121 S.E. 287 | W. Va. | 1924
Lyda Fisher, being arraigned on the 25th day of June, 1923, in the Intermediate Court of Kanawha County on an indictment charging her with a violation of the prohibition law, pleaded guilty, and a fine of $100 was assessed against her and a jail sentence of thirty days imposed. Upon her motion the sentence was suspended until the first day of the next regular term, which was the first Tuesday in the following October. It appears that she gave bond for her appearance at the first day of the next regular term, but failed to appear. Afterwards, in the month of December, she was arrested on a capias and placed in jail to serve her sentence. She applied for and obtained a writ of habeas corpus from a judge of this court. In her petition she sets out the above facts and asserts that the court was without power to suspend the sentence imposed; that the suspension was invalid and of no effect; that the sentence has expired by its own operation; and that she is held by the sheriff in the county jail illegally and without authority of law. In obedience to the writ the sheriff produced the petitioner in court and filed his return setting out substantially the same facts as are set forth in the petition concerning the crime and indictment therefor, confession, sentence and the suspension thereof by the court until its next regular term in October; and denying that the court was without power to suspend sentence; that upon her failure to appear at the October term she was arrested by him upon legal process issued from said court and is now legally confined in jail to serve the sentence imposed upon her. *399
The case was submitted upon oral argument and briefs.
Petitioner says she is illegally deprived of her liberty, (1) because the court exceeded its jurisdiction and abused its power by suspending the sentence even though it was upon her own motion and by her consent; (2) that the period of time for which she was sentenced having expired before she was arrested and incarcerated, the crime for which she confessed has been expiated by the running of time; that in contemplation of law she has been in custody for the period of the sentence, and has technically served out that sentence. The prosecutor says, (1) that the court had inherent power to suspend the operation of the sentence; that the suspension was for her benefit on her motion and agreement and she is now estopped from complaining of error (if any there be) which she induced; (2) that even if that part of the sentence suspending its operation is void, the sentence is valid, and although the period of the sentence has expired she has not expiated her crime, which can be done only by actual incarceration.
It will be seen that two controlling questions are presented: (1) Did the court have power to suspend the sentence? (2) If the actual suspension (by reason of the suspending part of the order) extended beyond the time when the sentence, if enforced, would have expired, would that fact render the sentence unenforceable now?
On both of these questions there is considerable conflict in the decisions. The United States Supreme Court, and the Federal courts generally, hold that those courts do not have inherent power to suspend the operation of sentences legally pronounced. A well considered and logical opinion was written by Chief Justice White in the case of Ex parte U.S. Petitioner, for writ of mandamus, reported in
We come to the other question: Did this void provision of suspension by which the operation of the sentence was stayed, make the sentence unenforceable after the time for which the sentence was imposed has passed? On this proposition there is diversity of opinion. The weight of authority seems to be that such unauthorized order suspending the execution of the sentence does not prevent the subsequent enforcement thereof because the validity of the judgment is not affected by such order, even though it is made a part of the sentence, and may be enforced at any time after its rendition so long as it remains unexecuted, either before or after the term of court *402
when it was imposed. Cases which negative this proposition are:U.S. v. Wilson, 46 F. 748; Ex parte Clendenning,
The prisoner has not been deprived of her liberty unlawfully, and she will be returned to the custody of the sheriff.
*403Prisoner remanded.