Respondent was released from the State Penitentiary by order of the Richland County Court dated November 24, 1950, after hearing in
habeas corpus
proceedings, but she was required to give bond pending this appeal by the State. On June 3, 1947, she was convicted in the Court of General Sessions of Abbeville County of assault and battery with intent to kill, for which she paid.án álternative fine; and also of maintaining a public nuisance for which latter she was sentenced to imprisonment for one year, which was
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suspended and she was placed on probation for five years. On September 8, 1948, she was tried in the same, court for a subsequent offense and convicted of assault and battery of a high and aggravated nature, and sentenced to two years imprisonment. She appealed from this .judgment; it was affirmed.
State v. Finley,
215 S. C. 62,
Thereupon respondent began • service of the sentence on June 27, 1949. Oh June 29, 1949, she was taken before the judge at Newberry who had imposed the suspended sentence of one year in 1947, and on account of the subsequent conviction in 1948 the court revoked' the suspension of the earlier, 1947, sentence, the order being in effective part as follows: “It is' therefore ordered that the suspended sentence be revoked and the said defendánt Marie Einley be required to serve the full term provided for in the sentence as originally imposed, with deduction in time for good behavior. This unserved portion of said sentence to run from date of commitment after suspension has been revoked, with defendant being given due credit for portion of said sentence that has already been served in either the South Carolina Penitentiary or on a County Chaingang.”
The Richland County Court, whose order is here under review, concluded that the one year sentence of 1947, the suspension of service of which was revoked by the. quoted order of June 29, 1949, was served concurrently with the longer sentence of 1948; in other words that the sentences ran concurrently, whereby respondent was entitled to release. The contrary contention of the State is that the formerly suspended sentence would begin to run only after completion of service of the 1948 sentence.
Ex parte Klugh,
132 S. C. 199,
While the foregoing was patently obiter it appears to be entirely sound and in the absence of direct precedent should govern the decision of the case at bar.
Forceful statement of the general law elsewhere is' found in
People ex rel. Clancy v. Graydon, Sheriff,
The respondent here will pay no separate penalty for violation of her parole from service of the 1947 sentence and to that extent may be said to have cheated society, but it is so because the court did not specify (in the order of revocation) consecutive service of the sentences— did not express that intention. It may be reasonably implied from the fact that otherwise revocation was futile but inference or implication is not enough to satisfy the rule; and should not be, because it involves the freedom of a citizen. The following apt quotation is from the opinion 'in
Ex parte Lamar, 2
Cir,
What has been said disposes of appellant’s first question, adversely to it. The second imputes error to the order of the lower court in allowing deduction of thirty per cent of the two-year sentence (of 1948) for good behavior. This assignment of error must be sustained. Respondent was a second offender and entitled to abatement of sentence for good behavior of only twenty per cent. Section 1578, Code of 1942,
Ex parte
Wilson, S. C.,
Affirmed in part; reversed in part.
