Counsel for the defendant insist that the original sentence imposed by the judge of the city court was not a “probation sentence”; that the defendant was sentenced to pay a fine of $43.50 and “work in the Public Works Camp of Clarke County for the full term of Twelve months . . with the privilege to pay said fine and costs and be discharged at any time after entering upon said Public Works.”
Counsel for the State insist that “the last clear pronouncement of the court in the sentence in this case is ‘upon payment of the fine the 12 months to be served outside said jail and/or camp, on probation until further order of the court’ ” (compare
Carter
v.
Johnson,
168
Ga.
688, 689,
From the language of the sentence imposed by the judge of the city court, the meaning -and intent of the court is not altogether clear. The first part of the sentence is certain and positive. The defendant was required to pay a fine and to work twelve months in the public works camp. The meaning is not clear as to the proviso, “with the privilege to pay said fine and costs and be discharged at any time after entering upon said Public Works.”
The judge of the superior court construed the word “discharged” to mean “released from confinement.” Webster’s New International Dictionary "(2d ed.), p. 742. This is one of the definitions given by that dictionary. The word “dis *396 charge,” however, has many meanings, some of which are: to absolve; to free from that which oppresses, as an obligation; to acquit; clear; exempt; dismiss legally; annul. Black’s Law Dictionary (3rd ed.), p. 584, defines “discharge” as “to release, liberate, annul, unburden, disencumber.” If the word “discharge” as used in the sentence should be given the meaning to annul, unburden, disencumber, acquit, or to free the defendant “from that which oppresses as an obligation,” the sentence would be terminated upon the payment of the fine.
There does not appear to be any “last clear pronouncement” by the judge of the city court in the proviso that “upon payment of the fine the 12 months to be served outside said jail and/or camp on probation until further order of this court.”
The rule has been laid down by this court that sentences for criminal offenses “should be certain, definite, and free from ambiguity; and where the contrary is the case, the benefit of the doubt should be given to the accused.”
Dixon
v.
Baughn,
149
Ga.
86, 87 (
Service of a sentence on probation is conferred as a privilege (
Statutes providing for the suspension of a sentence or the probation of a defendant must be strictly followed.
Former Chief Justice Russell, in speaking for this court in
Williams
v.
State,
162
Ga.
327, 328 (3) (
In the present case, the defendant did not violate the conditions of his probation, since no conditions were imposed. While there is no evidence in the record of any act of the defendant since the imposition of his original sentence, no amount of evidence would dispense with the duty of the judge to prescribe the terms and conditions of the probation in the manner required by law.
In
Lester
v.
Foster,
207
Ga.
596, 598, 599 (
The defendant should have been discharged upon payment of the fine, and the judge erred in remanding him to the custody of the sheriff.
Judgment reversed.
