182 Iowa 871 | Iowa | 1918
The plaintiff was committed to the penitentiary under two sentences of imprisonment of five years each. Indictments for larceny were found against him in the counties of Boone and Dallas. On October 10, 1913, the district court of Boone County entered judgment against him upon a plea of guilty, and imposed the maximum sen
“If the defendant is convicted of two or more offenses, the punishment of each of which is or may be imprisonment, the judgment may be so rendered that the imprisonment upon any one shall commence at the expiration of the imprisonment upon any other of the offenses.”
In the Revision of I860, the section corresponding-hereto (Section 4-880) provided that, where the defendant is convicted of two or more offenses, the “judgment shall be so rendered that the imprisonment upon one shall commence at the expiration of the imprisonment upon any other of the offenses.” This section was amended, and appears in the Code of 1873 as Section 4508, as follows:
“If the defendant is convicted of two or more offenses [before judgment on either], the punishment of each of which is, or may be, imprisonment, the judgment may be so rendered that the imprisonment upon any one shall commence at the expiration of the imprisonment upon any other of the offenses.” '
This section was later amended by the elimination of
If Section 4508 of the Code of 1873 had not received consideration in an earlier decision of this court, we should have little trouble in construing Section 5439 as 'supporting the contention of the plaintiff.. The clear implication of this section is that terms of imprisonment may be concurrent. Power is therein conferred upon the court to so render the judgment as to make them otherwise. The powers thereby conferred operates, to some extent, as a modification of the requirements of Code Sections 5443 and 5444, which require an immediate execution of the judgment, by delivery of the custody of the defendant to the warden of the penitentiary. The original form of this enactment, as it appeared in the Revision of 1860 with the .subsequent amendments thereto, is suggestive. Under Section 4880 of the Revision, as above quoted, it was mandatory upon the court, where two or more convictions were had, to so render the judgment that imprisonment upon one should commence at the expiration of the imprisonment upon another. In the amended statute, as it appears in the Code of 1873, Section 4508, the mandatory requirement was withdrawn, but the power was still conferred upon the court. The conferring of this power of discretion upon the court required it to determine whether the imprisonment upon one sentence should begin at the expiration of the imprisonment upon another. If yea, the judgment must be “so rendered.” If the judgment be not so rendered, the statute confers no power upon any other official to hold the custody of the convict beyond the term that appears upon the face of the
We think, therefore, that a fair construction of the statute requires us to hold it applicable, and that the two sentences imposed upon the plaintiff must be deemed to have run concurrently. In so far as Mieir v. McMillan, 51 Iowa 240, runs counter to this view, we cannot approve or follow it. We have no real occasion to overrule it, because of the change of the statute to its present form.
Because the judgment of conviction upon the second offense did not provide that the term of imprisonment thereunder should begin at the expiration of the term of imprisonment upon the other conviction, the terms must be deemed to have run concurrently. The judgment below is, therefore, reversed and the cause remanded. — Reversed and remanded.