1 Or. 241 | Or. | 1859
Upon trial for stealing property of a specified valu'e, it is not necessary, under our statute, that the
There is nothing in our statute which requires that the value of the property stolen should be returned in the verdict, and we have no law by which any person would be benefited or injured by such a return. The law does not require the doing of an unnecessary thing, and as such a return was unnecessary, it was properly omitted.
The 4th and 5th points assigned are substantially the same, and will be considered together. "Was the sentence such as was authorized by law ?
No authorities have been cited upon this question. By our general laws providing for indictments in criminal cases, it is provided, that “ in every case in which punishment in the penitentiary is awarded against any convict, the form of the sentence shall be, that he be punished by confinement at hard labor; and he may also be sentenced to solitary confinement for such term as the court shall direct, not exceeding twenty days at one time ; and in execution of such punishment, the solitary imprisonment shall precede the punishment by hard labor, unless the court shall otherwise order.” (Statutes of Oregon, sec. 5, page 274.)
As far as this provision of law is concerned, it is entirely clear that the court below was authorized to sentence the defendant to “solitary imprisonment,, not to exceed twenty days at one timeand that it had no power to sentence him to “ one year’s solitary confinement.”
But it is insisted by counsel for State, that the act, entitled “ An act to provide for the election, and to define the duties of a superintendent of the penitentiary,” passed January 28,. 1857, abolishes solitary imprisonment. That act repeals all laws, and parts of laws in conflict therewith, and provides
It is by no means clear that this provision of law does abolish solitary imprisonment. Before the enactment of that law, confinement at hard labor was, as it is now, a necessary part of every sentence of imprisonment in the penitentiary. That act does not specifically abolish “ solitary imprisonment, nor does it originate the punishment of hard labor;” but it does direct when and in what such labor shall be employed; as “ in and upon the penitentiary buildings and grounds, or in mechanical pursuits within the penitentiary, if deemed' practicable.” But, suppose it is true that solitary imprisonment is abolished, and that our courts have no authority to punish by solitary confinement for “ twenty days,” does it, therefore, follow, that the defendant was lawfully sentenced to “ one year’s solitary confinement?” We think not. It is said that the sentence of the learned judge in the court below, as orally announced, was not as it is recorded, and that the word “ solitary” was inserted by the clerk, under the supposition that it was his duty to do so ; but the record, as signed by the judge, and as it comes before this court, shows that the defendant was and is “ sentenced to one year’s solitary confinement.” • No application is made to amend the record, and it is not claimed that this court has the power to do so. In a civil case, this court has the power to modify a judgment of the Circuit Court; but in a criminal case, the judgment of the Circuit Court must be either affirmed or reversed. During the term, the court below might have amended the record according to the fact. The judge was .the living record of his court during the term, and possessed the power to so amend or modify it, as to make it conform to law.
Section 13, page 2.56, of .the statutes, provides, that “ no
If this sentence was authorized by law, the judgment should be affirmed; if not authorized by law, it should not be affix'med as law, but should be reversed.
We think that the sentence was unauthorized by law, and hence, that the judgment of the coux’t below should be reversed, and a new trial granted.
Judgment reversed and a new trial granted.