JOHN D. GREEN, Appellant, v. WALTER A. GORDON et al., Respondents.
S. F. No. 18523
In Bank. Supreme Court of California
July 9, 1952
August 7, 1952
39 Cal.2d 230
Gibson, C. J., Shenk, J., Edmonds, J., Carter, J., Traynor, J., and Spence, J., concurred.
Appellant‘s petition for a rehearing was denied August 7, 1952.
Edmund G. Brown, Attorney General, and David K. Lener, Deputy Attorney General, for Respondents.
GIBSON, C. J. — In 1932, petitioner was convicted of murder and sentenced to death. After affirmance of the conviction (People v. Green, 217 Cal. 176 [17 P.2d 730]), Governor Rolph commuted the sentence to “life imprisonment without parole.” Because of the terms of the commutation, the Adult Authority has refused to entertain petitioner‘s application for parole.
The superior court issued an order to show cause why mandate should not be granted to compel the Adult Authority to consider petitioner‘s application.* The return consisted of a general demurrer to the petition, and at the hearing thereon the court rendered a judgment of dismissal, from which petitioner has appealed.
He contends that by issuing the order to show cause the trial court passed upon the sufficiency of the petition and
We recently held that a commutation of sentence is in the nature of a favor which, under
Petitioner concedes that the Legislature cannot interfere with the governor‘s power to commute a sentence of death, but he claims that the Legislature has exclusive control over penalties for crimes, and that the punishment which has been provided for first degree murder is either death or life imprisonment with the possibility of parole. He argues that the governor cannot impose a different punishment, i.e., imprisonment for life without the possibility of parole. The penalties prescribed by statute, however, are the ones to be imposed by the trial court upon conviction of murder, and the statutory provisions relating to such penalties and the right to parole do not purport to limit
Shenk, J., Edmonds, J., Traynor, J., Schauer, J., and Spence, J., concurred.
CARTER, J. — I dissent.
While the holding of the majority of this court in this case is in accord with In re Collie, 38 Cal.2d 396 [240 P.2d 275], I have concluded that the last mentioned case was erroneously decided and should therefore be overruled. In my opinion the legal principle here involved is comparatively simple.
“All existing statutes and constitutional provisions, purporting to create such institutions or such agencies or officers or boards, to so delegate such government, charge and superintendence, to so prescribe such powers, duties, or functions, or to so provide for such punishment, treatment or supervision are hereby ratified, validated and declared to be legally effective until the Legislature provides otherwise.”
It is under the latter provision of the Constitution which was amended in 1940 that the Legislature has power to provide for the parole of prisoners. The Legislature has provided for a uniform system of parole (see
I think it is clear, therefore, that when
While I think it is clear that it was not the intention of the framers of
It also appears to me that to so construe our constitutional and statutory provisions is to make it possible for the governor to create a situation where a prisoner such as petitioner here is denied equal protection of the law in violation of the
