20 S.E.2d 69 | Ga. | 1942
1. An order of the Chief Executive, designated therein as a conditional pardon, and reciting, among other things, "that the said Ralph Harrell be and he is hereby granted a conditional pardon conditioned on his paying a fine of $150, and conditioned further on his obeying all laws of this State, of the United States, and of any other State; and this his conditional pardon shall be revocable at the pleasure of the Governor. And the said Ralph Harrell be and he is hereby released from service in the penal institutions of this State, and the sentences imposed on him under accusations No. 165996 and No. 158992 be and they are hereby suspended," is held to be a conditional pardon.
2. Where a convict is conditionally pardoned, he may upon breach of the condition be compelled to serve out the term which remained unserved at the time the pardon was granted and accepted, even though the breach occurred after the date upon which his sentence as fixed by the court would have expired.
On January 12, 1942, Harrell was arrested and charged by accusation with the offense of operating a lottery and violating the motor-vehicle laws of Georgia. Upon this arrest the solicitor of the criminal court of Fulton County moved to have the pardon granted on August 10, 1940, declared "to have become void and of no effect." On hearing this motion the court decided that the terms of the pardon had been violated, and ordered that Harrell "be delivered to the superintendent of public works of Fulton County, Georgia, for the purpose of serving the term of the sentence" imposed. Harrell then brought to the superior court his petition for habeas corpus, alleging the foregoing facts, and that he was being illegally restrained of his liberty, and praying that he be discharged. This was denied, and Harrell excepted. 1. The pardon was conditional. It was granted on August 10, 1940, and it is recited therein that "the said Ralph Harrell be and he is hereby granted a conditional pardon conditioned on his paying a fine of $150, and conditioned further on his obeying all laws of this State, of the United States, and of any other State; and this his conditional pardon shall be revocable at the pleasure of the Governor. And the said Ralph Harrell be and he is hereby released from service in the penal institutions of this State, and the sentences imposed on him under accusations No. 165996 and No. 158992 be and they are hereby suspended. And it is so ordered." The fine therein referred to was paid, and the pardon accepted.
What was actually ruled in Neal v. State,
2. Granting that this was a conditional pardon, should the condition nevertheless be construed as meaning merely that the grantee should not violate any law during the period for which the sentences were to run?
In 39 Am. Jur. § 71, the prevailing rule is stated as follows: "A pardon may, as one of its restrictions and limitations, designate the time for the observance of its conditions, but if it does not, it is generally held that the time of performance of conditions subsequent is limited only by the life of the convict." Again (§ 74), the following is stated: "A sentence of imprisonment for *821 a criminal act is satisfied only by the actual suffering of the imprisonment imposed, unless remitted by death or by some legal authority; if, from any cause, the time elapses without the imprisonment being endured, the sentence will still be a valid, subsisting, unexecuted one. In accordance with these principles, it is well settled that where a prisoner is conditionally pardoned, upon breach of the condition the time he was at liberty under the pardon is not to be considered as time served on the original sentence, and he may be compelled to serve out the term which remained unserved at the time the pardon was granted and accepted. By breach or nonperformance of the conditions the pardon becomes void, and the status of the prisoner is the same as it was before the pardon was granted; or, as is sometimes said, the position of the prisoner on a violation of the conditions of his pardon is similar to that of an escaped convict. He can not complain of the interruption of the execution of the sentence during the time he enjoyed his liberty, for it was secured by him by his acceptance of the conditional pardon. "A condition in a pardon that the convict shall be required to serve out the unserved portion of the term of his original sentence if he violates the terms of the pardon does not terminate with the expiration of the original term of sentence. Accordingly, the rule is laid down by many courts that a convict who has violated the conditions of a pardon may be compelled to serve out the unexpired term of his original sentence, even though the breach occurred after the date upon which his sentence as fixed by the court which sentenced him would have expired."
This rule, however, has not met with the approval of all the courts, some of them holding that the time a convict is at liberty under conditional pardon is to be taken as a part of the term of sentence, and that on his subsequent arrest for breach of the condition he is entitled to be discharged at the expiration of the term of his sentence. For the adjudications presenting the two views, and the reasoning in support of each, compare the following and the notes thereto: State v. Horne,
If what has been referred to above as the "well-settled" rule on this subject were not accepted, but on the contrary it were to be held that the only effect of the condition in the pardon was that Harrell should not violate any law during the time for which his sentence was to run, this would be to construe the Governor's act as changing the judgment of the court into something in the nature of a probation sentence; and the language of the order will not permit us to treat it as such, as was in effect ruled in the first division of this opinion. It is urged upon us that it would be unreasonable to construe the executive order as something held in terrorem over the applicant's head for the remainder of his life. If a conditional pardon releasing a convict from a term in prison, containing in substance a provision that it shall be valid only so long as the recipient thereof does not again enter on a criminal career, would have a tendency to restrain any evil plans that might come into his mind, and to that extent act in terrorem, this of itself would not be an unreasonable result to be hoped for. Therefore, construing it as having just that effect, this would not render the order unreasonable or unconscionable. It may be that the Chief Executive in granting the pardon, conditioned as it was on future good behavior, had in mind that it would so operate on him in the years to follow. That its purpose may have failed does not argue that it would be unreasonable to believe that the grantor of the pardon intended that it should operate in terrorem, if indeed the realization that the applicant must in the future obey the law on pain of forfeiting the pardon be a terrifying thought. *823
The order refers to the fact that the pardon was sought. It was granted on condition, and accepted. If petitioner had been of the opinion that an implied promise on his part to do forever thereafter what every person should do voluntarily, to wit, obey the law, was exacting too big a price to pay for the pardon, he could have declined it; but this he did not do. This court, along with numerous others, has ruled that a pardon may be granted with a condition appended thereto. Muckle v. Clarke,
It was not erroneous to refuse to grant the prisoner's release, but on the contrary to remand him to the custody.
Judgment affirmed. All the Justices concur.