Opinion by
Willard E. Comer,' Jr., lias appealed from the dismissal of his petition for habeas corpus. He contends that he was entitled to the writ and a full hearing upon it. The record in the quarter sessions by endorsements on three , bills of indictment shows that he on March 3, 1950, pleaded guilty to burglary and larceny on one bill; to carrying'explosives, on a second bill; and bn a third bill, to violation of the Uniform Firearms Act and possession of burglary tools. It is idle therefore for him to aver, in his. petition for the writ that he intended to plead guilty to the single charge of burglary. In a habeas corpus proceeding the relator is bound by the record until the contrary affirmatively and competently appears. Commonwealth ex rel. Spencer v. Ashe,
Separate sentences were imposed on each of the charges in all three indictments. In his petition for the writ relator alleges that his sentence for larceny in addition to the sentence for burglary was invalid because the felonious entry and the larceny, charged in separate counts of the same bill, were committed at the
There is no merit in the criticism of the consecutive sentences imposed on the charges' of burglary and larceny on the ground that they were committed in the “same transaction”. In Com. ex rel. Moszczynski v. Ashe,
All of the offenses charged, though committed at the same time, or in succession, were separate crimes, independent of each other. Relator’s possession of two revolvers, of dynamite with blasting caps, and of burglary tools, although in anticipation of the felonious entry or in aid of the larceny, did not merge with either of those crimes. “When a statute defines certain distinct acts as crimes, the actor cannot justly complain if he is prosecuted and punished for all of them unless one of the crimes was a necessary part of the other.” Com. ex rel. Moszczynski v. Ashe, supra, p. 108. The above crimes were not integral phases of the same act. Whatever crimes are committed in a building feloniously entered are separate and distinct offenses. Commonwealth v. Hellner, supra.
The petition for habeas corpus in this case, in the light of the record on which it is based, failed to make out a case entitling the relator to relief. The petition therefore was properly dismissed without hearing. Commonwealth ex rel. Elliott v. Baldi,
Order affirmed.
