121 Ga. 159 | Ga. | 1904
This was a petition for habeas corpus, brought to secure the release of Hightower from, the chain-gang of Monroe county. The case was submitted to the judge of the superior court of the Flint circuit, upon the pleadings and an agreed statement of facts. The prayers of the petition were denied, and Hightower excepted. From the statement of facts it appears that Hightower was tried and convicted under an accusation brought in the city court of Barnesville, and was sentenced to pay a fine of fifty dollars or be confined in the chain-gang for nine months. He took the case by certiorari to the superior court, and, pending the hearing of the certiorari, was released on bond, in accordance with the terms of the judge’s order.. Subsequently he was indicted by the grand jury of Pike county on a charge of carrying concealed weapons, to which charge be pleaded guilty, and. the judge of the superior court sentenced him to a term of six months on the public works. After his indictment on the charge of carrying concealed weapons, the security on his bond in the city-court case surrendered him to the sheriff, and he was duly imprisoned. Upon the call of the certiorari case the judge of the superior court, for reasons stated, dismissed the certiorari. High-tower was held in jail until ten days after the dismissal of his petition for certiorari, “when he was hired by the commissioners of Pike county to the commissioners of Monroe county, to be worked in the chain-gang of said county. Said hire was’ for six months, and ended on the 26th of April, 1904, at which latter time the judge of the said city court hired him to the same chain-gang for the term of nine months, as provided in the city-court sentence,” and Hightower is now confined in that chain-gang in the charge of Hollis. The contentions of the petition for habeas corpus are, first, that the two sentences, one imposed by the judge of the city court and the other by the judge of- the superior court, were concurrent as to time, and that, having been confined for the duration of the longer sentence, he has completed his full term; and, second, that the sentence by
Judgment affirmed.