our conclusion that as the order of May 4, 1934 was wholly without any legal power or authority to support it, it could be revoked and a legal sentence imposed at a term subsequent to the April 1934 term, the appellant would not, in any event, be entitled to be discharged on a writ of habeas corpus.
We have already shown that the order of May 4, 1934 placing the defendant on probation was not a sentence. If, by a strict adherence to the old common law rule, it should be held that, although without any legal authority for its entry, it was such a judgment as could not be revoked by the court at a term subsequent to its entry, and a legal sentence imposed, on appeal from habeas corpus proceedings reviewing the sentence of June 4, 1934, we would not discharge the relator, but would send him back to be sentenced in accordance with law: Com. v. Curry,
The order of the court below dismissing the writ of habeas corpus and remanding relator to the Eastern State Penitentiary is affirmed.