186 Ind. 644 | Ind. | 1917
On March 13, 1912, appellant, being charged with the crime of assault and battery with in-' tent to commit murder, by an affidavit pending in the circuit court of Noble county, pleaded guilty to the charge of assault and battery under said affidavit; and the court adjudged that he should pay a fine of five dollars and costs of the prosecution and that he should be imprisoned in the county jail of Noble county for the period of four months. As a part of the judgment it was ordered by the court, upon motion of the defendant and at his request, that the execution of said
1. Appellant takes the position that the court had no power to order him to be imprisoned at the Indiana State Farm when the original judgment provided that he should be imprisoned in the county jail. At the time the judgment was rendered the law providing for the Indiana State Farm was not in force. The act by which that institution was created (Acts
The rule is now generally recognized that one who invokes the provisions of -a law will be denied the right to question its constitutionality. 6 R. C. L. 95, §95. In the case of State v. Collins (1909), 225 Mo. 633, 125 S. W. 465, it was held that a person who applied for and obtained a parole under a statute providing for the parole of persons convicted of a crime, could not question the constitutionality of the statute as allowing the court to terminate the parole at any time without notice. Appellant having invoked the provisions of the act in question in order to obtain his release under it cannot afterward assert that it is invalid for the purpose of avoiding punishment.
No reversible error is shown by the record. Judgment affirmed.
Note. — Reported in 117 N. E. 856. Criminal law: power of court to suspend sentence or to stay execution of sentence, 33 L. R. A. (N. S.) 112, 39 L. R. A. (N. S.) 242; period between a release .on parole and rearrest for violation of condition, as part óf sentence, 10 Ann. Cas. 203; authority of court to suspend sentence indefinitely, 132 Am. St. 644. See under (2) 12 Cyc 810; (3) 12 C. J. 774; 8 Cyc 791; (4) 12 C. J. 780; 8 Cyc 798.