Petitioner, a Massachuetts prisoner, seeks an injunction against the enforcement of a sentence under a state statute, Mass.Gen.Laws, ch. 127, § 129, as amended by Mass.Acts of 1965, ch. 884, on the ground that the amendment is unconstitutional as an ex post facto law. Pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 2281 a three-judge district сourt was convened to consider the merits of his contention. We delayed our hearing briefly until a proceeding brought by petitioner in the state court has been determined adversely by a single justice of the Supreme Judicial Court. The single justice denied bail. We agree with petitiоner that we should delay no further.
1
See Zwickler v. Koota,
In 1962 petitioner was sentenced to a 5-7 year term by the Massachusetts Superior Court. Under sеction 129 of chapter 127 as then existing he was entitled to earn “good-conduct” deductions from the sentence imposed throughout the period of his incarceration. The Massachusetts practice, as testified to before us, is to compute at the time a prisoner
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commences service of sentence the total deductions which he may so earn and to deduct these from the maximum sentencе, thus establishing at the outset a tentative date of release. Should the prisoner, through misbehavior, fail to earn any of the time already deducted, it is “forfeited” by an appropriate extension of the tentative date of release. Broad provision for forfeiture for misconduct during confinement is contained in the statute, but prior to ch. 884 no forfeiture was provided for violation of parole. Gildea v. Commissioner of Correction, 1957,
By ch. 884 of the Acts of 1965 there was added to section 129 the following qualification:
“A prisoner released on parole by thе parole board, who has failed to observe all the rules of his parole and has been returned to a correctional institution fоr the violation of his parole, shall not receive deductions described in this section for any of the first six months after he is returned to the correctional institution.”
Apparently recognizing that there might be objections to retrospective application, the legislature made the provision prospective to the extent that it was not to apply to persons currently on parole. It did, otherwise, aрply to persons already under sentence. Petitioner, though sentenced before, was paroled after the amendment took effect, and upon his violation of parole and return to prison the statute was invoked. Consequently, whereas under the old statute it is conceded that petitioner, whose conduct since reincarceration has been good, would have been entitled to releasе prior to the bringing of this action, under the ch. 884 six months’ disqualification his release is considerably delayed. 2 He contends that application of ch. 884 to him is constitutionally impermissible.
The Supreme Court has long construed Article I, section 10 of the Constitution to forbid the imposition of a sеntence, by virtue of a change in the law, greater than the maximum sentence permitted at the date of the offense. Calder v. Bull, 1798,
The application of ch. 884 to persons sentenced for a crime committed after its effective date сould raise no question. The possibility of a partial forfeiture of the right to earn deductions would have been contemplated in the sentence, and would therefore be within the maximum term provided for. Van Busk
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irk v. Wilkinson, 9 Cir., 1954,
The Commonwealth’s argument must presuppose that parole is not like the good conduct deduction, but may be lawfully withdrawn altogether. It is true that parole is commonly spoken of as a matter of grace, and not of right. E. g., Cox v. Maxwell, 6 Cir., 1966,
The same must be said as between providing unqualified parolе and parole cum onere, i. e., subject to ch. 884. The difference between no penalty, other than a termination of the parole, and a substantial increase in imprisonment for violation, is far from inconsequential. To effect this by legislation enacted after the оffense for which sentence was imposed cannot be constitutionally supported.
Petitioner is entitled to an order enjoining the forfеiture or suspension of good conduct deductions as provided for by Mass.Acts of 1965, ch. 884, and requiring his present discharge.
Notes
. We also agree with petitioner that the decision of the single justice accorded with the opinion of the full bench in a previous case, Allen v. Massachusetts Parole Board, Mass.1967,
. At tlm hearing before us a controversy developed as to how long, under the rule announced in the final paragraph of Allen, fn. 1, supra, the delay should be. We need not consider this question.
